Is it really Thursday Night Football if there isn't some sort of weirdness?
Well, Thursday's Denver Broncos-Los Angeles Chargers game had an event that last happened in 1976.
With eight seconds left in the half and the Broncos leading 21-10, they pushed the ball away in hopes that time would expire and send both teams to the locker room.
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The good news is that the clock has reached zero – the bad news, however, is that Denver was called for fair catch interference.
Of course, a half can't end on a defensive penalty or a flag from the kicking team, so the Chargers had the opportunity to perform a “fair kick” after the penalty pushed them back 15 meters.
Cameron Dicker was able to line up for a 57-yard kick without any sort of rush, not without some confusion on both sidelines – in fact, the ball didn't even need to be snapped. Essentially, it was as much of a practice rehearsal as a real kick could be.
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Dicker, of course, did, and it was more of an eight-point lead for Denver before halftime instead of a 21-10 win.
Ironically, the last successful fair catch kick was in 1976 by none other than San Diego Chargers kicker Ray Wersching.
It was the 27th fair kick recorded in NFL history, including the playoffs, and only the seventh that went through the uprights. The last attempt before Thursday was in 2019, when Joey Slye missed from 60 yards.
Dicker's kick is now the longest fair kick in NFL history, surpassing Paul Hornung's 52-yard boot in 1964.
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There were nine failed attempts between the Chargers' two free kicks, but this one was the shortest attempt. It is not uncommon for the kick to reach over 70 yards, since good catches are normally taken on the opposite side of the field.
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