Robbie Gould

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
Robbie Gould
Chicago BearsNo. 9
Placekicker
Date of birth: December 6, 1982 (1982-12-06) (age 25)
Place of birth: Jersey Shore, Pennsylvania
Height: 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) Weight: 183 lb (83 kg)
National Football League debut
2005 for the Chicago Bears
Career history
College: Penn State
Undrafted in 2005
 Teams:
*Offseason and/or practice squad member only
Current status: Active
Career highlights and awards
  • NFC Special Teams Player of the Month (10/06)
  • All-Pro selection (2006)
  • Pro Bowl selection (2006)
Stats at NFL.com

Robert Paul Gould III (pronounced /Gōld/) (born December 6, 1982 in Jersey Shore, Pennsylvania) is an American football placekicker for the Chicago Bears of the National Football League. He was originally signed by the New England Patriots as an undrafted free agent in 2005. He played college football at Penn State.

Contents

[edit] Early years

Gould was born in Jersey Shore, Pennsylvania. He attended Central Mountain High School in Mill Hall, Pennsylvania, where he won letters in football, soccer, basketball, and track. During the 2000 Boys' Soccer District Championship, Gould scored the game winning goal with seconds left. Although originally interested in becoming a professional soccer player, he eventually chose to pursue a career in football, asking his high school principal to send a letter of recommendation to Penn State head football coach, Joe Paterno, who invited Gould to try out as a freshman walk-on[1]

[edit] Professional career

The defending Super Bowl champion New England Patriots signed rookie free-agent Gould prior to the 2005 NFL preseason, despite the fact they already had Adam Vinatieri.[2] Following his preseason release from the Patriots, Gould next signed with the Baltimore Ravens, only to be waived three weeks later. The Bears signed him on October 8, 2005, following the week three injury of their starting kicker, Doug Brien.[3] Gould kicked his first NFL field goal the next week in a 20-10 loss at Cleveland, and his first game-winner in week nine against the New Orleans Saints. He would finish the 2005 season with a 77% field goal percentage and hitting all but one of his 20 PAT attempts.

Gould kicked 26 consecutive field goals during the 2006 NFL season. His accomplishments broke former Bears’ kicker Kevin Butler’s record of most consecutive field goals, and landed him acclaim as the NFL Special Teams Player of the Month for October 2006. Additionally, NFL fans across the nation selected Gould as the NFC’s kicker for the 2007 Pro Bowl. He was also named to the 2006 All-Pro team by the Associated Press[4]. Gould made a 25-yard field goal in overtime against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, allowing the Bears to emerge victorious and clinch home field advantage throughout the playoffs.[5]. On January 14, 2007, Gould kicked a 49-yard field goal in overtime against the Seattle Seahawks, enabling the Bears to win their first divisional playoff game since 1988 and advance to the NFC Championship game. The Bears won the NFC Championship game, but lost Super Bowl XLI, 29-17.

[edit] Personal life

Gould was born to Cheryl and Robert Gould. His father was a three-time All-American soccer player who led Lock Haven University to a Division II national championship.[6] and was drafted by the St. Louis Steamers in the early 80s. His brother, Christopher, is currently a kicker and punter for the University of Virginia.[7]

Following his stint with Baltimore and before his tryout with Chicago, Gould worked construction at M&R Contracting in Mill Hall, Pennsylvania. He is good friends with teammates Patrick Mannelly and Brad Maynard, who directly assist Gould on every field goal and extra point attempt as the long snapper and holder.[8][9]

Gould performed Take me out to the ball game during the Seventh inning stretch at a Chicago Cubs' game. He later had an interview with WGN's commentators, Len Kasper and Bob Brenly.[8]

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Preceded by
Doug Brien
Chicago Bears Kickers
2005-present
Succeeded by
Incumbent
Penn State starting placekickers
view  talk  edit
Charles Atherton • Carl Forkum • Larry Vorhis • Johnny Roepke • Vince O’Bara • Bill Leonard • Jim Garrity • Milt Plum • Emil Caprara • Don Jonas • Sam Stellatella • Henry Opperman • Don Jonas • Ron Coates • Gerry Sanker • Tom Sherman • Don Abbey • Rusty Garthwaite • Mike Reitz • John Hull • Alberto Vitiello • Chris Bahr • Tony Capozzoli • Matt Bahr • Herb Menhardt • Brian Franco • Nick Gancitano • Massimo Manca • Eric Etze • Ray Tarasi • Craig Fayak • Brett Conway • Travis Forney • Ryan Primanti • David KimballRobbie Gould • Kevin Kelly
v  d  e
Current placekickers in the National Football League (as of Week 17 of the 2007 NFL season)
American Football Conference
East North South West
Lindell (Buffalo) Stover (Baltimore) K. Brown (Houston) Elam (Denver)
Feely (Miami) Graham (Cincinnati) Vinatieri (Indianapolis) Carney (Kansas City)
Gostkowski (New England) Dawson (Cleveland) Scobee (Jacksonville) Janikowski (Oakland)
Nugent (NY Jets) Reed (Pittsburgh) Bironas (Tennessee) Kaeding (San Diego)
National Football Conference
East North South West
Folk (Dallas) Gould (Chicago) Andersen (Atlanta) Rackers (Arizona)
Tynes (NY Giants) Hanson (Detroit) Kasay (Carolina) Wilkins (St. Louis)
Akers (Philadelphia) Crosby (Green Bay) Gramática (New Orleans) Nedney (San Francisco)
Suisham (Washington) Longwell (Minnesota) Bryant (Tampa Bay) J. Brown (Seattle)
Personal tools