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Gogolak made 16 of 28 attempts (.571) for the Giants in 1966, but they finished at 1–12–1, the worst record in franchise history (and in pro football in 1966). Gogolak was inducted into the U.S. Army in January 1967; he had failed a physical the previous summer due to a childhood spinal injury, but standards had since been relaxed. [12]
Gogolak was one of the first "soccer style" placekickers in the NFL, along with his older brother Pete. The brothers combined to score fourteen extra points in a single game in 1966, [1] tied for the most ever, [2] in a 72–41 win over the New York Giants. Charlie made nine of ten PAT's and a game-ending field goal while Pete converted on five ...
Washington – Charlie Gogolak 37-yard field goal, Redskins 3–0. Second Quarter. Washington – Bobby Mitchell 7-yard pass from Sonny Jurgensen (Gogolak kick), Redskins 10–0. New York – Pete Gogolak 15-yard field goal, Redskins 10–3. Third Quarter. Fourth Quarter. New York – Pete Gogolak 18-yard field goal, Redskins 10–6.
Spider Lockhart 72-yard interception return (Pete Gogolak kick) Giants: Pete Gogolak 20-yard field goal 3rd: Eagles: Tom Woodeshick 54-yard rush (Sam Baker kick) Giants: Pete Gogolak 30-yard field goal Giants: Joe Morrison 12-yard pass from Fran Tarkenton (Pete Gogolak kick) 4th: Giants: Bobby Duhon 1-yard rush (Pete Gogolak kick) Eagles
He’ll also serve as an executive producer with John Requa, Glenn Ficarra and Charlie Gogolak (This Is Us), as well as Suzan Bymel, who previously exec-produced Designated Survivor with ...
Gogolak is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Charlie Gogolak (born 1944), American football player; Pete Gogolak (born 1942), ...
Gogolak – Pete Gogolak, Charlie Gogolak (brothers) Golic – Bob Golic, Mike Golic (brothers), Mike Golic Jr. (nephew of Bob, son of Mike) [55] Gore – Frank Gore (father); Frank Gore Jr. (son) [56] Gramatica – Martín Gramática, Bill Gramatica (brothers) Grange – Garland Grange, Red Grange (brothers) Green – A. J. Green, T. J. Green ...
n November 1954, 29-year-old Sammy Davis Jr. was driving to Hollywood when a car crash left his eye mangled beyond repair. Doubting his potential as a one-eyed entertainer, the burgeoning performer sought a solution at the same venerable institution where other misfortunate starlets had gone to fill their vacant sockets: Mager & Gougelman, a family-owned business in New York City that has ...