Football Player Scores One for the Record Book

Place kicker Bobby Puyol, UConn's MVP in the St. Petersburg Bowl on Saturday, hopes to score a sports management job after completing his degree in business.

Bobby Puyol. (Nathan Oldham for UConn)

Bobby Puyol. (Nathan Oldham for UConn)

Place kicker Roberto ‘Bobby’ Puyol ’16 (BUS) was UConn’s MVP in the St. Petersburg Bowl on Saturday, the Huskies’ first postseason game since 2010. Although the Huskies fell to Marshall University 16-10, Puyol put his name into the St. Petersburg Bowl record book with a 52-yard field goal in the final seconds of the third quarter – the longest field goal in the eight-year history of the St. Petersburg event. 

This article about him was first published in the School of Business online newsletter in November. It has been slightly modified for UConn Today.

Imagine that you have just five seconds to do your job – with 30,000 people watching, the wind blowing, and your team’s victory hinging on the accuracy of your kick.

For UConn place kicker Roberto “Bobby” Puyol ’16 (BUS), the pressure and excitement adds to the thrill of the game.

“I love it. I think it’s so much fun. I go out there for five seconds and I’ve got to do my job,” says Puyol, a senior who is majoring in management, with a concentration in international business.

“It’s especially fun during away games when the crowds are screaming, telling you to miss, calling you names,” he says. “When you make it, it’s so quiet you can hear a pin drop.”

In November, Puyol was named one of 20 semifinalists for the 2015 Lou Groza Collegiate Place-Kicker Award presented by the Orange Bowl.

As of early November, Puyol was 12-for-13 in field goals this season and tied a career-long and season-high 45-yarder during UConn’s victory over East Carolina on Oct. 30. He is also a serious student, who earned a 3.8 GPA last year.

Bobby Puyol '16 (BUS). (Nathan Oldham for UConn)
Bobby Puyol ’16 (BUS). (Nathan Oldham for UConn)

Puyol hails from North Palm Beach, Fla. His parents, who run a Christian pre-school, where his sister also works, travel to attend every game.

As a youngster, he played football, baseball, soccer, and basketball. In his freshman year in high school, his football team needed a kicker and Puyol stepped up, even scoring the winning field goal in the final game. From then on, his destiny was set. Although he loved playing quarterback, he knew the kicker position would get him to college.

Both on the football field and off, Puyol – who will graduate in May but has another year of eligibility as a player – sees himself as a leader.

As an upperclassman, he tries to take the younger players under his wing and talk to them about life and football. “At this point in the season, everyone is tired,” he says.

Whenever I’m needed to do something, I put as much into it as I can. I think the younger guys notice and learn from it.

Off the field, Puyol is involved in community service initiatives. He serves on the NCAA Student-Athlete Advisory Committee (SAAC), whose work includes mentoring children from inner cities. He is also a member of Athletes in Action, a Christian organization that connects faith and sports. He also founded a player-led Bible study group on campus, called Journeymen.

“My faith is a big part of who I am,” says Puyol, whose brother is a Christian singer. “I’ve relied on my faith, I’ve grown in my faith, and it has helped me figure out who I am. I identify myself by my faith first, then by my sport.”

Puyol chose UConn for the scenery, the football, and the School of Business.

“I’m from North Palm Beach, Florida, and I’m used to the beach. I remember the first time I came to UConn and I saw all those trees. I thought I was in the forest,” he says, laughing. He liked Connecticut’s focus on collegiate sports and how the Huskies don’t have to compete with professional football for spectators. He also liked the prominence of the School of Business.

Puyol enjoys math and had initially planned a career in accounting, but realized after his first class that being a CPA wasn’t for him. It wasn’t that he disliked the work, it was that he realized he wasn’t the kind of guy to sit at a desk all day.

He says instructor Nicole Jones, who taught a management course that he loved, and Professor David Souder, his advisor for an independent study on social media, have been especially inspiring. He hopes to return to UConn next fall as a graduate student.

Puyol plans a career in sports management and hopes to land a front-office job with an NFL team. Although he’s a huge Miami Dolphins fan, he would prefer to remain in the Northeast, which has – despite some misgivings about the cold – become his home.

This year, the team’s success took Puyol and his teammates to a playoff bowl, when the Huskies met Marshall University at the St. Petersburg Bowl on Dec. 26.

“Both individually and collectively, last year was very different. Last year I was very inconsistent with my kicking, and this year started out that way. Then I fell back on what got me to UConn. I focused on preparation,” he says.

He credits Coach Bob Diaco, as well as the assistant coaches, for pushing the team to do its best, but also fostering a bond between the players.

“Coach Diaco emphasizes the importance of brotherhood and spending time together as friends and being there for each other,” Puyol says. “He wants us to develop a bond that carries onto the field.”

The ‘brotherhood’ aspect helped out. “As a team, we all wanted to have fun, but also do well,” he says. “Sometimes in football it can get too intense, too stressful. We’ve learned that when you do the little things right, then the big things will come.”

His roommate and good friend is punter Justin Wain, and this year’s team boasts 11 players from Florida. “To have my Florida guys with me, especially freshman year, was great,” Puyol says. “None of us had ever witnessed snow before!”

Although Puyol has made many friends on the Storrs campus, he isn’t recognized as a celebrity like the basketball players are. Sometime, he says, he thinks it would be fun to to walk around campus with a video camera and ask students and faculty how the team is doing, much as Mets player Matt Harvey recently did as a prank on “Jimmy Kimmel Live” a year ago.

This year is one of accomplishment, Puyol says, as excitement is building toward graduation. But next year will be a bonus – one final chance to enjoy athletics and academic life.

Puyol’s father, Orlando, was a pitcher for the University of Florida, his mom Susie was a dancer. “I got my Dad’s genes, he has a great deal of athletic skills,” he says. “My mom, she’s funny. She likes to coach me. She’ll say, ‘Bobby, it’s as easy as 1-2-3 kick.’”

During a recent visit to campus, the coaching staff offered parents a chance to compete in a football-kicking challenge, which Mrs. Puyol gladly accepted. It didn’t go as well as she’d anticipated.

Afterward, Puyol recalls his mom shaking her head and saying, “Bobby … it’s not so easy.”