The Jaguars’ rookie kicker drilled a 67-yard field goal against the Titans at EverBank Stadium, officially recording the longest outdoor field goal in NFL history and the second-longest regular-season kick ever. Outdoors. At sea level. No dome, no thin air, no gimmicks.
Earlier this season, the 22-year-old Arkansas product hit a 68-yarder, and now he holds both of the two longest regular-season field goals in league history. That’s not a hot streak. That’s a résumé.
67 yards out and hitting the net is WILD pic.twitter.com/GSaxcvVLBE
— NFL Memes (@Nflmemes) January 4, 2026
The kick came during a 41–7 Jaguars blowout of Tennessee, a game that locked up the AFC South title for Jacksonville. Trevor Lawrence did his part with three touchdown passes, the defense handled business, and then Little provided the moment everyone will remember.
From 67 yards, the kick was clean. No wobble. Plenty of distance. Dead center. The kind of kick where the crowd reacts halfway through because it’s obvious it’s good before it ever reaches the posts.
Fans stayed on their feet, chanting his name, one even holding a sign with Little’s face in the middle of a teal sea. Not bad for a rookie kicker in December.
On the season, Little is now 28-for-32, good for 87%, while casually extending what “field goal range” means for an NFL offense. Midfield is no longer a discussion point — it’s a legitimate option.
Jacksonville didn’t just clinch a division Sunday. They may have locked in one of the league’s most reliable — and dangerous — weapons. When your kicker can change games from distances most teams won’t even consider, it alters how opponents defend late halves and close games.


