After three straight games without a made field goal, Arizona State coach Kenny Dillingham has run out of patience.
“Our kicking game’s atrocious,” Dillingham said after ASU’s 24-14 loss to Cincinnati on Saturday. “So, if you can kick and you’re at Arizona State, email me. We’re going to have kicking tryouts on Monday, so bring it on.”
Asked if he was serious, Dillingham doubled down.
“I’m dead serious. We’re going to put it out on our social. We’re going to have a kicking tryout on Monday,” he said. “We got to find somebody who can make a field goal. It makes it even harder late in games when it’s clearly a kick scenario. That’s when it gets really hard.”
Sun Devils kicker Ian Hershey, who began his career at Idaho State, badly missed attempts from 48 and 41 yards on the Sun Devils’ final two drives of the game. Hershey is 7-of-12 on field goal attempts this season and 18-of-19 on extra point attempts. Redshirt freshman Carston Kieffer missed his only field goal attempt this season in the opener against Wyoming.
“[Hersey] was kicking good pregame. So, I felt good about it, but you know, it is what it is,” Dillingham said. “We got to do a better job getting him in a better mental state to kick. But at the same token, I got to do a job and I got to get guys on the field that can perform in those situations as well.”
A few hours after the postgame news conference, Dillingham apologized on X, indicating his comments needlessly put the blame on one player.
“I would like to apologize in my postgame press conference I talked about our kicking game like I do offense / defense,” he wrote. “However the kicking game is always directed at one player. I should not have done that and I apologize. This team’s losses will always 100% fall on myself.”
Dillingham acknowledged an open tryout won’t necessarily lead to a change, in which case the team will stick with the status quo.
“If somebody is [good enough], then, you know, welcome to the team and we’ll rock and roll from there,” Dillingham said.
Looking to the student body for help in the kicking game isn’t without precedent.
In 2022, Ole Miss added punter Charlie Pollock to the roster, after which coach Lane Kiffin, said, “I don’t know a whole lot about him. I think he was down at the frat house at a keg party or something where they got him from.”
In 2008, the late Mike Leach recruited student Matt Williams to the team at Texas Tech after watching him kick a 30-yard field goal during an in-game contest. Williams would remain with the team through the 2010 season.
There are some who saw what the Carolina Hurricanes did at the trade deadline — or perhaps failed to do after they traded Mikko Rantanen — and believe they’re cooked when it comes to the Stanley Cup playoffs. However, based on the projections from Stathletes, the Canes remain the team with the highest chances of winning the Cup, at 16.7%.
Standing before them on Sunday are the Winnipeg Jets (5 p.m. ET, ESPN+). The Jets had a relatively quiet deadline, adding Luke Schenn and Brandon Tanev, though sometimes these additions are the types of small tweaks that can push a contender over the edge. As it stands, the Jets enter their showdown against the Canes with the sixth-highest Cup chances, at 8.7%.
Carolina has made two trips to the Cup Final: a loss to the Detroit Red Wings in 2002 and a win over the Edmonton Oilers in 2006. The Canes have reached the conference finals three times since (2009, 2019, 2023). Winnipeg has yet to make the Cup Final, and was defeated 4-1 in the 2018 Western Conference finals by the Vegas Golden Knights in the club’s lone trip to the penultimate stage.
Both clubs are due. Will this be their year?
There is a lot of runway left until the final day of the season on April 17, and we’ll help you keep track of it all here on the NHL playoff watch. As we traverse the final stretch, we’ll provide detail on all the playoff races — along with the teams jockeying for position in the 2025 NHL draft lottery.
Points: 43 Regulation wins: 12 Playoff position: N/A Games left: 17 Points pace: 54.3 Next game: vs. NSH (Tuesday) Playoff chances: ~0% Tragic number: 8
Race for the No. 1 pick
The NHL uses a draft lottery to determine the order of the first round, so the team that finishes in last place is not guaranteed the No. 1 selection. As of 2021, a team can move up a maximum of 10 spots if it wins the lottery, so only 11 teams are eligible for the draw for the No. 1 pick. Full details on the process can be found here. Sitting No. 1 on the draft board for this summer is Matthew Schaefer, a defenseman for the OHL’s Erie Otters.
The days leading up to the 2025 NHL trade deadline were a furious final sprint as contenders looked to stock up for a postseason run while rebuilding clubs added prospects and draft capital.
After the overnight Brock Nelson blockbuster Thursday, Friday lived up to expectations, with Mikko Rantanen, Brad Marchand and other high-profile players finishing the day on different teams than they started with. All told, NHL teams made 24 trades on deadline day involving 47 players.
Which teams and players won the day? Who might not feel as well about the situation after trade season? Reporters Ryan S. Clark, Kristen Shilton and Greg Wyshynski identify the biggest winners and losers of the 2025 NHL trade deadline:
Hintz extended his stick toward Henrique, whose wrist shot sent the puck under Hintz’s visor during his club’s 5-4 loss to the Oilers. He was on the ice, with his face in a towel, as the team’s medical staff assessed him and helped him skate toward the dressing room.
After the loss, Dallas coach Peter DeBoer said Hintz was at a local hospital, receiving tests. The coach added that the initial report was fairly optimistic for Hintz, 28, who has 25 goals and 52 points.
“Everyone’s optimistic that it’s not ‘serious, serious,'” DeBoer said. “But we won’t know until we get testing.”
The short-handed Stars rallied from a 5-1 deficit before eventually losing. Trade deadline acquisition Mikko Rantanen had a goal and an assist in his debut for Dallas, which had its four-game winning streak stopped. Wyatt Johnston, Jamie Benn and Matt Dumba also scored for the Stars.