Pete Gogolak was bright spot during Giants’ dark days of 1960s

Recently celebrated at “A Night with Legends,” Pete Gogolak was a bright spot for the New York Giants during their dark time in the 1960s.

Pete Gogolak is well-known to old-time New York Giants fans but not to the younger generations.

The Hungarian-born former placekicker who broke barriers in the 1960s with first the Buffalo Bills and then the Giants is now 82 years old and recently spoke about his storied career at an event commemorating the team’s 100th season.

“I’m very proud to be part of the Giant family,” Gogolak said. “It’s a great organization and it’s great to be back.”

The Giants’ Ring of Honor member downplayed his role as both the NFL’s first soccer-style kicker and as one of the first players to move from the AFL to the NFL in what would become a war for players between the two leagues.

Gogolak was a two-time AFL champion with the Bills from 1964-65 before coming over to the Giants in 1966. He played until 1974, and his 646 points scored is still a Giants franchise record.

“I’m just proud that I lasted that long, nine years, as a kicker with one team,” Gogolak said. “That’s a pretty good, good thing.”

Gogolak, whose brother Charlie was also a kicker in both leagues, was an outlier with his style and felt he could be a success as a specialist in the NFL.

“When I saw Lou Groza, the old Cleveland kicker, kick the ball straight on, I was 15 years old and said to my father, ‘I think I can do better than that and I can kick a ball from the side like a soccer player.’ I should have patented this kick. I should have got a patent and a quarter every time people come in and did it because now everybody is kicking this way,” he said.

Giants owner Wellington Mara agreed. He broke the NFL-AFL “gentleman’s agreement” regarding poaching players to sign Gogolak. The Giants’ kicking game was pathetic at the time, and the team was on the brink of disaster.

In 1965, the Giants used four different players at kicker and converted just four of 25 attempts. Gogolak rectified that ineptitude in 1966 by hitting on 16 of 28 field goal attempts and converting 29 of 31 point-after tries.

Unfortunately, 1966 would be the Giants’ worst season ever as they finished with a 1-12-1 record.

[lawrence-related id=728751,728726,728743]

Throwback Thursday: Giants, Oilers meet for first time in 1973

In the first Throwback Thursday of the season, we travel in time to 1973 when the New York Giants and Houston Oilers met for the first time.

The New York Giants have only met the Tennessee Titans 12 times since the NFL and AFL merged in 1970. The first meeting occurred on September 16, 1973, when the Titans were the Houston Oilers. It would be the only meeting between the clubs until they met again in 1982.

The 1973 meeting was the season opener and took place at Yankee Stadium. It would be the Giants’ next-to-last home game at The House That Ruth Built in the Bronx. They moved to the Yale Bowl in New Haven, Connecticut the next week.

The move was not being received well by Giant fans as the game drew just under 58,000 fans — the lowest attendance in five years and the first non-sellout since 1960.

The Giants took a 27-0 halftime lead on two Pete Gogolak field goals, two one-yard rushing touchdowns from running back Ron Johnson and a 14-yard pass play from Norm Snead to Don Herrmann.

The Oilers turned a pair of interceptions into touchdowns in the third quarter to narrow the score to 27-14. The Giants closed out the scoring with a one-yard plunge from running back Joe Orduna to ice the game, 34-14.

The win would be only one of two the Giants would record on the season. They finished the year at 2-11-1. The Oilers didn’t fare that well, either, going 1-13 on the season.

As a result, the Oilers would earn the top pick in the 1974 NFL draft but could don’t capitalize on it as they had dealt it earlier in the year to the Dallas Cowboys in exchange for defensive end Tody Smith and wide receiver Billy Parks.

Dallas ended up drafting Tennessee State defensive end Ed “Too Tall” Jones with that No. 1 pick and then used the other selection they got in the deal — a 1975 third rounder — to take quarterback/punter Danny White. Ouch.

The Giants held the third overall pick in 1974 and selected Ohio State guard John Hicks.

[lawrence-related id=696745,696748,696736]

[listicle id=696717]