logo
With Tyler Bass out, Bills RB Ray Davis kicks and makes extra point in preseason game against Giants

With Tyler Bass out, Bills RB Ray Davis kicks and makes extra point in preseason game against Giants

Yahoo6 hours ago
With sixth-year kicker Tyler Bass sidelined by a pelvic injury, the Buffalo Bills signed Caden Davis to a one-year contract Friday. He wasn't who the Bills trotted out for their first extra point of the preseason, though.
Another player with the same last name but different number got the call: part-time emergency kicker and full-time running back Ray Davis.
Following Mitch Trubisky's second-quarter touchdown pass to tight end Dawson Knox, Davis came onto the field wearing two different cleats. In that way, he looked the part of a kicker, at least from the knees down. In just about every other way, however, he looked like the 5-foot-8, 220-pound running back who piled up 631 yards and six touchdowns from scrimmage as a rookie last season.
Nevertheless, with his mouth piece dangling from his face mask, Davis drilled the 33-yard PAT right down the middle in Orchard Park's Highmark Stadium Saturday.
The Bills used Davis at kicker in their scrimmage, according to the local broadcast, via NFL Network, and they must have liked what they saw.
The second-year back and 2024 fourth-round pick — who bounced from Temple to Vanderbilt to Kentucky during his college career — followed through in exhibition action against the Giants.
When the Bills entered the red zone in the final seconds of the first half, thanks to a 58-yard downfield connection between Trubsiky and wideout Tyrell Shavers, Caden Davis got an opportunity.
He easily soared a 24-yard field goal through the uprights to draw the Bills within one score of the Giants before intermission. Davis, who previously spent time with the New York Jets this summer, went undrafted after finishing his college career at Ole Miss, where he set the school record for most 50-plus-yard field goals with four such makes.
Ironically, his first preseason attempt with the Bills was shorter than the extra point the team's emergency kicker, and RB2, made earlier that same quarter.
Non-kickers have flashed place kicking ability several times before. Earlier this week, Philadelphia Eagles punter Braden Mann traded places with Jake Elliott, who held for Mann as he comfortably made a PAT in the second quarter of a preseason game against the Cincinnati Bengals.
Speaking of the Bengals, wide receiver Chad "Ochocinco" Johnson famously blasted an extra point for Cincinnati during the 2009 preseason.
On Saturday, Davis put his touch on one of football's more peculiar rarities.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

White Sox celebrate showman Bill Veeck with wedding, 50-foot hot dog, petting zoo at ballgame
White Sox celebrate showman Bill Veeck with wedding, 50-foot hot dog, petting zoo at ballgame

Yahoo

time2 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

White Sox celebrate showman Bill Veeck with wedding, 50-foot hot dog, petting zoo at ballgame

CHICAGO (AP) — The Chicago White Sox threw a party that would have made Bill Veeck proud. The club celebrated its quirky former owner with Bill Veeck Night on Saturday by bringing back some of the stunts, tricks and exhibitions that added to the lore of the legendary showman and Hall of Famer. There was a pregame petting zoo and a roving circus with — what else? — a clown to entertain fans entering Rate Field. There was ice sculpting on the concourse in the outfield and a chance to get a photo taken with a 50-foot hot dog, along with an offer of free haircuts. The first 15,000 fans received a Veeck bobblehead, and postgame fireworks were planned. Another highlight was what the team described as a 'married in a minute' event, with two White Sox fans tying the knot in a 60-second ceremony officiated by 1983 American League Rookie of the Year Ron Kittle. Veeck's son, Mike, threw out the ceremonial first pitch before the White Sox took on the Cleveland Guardians. The fun wasn't limited to fans in the stands. White Sox players turned back the clock by wearing pinstriped shorts during pregame warmups and batting practice. The team wore those unusual shorts — along with collared uniform tops — for some games during the 1976 season. Veeck was a two-time owner of the White Sox, first from 1959-61 and again from 1975-81. His tenure was marked by memorable and forgettable stunts to enhance the fans' game-day experience through entertainment. His stunts included an exploding scoreboard in 1960 and a disastrous disco demolition night in 1979, when a crate of disco records was blown up between games of a doubleheader. The playing surface at Comiskey Field was so damaged by the blast and fans who rushed the field after the stunt that Chicago was forced to forfeit the second game to Detroit. Another of his famous acts was signing 3-foot-7 Eddie Gaedel to be a pinch hitter in 1951, when Veeck owned the St. Louis Browns. Gaedel, who had a miniscule strike zone, walked on four pitches. Veeck died in 1986 at 71 and was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1991. ___ AP MLB:

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