Rich Camarillo

Richard Jon Camarillo (born November 29, 1959) is an American former football punter who played for 16 seasons in the National Football League (NFL) for the New England Patriots (1981–1987), the Los Angeles Rams (1988), the Phoenix Cardinals (1989–1993), the Houston Oilers (1994–1995), and the Oakland Raiders (1996).

Rich Camarillo
No. 3, 16
Position:Punter
Personal information
Born: (1959-11-29) November 29, 1959
Whittier, California, U.S.
Height:5 ft 11 in (1.80 m)
Weight:193 lb (88 kg)
Career information
High school:El Rancho
(Pico Rivera, California)
College:Cerritos
Washington
Undrafted:1981
Career history
 * Offseason and/or practice squad member only
Career highlights and awards
Career NFL statistics
Punts:1,027
Punting yards:43,895
Punting average:42.7
Longest punt:76
Inside 20:279
Player stats at PFR

He played college football for the Cerritos Falcons, where he earned All-American honors. He then transferred and played for the Washington Huskies (1979–1980), where he was selected as a member of the Huskies All-Century team.

Professional career

A consistently solid, dependable punter during his 16 NFL seasons, Camarillo led the league in punting yards twice (1985, 1994), net yard average three times (1983, 1991 and 1992), and gross yards per punt once (1989).[1] He also led the league in 1994 with 35 footballs inside the 20-yard line. With the Patriots, Camarillo made a championship appearance in Super Bowl XX, and ended up punting often as his team was blown out 46–10 by the Chicago Bears.[2] Camarillo punted 6 times for 263 yards (43.8 average), with 225 net yards (37.5 average), one touchback, and one punt in the 20, including a then Super Bowl record 62-yard punt that planted the Bears back at their own 4-yard line, this record being broken by another Patriots punter, Ryan Allen, who kicked a 64-yard punt in Super Bowl XLIX. However, Chicago still managed to drive a Super Bowl-record 96 yards and score a touchdown anyway.

Camarillo finished his career with 1,027 punts for 43,895 yards (42.7 average) and 279 punts inside the 20. Upon his retirement, that mark stood as the most in NFL history. Camarillo also had a career net average of 36.0 yards per punt. He was named to the NFL's all-rookie team in 1981. He was also selected to five Pro Bowl games after the 1983, 1989, 1991, 1992, and 1993 seasons, with Ray Guy and Shane Lechler sharing the record with seven appearances each as of 2016. Camarillo had a punt returned for a touchdown in his first NFL game on October 25, 1981. Fourteen seasons and 876 punts later on October 30, 1994, would be the next time one of his punts was returned for a score. He also owns the NFL's record for highest net avg. in a season with a mark of 39.6 yards. Camarillo's 44.5 yards per punt still stands as the highest punting average in NFL playoff history. He was also selected seven times (first or second-team) All-Pro, in his career. He was also named to the team of the 1990s by CNNSI. Camarillo was a nominee for induction into the NFL Pro Football Hall of Fame, class of 2009.

NFL career statistics

Legend
Led the league
Bold Career high

Regular season

Year Team Punting
GPPuntsYdsNet YdsLngAvgNet AvgBlkIns20TB
1981NWE 9471,9591,5707541.733.40129
1982NWE 9492,1401,8497643.737.70105
1983NWE 16813,6153,0037044.637.102511
1984NWE 7482,0201,6666142.134.70127
1985NWE 16923,9533,0957543.033.601613
1986NWE 16893,7463,0416442.133.13167
1987NWE 12622,4891,9967340.131.71148
1988RAM 9401,5791,3945739.534.90112
1989PHO 15763,2982,8485843.437.50216
1990PHO 16672,8652,5076342.837.40165
1991PHO 16763,4452,9926045.338.91197
1992PHO 15542,3172,1367342.939.60232
1993PHO 16733,1892,7626143.737.80238
1994HOU 16964,1153,4975842.936.40359
1995HOU 16773,1652,7176041.134.81268
1996OAK 100000.00.0000
Career2051,02743,89537,0737642.735.96279107

Playoffs

Year Team Punting
GPPuntsYdsNet YdsLngAvgNet AvgBlkIns20TB
1982NWE 152181785843.635.6010
1985NWE 4218895656242.325.7133
1986NWE 194523776050.241.9002
Career6351,5591,1206244.531.1145

After football

Camarillo coached the Ahwatukee Little League All-stars from Phoenix, Arizona in the 2006 Little League World Series in Williamsport, Pennsylvania. His son, Eric, was a member of that team.

References

  1. "Rich Camarillo Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Draft, College". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved March 22, 2024.
  2. "Super Bowl XX - Chicago Bears vs. New England Patriots - January 26th, 1986". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved November 16, 2023.
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