Lou Groza Awards Banquet

December 8, 2025
West Palm Beach Marriott
6:00 PM Cocktail Reception and Silent Auction
7:00 PM Dinner and Awards Program
7:45 PM Silent Auction Closes
Emcee Theo Dorsey, ESPN West Palm


The Lou Groza Collegiate Place-Kicker Award hosts its highly anticipated annual banquet each year in Palm Beach County. The event brings together the best of college and high school football for an unforgettable night of recognition. Each year, the event celebrates the three collegiate finalists for the prestigious Lou Groza Collegiate Place-Kicker Award, honoring their consistency, accuracy, and impact on the national stage.

But the evening also shines a powerful spotlight on Palm Beach County’s own rising talent. The banquet proudly recognizes the High School Place-Kicker of the Year, as well as the High School Coach of the Year, High School Player of the Year and High School Team of the Year, highlighting the exceptional dedication, leadership, and performance found within our local football community.

This annual tradition not only honors outstanding kickers and coaches but also reinforces Palm Beach County’s role as the home of one of college football’s most respected awards and a hub for developing future stars.

Birr, a junior from Kennedale, Texas, is tied for second in FBS with 22 field goals, but it’s the time and context of those makes that has defined his season. Out of Georgia Tech’s 9 wins, three required clutch kicks from Birr: a school-record 55-yarder as time expired to top Clemson 24-21, a 33-yarder with two seconds left to force overtime against Wake Forest, and a 23-yard game-winner to beat Boston College 36-34. His 108 points are second among all FBS kickers and the most in the ACC at any position.
Matsuzawa, a senior from Tokyo, Japan, has a chance to complete the most prolific perfect kicking season in FBS history. Not only do his 23 field goals lead all kickers in the nation, he’s needed exactly 23 attempts. At 23-for-23, he would top 2012 Groza winner Cairo Santos’ 21-for-21 season for the most field goals ever without a miss. No other kicker with even 15 attempts remains perfect this year. He’s gone 3-for-3 in five games, including the opener capped with a 38-yard game-winner as time expired.
Sandell, a junior from Port Neches, Texas, is on the verge of perhaps the greatest long-distance kicking season in FBS history. At a combined 15-for-16 from 40 yards or longer, he’s just one make away from tying the FBS record for field goals from at least 40 yards and could do it in 7 fewer attempts. His 7-for-7 mark from 50 yards includes four makes from 55-plus, one of only two FBS kickers in the last 30 years with such distance. At 22-for-23 overall, he’s tied for 2nd in field goals and sits 4th in percentage.
Alstott

2025 Special Guest

mike Alstott

Michael Alstott is an American former professional fullback who played in the National Football League (NFL) for 12 seasons with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Nicknamed "A-Train", he is regarded as one of the greatest fullbacks of all time. 

Alstott played college football for the Purdue Boilermakers, earning third-team All-American honors in 1995, and was selected by the Buccaneers in the second round of the 1996 NFL draft. He received six Pro Bowl and three first-team All-Pro selections, in addition to being a member of the Buccaneers team that won the franchise's first Super Bowl title in Super Bowl XXXVII. For his accomplishments in Tampa Bay, he was inducted to the Buccaneers Ring of Honor in 2015.

In addition to celebrating the three national collegiate award finalists, we will honor local achievements in football from Palm Beach County High Schools and present awards for Team of the Year, Player of the Year, Place-Kicker of the Year, and Coach of the Year.

Cornelius

2025 Special Guest

Cornelius Bennett

Bennett played for the University of Alabama from 1983 to 1986. Bennett was a first selection on the College Football All-America Team three times (1984–1986). He is one of only two Alabama players to be named to three All-America teams, the other being fellow linebacker Woodrow Lowe. As a senior, he won the Lombardi Award, SEC Player of the Year honors, and finished 7th in the balloting for the Heisman Trophy. In his four seasons at the University of Alabama, Bennett recorded 287 tackles, 21+1⁄2 sacks, and 3 fumble recoveries. His most famous play was in 1986 when he leveled Notre Dame quarterback Steve Beuerlein, immortalized in a painting by artist Daniel Moore titled simply, ‘The Sack.’ In 2005, Bennett was elected to the College Football Hall of Fame. 

In the NFL, Bennett's talent at the left outside linebacker position helped the teams he played for to five Super Bowl appearances (four with Buffalo and one with Atlanta), but they lost them all (an NFL record he shares with offensive lineman Glenn Parker). In his 14 NFL seasons, he recorded 71+1⁄2 sacks, 7 interceptions, 31 forced fumbles, 27 fumble recoveries and three touchdowns (one interception, one fumble return, and one blocked field goal return).

At the time of his retirement, Bennett's 27 defensive fumble recoveries were the third most in NFL history.

Bennett was inducted into the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame in 2004.

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