NAKED AND ALONE - The Nick Lowery Story | A Film Treatment
A Film Treatment

NAKED AND ALONE
WITH 80,000 PEOPLE

The Nick Lowery Story

After being rejected by eight NFL teams eleven times, Nick Lowery becomes the most accurate kicker in history—but discovers that performing under pressure is only half the battle. The real challenge is learning to forgive yourself when 80,000 people are watching.

11 Rejections
18 NFL Seasons
3 White Houses
110 Minutes Runtime

The Story

Genre
Sports Drama / Inspirational
Tone
"The Natural" meets "Jerry Maguire" meets "A Beautiful Mind"
Runtime
110-115 minutes
Setting
1978-1996
NFL stadiums, Harvard, White House
Comparable Films
Rudy (114 min)
Hoosiers (114 min)
Rocky (120 min)

1978. Dartmouth College. Nick Lowery is the most unlikely NFL prospect you've ever seen—an Ivy League kicker who reads philosophy and quotes Toynbee. But he has one gift: when the pressure is on, he doesn't miss.

What follows is a two-year odyssey through rejection. The Jets cut him. The Patriots cut him. Tampa Bay, Baltimore, Cincinnati, Washington, Green Bay, San Francisco, San Diego, New Orleans—all say no. Some teams cut him twice. By the eleventh rejection, even his mentor Dick Johnson questions whether it's time to quit.

Nick takes a job on Capitol Hill, convincing himself he's done with football. Then the Kansas City Chiefs call. One last shot. Head coach Marv Levy has a problem: his Hall of Fame kicker Jan Stenerud is aging, and the team needs fresh blood. Nick makes the team—barely—but his first night in the dorms, teammates fill his bed with five feet of warm cow manure. Welcome to the NFL.

What unfolds over 18 seasons is not just the story of becoming the most accurate kicker in NFL history. It's the story of a man learning that success without purpose is just an ego trip. While playing, Nick earns a Master's from Harvard's Kennedy School—something no other NFL player has done. He works in three White Houses, helps launch AmeriCorps, and founds humanitarian programs that span decades.

But the loneliest position in sports extracts its price. Nick battles the isolation of being the only player who enters the game when it's already lost, the only one who can't afford a single mistake. After missing three kicks in Cleveland, a newspaper publishes a cartoon of him with a spring popping out of his head: "HAS LOWERY LOST IT?" On a frozen New York field in 1995, he slaps a ball boy who won't heat the footballs—an incident that nearly destroys him.

Yet through it all, Nick discovers something more valuable than accuracy: the ability to stand naked and alone before 80,000 screaming fans and know that you are enough—not because they love you, but because you've learned to love yourself.

This is a story about pressure, yes. But more than that, it's about the courage to keep showing up after being told you don't belong. It's about finding your voice when everyone else is screaming. And it's about learning that the person you need to prove yourself to isn't in the stands—it's in the mirror.

Three-Act Structure

ACT I
The Rejections
15-18 Minutes

Opening: 58-yard field goal, perfect spiral. Nick's moment of glory.

The Fall: Eleven rejections by eight teams. Each "no" more brutal than the last. The Jets cut him twice—the second time, Coach Walt Michaels doesn't even remember him.

The Breaking Point: Nick quits football, takes a job on Capitol Hill. Dick Johnson's words haunt him: "You'll always wonder."

The Turn: Kansas City calls. One last chance.

ACT II
The Arena
58-72 Minutes

Welcome to the NFL: Cow manure in his bed. Five feet of warm, fresh manure. Perpetrator: Jack Rudney, future Pro Bowler who becomes Nick's closest friend.

The Competition: 16-year-old ball boy Clark Hunt (now Chiefs owner) quietly charts every kick, tells his father Nick will beat the legend Jan Stenerud.

Dual Life: Harvard by offseason, Arrowhead by fall. The only player studying international policy while teammates party.

Cleveland Disaster: Three missed kicks. Newspaper cartoon. Public humiliation.

Miami Redemption: Christmas Day, 32 degrees (coldest Dolphins game ever), Joe Namath commentating. Nick nails the game-winner. Following season: leads NFL in scoring, Pro Bowl, Kicker of the Year.

The Foscaldo Incident: 1995, freezing game, Matt Bahr misses three field goals in one quarter (frozen balls). Nick confronts ball boy David Foscaldo about not heating the balls. Foscaldo says "that's not my job." Nick slaps him. Media firestorm. Public apology. NFL fine. But weeks later, Nick invites Foscaldo as his personal guest to his first Native Vision fundraiser. 20 years later, Foscaldo is a decorated police officer. Nick speaks at his ceremony.

ACT III
Purpose Beyond the Posts
16-20 Minutes + 7-9 Min Epilogue

White House Years: Reagan, Bush, Clinton. Co-founding AmeriCorps with Eli Segal. Realizing football was just the platform.

The Final Miss: Late in his career, Nick misses a crucial kick. Joe Montana approaches: "You know what separates us from everyone else? We show up the next day."

Retirement Decision: Walking away from the game on his own terms.

EPILOGUE: 20 years later. Nick attends David Foscaldo's police ceremony. The kid he slapped is now an award-winning officer. The circle closes. Nick gives a speech about the lessons the arena taught him. Final image: Nick alone on an empty field, this time at peace with the solitude. He kicks one last ball through the uprights. Perfect. Cut to black.

10 Unforgettable Scenes

Scene 1
The Eleventh Rejection
New York Jets facility. Second time being cut by the same team. Head Coach Walt Michaels looks at Nick's file: "You were here last year." Nick's face—he doesn't even remember me. The door closes. Eleven rejections complete. Nick stands alone in the parking lot, duffel bag in hand, nowhere to go.
Impact: Establishes the emotional core—what does it cost to be told you're not good enough eleven times? Sets up the entire redemption arc.
Scene 2
The Cow Manure Hazing
William Jewell College dorms, Liberty Missouri. 107-degree heat. Nick returns after dinner to find five feet of warm, fresh cow manure in his bed, complete with live worms. More manure in his chest of drawers. Perpetrator: Jack Rudney, a 3-time Pro Bowl center who looks like a "Bluebeard pirate." This is his welcome to professional football. 8-10 minute setpiece showing Nick cleaning up, teammates watching. But later: Jack becomes his closest friend, calls him "Peaches," cries at a Special Olympics event where Nick volunteers.
Impact: Visceral, unforgettable, darkly comic. Shows the brutal hazing culture but also sets up one of the film's most beautiful friendships. External pressure to fit in vs. internal dignity.
Scene 3
The 16-Year-Old Ball Boy
Training camp. No one's watching, but 16-year-old Clark Hunt is quietly charting every single kick Nick makes against Jan Stenerud. Days later, Clark tells his father Lamar (Chiefs owner): "Nick's going to beat Jan. He's better." No one else sees it. But the kid does. And he's right.
Impact: Shows who believed when no one else did. Emotional payoff when we reveal Clark Hunt is now the Chiefs Chairman who led the team to 4 Super Bowl victories. The boy who saw greatness in a nobody.
Scene 4
"HAS LOWERY LOST IT?"
Cleveland Stadium. 8 inches of mud. Three missed game-winning field goals. Cut to: Kansas City Star newspaper—cartoon of Nick with a spring popping out of his head. Nick reads it in the locker room. Silence. Teammates avoid eye contact. Dick Johnson calls: "This is when you find out who you are."
Impact: The cruelty of public failure. External judgment at its worst. Sets up the Christmas Day redemption.
Scene 5
Christmas Day in Miami
32 degrees—coldest Dolphins game ever. Joe Namath in the broadcast booth. Nick lines up for a 41-yard game-winner. The entire season hangs on this kick. Flashback to the Cleveland cartoon. He nails it. Joe Namath: "Ice. In. His. Veins." Following season: Nick leads the entire NFL in scoring, makes the Pro Bowl, wins Kicker of the Year.
Impact: The hero rises. Public redemption. But also shows: the pressure never ends. You're only as good as your last kick.
Scene 6
Harvard Kennedy School Decision
Nick in admissions interview at Harvard. Admissions director: "Why do you want to do this?" Nick: "I need to know I'm more than a kicker." Montage: studying on the plane, writing papers in hotel rooms, defending his thesis while teammates party. Becomes the only NFL player to earn a Master's from Harvard Kennedy School during his playing career.
Impact: Shows depth beyond football. External validation (NFL success) isn't enough—he needs internal purpose. Foreshadows White House work.
Scene 7
The Foscaldo Slap (10-12 minute setpiece)
1995. Giants Stadium, freezing cold. Matt Bahr has just missed his THIRD field goal in one quarter—all because the balls are frozen. Nick sees ball boy David Foscaldo (20 years old, 6'0", 180 lbs) standing far from the sideline heater. Nick: "Why aren't you heating the balls?" Foscaldo: "That's not my job." Nick slaps him with his left hand. Bubby Brister (backup QB): "He deserved that!" Cut to: Media circus. WFAN radio (Mike and the Mad Dog). Public apology. NFL fine. Coach Richie Kotite nowhere to be found. Nick's reputation in tatters. But weeks later: Foscaldo is Nick's personal guest at the first Native Vision fundraiser at Harley Davidson Restaurant, NYC (Dick Schaap MC'ing). 20 years later reveal: Foscaldo became a decorated police officer in Foxboro, won AAA award for outstanding leadership.
Impact: Internal pressure explodes. The moment Nick's control snaps. But the REAL story is the reconciliation and what it teaches about grace, forgiveness, and character. This is the heart of the film—external crisis leading to internal transformation.
Scene 8
White House with Reagan
Reagan White House, Old Executive Office Building. Nick working on policy while still playing NFL seasons. Meeting with Eli Segal, Rick Allen, Rob Gordon, Shirley Sagawa about launching AmeriCorps. Reagan asks: "How do you do both?" Nick: "Football taught me how to perform under pressure. This taught me what to use that pressure for."
Impact: Shows the platform vs. purpose dynamic. NFL was the training ground; service is the mission. External spotlight → Inner light.
Scene 9
Joe Montana's Wisdom
Late in Nick's career. He's just missed a crucial kick. Sitting alone in the locker room. Joe Montana sits down next to him. No words for a moment. Then: "You know what separates us from everyone else? Not the wins. It's that we show up the next day." Nick looks at him. Joe: "The greatest players I've ever known weren't the most talented. They were the ones who could forgive themselves." He stands, pats Nick's shoulder, walks away.
Impact: The lesson crystallizes. It's not about perfection—it's about resilience. The ability to fail and return. Self-forgiveness as the ultimate skill.
Scene 10 - Epilogue
The Foscaldo Ceremony (20 Years Later)
2015. Foxboro, Massachusetts. Police ceremony honoring David Foscaldo for outstanding leadership. Nick is in the audience. Foscaldo sees him, walks over. "You came." Nick: "Of course." Foscaldo: "You know what that slap taught me?" Nick, uncomfortable: "What?" Foscaldo: "That even the greatest people can lose control. And that grace means showing up anyway." They embrace. Nick gives a speech about the arena, about pressure, about learning to be naked and alone with 80,000 people and discovering you're enough. Final shot: Empty football field. Nick alone. He kicks one ball through the uprights. Perfect spiral. This time, the solitude doesn't hurt—it heals. Cut to black.
Impact: Full circle. Redemption complete. External grace received becomes internal peace achieved. The lesson learned. The story told.

Core Themes

🎯
Rejection Is Redirection
The eleven "no's" weren't obstacles—they were the path. Each rejection forged the mental toughness Nick would need to succeed at the highest level. The setbacks weren't punishment; they were preparation.
Pressure Is Privilege
The loneliest position in sports taught Nick that being chosen for high-pressure moments isn't a burden—it's an honor. Pressure means you matter. The question is: can you learn to love it?
🔥
Character Is Forged Through Fire
From cow manure hazing to public humiliation to the Foscaldo incident—easy circumstances produce soft people. Nick's greatest moments of growth came from his darkest failures. Comfort doesn't build champions. Fire does.
💡
External Validation → Internal Purpose
The journey from seeking approval (making the NFL) to finding purpose (AmeriCorps, humanitarian work). Success without service is just an ego trip. The real victory is discovering what you're willing to stand for when no one's watching.
🤝
Grace & Reconciliation
The Foscaldo story is the heart of the film. What happens when you lose control? Can you repair what you've broken? The answer defines character more than any kick ever could. Grace received becomes grace given.
🎭
Naked and Alone
The central metaphor: standing exposed before 80,000 screaming fans, knowing you can't hide, can't deflect, can't blame anyone else. Learning to be comfortable in your own skin when the whole world is watching—and judging. That's mastery.

Why This Film Works Now

130M
NFL Fans in America
18
Years of Authentic NFL Footage
3
White House Administrations
TIMELY
Mental Health in Sports
UNIVERSAL
Rejection, Resilience, Redemption
AWARDS
Oscar-Caliber True Story

This is the sports film America needs right now. Not another underdog story—a story about what happens AFTER you achieve your dream and discover it's not enough. About mental health in the pressure cooker of professional athletics. About learning that the person you need to prove yourself to isn't in the stands—it's in the mirror.

NFL Films has the archive footage. The access. The legacy. This is a story that can only be told by the people who captured every moment of Nick's 18-year journey. From the rejections to the redemption, from the failures to the forgiveness—this is cinema built on truth.

Let's Make This Film

From 11 rejections to NFL legend to the White House—Nick Lowery's story proves that failure isn't final, it's formative. This is the film that shows the world what happens when you refuse to quit on yourself.

"You were always enough. You just had to decide to believe it."