After the third game of his rookie season in 2024, Joshua Karty could not have felt better.
His field goal in the final seconds gave the Rams a victory over the rival San Francisco 49ers.
A year later, Karty felt different going into Week 4.
Last Sunday, his potential winning field-goal attempt against the defending Super Bowl-champion Philadelphia Eagles was blocked and returned for a touchdown.
“I’m honestly never going to forget that moment my whole life,” Karty said. “But I will say I’ll learn from it, practice getting better and do my part to try and make kicks.”
Karty has made six of eight field-goal attempts, including his first four against the Eagles last Sunday in Philadelphia. But the Eagles blocked his next two attempts.
On Sunday against the Indianapolis Colts at SoFi Stadium, Karty will attempt to regain his rhythm for field-goal and extra-point attempts.
And continue his success on kickoffs.
The NFL tweaked kickoff rules this season, awarding the receiving team the ball at the 35-yard line after a touchback.
Karty then began working on a technique that would cause problems for kick returners.
“I’m just going out and I’m trying to hit a knuckleball,” he said, pointing to the trouble Eagles players experienced attempting to field his kicks. “If I do everything I can to hit a great ball, and I get a little fortunate with the bounces, there’s nothing the returner should be able to do.
“But you have to rely on a little bit of luck.”
Karty began experimenting during offseason workouts, trying 10 different styles, he said. Some he scrapped immediately because it was clear it would not be effective.
“But this one I tried and it worked,” he said.
Karty arrived at his formula for success by thinking back on his worst kicks in high school and at Stanford.
“Whenever I would shank a kickoff, what was that feeling?” he said. “So I would try to replicate that and I was able to find something that worked.”
Eagles kick returners struggled mightily to handle Karty’s knuckleball kickoffs.
“Josh has been a real weapon being able to hit some of those liners or those squibs, however you want to really be able to look at it,” coach Sean McVay said, adding, “The field position was a big advantage for us the majority of the day because of that.”