Venus Powers

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Venus Powers
VenusHonolulu.jpg
No. 3 – Honolulu Hahalua
Position:Kicker/Punter
Personal information
Born: (2011-11-05)November 5, 2011 (aged 49)
Alamo Heights, Texas
Height:6 ft 4 in (1.93 m)
Weight:210 lb (95 kg)
Username:Baron1898
Career information
High school:Reagan High School
College:United States Air Force Academy
ISFL Draft:2035 / Round: 2 / Pick: 4
DSFL Draft:2034 / Round: 5 / Pick: 4
Career history
Roster status:Retired
Career highlights and awards
ISFL Hall of Fame

4x ISFL Pro Bowl Punter (2035, 2036, 2037, 2038)

3x ISFL Pro Bowl Kicker (2036, 2039, 2040)

2x ISFL Punter of the Year (2036, 2037)

2x ISFL Kicker of the Year (2039, 2040)

Venus Powers (born November 5, 2011) is a retired American football kicker/punter who played for the Philadelphia Liberty and the Honolulu Hahalua. She played college football for the United States Air Force Academy before being picked up on waivers by the Norfolk Seawolves after the trade deadline. Powers was selected 20th overall in the S19 DSFL Draft by the Portland Pythons. After playing a full season for the Pythons, she was selected 14th overall by the Philadelphia Liberty in the S20 ISFL Draft. Two years later, Venus was selected by the Hahalua in the S22 Expansion Draft.


Early years

Venus Powers was born on November 5, 2011 in Alamo Heights, Texas, the only child of Simon and Loretta Powers. Her mother worked as a police officer while her father taught 5th grade at the local Cambridge Elementary School. Powers was bright from a young age, displaying a prodigious aptitude for math and science. Her parents enrolled her in Cambridge Elementary, where she quickly made friends and rose to the top in grades. Simon and Loretta provided Powers with every opportunity they could afford.

Then came tragedy. On November 19, 2019, on the way back from a late birthday family trip to Six Flags Fiesta Texas, a drunk driver crashed into the Powers’ car, resulting in Loretta’s death. Simon Powers continued to raise her as a single father, supporting her throughout school and into secondary schools. It was in middle school that Powers discovered her love of athletics, particularly soccer and football. The latter sport drew her as a freshman in high school, where she competed for and won the kicker spot as a freshman for the Rattlers. In her four years of kicker for the Rattlers, Powers went 50/54 on field goals and 77/79 on extra point attempts. During her blooming athletic career and interest in football, Powers and her father became ticket holders for the San Antonio Marshals. She earned a nomination into the United States Air Force Academy and was accepted as part of the class of 2034.

College career

Fourth-Class Cadet

In her first year at the Academy, Powers excelled in her academic studies and went through the same rigorous military and leadership training as her fellow cadets. On the football field, she tried out for the team and rode the bench for five games behind incumbent first-class kicker Brett Longwise. The sixth game of the year saw Longwise out for the year after a leg injury, thrusting Powers into the starting role for the remainder of the season. In her six and a half games of action, Powers kicked for 9/11 (81.8%) on field goals and 13/13 (100%) on extra points.

Third-Class Cadet

Powers returned for the 2031-32 season as the undisputed starter for the Falcons. In eleven games of action, the Falcons rode a 9-2 wave and claimed the Commander-in-Chief’s Trophy by defeating Army. Venus herself had a great year, kicking 23/25 (92.0%) of her field goal attempts through the uprights and adding on a perfect extra point record on 31 tries. When punter Leon O’Sullivan dropped out of the Academy, Powers also took on punting duties for the final three games of the year. She punted 18 times for 819 yards (45.5 avg) and pinned the opponent inside the 20 on two of those attempts. Powers earned First Team on the 2031 All-Mountain West Conference team for her efforts.

Second-Class Cadet

In the offseason, Venus attended an open practice for the Marshals next door, who had just come off the 13-1 season of “Marshal Law”. It was in this time that Venus met with team kicker Spencer Lawes and running back Morgan Marshall. Once again, Powers entered the season as the starting kicker and punter, kicking an almost perfect season with 17/18 (94.4%) field goals and 24/24 (100%) on extra points. She punted 51 times for 2,261 yards (44.3 avg) with 8 inside the 20. Powers’ season was cut short in the Week 8 match against Navy, where she suffered a torn ACL that sidelined her for the rest of the season. Despite the injury, Powers still got the nod for the 2032 All-MWC Second Team.

First-Class Cadet

The fourth and final year of Powers’ college career was an emphatic comeback for the star kicker. Off of her torn ACL, Powers played all 11 games of the Falcons’ 2033-34 season as the starting kicker and punter. As the team went undefeated on the season and claimed both the Commander-in-Chief’s Trophy and the MWC Championship, Powers kicked 33/36 (91.7%) field goals, both a school and NCAA record, and again went perfect on all 26 extra point attempts. She also punted 62 times for 2,649 yards (42.7 avg) and 18 of those inside the 20 yard line. By the end of her career, Powers held the Air Force Academy records for field goal completions (82), field goal percentage (91.1%), and single season field goals (33, an NCAA record). Powers received a bevy of awards and recognition for her accomplishments in the 2033 season, including unanimous First Team All-American, Mountain West Conference Special Teams Player of the Year, First Team 2033 All-Mountain West Conference, the Lou Groza Award, and the Vlade Award.

Due to her incredibly prolific college career, Powers began attracting interest as early as junior year from scouts in the DSFL, in particular those from her hometown of San Antonio. After her senior year was concluded and Powers prepared to graduate, she officially declared for the DSFL on November 19, 2033, the first college recruit to declare for the S19 DSFL Draft.

College career statistics

Career statistics Extra Points Field Goals Punting
Season Team Games XPM XPA XP% FGM FGA FG% <20 20-29 30-39 40-49 50+ Lng Punts Yards Avg In20 Lng
2030 Air Force 7 13 13 100 9 11 81.8 1/1 3/3 4/5 1/2 0/0 42 - - - - -
2031 Air Force 11 31 31 100 23 25 92.0 2/2 6/6 8/9 6/6 1/2 51 18 819 45.5 2 56
2032 Air Force 8 24 24 100 17 18 94.4 2/2 6/7 5/5 3/3 1/1 57 51 2261 44.3 8 65
2033 Air Force 11 26 26 100 33 36 91.7 1/1 6/6 14/14 8/10 4/5 59 62 2649 42.7 18 63
College Air Force 37 94 94 100 82 90 91.1 6/6 21/22 31/33 18/21 6/8 59 131 5729 43.7 28 65

Professional career

Pre-draft measurables
Ht Wt 40‑yd dash 20‑ss 3‑cone Vert jump Broad BP Wonderlic
6 ft 4 in
(1.93 m)
210 lb
(95 kg)
6.01 s 5.56 s 8.38 s 18.3 in
(0.46 m)
4 ft 7.6 in
(1.41 m)
0 reps 30

DSFL career

After declaring for the DSFL Draft, Powers was picked up by the Norfolk Seawolves on waivers on December 4, 2033 after the end of the DSFL trade deadline. Because the Seawolves were 3-9 and out of playoff contention, Powers would only play the final two games of the 2033 season for Norfolk. Her first professional game action was a home game against her hometown San Antonio Marshals. In an inglorious 41-0 loss at home, Powers attempted and missed a 41-yard field goal, the only kick of the game for Norfolk. She would also finish the game with 5 punts for 185 yards. In her second game of the season, a 34-20 loss to the Kansas City Coyotes, she went 2/2 on extra points and also successfully made both of her field goal attempts, from 37 and 26 yards. Powers punted 6 times for 237 yards.

Powers originally intended to hold out until drafted by her hometown team, the Marshals, in the upcoming S19 DSFL Draft. However, that plan changed when the Marshals relocated and rebranded as the Minnesota Grey Ducks. Powers and her father canceled their status as season ticket holders, and Powers publicly announced her willingness to be drafted by any interested DSFL team. She was drafted at the 20th overall pick at the end of the 5th round by the Portland Pythons, one pick after the Grey Ducks selected kicker Silver Banana.

In her lone season in the DSFL, Venus Powers played all 14 regular season games and 1 playoff game for the 2034-35 Portland Pythons. She shared snaps with fellow kicker Diego Espinosa, with Powers handling all field goals and extra point attempts while Espinosa handled kickoffs and punts. In the Pythons’ 8-6 campaign, Powers attempted 24 field goals and made 21 of them, good for an 87.5% field goal percentage, with a long of 47 yards. She also kicked 39 of a possible 42 extra points through the uprights, leading the league in extra points made and good for a 92.9% accuracy rate. In the Pythons’ 30-27 loss to the Grey Ducks in the playoffs, Powers connected on both extra point attempts and on a 39 yard field goal. She lost the nod of S19 DSFL Kicker of the Year to Tijuana kicker Jordan Jackson.

Going into the S20 ISFL Draft, Powers received offers of interest from multiple teams. However, many of her suitors were concerned over her choice of position, offering to draft her much higher in exchange for a potential position switch away from kicker. Powers repeatedly and vocally denied such attempts, publicly reasserting her commitment to pursuing a career on special teams. She was drafted 14th overall in the 2nd round by the Philadelphia Liberty, the first kicker off the board in the draft.

2035-36 season

Over the 2035 offseason, Venus Powers worked with private trainers in Philadelphia to improve her kicking mechanics, especially the power she was able to put into each swing of the leg. She inked a 3 year, $3 million contract with the Liberty shortly after the ISFL Draft, taking a league minimum rate for her rookie contract with a mutual option on her last two seasons and a no trade clause specifically towards the Chicago Butchers.

The Liberty came out of the gate with a 23-10 victory on the road against the Butchers. Powers went 2/2 on extra points and 3/5 on field goals for the night, with completions from 19, 40, and 41 yards out, as well as punting 7 times for 313 yards. In a tough home loss to the Baltimore Hawks, 27-20, Powers added 2 extra points and 2 field goals on a perfectly accurate night, including a career-high 56 yarder. She also punted 9 times for 402 yards, twice inside the 20, as the Liberty offense struggled to get going as they neared the red zone. Powers went perfect on limited opportunities in Week 3, 1/1 on extra points and 2/2 on field goals as the Liberty lost again at home to the New Orleans Second Line 23-13. She added 8 more punts for 375 yards and another inside the 20. Her busy punting load didn’t lighten much in the road loss the next week to the Yellowknife Wraiths, with another 6 punts for 323 yards (2 in the 20), 1/1 on the only Liberty touchdown of the night, and 1/2 on field goal duty.

As the Liberty season progressed on, Powers tried to tighten up her field goal game and take advantage of her heavy punting duties, which rocketed her to the league lead in punting yardage. The team’s Week 5 loss to the Colorado Yeti saw Powers add 2 late game extra points and a field goal to her count, as well as another 298 punting yards on seven boots - one of which was a season long 71 yarder. Spirits improved in Week 6 when the Liberty finally notched another win, once again against the Chicago Butchers, with Powers putting on a show and dazzling with 3/3 on extra points, 2/2 on field goals, and 8 punts for 387 yards. Her newfound accuracy streak was broken Week 7 against the Baltimore Hawks, who crushed the Liberty 34-10. Powers only nailed one of her two field goal attempts and an extra point, putting on a prototypical 7 punt 336 yard game through the punting game as Philadelphia struggled to move the ball. Fortunes improved in Week 8’s 24-10 home victory over the Austin Copperheads, which saw possibly Powers’ busiest workload of the season - 3 extra points, a field goal, and 9 punts for 465 yards.

With the Week 9 loss to the Yeti, where Powers scored 2/2 extra points and 2/3 field goals but an absolutely miserable 5 punts for only 191 yards, the Liberty found themselves on the outsides looking in for playoff contention. The odds only got longer in Week 10 as the Orange County Otters drubbed them 23-13 in an away game. Powers again punted 5 times but for a much cleaner 258 yards, chipping in an extra point and two field goals to keep the game relatively close. The Liberty enjoyed their only winning streak of the season in Weeks 11 and 12, beating the Yellowknife Wraiths and San Jose Sabercats in back to back home and away games. The team was aided by Powers going perfect on both extra points (3) and field goals (4) during this period, as well as 386 yard and 330 yard punting games. The winning came too late to hold hope for the playoffs, however, and the last game of the season saw the Liberty playing for draft position to lose to the Arizona Outlaws 27-20. Powers put the finishing touches on a perfect season of extra pointers and added two more field goals to boot, as well as seven punts for 337 yards.

Venus Powers finished off her first season in the ISFL as a mixed bag. While she finished the year flawlessly on extra points, nailing all 23 shots, she only made 23 of 29 field goal attempts for a career low 73.9% completion rate. The Philadelphia offense finished the year with the least points scored of any league offense, which consequently gave Powers less chances to get into kicking range. On the other hand, she enjoyed an incredible resurgence in punting after spending her DSFL career solely as a placekicker, leading the league with 92 punts for 4401 yards, 16 inside the 20, and a 47.8 yard average, the latter of which placed second behind Austin’s Alfredo Crisco. However, Powers was thoroughly snubbed by the NSFL Awards Committee, with Crisco nominated for and winning S20 Punter of the Year over nominees ForThe Brand and Herbert Prohaska despite Powers outpacing the latter two in every possible statistical category. Powers did achieve recognition through her selection as the NSFC Pro Bowl Punter.

2036-37 season

Venus Powers made accuracy a major focus of her offseason. Working with a kicking coach in Philadelphia, Powers invested energy into improving her kicking mechanics with the hopes of enjoying a more productive field goal season to come. It appeared to reap dividends in a Week 1 away victory against the Colorado Yeti, where Powers started the season off strong with 2/2 on extra points, 4/4 on field goals, and 8 punts for 355 yards. Despite a similarly strong 3/3 XP and 2/2 FG mark the next week, the home opener against Orange County, the team faltered and slipped to 1-1 after a 37-27 loss. Powers’ punting game also suffered, hitting the ball seven times for a wretched 285 yards and 40.7 average. A similarly heartbreaking home loss the next week against Baltimore saw one of Venus’s finest career games to this point - 3/3 on extra points, 3/3 on field goals, and seven punts for 385 yards, 3 inside the 20 and with a 55 yard average. The perfect streak continued in the 30-24 loss to Yellowknife in Week 4, with Powers kicking all three extra point attempts and the sole field goal accurately, as well as 297 yards in the punting game on only 6 attempts.

The next three weeks saw loss after loss for Philadelphia - to the Butchers away, the Outlaws at home, and then at the Second Line. Once again taking the league lead in punting yards, Powers chipped in 264, 231, and 334 yard games and made all 5 extra point attempts; however, she missed her first field goal of the season in Week 5, going 5/6 for the three week span. Her fortunes improved Week 8, as did her team’s. In a 19-10 victory over Colorado, their second of the season, the Liberty relied on Powers to work her magic in a tight game, and she delivered, sinking the sole extra point attempts and all four field goals, one of which was a 57 yarder tying the franchise record for the longest field goal. She also punted 6 times for 287, one inside the 20. The win streak continued in a 30-13 Week 9 victory over the Baltimore Hawks, although it did not go as well for Powers. Despite hitting her only field goal attempt of the day, she missed her first ever NSFL extra point on four attempts and also punted 8 times for only 353 at a meager 44.1 clip.

The team’s meager playoff hopes were dashed in a must win game against the Butchers, a game they lost 17-7 at home. Powers only attempted one extra point and punted 8 times for 355 yards. An even more embarrassing score was to come in a 40-6 drubbing against Yellowknife, which officially ended any chance of making the playoffs. For the first time in her career, Powers was held off the scoreboard entirely, with no field goal attempts and a missed extra point paired with 8 punts and only 322 yards. The morale of the team, and of Powers personally, hit a low after this stretch, but they resolved to close out the rest of the season and look forward to brighter days ahead. A close 15-13 loss to the Sabercats at home the next week, and one final loss to the Copperheads to the tune of 30-16, put the Liberty in the position of the league’s worst record. Powers went 1/2 on extra points and 3/3 on field goals to end the season rather ingloriously, although 505 and 362 yard punting games and another 57 yard field goal helped to soften the blow.

With the Sarasota Sailfish and Honolulu Hahalua being formed in the S22 to accommodate the league’s new expansion, each team was allowed to protect seven of its own players before the expansion draft. Powers was not initially protected by the Liberty but was told that she would be their first additional protection if someone else was picked up first in the draft. However, Powers herself would be the first Liberty player poached in the draft at the 14th overall pick by the Hahalua. She inked a 3 year, $6 million extension soon after arriving in Honolulu with mutual options on all three contract years and another NTC specifically targeted towards the Butchers. Powers received recognition for her 2036 season, earning a Pro Bowl nod for both the kicker and punter positions in the NSFC. Significantly, she also narrowly edged out Alex Dasistwirklichseinnachname to earn her first Punter of the Year award.

2037-38 season

Powers spent the offseason in transition, moving to a new house near Honolulu after the contract extension and training in new athletic facilities to increase her endurance. Even before the season Powers was now widely seen as the best punter in the league, battling only the aging corpse of Crisco.

The 2037-38 campaign was another rough year for Powers’ squad, who went 4-9 in their first year of contention, good for last place in the ASFC and the third worst record in the league behind the Chicago Butchers and the Baltimore Hawks. With the second lowest scoring offense of the year behind only the lowly Butchers, the Hahalua did not give Powers many opportunities to score, and this is reflected in her stat line. She only attempted 19 extra points for the entire year and made them all, a career low output, as well as making 15 of 16 field goal attempts, also a new low volume in both categories. However, the punting side of the field is where Powers shined once more. Despite a new career low punting yardage of 4003 yards, narrowly missing out on the top three, Powers was second in the league in punt efficiency with a career high 48.2 average and once again killer with ball placement, tying for second in the league on punts inside the 20. For her efforts, she was nominated for the Pro Bowl Punter spot for the third straight year, albeit in a different conference, and won the ISFL Punter of the Year award for the second season in a row.

2038-39 season

Off the heels of two consecutive Punter of the Year awards, Venus Powers entered her fourth season in the newly rebranded ISFL as the premier kicker and punter of the league. Powers again focused her offseason training on leg endurance.

As per usual, Powers’ team missed the playoffs. With the new 16 game schedule in place for the first time, the Hahalua nearly reached .500 with a 7-9, still only good for fifth place in the brutal ASFC over the San Jose Sabercats. Although Honolulu still only ranked eighth in league in scoring offense, Powers was able to attempt a career high 35 extra points and made all 35 of them for a 100% accuracy rate. Field goal attempts were the same dismal results as always, with 21 completions on 24 attempts for an 87.5% accuracy rating, down from the previous two years. But as always, Venus Powers shined in the punting department. Once again she led the league in punting yards, with 5144 on 110 attempts, a 46.8 average punt distance and 22 punts landing inside the 20. In the offseason, Powers received her fourth straight Pro Bowl nod for punter. She came one vote short of a threepeat but was beaten out for Punter of the Year by Sam Sidekick. She activated her contract option in free agency with full intention to sign back with the Hahalua; one day later, she became the franchise’s first long term contract with a 9 year deal worth $36 million and a full no trade clause.

2039-40 season

Venus Powers’ fifth season was a change in the status quo. For the first time in her ISFL career, she was not in contention for Punter of the Year. She punted 91 times for 4350 yards and only 12 punts inside the 20; her efficiency clip of 47.8 tied her rookie year for the second most efficient season thus far, but her below average accuracy and strength of competition did not gain her any buzz in the punting department. However, Season 24 was also the season in which Powers’ kicking finally came into its own. For the first time in her career, and for only the fifth time in ISFL history, Powers did not miss a single kick - nailing all 32 extra point attempts and all 29 field goals, the latter a career high. Powers won her first Kicker of the Year award in a nearly unanimous vote and was elected to the Pro Bowl for the fifth consecutive season.

The Honolulu Hahalua as a whole played well, going 8-8 behind a stingy young defense and an offense churning through rookie running back Nicholas Ayers and quarterback Luke Skywalker. Despite the rosters’ general inexperience and youth, they faced a win-and-in situation in Week 16 and just barely missed out on the highly competitive ASFC playoff scene. In the off-season, expansion once again came to the league, and with the additions of the New York Silverbacks and Berlin Fire Salamanders, Powers was once again left off the protection list by the Hahalua. As before, she was promised that she would be the first additional protection once another player was claimed. When Jack Banks was taken with the first overall pick of the expansion draft, Powers was protected by the Hahalua, avoiding having to relocate for the second time in five seasons.

Professional career statistics

Career statistics Extra Points Field Goals Punting
Season Team Games XPM XPA XP% FGM FGA FG% <20 20-29 30-39 40-49 50+ Lng Punts Yards Avg In20 Lng
2033 (S18) Seawolves 2 2 2 100 2 3 66.7 0/0 1/1 1/1 0/1 0/0 37 11 422 38.4 0 48
2034 (S19) Pythons 14 39 42 92.9 21 24 87.5 0/0 6/6 8/9 7/9 0/0 47 - - - - -
2035 (S20) Liberty 13 23 23 100 23 29 79.3 1/1 5/5 11/11 5/9 1/3 56 92 4401 47.8 16 71
2036 (S21) Liberty 13 23 26 88.5 23 24 95.8 0/0 6/6 9/10 6/6 2/2 57 93 4335 46.6 21 73
2037 (S22) Hahalua 13 19 19 100 15 16 93.8 3/3 5/5 4/4 3/4 0/0 46 83 4003 48.2 17 75
2038 (S23) Hahalua 16 35 35 100 21 24 87.5 2/2 4/4 8/8 7/10 0/0 48 110 5144 46.8 22 73
2039 (S24) Hahalua 16 32 32 100 29 29 100 0/0 10/10 7/7 9/9 3/3 54 91 4350 47.8 12 68
2040 (S25) Hahalua 16 49 49 100 35 36 97.2 0/0 11/11 11/11 13/14 0/0 46 88 3974 45.2 10 75
2041 (S26) Hahalua 16 39 41 95.1 28 30 93.3 0/0 10/10 10/10 8/9 0/1 49 108 5143 47.6 7 75
2042 (S27) Hahalua 16 44 45 97.8 32 34 94.1 3/3 11/11 8/8 7/9 3/3 52 81 3763 46.5 20 71
2043 (S28) Hahalua 16 29 29 100 31 35 88.6 3/3 5/5 11/12 7/7 5/8 54 81 3711 45.8 30 69
2044 (S29) Hahalua 16 36 36 100 28 31 90.3 4/4 7/7 5/6 7/9 5/5 56 11 532 48.4 4 65
2045 (S30) Hahalua 16 42 42 100 29 35 82.9 5/5 7/8 6/7 8/11 3/4 53 - - - - -
Career PHI/HON 167 371 377 98.4 294 323 91.0 21/21 81/82 90/94 80/97 22/29 57 469 22233 47.4 88 75

Professional playoff statistics

Career statistics Extra Points Field Goals Punting
Season Team Games XPM XPA XP% FGM FGA FG% <20 20-29 30-39 40-49 50+ Lng Punts Yards Avg In20 Lng
2034 (S19) Pythons 1 2 2 100 1 1 100 0/0 0/0 1/1 0/0 0/0 39 - - - - -
2040 (S25) Hahalua 1 0 0 - 2 2 100 0/0 1/1 0/0 1/1 0/0 40 9 397 44.1 1 57
2042 (S27) Hahalua 2 5 5 100 6 6 100 0/0 0/0 3/3 2/2 1/1 50 8 355 44.4 4 60
2043 (S28) Hahalua 1 1 1 100 1 1 100 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/0 1/1 51 7 336 48.0 2 65
Career Hahalua 4 6 6 100 9 9 100 0/0 1/1 3/3 3/3 2/2 51 24 1088 45.3 7 65

Achievements and records

Collegiate

2031 All-MWC First Team

2032 All-MWC Second Team

2033 All-MWC First Team

2033 All-MWC Special Teams Player of the Year

2033 All-American

2033 Lou Graza Award

2033 Vlade Award

School record, field goals completed (82)

School record, field goal percentage (91.1%)

School record, single season field goals completed (33)

NCAA record, single season field goals completed (33)

Professional

2035 NSFC Pro Bowler - Punter

2036 NSFC Pro Bowler - Punter

2036 NSFC Pro Bowler - Kicker

2036 ISFL Punter of the Year

2037 ASFC Pro Bowler - Punter

2037 ISFL Punter of the Year

2038 ASFC Pro Bowler - Punter

2039 ISFL Kicker of the Year

2039 ASFC Pro Bowler - Kicker

2040 ISFL Kicker of the Year

2040 ASFC Pro Bowler - Kicker

ISFL Record - Most Consecutive Games w/o a Missed Kick (29)

ISFL Record - Most Consecutive Kicks w/o a Miss (133)

ISFL 4th all-time FGM (294)

ISFL 4th all-time FGA (323)

ISFL 9th all-time FG% (91.0%)

ISFL 9th all-time most XPM (371)

ISFL 10th all-time most XPA (377)

ISFL 8th all-time punts (838)

ISFL 9th all-time YDS (39356)

ISFL 8th all-time punts inside 20 (159)

ISFL 6th all-time points (1253)

ISFL Hall of Fame