
As a former kicker (yeah, yeah … it was YMCA ball in 8th grade, but still), field goals always pique my interest. And you might be interested to know it’s been almost 19 years since a pro football kicker has connected on a 4-point field goal.
If you’re an alt-football junkie, you already know by now that the United Football League released a new rules package for the 2026 season – one that includes a 4-point field goal. Yet, as creative as it is, it’s not unprecedented in tackle football.

The World League of American Football introduced the 4-pointer in 1995 as part of its all-European reboot.
The WLAF played two spring-summer seasons, 1991 and 1992, with 10 franchises, including seven in North America. The circuit – owned and operated by the National Football League – featured standard NFL rules for the most part. But after the WLAF flopped in U.S. markets, it went on hiatus for two years.
When it returned, the NFL decided to use it as a proving ground for rule innovations and the 4-point field goal was arguably it’s boldest experiment.
“We think the four-point play is an exciting rules change which is in keeping with the innovative style of the World League,” WLAF vice president of football operations Jerry Vanisi said.
Of course, while the UFL rule mandates that a field goal is worth four points from 60 yards or more, WLAF kickers needed only to split the pipes and clear the crossbar from 50 or better. (There weren’t nearly as many Cam Littles and Brandon Aubreys 30-plus years ago).
London’s Don Silvestri connected on the first successful 4-point field goal in WLAF history on May 7, 1995. He nailed a 52-yarder against the Scottish Claymores to open scoring in an 11-10 victory for the Monarchs.
The rule remained in place over the years as the WLAF morphed into NFL Europe and, finally, NFL Europa.
The last 4-pointer came in week 10 of the fifteenth and final season of the NFL-sponsored spring league. Rhys Lloyd of the Frankfurt Galaxy closed out scoring with a 50-yard field goal in a 31-14 victory over the Cologne Centurions on June 16, 2007.
Certainly, 4-point field goals will be divisive to old-schoolers, but what if you made kicks worth one, two or three points based on distance?
The World Football League did just that during the preseason of its ill-fated 1975 campaign.
Billy DeCarlis, chairman of the WFL rules committee, proposed that field goals inside the 10-yard line would count one point, tally two points from the 10 to the 30, and three points from 31 yards out or further.
The league was keen on deemphasizing scoring via the kick; touchdowns counted seven points and the PAT was eliminated in favor of an “action point” that required a run or pass for a single-point conversion.
“If a team were trailing by two points, it would have to use strategy, maybe even take a loss, to get the ball in position for a three point try,” DeCarlis told The Birmingham News in a May, 1975, article. “It would be a multiple choice type decision. Try to take it into the end zone, stay outside the zone, or kick immediately. It could eliminate running the clock down to get a chip shot field goal at the end.”
I had an in-person brush with this bit of history on July 12, 1975, when I watched the Birmingham Vulcans defeat the Portland Thunder, 25-9, in an exhibition contest at Legion Field.
Birmingham’s Ron Slovensky booted a 35-yard field goal late in the fourth quarter – good for two points.
However, if a rules committee ever wants to really mess with field goals (and the minds of football fans), they could try the WFL experiment in reverse. The job of the offense is to gain yards against the defense and move the ball toward the goal line, right?
So, to reward progressing down the field, a field goal inside the 10 would be worth three points, between the 11 and 30, two points, and anything beyond that, a single point.
I’ll show myself out …


