Mountain West Football: Post-Spring Practice Specialist Rankings

A pair of record-setters have now moved on, so which Mountain West teams have the conference’s best punters and kickers this spring?

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Mountain West Football: Post-Spring Practice Specialist Rankings


A pair of record-setters and more have now moved on, so which Mountain West teams have the conference’s best punters and kickers this spring?


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Who looks like they could be truly special this fall?

12. San Jose State

Projected frontrunners: Taren Schive (K), Travis Benham (P)

Will Hart established a baseline of punting performance that the Spartans hadn’t seen since Michael Carrizosa left town and Matthew Mercurio established himself a reliable kicker with an 82% field goal rate over three seasons, but both of those guys are gone now to the pros and transfer portal, respectively. San Jose State is starting over, then, so will there be a drop-off?

Schive handled kickoffs for the Spartans last year and managed a solid 51.9% touchback rate, suggesting a strong leg that should be just fine among the conference’s new crop of specialists. Benham, meanwhile, improved his yards per punt across two years at the juco level but averaged only 37.4 YPP in his last extended action at City College of San Francisco in 2019.

11. New Mexico

Projected starters/frontrunners: George Steinkamp (K), Aaron Rodriguez (P)

Rodriguez was a busy man in his first full year as the Lobos punter, launching more punts than anyone else in the country, and he fit in just fine among first-year Mountain West specialists with a 42.8 YPP average.

Steinkamp, on the other hand, is the only Lobos kicker with prior game experience… though his first stint as the starter in 2020 didn’t go exactly as planned (6-of-11 on field goals). He held down kickoffs for UNM last season, however, and booted touchbacks 63.2% of the time, the third-best figure in the conference, so the leg strength is there if he can hold off newcomers Zach Benedict and Luke Drzewiecki.

10. Fresno State

Projected starters: Abraham Montano (K), Carson King (P)

Montano’s initial audition as the Bulldogs kicker could hardly have come in more intense circumstances, replacing an injured Cesar Silva on the road against a ranked Oregon team, but he was perfect that day and for the rest of the year (5-of-5 field goals, 14-of-14 extra points) and figures to be the frontrunner to handle Silva’s job for good now that he’s moved on.

King, like Utah State’s Stephen Kotsanlee, improved his yards per punt average from 2020 to 2021 (albeit not as drastically), but it’d be a surprise if he was pushed for the starting role. Fresno State’s specialists may not have a lot of flash, but it’s likely they’ll get the job done next fall.

9. San Diego State

Projected frontrunners: Jack Browning, Collyn Hopkins

Matt Araiza has ascended to new heights, so the job of replacing him should fall to Browning and Hopkins. No one should be expecting record-setting production from either specialist, but the longer track record of Aztec excellence on special teams means that the bar will still be relatively high.

8. UNLV

Projected frontrunners: Daniel Gutierrez (K), Ryan O’Hara (P)

Daniel Gutierrez quietly established himself as one of the best kickers in Rebels history over the past few years, so having him back is big for an offense still growing into its potential. O’Hara, meanwhile, stepped up and impressed down the stretch in handling kickoffs (50% in two games), so the leg is probably good enough to play. Evan Silva and Charlton Butt are also still around and could contribute should O’Hara falter.

7. Nevada

Projected starters/frontrunners: Brandon Talton (K), Matt Freem (P)

The Wolf Pack’s placement here is mostly splitting the difference between possessing one of the conference’s most reliable kickers (Talton) and an unproven entity at punter (Freem). Technically, Nevada has three placekickers on the current roster but Freem is the only one who’s seen the field as a punter in the past, doing so in two games back in 2020.

6. Hawaii

Projected depth: Matthew Shipley (K/P)

Shipley got a fraction of the attention that Matt Araiza did at San Diego State, but he was also a decent one-man show for the Warriors in 2021. There are still things on which he can improve, though: While his 85.7% field goal percentage ranked third in the Mountain West, Shipley’s 41.5 yards per punt average was next-to-last.

There’s still a chance he may not have to pull double duty again, though. Adam Stack put his name into the transfer portal back in December but is still listed on the team’s spring roster; he averaged 43.4 YPP in 2020. Shipley may not have to worry about handling kickoffs against, either, as Kyler Halvorsen did that job a year ago.

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