MORGANTOWN —
In West Virginia University kicking circles, you normally get what you don’t see.
It begins back in what rapidly is becoming the dark ages of the sport, back to the early 1990s when Don Nehlen was coach. He brought in a punter who he thought would be one of the best the school ever saw.
His name was Mike Vanderjagt, and he became one of the best place-kickers the Mountaineers ever produced, going on to a long NFL career.
At that same time he brought in a place-kicker who he thought would make them forget Paul Woodside. Seeing as you still remember Woodside and that he holds the record for career field goals made in a season and a career, that didn’t work.
Instead, Todd Sauerbrun became college football’s greatest punter, complete with a 90-yard punt against Nebraska and average of 48.6 for the 1994 season.
Now I don’t want to alarm you, but right now another punter who looked like he would never become the WVU regular is averaging 49.2 yards a punt – more than Sauerbrun – after the opener.
That punter is Greg Pugnetti, who stuck around as a backup punter for four full seasons backing up first Pat McAfee and then Scott Kozlowski before finally getting his chance.
Now one may wonder why one would be so determined and stick with football here rather than move on to somewhere where he could punt, Pugnetti gives you a very simple answer.
“I came here to play. I don’t want to quit, because I’m not a quitter. I put in my time and tried to prepare myself every year like I was going to play. If it happened, it happened,” he said.
Not that even this year was guaranteed. See, a year ago WVU brought in a punter/place-kicker from a pretty fair program — Alabama — as a transfer, and after sitting out a year it was thought that he would inherit both jobs.
His name was Corey Smith out of Musselman High as a prep, and it was obvious he was a good one. If Pugnetti would make his four years of waiting worth it, he would have to beat him out in head-to-head competition in the summer.
Pugnetti answered that challenge.
“It was good they brought him in for competition, but I wasn’t going to let my spot go easily. I just kept it going,” he said.
The competition was among the fiercest in camp, but Pugnetti prevailed with Smith becoming the kickoff specialist.
Certainly, Pugnetti improved over the punter who had been tied to the bench over the past few seasons.
“I definitely improved on the roll punt. I used to do the traditional punt, but since we roll here I wanted to make sure I got it down,” he said.
When West Virginia began using the roll punt a number of years back it was something of an oddity. The punter would take the ball, roll to his right and kick it on the run rugby style. It would go end over end, probably no more than 30 yards, but because of the end-over-end motion it would hit and roll forward, often leaving a return man no chance to return it.
McAfee — himself right out of the WVU mold of not knowing what to do with kickers as he came in as a place-kicker and wound up a dual kicker – refined the art of the roll punt, turning it into something half traditional, getting hang time out of it, yet doing it while moving away from the pocket. He averaged 44.7 yards a punt in 2008, second only to Sauerbrun, before going on to punt for the Indianapolis Colts in the Super Bowl.
“McAfee turned it into a bomb,” Pugnetti said. “That’s what it turned into.”
Pugnetti admitted that after all those years waiting, he had a case of nerves when he first stepped onto the field against Coastal Carolina, and that first punt was nothing to remember, getting him just 34 yards.
Pugnetti wasn’t about to let that ruin his year, even with Smith sitting over on the sideline eager to get back into the competition.
“I just let it go and got to the next punt,” Pugnetti said. “I don’t want to dwell on it too long and let it hurt the next punt. I make the corrections and go to the next punt.”
And that’s when they started booming off his foot, one punt just before halftime traveling 71 yards, the longest punt since McAfee hit one 75 yards against Rutgers in 2006.
What made Pugnetti’s punt even more spectacular, however, was that it rolled dead at the goal line, one of two punts on the day that pinned Coastal Carolina back at its own 1.
Lucky? Or good?
“It was probably a combination of both,” he said of the 71-yard punt. “I know the balls felt good off my foot. Whenever you get a forward roll, it’s always lucky. I won’t take credit for that.”
He’d better take credit for it, because he got the blame for that 34-yard punt to start the year.
E-mail Bob Hertzel at bhertzel@hotmail.com.
Bob Herzel
Pugnetti’s improved punting earn him time
- Bob Herzel
-
-
HERTZEL COLUMN: Patrone finally gets his due
Lee Patrone says he remembers it vividly, even though more than 50 years have passed, and while it was the greatest accomplishment in his life it has nothing to do with the West Virginia University basketball career that has lifted him into the Class of 2012 that will be inducted into the Mountaineer Sports Hall of Fame in September.
-
HERTZEL COLUMN: No doubt WVU made out well
There was a cold, ill wind blowing in from the north on Friday.
It was the kind of wind that blows whenever a Pitt man opens his mouth, as the Pittsburgh athletic director Steve Pederson did. -
Tears and memories: VIDEO
It was mid-Thursday afternoon at the Morgantown Event Center and the crowd stood mostly silently in line that wound out of the Events Hall and into the hallway toward the staircase.
A young lady was there holding a singular golden rose
“I wish,” Rebecca Durst said, “it could be gold and blue.” -
HERTZEL COLUMN: Stew fondly remembered by players
The tributes have poured in all week for Bill Stewart, the former West Virginia University football coach whose sudden and unexpected death from a heart attack at age 59 on Monday stunned the state, but it wasn’t the administrators or executives or politicians who really knew him.
-
HERTZEL COLUMN: White right there with Hall of Famers
Back on New Year’s Eve, 2008, shortly after West Virginia University had edged North Carolina, 31-30, to win the Meineke Car Care Bowl, an attempt was made to put Mountaineer quarterback Patrick White into his proper historical perspective.
-
HERTZEL COLUMN: Pat Beilein follows in father’s path
In a day filled with the sorrow of former West Virginia University football coach Bill Stewart’s sudden and unexpected death, there was a ray of sunshine that managed to slip through, a happening that shows us all that even in death there is life and as one son grieves, as does Stewart’s son, Blaine, somewhere else a father basks in pride over his son.
-
HERTZEL COLUMN - Stewart’s gift was giving
It was the kind of cosmic happening that defies description. We all come across them from time to time, leaving us in a state of disbelief.
-
HERTZEL COLUMN: This ‘Maniac’ makes music with Kilicli
Mike Martin wasn’t long removed from his New York roots, a somewhat rare import in these parts compared to the migration of New Jerseyites who matriculate at West Virginia University.
-
Van Zant fired as WVU baseball coach
West Virginia athletic director Oliver Luck believes with a new coach and a new stadium the Mountaineers can compete with the likes of Texas and Oklahoma for the Big 12 baseball championship but understands it will not come easily or quickly.
-
SEC, Big 12 team up for bowl
Even before the full impact of West Virginia University’s 2014 season-opening meeting with Alabama in Atlanta has been grasped, the opportunity presented itself for the two to meet again later in that season or future ones in a bowl agreement between the Big 12 and SEC that is much like the Rose Bowl agreement between the Big Ten and the Pac-12.
- More Bob Herzel Headlines
-
HERTZEL COLUMN: Patrone finally gets his due

