Nick Novak
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Nick Novak | |
---|---|
Date of birth | August 21, 1981 |
Place of birth | Charlottesville, Virginia |
Position(s) | Kicker |
College | University of Maryland, College Park |
Statistics | |
Team(s) | |
2005 2005 2006 |
Washington Redskins Arizona Cardinals Washington Redskins |
Nick Novak (born August 21, 1981 in Charlottesville, Virginia) was a kicker for the Washington Redskins.
A graduate of Albemarle High School in Charlottesville, Virginia, Novak attended the University of Maryland. An erratic kicker at the outset, it was during a nationally-televised game against Georgia Tech that the then-redshirt freshman established himself, successfully completing a 46-yard field goal to send the game into overtime. In the second stanza, Novak connected on a 26-yard field goal that ultimately won the game for a resurgent Terrapin team. Novak would go on to establish himself as one of the more consistent and clutch kickers in the country; his leg keyed comeback victories against North Carolina State in 2002 and 2003. Accordingly, he was frequently an all-conference specialist and a mainstay on the Lou Groza watchlist. During the first game of his senior season, he became the ACC's all-time leading scorer, a field goal allowing him to surpass Scott Bentley's career total of 324 points. Novak ultimately ended his college career with 393 points, best in the league and fifth-best all-time amongst kickers in the NCAA. He was also awarded the Jim Tatum Award by UMCP for his commitment to academics. 1
Novak, an undrafted free agent, signed with the Redskins in September 2005, and appeared in five games, most notably kicking a game-winning field goal in overtime against the Seattle Seahawks. He was released shortly thereafter, and was signed by the Arizona Cardinals, appearing in three games. He re-signed with the Washington Redskins on October 10, 2006, replacing injured kicker John Hall. On November 5, after missing a 49-yard field goal with 35 seconds left to go, Redskin safety Troy Vincent blocked a Dallas Cowboys field goal; Sean Taylor picked the ball up and ran it all the way to the Dallas 45 yard line. Then, a facemask penalty was called which moved the ball to the Cowboy 30 and gave the Redskins one more play with no time on the clock. Novak then kicked a 47-yard field goal to defeat Dallas 22-19. On December 4, the Redskins released Novak in favor of Shaun Suisham.