Jan Stenerud

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Jan Stenerud
Date of birth November 26, 1942 (age 64)
Place of birth Flag of Norway Fetsund, Norway
Position(s) Kicker
College Montana State
AFL Draft 1966 / Round 3
Career Highlights
Pro Bowls AFL All-Star 2 times
NFL Pro Bowl 4 times
Awards 1972 Pro Bowl MVP
Honors Chiefs Hall of Fame,
NFL 75th Anniversary
All-Time Team

Green Bay Packers HOF
Retired #s Kansas City Chiefs #3
Stats
Statistics
Team(s)
1967-1979
1980-1983
1984-1985
Kansas City Chiefs
Green Bay Packers
Minnesota Vikings
Pro Football Hall of Fame, 1991

Jan Stenerud (born November 26, 1942, in Fetsund, Norway) is a former football player for the Kansas City Chiefs (1967-1979), Green Bay Packers (1980-1983), and Minnesota Vikings (1984-1985) of the National Football League. Stenerud was one of the first professional football players to be used as a dedicated kicker, due to his excellent "sharpshooting" ball kicking performance. He was one of the first placekickers to use the "soccer style," a technique the Hungarian-born Pete Gogolak had recently introduced in the AFL. Stenerud came to the United States on a ski jumping scholorship and had never played football. While attending Montana State University in Bozeman, Montana, he joined the football team and in 1964 kicked a 59-yard field goal, then a college football record, against the rival Montana Grizzlies.

After the 1969 season, Stenerud won Super Bowl IV with the Chiefs when they defeated the Minnesota Vikings 23-7. In that game, Stenerud kicked three field goals, scoring the first 9 points of the game for his team. His first, a 48-yarder, would remain the longest field goal in a Super Bowl until January 1994, when the record was broken by the Buffalo Bills kicker Steve Christie in Super Bowl XXVIII.

But Stenerud wasn't infallible. He missed two field goals and had another kick blocked on Christmas Day, 1971 in an AFC divisional playoff game against the Miami Dolphins. The Dolphins won the game 27-24 in double overtime on a 37-yard field goal by Garo Yepremian. The game is the longest in NFL history at 82 minutes, 40 seconds of playing time, and was also the final football game in Kansas City Municipal Stadium.

Stenerud retired in 1986, after 20 NFL seasons. In his career, he converted 373 out of 558 field goals (66 percent) and 580 out of 601 extra points (96 %). Overall, Stenerud scored a total of 1,699 points.

Enshrined in 1991, Stenerud, along with George Blanda and Lou Groza is one of only three kickers Pro Football Hall of Fame, and he is the only one of those three who did not play another position (Blanda played Quarterback, Lou Groza played Offensive Tackle). The Chiefs have retired jersey number 3 in his honor. In 1994, he was selected on NFL's 75th Anniversary Team

In recent years Stenerud has been involved in a Kansas City firm that is involved in designing stadiums and sports arenas. He also worked as a commentator for Scandinavian TV channel TV3's Super Bowl Sunday coverage in the 1990s, and still maintains strong ties with his native Norway. The street where he grew up, in the town of Fetsund, was renamed in his honor.

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National Football League | NFL's 75th Anniversary All-Time Team

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