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David Buehler

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David Buehler
refer to caption
Buehler during a Cowboys game
Dallas Cowboys
Career information
College:Southern California
NFL draft:2009 / round: 5 / pick: 172
Career history
Career highlights and awards
  • First-team All-Pac 10 honors (2008)
Stats at Pro Football Reference Edit this at Wikidata

David Buehler (born February 5, 1987) is an American football kicker for the Dallas Cowboys.[1] He played college football for the University of Southern California (USC Trojans).

High school years

Buehler attended Canyon High School in Anaheim, California where he lettered in football, volleyball, golf, and track. In football, he played linebacker and running back.[2] He wore jersey #37 and was an All-Century League football selection as a senior. David Buehler graduated from Canyon High School in 2005.

College career

Buehler attended Santa Ana College, a junior college in Santa Ana, California, for the 2005-2006 school year and was a student and a letterman in football. In football, he played kicker, safety, goal-line running back and a gunner on punts.[2] He was named to the All-Mission Conference National Division first team. At the junior college scouting combine he had the fastest 40-yard dash time. USC coaches saw Buehler's potential at multiple positions, and head coach Pete Carroll offered him a scholarship in the summer of 2006.[2]

USC Trojans

Buehler leaving the field after a 2007 USC game

Buehler was recruited to USC for multiple positions, and in his first season with the Trojans (2006) was designated as a back-up placekicker, fullback and safety while playing coverage on special teams. He appeared in 11 games, primarily on special teams. Because he had a longer range than the Trojans' starting kicker, Mario Danelo, Buehler was used as for one, long field goal attempt, a successful 49 yard kick against California; it was the Trojans' longest field goal since 1998. Buehler had not expected to kick during the game, he made the kick while wearing the heavier equipment of a fullback and tied the score at 9 as the Trojans went on their way to a conference-clinching victory.[2] He had one kickoff during the 2006 Stanford game and, after starting kicker Troy Van Blarcom was dismissed from the team for academic reasons at the end of the regular season, Buehler handled kickoff duties during the 2007 Rose Bowl.[3] Of his 8 kickoffs that season, 6 pinned opponents within the 20-yard line, with 3 touchbacks.

Days after the 2007 Rose Bowl, Danelo, the two-year starting placekicker died in an accident.[4] Danelo had been expected to start during the 2007 season; with his death and the dismissal of Van Blarcom the previous month, Buehler became the starting kicker and dropped his other positions.[2][3] Buehler started all of the 2007 season: in 13 games, he successfully made 16-of-19 field goals and 52-of-54 extra points, plus he made 3 tackles. Thirty-five of his 84 kickoffs kept opponents within their 20-yard line, with 18 touchbacks.

Buehler started all 13 games as a senior in the 2008 season, making 9 of 13 field goals and 65 of 66 extra points.[5] Three of his four missed field goals during the season came during his final regular season game against rival UCLA, where he missed all three attempts in a 28–7 Trojans victory. Buehler blamed himself for trying to do a different routine before his final regular-season game.[6] He was able to bounce back during the 2009 Rose Bowl, making his one field goal attempt and successfully kicking all five extra points in a 38–24 victory over Penn State.[5]

Buehler finished the 2008 season with 5,976 yards on 88 kickoffs. He also registered 48 total touchbacks on those 88 kickoffs.[7]

Professional football

NFL Draft

Buehler was one of twelve USC players invited to the 2009 NFL Scouting Combine.[8] At the Combine, Buehler opted to participate in areas not required of kickers, and recorded results on strength and speed tests that were better than other regarded linebackers and offensive linemen; he recorded 25 reps of 225 pounds on the bench press test, better than USC teammate Rey Maualuga, linemen Michael Oher and Eugene Monroe, and equal to Aaron Curry, and ran 4.56 and 4.63 seconds in the 40-yard dash, better than teammates Brian Cushing and Clay Matthews III.[9][10]

Pre-draft measureables

Pre-draft measurables
Height Weight 40-yard dash 10-yard split 20-yard split Vertical jump Bench press Wonderlic
6 ft 2 in
(1.88 m)
222 lb
(101 kg)
4.57 s 1.50 s 2.62 s 37+12 in
(0.95 m)
25 reps 22
All values from NFL Combine.[citation needed]

Dallas Cowboys

He was drafted in the 5th round by the Dallas Cowboys in the 2009 NFL Draft, and the first kicker taken. He was the first USC kicker to be drafted since Cole Ford in 1995.[11] He handles the team's kickoffs and missed his only field goal attempt in the Cowboys' opening regular season game against the Redskins. He did make his only attempt (from 39 yards) in a pre-season game against Oakland on August 13, 2009.[12] He also takes the field on the kick and punt return teams.

In May, when the Dallas Cowboys' training facility collapsed during rookie mini-camp, Buehler was one of the few players injured. Standing on the sideline at the time of the collapse, he ran out a side door and was sprinting across a practice field when a pole from the structure crashed into him. The impact caused a minor concussion, gashes in his forehead and right knee, and had skin ripped off his ear; he required three stitches on his kicking knee.[13][14]

At the end of his rookie year, Buehler finished the regular season with 29 touchbacks, the most of all NFL kickers. That number also set a new franchise record for most touchbacks in a single season. The previous record was 27 by Lin Elliot in 1992.[15][16]

As of July 2010, Buehler is the only placekicker on the Cowboys roster. Previous placekicker Nick Folk was released midway through the previous season and Folk's replacement Shaun Suisham was not re-signed.

Buehler hit his career long field goal of 53 yards on November 25, 2010 against the New Orleans Saints. With 32 seconds left he also attempted one from 59 yards. Had he made it, it could have sent the game into overtime. The kick had more than enough distance, but was just barely wide-left. Buehler missed a field goal vs the Indianapolis Colts. Later in that game he made a 30yard game-winning field goal in overtime.

Buehler then missed an extra point against Arizona to blow the game for the Cowboys on Christmas 2010.

Personal

Buehler's father, John, was a shot putter for the USC Trojans. His uncle, George Buehler, played football for Stanford University and later the Oakland Raiders and Cleveland Browns; another uncle also played football at Stanford. He also has a cousin, Eric Buehler, who is enlisted in the United States Marine Corps that has served in Operation Enduring Freedom (Afghanistan).

References

  1. ^ Cowboys ban foot races because the kicker would smoke everyone, by MJD, Yahoo! Sports, July 20, 2010
  2. ^ a b c d e Gary Klein, David Buehler is giving USC a leg up, Los Angeles Times, November 8, 2008, Accessed February 2, 2009.
  3. ^ a b Garry Paskwietz, Trojans add JC kicker, WeAreSC.com, July 23, 2007, Accessed May 30, 2008.
  4. ^ Gary Klein, A university, and a city, mourn Danelo, Los Angeles Times, January 13, 2007, Accessed February 2, 2009.
  5. ^ a b David Buehler Stats, News and Photos, ESPN.com, Accessed February 2, 2009.
  6. ^ Gary Klein et al., Trojans' David Buehler kicks himself, Los Angeles Times, December 7, 2008, Accessed February 2, 2009.
  7. ^ http://www.usctrojans.com/sports/m-footbl/stats/2008-2009/teamcume.html, Accessed 2 January 2010.
  8. ^ Ted Miller, Pac-10 NFL combine invitees, ESPN.com, February 2, 2009, Accessed February 2, 2009.
  9. ^ James Wagner, David Buehler does the heavy lifting, Los Angeles Times, February 25, 2009, Accessed March 3, 2009.
  10. ^ Adam Rose, Former USC kicker David Buehler turns heads at NFL combine, Los Angeles Times, February 25, 2009, Accessed March 3, 2009.
  11. ^ Gary Klein, USC's NFL pipeline stays open on second day, Los Angeles Times, April 27, 2009, Accessed April 27, 2009.
  12. ^ http://www.nfl.com/players/davidbuehler/gamelogs?id=BUE266361, David Buehler Game Logs on NFL.com, Accessed Jan 4, 2010.
  13. ^ Tim MacMahon, David Buehler: 'My initial thought was, how many people are dead in this?', Dallas Morning News, May 2, 2009, Accessed May 7, 2009.
  14. ^ OSHA investigates tent incident at Dallas camp, Los Angeles Times, May 5, 2009, Accessed May 7, 2009.
  15. ^ http://www.star-telegram.com/332/story/1865899.html, Buehler's Big Day, Jan 3, 2010, Accessed Jan 4, 2010.
  16. ^ http://www.dallascowboys.com/multimedia/multimedia_center.cfm?id=F70B9979-E8D4-FC50-8A21691C9D6BDB13, David Buehler Touchbacks, Jan 3, 2010, Accessed Jan 4, 2010.

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