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Keep slicing and you might get cut
September 13, 2006
Mike Nugent said watching the tape of his mis-kicks from Sunday's win over the Titans was something like an out-of-body experience. If there is a sequel to the performance, it could lead to an out-of-work experience.
Nugent missed an extra point for the first time in his brief NFL career, then followed with missed field-goal attempts from 34 and 30 yards, all of them to the right. Any of those seven points would have dramatically altered the flow of the fourth quarter, when the Titans scored two touchdowns and a pair of two-point conversions to tie the score at 16 before the Jets won it.
"My teammates and coaches really didn't deserve to be in that position, in a tight, close game, 16-all," said Nugent, who talked straighter than he kicked when facing the media over his miscues. "We should have had seven more points. If I could have made up those points, it wouldn't have been the game that it was."
Eric Mangini didn't pile on Nugent. But he wasn't patting him on the back, either.
"Win or lose, all of us have things we have to correct," the rookie coach said, adding his stock line about how he and general manager Mike Tannenbaum get together each night and evaluate the players on the team as well as those available.
The reality is, NFL kickers aren't afforded much time to get out of slumps (though Nugent doesn't believe Sunday's performance was a slump). If Nugent cannot fix the problems he faced Sunday - he said he was kicking the ground before making contact with the ball - there's a chance the Jets could bring in a free agent to at least push the second-year player from Ohio State who was taken in the second round of the 2005 draft.
It's a situation Nugent knows could happen, and likely hinges on how he performs beginning Sunday against New England.
"If something like that happens, that's everyone thinking, 'What can we do to make this team better?'" he said.
Because Nugent was drafted so high, cutting him would cost the Jets $406,250 per year in a prorated signing bonus against the salary cap. Nugent is signed through 2008.
Nugent admitted that missing the extra point late in the second quarter got inside his head a little, even though he connected on an 18-yard field goal after the PAT miss. "It does make you think about it," he said.
But he is confident he can right things against the Patriots. After putting in extra time in the weight room and doing some underwater workouts during the offseason, he said he thought he had the best preseason of his life. He showed the increased strength on kickoffs, putting four of them inside the 6 and his final one - which followed a converted extra point on the winning touchdown - two yards into the end zone. Perhaps there was a release of frustration behind that one.
Nugent converted 22 of 28 field-goal attempts as a rookie, including 15 of 16 inside 40 yards. His career long is 49, but he hit a 50-yarder in training camp that won him goodwill among teammates because it canceled evening meetings that day. Last year, he missed two field goals in a game only once, from 40 and 48 yards against the Buccaneers. The Jets won that game, as well.
Week 1 has not been kind to Nugent. Last year, he slipped on his first career attempt at Kansas City and had the kick blocked.
"I used to think the worst thing to happen to me was opening day last year," Nugent said. "This one definitely overcame that one."
Great Gonzo! Nugent alive and still kicking
BY RICH CIMINI
DAILY NEWS SPORTS WRITER
Mike Nugent can relax - this week, anyway.
The Jets' struggling placekicker finally received a vote of confidence from coach Eric Mangini, who said yesterday, "Mike's our kicker. He'll be kicking this weekend." It wasn't exactly a long-term endorsement, but it was more than Mangini had offered on Monday, the day after Nugent's season-opening nightmare. He missed two chip-shot field goals and an extra point against the Titans, prompting the Jets to audition three free-agent kickers on Tuesday - Paul Edinger, Owen Pochman and Tyler Jones. On Sunday, the Jets face the Patriots at Giants Stadium.
LOCALS IN THE NFL
Centerville, OSU star Nugent talks about the Jets, NFL
One tackle and lots of New York traffic
By Mark Gokavi
Staff Writer
Sunday, November 05, 2006
Mike Nugent
- Position: Kicker
- Size: 5-9, 182
- Age: 24
- Experience: 2nd year
- NFL team: Jets
- College: Ohio State
- High school: Centerville
- Extra point: Nugent has one NFL punt, an 18-yard pooch inside an opponent's 20-yard line.
Q What's your favorite high school football memory?
A I'd probably say beating Fairmont my senior year. We were down and came back and won 17-10. I was playing quarterback, so that was kind of cool. It was the only year I really played it and got to carry the ball. Kicking-wise, it would be my last kick ? a 52-yarder against Wayne, but we lost.
Q What's your favorite NFL moment so far?
A It was recently, an onside kick that we recovered against the Colts. I hit it pretty well. They didn't know it was coming. As far as a field goal, my longest so far was a 49-yarder against Buffalo (in 2005). I had three field goals that game.
Q You had a rough opening day (two missed field goals, one missed extra point). How do you bounce back?
A No matter when you have tough days, first of all, you have to learn from it and move on from it. If you dwell on it too long, you'll go back to it.
Q Have you made a tackle?
A I had one in preseason against Miami. It was kind of one of those where he was running toward the sideline. It was nothing like a form tackle, just something to do if they get by the other 10 guys.
Q How strange is it that the Jets picked your former Ohio State teammate (and ex-Alter Knight) Nick Mangold?
A I was pretty excited. I was watching (the draft) with a buddy who went to Alter. We made a prediction that the Jets would take Nick. I've known Nick since kindergarten. I was kind of saying that because I knew we were looking for a lineman. But I was in the dark like everybody else, like a regular fan.
Q How is life on Long Island?
A It was definitely a change compared to Centerville. There's a lot more traffic, and you have to wait in line. Not many people recognize me because there's so many people with different interests.
Q Did you see Ohio State's amazing season coming?
A I've been out a couple years now, so I don't know exactly who is on the roster. But you really expect that. (Jim) Tressel is an unbelievable coach. He knows what he's doing.
Contact this reporter at (937) 225-6951 or [email protected]