NFL kickers are becoming so accurate that there is talk of changing the width of the goalposts.
Chances are you've never heard of him, but Ward Cuff was quite the NFL placekicking weapon from 1937 to 1947.
Representing the New York Giants, Chicago Cardinals and Green Bay Packers, the Redwood Falls, Minn., native led the league in field goals made four times and field goal accuracy twice.
In 1943, he led both, going 3-for-9 for 33.3 percent. Not bad for someone whose main duty was playing wingback in the Giants' single-wing offense. The league average that year was 23.5 percent (16 of 68).
In 1967, Jan Stenerud began a 19-year career with the Chiefs, Packers and Vikings. To this day, he's the only Pro Football Hall of Famer who was exclusively a kicker. His career percentage of .668 ranks 112th in league history.
An NFL goalpost has been 18 feet, 6 inches wide since the league was founded in 1920. But the guys kicking footballs through them certainly have changed. In fact, they've changed so much that many people around the league believe it's only a matter of time before the NFL narrows the goalposts to reduce the expanding range of chip shots and increase the number of times teams go for it on fourth down.
"I think that's probably something that will be talked about in the offseason," Ravens coach John Harbaugh said. "I know it's been talked about in the past. That's probably something that could be coming down the road."
Thirteen of the top 14 most accurate kickers in NFL history are active. The top two are second-year players Justin Tucker from Baltimore (92.2 percent) and the Vikings' Blair Walsh (90.8).