logo
49ers' kicker competition between Moody and Joseph draws attention from team stars

49ers' kicker competition between Moody and Joseph draws attention from team stars

Fox Sports7 days ago
Associated Press
SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP) — The kicking portion of an NFL training camp practice is often a time when established players take a break or work on something else.
That's not necessarily the case this summer for the San Francisco 49ers where the competition between incumbent kicker Jake Moody and offseason acquisition Greg Joseph is catching the attention of even the team's biggest stars.
'I actually have been paying attention to it. I can't lie,' defensive end Nick Bosa said. 'It's kind of exciting.'
That's just the kind of focus new special teams coordinator Brant Boyer wants on his kickers as he tries to create as much of a high-stakes environment for his kickers on the practice field to determine who he can trust most once the season starts.
'I think it's cool that everybody's watching and it puts that added pressure on and stuff like that,' Boyer said. "Because that's where you're going to find out who has the upper leg or not.'
Boyer has had both kickers alternate kicks from the exact same spot on the field in camp, to make sure both are getting their opportunities in the same conditions and to put pressure on each.
Both kickers had performed well throughout the offseason and the start of camp before hitting a but of a rough patch on Friday when Joseph missed two of his four attempts and Moody missed one.
Moody is trying to bounce back from a rough second season in the NFL when he struggled mightily in the second half of the 2024 campaign after coming back from an ankle injury.
Moody made some changes to his approach this offseason, going from taking three steps on his approach to just two. He made the change after consulting with his kicking coach and some veteran kickers after seeing on film that his third step had been inconsistent and could have contributed to the inaccuracy.
'What that did, at least in my mind, was keep everything kind of shorter and more consistent as far as less variables of having a third jab step is what I would call it,' he said. 'So just kind of taking that out gets me to the ball a little quicker.'
Moody said the new approach might cost him a yard or two in length but should make him more consistent and become the kicker the Niners thought they had when they drafted him in the third round in 2023.
Moody had an up-and-down rookie season, making 21 of 25 field goals in the regular season and missing only one extra point. But he missed a potential game-winning kick in a loss at Cleveland and missed field goals in playoff wins against Green Bay and Detroit.
Moody then made three field goals in the Super Bowl with two coming from more than 50 yards, but also had an extra point blocked in that game.
Moody got off to a strong start last season, making all six field goals he attempted in the season opener and going 13 for 14 before injuring his ankle while attempting to make a tackle on a kickoff return in Week 5.
He missed three games and then went 5 for 14 on attempts from at least 40 yards in the final nine games.
'I seen a guy that lost his confidence a little bit, but I also seen a guy that was injured half the year," Boyer said. 'He's a super-talented kid, and I think that he's just got to get his stinger back so to speak. And Greg is putting all the pressure on him that he can.'
Moody said his confidence isn't an issue and that he is using last season as a learning experience that gave him a chip on his shoulder.
He said he is going through camp focused on his process more than results and is confident he can get back to being the consistent kicker he knows he can be.
'I want to prove to myself that I deserve to be here, and that I belong,' Moody said. 'It doesn't have anything to do with last year or other people or anything. Just kind of changed my mindset to just focusing on the now, and doing whatever I can do in the moment to help myself best make kicks.' Brock Purdy's day off
Brock Purdy missed practice Friday for what the team described as personal reasons. Purdy is expected back at San Francisco's next session Sunday.
With Purdy out, Mac Jones and Tanner Mordecai split all the reps. Renardo Green leaves injured
Second-year cornerback Renardo Green had a strong practice with a few pass breakups before he came up limping late in the session with what appeared to be a sore hamstring.
___
AP NFL: https://apnews.com/NFL
recommended
Item 1 of 3
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

2025 Hall of Fame: Eric Allen was the epitome of excellence at cornerback
2025 Hall of Fame: Eric Allen was the epitome of excellence at cornerback

Yahoo

time4 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

2025 Hall of Fame: Eric Allen was the epitome of excellence at cornerback

Four men will be formally enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame on Saturday in Canton, Ohio. Yahoo Sports will take a relatively short look at each legend and how he reached football immortality. [More on Hall of Famers: Sterling Sharpe | Jared Allen | Antonio Gates] The great John Madden could be prone to hyperbole at times, but Madden also had a deep appreciation for great football and great players. The excitement in the voices of Madden and Pat Summerall on Oct. 3, 1993 at old Giants Stadium was unmistakeable. The player who pulled it out of them was Eric Allen. The New York Jets led Allen's Philadelphia Eagles in the fourth quarter when Jets QB Boomer Esiason missed on a pass. Allen reached back to pick it off, then started spinning and juking his way through the Jets. He broke free for a 94-yard score, which gave the Eagles a 35-30 lead. That would end up being the final score. [Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Football league for the 2025 NFL season] "That is one of the greatest plays I've ever seen in this league," Madden said on the broadcast. "Not only the interception, but that runback, and spins and everything Eric Allen did on that play." "Want to see it again? I do," Summerall said. "Just enjoy this." Allen had 14 great seasons in the NFL, and that's why he's heading to the Pro Football Hall of Fame. But if it's possible to sum up a Hall of Fame career in about 20 seconds, just watch Allen weaving his way through the Jets for what would be a game-winning touchdown. Eric Allen made his name with Eagles Allen didn't have a flashy persona like other star cornerbacks, but his performance on the field was undeniable. Allen was one of the best cover corners of his era. He wasn't the biggest player, at 5-foot-10, 184 pounds, but he was quick and had tremendous anticipation. When quarterbacks threw his way, he often ended up with his hands on the ball. Allen had 54 interceptions and returned eight of them for touchdowns. He led the NFL in pick-6s in 1993 and again in 2000. Allen is best remembered for his role in a phenomenal Eagles defense. He was drafted in the second round of the 1988 NFL Draft and started all 16 games as a rookie. In his second season, he was a first-team All-Pro. That was his only time as a first-team All-Pro but he probably deserved more. He was a six-time Pro Bowler. Allen made the Pro Bowl in five of his seven seasons with the Eagles. That Philly team could never get to a Super Bowl (though Allen had two interceptions, including a pick-6, in a wild-card playoff win over the Saints at the end of the 1992 season) but fantastic defenses that included Reggie White, Jerome Brown, Clyde Simmons and Seth Joyner among others are remembered fondly. Allen moved on from the Eagles for the 1995 season, at age 30, but he was far from finished. Allen was a 'complete cornerback' Allen spent three more seasons with the Saints, then finished his career with four more seasons on the Raiders. He was a starter from the beginning of his career to the end, starting 214 of 217 games he played. He missed just seven games in 14 seasons and was still a starter at age 36. Allen was overshadowed a bit in his era by cornerbacks Deion Sanders and Rod Woodson, but he was among the best who have ever played the position. "I feel like I was a complete cornerback," Allen said, via the Eagles' site. "I traveled with the best of the best receivers in the game — left side, right side, everything. I think there are 13 or 14 receivers I played against who are in the Hall of Fame." It took a while for Allen to get the call to the Hall of Fame. His final season was 2001. That's a long time to wait for a player who was considered one of the best of his era at his position.

35 locks for Broncos' 53-man roster
35 locks for Broncos' 53-man roster

USA Today

time6 minutes ago

  • USA Today

35 locks for Broncos' 53-man roster

With the Denver Broncos wrapping up the first week of training camp today, we've put together a quick list of 35 players who appear to be locks to make the 53-man roster this summer. If this projection is accurate and these 35 players are safe, that leaves 18 spots up for grabs going into training camp. Of course, few NFL players are truly ever "locks," but these players seem about as safe as you can get. Three quick notes: fullback Michael Burton could be cut from the active roster and signed to the practice squad, just like he was last year. Linebacker Drew Sanders will likely make the initial 53-man roster and then get moved to injured reserve. Fellow linebacker Alex Singleton does not make our lock list. He's likely to make the team, but he'll turn 32 this season and is coming off a torn ACL and carries a large cap hit. Broncos locks for 53-man roster Do you agree with this list? Disagree? Give us your thoughts on Facebook and Twitter/X!

Raiders beat writer explains possible reason behind Las Vegas' unexpected offensive line shuffle
Raiders beat writer explains possible reason behind Las Vegas' unexpected offensive line shuffle

Yahoo

time34 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Raiders beat writer explains possible reason behind Las Vegas' unexpected offensive line shuffle

All offseason long, offensive lineman Jackson Powers-Johnson was expected to be the Las Vegas Raiders' starting center in his second season. The expectation made sense considering JPJ was a center in college and was solid at the position in his rookie campaign that first saw him play left guard before a switch to center and then a return to left guard to close out the season. In all, Powers-Johnson posted a Pro Football Focus run-blocking grade of 70.4 and a pass-blocking grade of 68.3 while giving up just two sacks and 23 total pressures over 633 pass-blocking snaps. However, despite all that, fellow offensive lineman Jordan Meredith has been rotating with Powers-Johnson at center in practice. And, on Thursday, Powers-Johnson played at right guard and Meredith was at center, according to Vincent Bonsignore of the Las Vegas Review-Journal. That setup left veteran Alex Cappa on the outside looking in when it comes to the starting offensive line after he was considered the favorite for a guard spot. Bonsignore has a possible explanation for why the Raiders are taking a look at a pairing of JPJ and Meredith at guard and center. "I think it's more that they feel Jordan (Meredith) profiles better at center than guard and that JPJ can be a pro bowl level player at either spot," he wrote. Meredith made eight starts in 2024, playing at both guard spots. He was a pleasant surprise for Las Vegas, posting strong Pro Football Focus grades of 75.7 in pass-blocking and 78.4 in run-blocking. Meredith didn't give up a single sack and surrendered just nine pressures in 399 pass-blocking snaps. That said, Meredith has played zero regular-season snaps at the position during his three-year career, so center is certainly new to him. Cappa, who once looked like he'd earn a starting role earlier this offseason, was signed to a two-year, $11.01 million deal in free agency. The signing was a bit odd at the time given the fact that he wasn't really an upgrade over anyone the Raiders had vying for a starting guard role. Cappa is coming off a terrible season that saw him give up eight sacks and 51 total pressures while also garnering PFF grades of 39.7 in pass-blocking and 54.9 in run-blocking. If the JPJ-Meredith combo from Thursday's practice holds, the Raiders' starting offensive line from left to right tackle would be Kolton Miller, Dylan Parham, Meredith, JPJ and DJ Glaze. MORE LAS VEGAS RAIDERS NEWS Geno Smith already in midseason form at Raiders camp Raiders looking to extend another veteran after Kolton Miller deal

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store