Former Bills kicker Steve Christie had Super Bowl record broken… twice

Boooooooooooooo

Poor 49ers. They lost 25-22 in over to the Chiefs in Super Bowl 58.

In western New York, most of the sad tears were probably shed for Steve Christie.

The former Bills kicker previously held the NFL’s record for the longest kick in Super Bowl history. That one was from 54 yards.

Unfortunately, that 31-year record was not only snapped, but it was twice in Las Vegas. First, Niners rookie Jake Moody took the honor for about an hour. He converted from 55 yards.

Later on in the Super Bowl, the Chiefs’ Harrison Butker decided 57 yards sounds good too. He converted.

At least Christie’s record stuck around for a little longer than Moody’s…

All three attempts can be found below:

Steve Christie named ‘Legend of the Game’ for Bills vs. Cowboys

Steve Christie named ‘Legend of the Game’ for #Bills vs. #Cowboys:

Steve Christie will be back in western New York on Sunday and will be honored in Orchard Park.

The Buffalo Bills have announced that Christie will be back at Highmark Stadium and highlighted during the team’s game against the Dallas Cowboys in Week 15. He will be the “Legend of the Game.”

Christie holds a place in a Bills history no one else has reached. The former kicker is Buffalo’s all-time scoring leader with 1,011 points.

The Ontario, Canada, native was with the Bills from 1992-2001. He was part of the team’s famous 32-point comeback win over the Houston Oilers.

Christie told the team’s website he still has fond memories of the kicking difficulties he had during his career in Buffalo.

“There were games where we’d go for an extra point into the scoreboard end and the flags would be blowing in both directions,” Christie said. “When kickers would come in from Los Angeles or Miami or wherever, especially later in the year, we just watched the other kickers warm up and say, yeah, they’re gonna have fun today.”

Christie also owns the longest field goal ever made in Super Bowl history, hitting a 54-yarder in Super Bowl XXVIII.

Prior to kickoff, Christie will be one of the first ones out of the tunnel at Highmark Stadium. He’ll pump Bills Mafia up just ahead of the opening kick and team introductions.

Get to your seats early to see Christie’s acknowledgement.

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Bills K Tyler Bass: ‘It’s about what you do after a miss’

Entering today’s game vs. the New York Jets, Bills kicker, Tyler Bass, had had an up and down rookie season.

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Entering today’s game vs. the New York Jets, Bills kicker Tyler Bass, was having an up and down rookie season.

Bass started his NFL career 6 for 9 (67%,) with one of his misses coming before halftime last week vs. the Chiefs, in a game where his team really could have used the points. Others came in his first-career game, Buffalo’s season opener against the Jets, which were near chip-shot territory.

After releasing veteran Stephen Hauschka and handing the job to Bass, some were starting to wonder had Buffalo made the right move, entrusting the kicking duties to a rookie on a team that is expected to compete now.

In Week 7, Bass did his best to silence those critics.

After missing a 48-yard kick at the start of the game, Bass nailed a 53-yarder and was off and running.

Bass finished the day 6 for 8, accounting for all 18 of the Bills points leading them to the victory. After the 18-10 win, Bass had a very levelheaded approach to it all despite having just attempted eight field goals.

“It’s really not about how many you make,” Bass told the media via a Zoom call after the game. “It’s about what you do after a miss, after something goes wrong. Anyone can handle stuff when things are easy, it’s just about… when something goes wrong, it’s about how you handle that. You don’t let it define you… you just trust everything you’d done in practice that week and you just put it to show.”

The CBS broadcast crew was also heard poking fun at Bass during the game for wearing eye black under only one of his eyes. Turns out part of the reason is as a homage to his grandmother.

Regardless of the broadcasters, confidence was something Bass was searching for on Sunday and perhaps he found it.

“It’s a huge confidence boost to get out there and get the live reps,” Bass said.

While Bass was happy to see the live reps, one can be sure that he did not expect to see that many opportunities.

The kicker set a new Bills franchise record with eight FG attempts and tied Steve Christie’s franchise record for field goals made in a game at six. That was set all the way back in 1996.

While the Bills schedule doesn’t get any easier facing the Patriots and Seahawks before their bye week, the team will certainly be relying on Bass to make big kicks for them in the second half of the season.

If Sunday is any indication, perhaps despite a slow start, the rookie is up for the challenge.

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