UFL kicker smashes 64-yard field goal: Watch Jake Bates’ improbable kick that almost matched an NFL record

The United Football League kicked off its inaugural season on Saturday and a kicker was the star of the show.

That kicker was Jake Bates and he pulled off easily the biggest play of the weekend when he kicked a 64-yard field goal with just three seconds left to play to give his Michigan Panthers an 18-16 win over the St. Louis Battlehawks.

The kick by Bates might go down as one of the most improbable field goals of all-time. The kick against the Battlehawks was his first field goal attempt since HIGH SCHOOL and he drilled it from a distance that even NFL kickers struggle with. In the entire history of the NFL, there have only been two field goals of 64 yards or more.

The drama on Saturday started after the Battlehawks took a 16-15 lead after scoring a touchdown with just 49 seconds left to play. On the ensuing kickoff, Michigan’s Marcus Simms returned the ball out to his own 35-yard line.

It was an improbable kick for a multitude of reasons. For one, it was Bates’ first field goal attempt since high school. The 24-year-old started his college career as a soccer player at Central Arkansas before transferring to Texas State, where he served as a kickoff specialist. After two seasons with the Bobcats, Bates transferred to Arkansas, where he also served as a kickoff specialist for the Razorbacks.

Due to his career as a kickoff specialist, Bates never got a chance to kick a field goal in college. After leaving Arkansas, he actually went to training camp with the Houston Texans in 2023, but he only saw action in one preseason game, before losing the job to Ka’imi Fairbairn.

The other improbable part of Bates’ kick is that he actually made it TWICE. Bates hit the first one down the middle, but it didn’t count because the Battlehawks had called a timeout before he got Michigan got the snap off. You can check out that entire sequence below.

In a bizarre coincidence, Tucker’s kick came at Ford Field, which is where Bates hit his kick on Saturday. The Ravens kicker set the NFL record for longest field goal when he hit a game-winner against the Lions that hit off the crossbar before going in. As for Prater, his kick came in Denver while he was playing for the Broncos.

The Panthers win over the Battlehawks was just the second game in UFL history, but no matter what happens from here on out, there’s a good chance that Bates is going to hold the record for longest field goal as long as the league exists.

Read original CBS Sports article.