57-yard FG Attempts (Pre-1974)

APBA instituted the Tom Dempsey rule, which KA* Kicker may attempt a field goal of up to 63 yards, play result of 37 shall be Good from that distance. All other numbers follow the play results in the 40–49-yard line column as indicated. This is great but it doesn’t address a 57-yard field goal attempt for kickers when the goal post was on the goal line. At the end of my last game of my 1970 replay between the Broncos and 49ers, the Broncos reached the 50-yard line, down by one point with one play remaining. The boards only extend to the 40–49-yard line and Bobby Howfield isn’t a KA* carded kicker. So, what does an APBA football coach do? In real life, the head coach chats with the special teams coordinator to determine the kicker’s long during pre-game warmups and considers the kicker’s past performance.  To translate this to the tabletop, I reviewed Bobby Howfield’s K-column to determine if he had one or more play result 37 on his card. Howfield had three 37’s for a 1:12 chance in successfully making the attempt, so I sent out the field goal unit. If the roles were reversed and San Francisco had the ball at midfield, I would have called a long pass (term hail mary didn’t exist yet) and hoped John Brodie hit one of his three numbers (1:12) for a touchdown because Bruce Gossett doesn’t have a play result 37 on his K-column.

For situations where the quarterback in the game doesn’t have play result 3 on his card, I would consider one of two options. I could either call a long pass and hope for a pass interference penalty or fall back on a face-to-face strategy and call a draw play to a K-carded running back with multiple play results 1 or 2 in his K-column.

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