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  1. Charles Paul Gogolak (in Hungarian: Gogolák Károly Pál, born December 29, 1944) is a former American football placekicker. The sixth overall selection of the 1966 NFL Draft , Gogolak was signed out of Princeton University by the Washington Redskins , marking the first time that a placekicker was selected in the first round.

  2. 12. FGM. 52. FGA. 93. XPM. 114. XPA. 117. Checkout the latest stats for Charlie Gogolak. Get info about his position, age, height, weight, college, draft, and more on Pro-football-reference.com.

    • December 29, 1944
  3. Charlie finished his career with seven NCAA kicking records and broke his brother Pete’s record by connecting on 50 extra points without a miss. Charlie became the first placekicker selected in the first round of the NFL Draft when he was taken with the sixth overall pick by the Washington Redskins.

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  5. Dec 7, 2015 · He was the first kicker ever selected in the first round of the NFL draft, taken sixth overall by the Washington Redskins in 1966. His career was cut short due to injuries, but he played six...

  6. Longest Successful Field Goal. Charlie Gogolak kicked a career-long 32-yard field goal during the Boston Patriots 45-10 loss against the Buffalo Bills on November 1, 1970. View the most current football statistics for Charlie Gogolak, Kicker, for the Washington Redskins, Boston Patriots and New England Patriots at The Football Database.

    • December 29, 1944
  7. Charlie Gogolak Career Stats (Kicking) | StatMuse. • Redskins •. XP% 97.4. FG% 55.9. PTS. 270. Career. Overview Stats Game Log Splits Bio. Regular Season. Explore. Charlie Gogolak rookie season stats. When was Charlie Gogolak drafted? Charlie Gogolak stats in his last season. See trending. More Commanders Stats. Team Leaders. See more. PASS. 3,946.

  8. Oct 21, 2019 · Charlie Gogolak kicked six field goals in a 1965 game against Rutgers and two weeks later a record 54-yarder against Cornell, which tried to stymie him with a human pyramid — two players stood on their teammates’ shoulders. The tactic was soon outlawed.

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