Kicker Football Cards, page 10
Image | Set | # | Card Title/Players | Pro Team | Position | College | Honors | Notes | Grades available at Nearmint Sports Cards |
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1967 Philadelphia | 89 | Bruce Gossett | Los Angeles Rams | kicker | Richmond | ||||
1967 Philadelphia | 100 | Fred Cox | Minnesota Vikings | kicker | Pittsburgh | Error card "Its" is misspelled above the cartoon on the back of this card. |
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1967 Philadelphia | 134 | Sam Baker | Philadelphia Eagles | fullback, kicker | Oregon State | Double print | |||
1967 Philadelphia | 149 | Mike Clark | Pittsburgh Steelers | kicker, end | Texas A and M | Double print | exmt | ||
1967 Philadelphia | 158 | Jim Bakken | St. Louis Cardinals | kicker | Wisconsin | Bakken kicked 7 field goals in a game against the Steelers in 1967, breaking the NFL record. The record stood until Rick Beronis broke it in 2007. | exmt | ||
1967 Philadelphia | 165 | Jackie Smith | St. Louis Cardinals | tight end, kicker | Northwestern Louisiana | Pro Football Hall of Fame 1994 | Rookie card | PSA 8 | |
1967 Philadelphia | 174 | Tommy Davis | San Francisco 49ers | kicker, punter | LSU | exmt | |||
1967 Philadelphia | 182 | Charlie Gogolak | Washington Redskins | kicker | Princeton | Rookie card, double print Gogolak was the first placekicker ever to be chosen in the first round of the NFL draft. The Redskins took him with the 6th overall pick in 1966. |
nm oc | ||
1968 O-Pee-Chee CFL | 27 | Moe Racine | Ottawa Rough Riders | tackle, kicker | Cornwall | Canadian Football Hall of Fame 2014 | |||
1968 O-Pee-Chee CFL | 44 | Tommy Joe Coffey | Hamilton Tiger-Cats | end, kicker | West Texas State | Canadian Football Hall of Fame 1977 | |||
1968 O-Pee-Chee CFL | 124 | Ted Gerela | BC Lions | kicker | Washington State | ||||
1968 Topps | 8 | Jim Bakken | St. Louis Cardinals | kicker | Wisconsin | ||||
1968 Topps | 26 | Wayne Walker | Detroit Lions | linebacker, kicker | Idaho | PSA 9 | |||
1968 Topps | 32 | Sam Baker | Philadelphia Eagles | fullback, kicker | Oregon State | ||||
1968 Topps | 54 | Bobby Walden | Minnesota Vikings | kicker, halfback | Georgia | nm+ | |||
1968 Topps | 70 | Dick Van Raaphorst | Cincinnati Bengals | kicker | Ohio State | Rookie card Van Raaphorst's son, Jeff Van Raaphorst, played quarterback for the Atlanta Falcons in 1987. |
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1968 Topps | 86 | Jackie Smith | St. Louis Cardinals | tight end, kicker | Northwestern Louisiana | Pro Football Hall of Fame 1994 | PSA 9 | ||
1968 Topps | 107 | Fred Cox | Minnesota Vikings | kicker | Pittsburgh | ||||
1968 Topps | 123 | Mike Mercer | Buffalo Bills | kicker | Arizona State | Mercer scored the first field goal in Super Bowl history, a 31-yarder for the Chiefs in Super Bowl I. | exmt | ||
1968 Topps | 142 | George Blanda | Oakland Raiders | quarterback, kicker | Kentucky | Pro Football Hall of Fame 1981, Titans Ring of Honor 1999 | |||
1968 Topps | 165 | Tommy Davis | San Francisco 49ers | kicker, punter | LSU | ||||
1968 Topps Test Team Photos | 4 | Miami Dolphins | Miami Dolphins | This card pictures the 1967 Dolphins. Sadly, it might be the worst team photo ever. The coaches in front dominate the photo, and all you can see of the players in back is their heads. Only about half of the players' numbers are visible. | |||||
1968 Topps Test Team Photos | 11 | Dallas Cowboys | Dallas Cowboys | This card pictures the 1967 Cowboys team. Strangely, the background is blanked out on the image, and the players appear to be floating in space. You can see the original image here. The 1967 Cowboys finished 9-5 and lost to the Green Bay Packers in the "Ice Bowl." The 1968 Cowboys went 12-2 and lost to the Cleveland Browns in the divisional round of the playoffs. | |||||
1968 Topps Test Team Photos | 12 | Buffalo Bills | Buffalo Bills | The Bills finished 1-12-1 in 1968, worst in the NFL and AFL. They chose O.J. Simpson with the first overall draft pick in 1969. | |||||
1968 Topps Test Team Photos | 17 | Oakland Raiders | Oakland Raiders | The Raiders arranged themselves in numerical order for this photo, with one exception: number 00, Jim Otto, the Hall of Fame center, is in the center of the front row. |