All those missed kicks
  Paul Stewart, Buccaneers Review, published 2008
  Introduction
  There are three phrases that really sum up the amazing 1979 season 
  of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. “Unbeaten, untied, unbelievable” was 
  the cover of Sports Illustrated after the Bucs 5-0 start to the year.
  “From worst to first” was the motto of the season and the title of NFL 
  Films’ review of the campaign. And for all the retro disco music lovers 
  out there, “Ain’t no stopping us now” by McFadden and Whitehead 
  was the players’ anthem for the season.
  And then there was one more word. “Blat” – the apparent sound of a 
  blocked kick. For this was the game in which it played a bigger part 
  than any other in franchise history.
  The background
  The 1976 Buccaneers lost every game they played. The following year’s edition only won two, and by the end of the 1978 season, Coach 
  John McKay had a career record in the NFL of 7-37. Most pundits had the Bucs finishing fifth in the NFC Central Division again in 1979 and 
  expected that McKay would be fired and then return to the college game.
  But McKay had been building himself a pretty useful defense over the previous three seasons. The 1976 draft had brought the Brothers 
  Selmon, and the likes of LB Richard Wood and SS Mark Cotney had been present since the outset of the franchise. Key veterans such as 
  DT Bill Kollar and DE Wally Chambers added to the youthful exuberance of LBs Cecil Johnson and David Lewis, and every NFC offense 
  knew that every yard against the orange defense was hard earned.
  But when the Bucs jumped out to a 5-0 mark, everyone in the nation was stunned. A picture of LB Dewey Selmon decapitating a Ram runner 
  made the cover of Sports Illustrated, and suddenly America woke up to the fact that the joke franchise of the NFL was now serious and 
  meaning business.
  The Minnesota Vikings had won the NFC Central Division each year the Bucs had been in the NFL and still harboured thoughts of making 
  the post-season again when they came to Tampa for their Week 13 match-up. The Bucs were now 9-3 and needed just one more win to not 
  only clinch their first play-off berth, but also take the NFC Central title from the defending champions.
  The game
  As Brent Musberger welcomed the nation with his traditional “you are looking 
  live at Tampa Stadium” comment, the first image television viewers got to see, 
  was that of the goal-posts being covered in oil to stop fans climbing on them in 
  expected celebration as had happened after the franchise’s first home win in 
  December 1977.
  And it was no wild dream when the Bucs jumped out to an early 9-0 lead on the 
  back of a Neil O’Donoghue fieldgoal and Ricky Bell touchdown run. The only 
  drawback was the Vikings blocking the PAT following Bell’s score, an art form 
  they were well known for around the NFL.
  By half-time, the boo birds were out in Tampa as the Bucs found themselves 
  trailing 14-9 on a pair of Tommy Kramer touchdown passes as the old bad 
  Bucs made error after error to hand the initiative to their visitors.
  Rick Danmeier’s early third quarter fieldgoal extended the lead after hitting the 
  crossbar and bouncing over. Did the oil on uprights make a difference? It 
  certainly had no effect on O’Donoghue when his attempt was once again blocked by the Vikings later in the half.
  With 2:23 remaining, the Bucs trailed 23-16 and had one last drive to save the game. Doug Williams, having had one apparent TD to WR 
  Morris Owens called back on a penalty, dived head-over-heels into the endzone himself with 27 seconds left and knocked himself woozy in 
  the process.
  Back-up QB Mike Rae was already warming up on the sideline for the apparent overtime, when O’Donoghue heard that awful “blat” noise for 
  the third time on the day, Wally Hilgenberg being the Viking to block this attempt. One failed onside kick later, and the Bucs were losers on 
  the day that was supposed to be their crowning moment.
  The aftermath
  John McKay, master of the post-game quote, was in truly magnificent form after this one. “We blocked bad. We played terrible on defense 
  and our kicking game made up for it by being absolutely horrible.”
  When asked if he was happy with any part of his team’s performance, McKay simply replied “We ran on the field very well” and left the locker 
  room.
  “Different teams rush different ways,” G Darrell Austin said in explaining that the Vikings line multiple people on LS Charley Hannah. The 
  effect of which was Hannah being bowled over, allowing a great deal of pressure up the middle on placements. “I told Charley I would try to 
  get as much of his guy as I could, but I had a guy over me, too.”
  Fellow kick team blocker Greg Horton concurred, “They had a big surge up the middle. They had two guys jumping up at the same time. All I 
  heard was a double thud (the sound of the kick and the sound of the block),” said Horton.
  Neil O’Donoghue defended his blockers and pointed some of the blame at himself. “I felt like I hit the ball well all day. You win together and 
  you lose together, but I accept the blame for my part in this.”
  The Bucs would go on to lose badly the following two weeks against Chicago and San Francisco, before clinching their division title during a 
  torrential downpour at Tampa Stadium against the Kansas City Chiefs. O’Donoghue’s 19-yard field-goal was the only score of that game and 
  took the Bucs into the post-season where they would defeat the Philadelphia Eagles before losing in the NFC Championship Game to the 
  Los Angeles Rams.