A blocked field goal is recorded as a miss in the official statistics sheet.
0 points... because it was blocked...
He is typically called the Place Kicker
no, the kicker gets credited with the pat, there is no stat that credits the offense with the extra point
If you're SMU in the 2010 season, the answer is an unbelievable 56%.
In the NFL, if a team blocks an extra point attempt, they can return it for a touchdown and score two points. The opposing team cannot score any points on a blocked extra point attempt.
yes
Ravens' Field Goal KickerSteve Hauschka was the place kicker until November 17, 2009, when the Ravens released him the day after Hauschka missed a field goal and had an extra point attempt blocked in the Ravens' 16-0 victory over the Cleveland Browns on Monday Night Football.
offense
A blocked extra point attempt that is subsequently returned by the defensive team is not considered a touchdown because the play is classified as a continuation of the extra point attempt rather than a new play. In this scenario, the defensive team can only score two points by successfully returning the blocked kick to their end zone, not a touchdown. A touchdown can only be scored during a regular play, while an extra point attempt is a separate situation with its own scoring rules.
It doesn't matter that it is a blocked extra point or an interception or a fumble recovery, if either team scores by possessing the ball in their end zone, it is a 'two-point conversion.'
It depends on the scale. Some schools count on a 4 point scale and some count on a 5 point scale. If you take an AP or advanced placement class, you get an extra point. Regardless it is a high grade point.
If overtime is sudden death, there would be no extra point. The game would end when the touchdown is scored. If overtime is based on time, and not sudden death, the penalty would be assessed on the kickoff