by Omotosho Adeola
NASHVILLE,
Tenn. (AP) — Rob Bironas, who worked his way through odd jobs and the Arena
Football League before becoming one of the NFL's most accurate kickers, died in
a car crash. He was 36.
The former
Tennessee Titans player died Saturday night when he lost control on a curve in
his 2009 GMC Yukon Denali and crashed after 11 p.m. less than a mile from home.
Report said his SUV was speeding when it went off the
road and hit a line of trees before coming to a stop upside down in a culvert.
Bironas was
taken to Vanderbilt University Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead with out any evidence of alcohol or drugs at the scene.
The Titans
released Bironas in March after nine seasons. The Tennessean reported that
Bironas worked out for the Detroit Lions and for Tampa Bay during the
off season.
The Titans,
who play at Cincinnati, extended condolences Sunday.
The team said in a
statement "Rob made a significant impact as a player in his nine years
with the team and more importantly touched many lives in the Nashville
community off the field,".
Bironas was
the fourth most-accurate kicker in NFL history, connecting on 85.7 percent of
his kicks (239 of 279). Only David Akers made more field goals (247) between
2005 and 2013 than Bironas. For kickers with 100 or more field goals since the
1970 AFL-NFL merger, Bironas ranked third making 75.2 percent of his kicks from
40 yards or longer (94 of 125).
He finished as
the Titans' second all-time leading scorer with 1,032 points, and he set a
franchise record scoring triple digits in seven straight seasons. He also set
an NFL record in 2011 in hitting a field goal from at least 40 yards in 10
consecutive games.
Bironas made a
franchise-record 11 game-winning field goals during his career, including a
60-yarder against the Indianapolis Colts in 2006 that remains the longest field
goal in Oilers or Titans history. Bironas kicked an NFL single-game record
eight field goals in a 2007 victory over the Houston Texans, including a 29-yard
game-winner as time expired. That helped him make his only Pro Bowl, the same
year he was an Associated Press All-Pro.
He went to
Auburn and transferred to Georgia Southern, where he won a Division I-AA
national title. Bironas went to work for his father's company in Louisville,
Kentucky, and was cut by Green Bay in 2002. He played in the Arena Football
League and even the AF2 while spending time in training camps with Tampa Bay
and Pittsburgh working as a part-time security guard and other jobs while trying
to stick with an NFL team.
No comments:
Post a Comment