ST. LOUIS (AP) -Jeff Wilkins, the St. Louis Rams’ career leading scorer and the best active long-range kicker in the NFL, announced his retirement on Friday after 14 seasons.
The departure leaves the Rams with three players from their Super Bowl victory in 2000: offensive tackle Orlando Pace, wide receiver Torry Holt and defensive end Leonard Little.
Isaac Bruce, who caught the eventual game-winning touchdown pass in that game, was released in a salary cap move on Thursday.
“Throughout my 11 years with the Rams, everybody in the organization has been fantastic from top to bottom,” Wilkins said. “But my retirement is the best for me, my family and the Rams.”
Wilkins was so accurate, former coach Mike Martz nicknamed him “Money.”
“Jeff has been one of the best kickers that I have ever seen,” Rams coach Scott Linehan said. “We will miss him here, but we also wish him well in retirement.”
The 35-year-old Wilkins had 1,223 points and 265 field goals with the Rams, finding a home after playing one season for the Eagles and two for the 49ers. He also leads the franchise in field goal attempts (328) and a success rate of 80.8 percent.
From 49 yards or longer, Wilkins was 39-for-50 for his career and 38-for-49 with the Rams. Among active kickers with 20 or more attempts, his 78 percent success rate from 49 yards or longer is the best in the NFL and his 25 field goals most in league history.
Wilkins hit a franchise-record 57-yard field goal in 1998 against the Falcons, and was perfect on 17 field goals in 2000, tying Tony Zendejas’ franchise record for field goal percentage in a season.
He retires having hit 371 consecutive extra-point kicks, a franchise record and tied for the best in NFL history with Jason Elam (1993-2002).
Wilkins went to the Pro Bowl in 2003 after leading the NFL in scoring with 163 points, going 39-for-42 on field goal attempts that season. He’s the only kicker in NFL history to make a field goal as time expired in the first half, second half and to end an overtime.
Add A Comment