Announcements

Hoyland Named An AP Preseason Second Team All-American

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The Associated Press announced its 2023 Preseason All-America Teams on Monday and University of Wyoming junior place-kicker John Hoyland was named to the Second Team.  Hoyland was the only player from a non-autonomous five conference to be named to either the AP First or Second Team.
 
Hoyland is coming off a 2022 season that saw him make 88% of his field goal attempts, ranking him as the best of any FBS kicker returning in 2023 who made more than 20 field goals last season.  He achieved that percentage while being one of only two kickers in the country with four made field goals from over 50 yards during the 2022 season.  Among kickers with at least 50 career attempts, his career 84.9% accuracy is tied for second-best.

Earlier this summer, Hoyland was named a 2023 Second Team Preseason All-American as selected by Athlon Sports and a Third Team Preseason All-American as named by Phil Steele.  He was selected by Mountain West Media to the 2023 Preseason All-Conference Team, as well as being named to the First Team Preseason All-Mountain West Conference teams as selected by both Athlon Sports and Phil Steele.
 
The junior from Broomfield, Colo., also is one of 30 FBS place-kickers named to the 2023 Lou Groza Award Preseason Watch List.  In 2022, Hoyland was one of 20 semifinalists for the Groza Award.
 
Hoyland was a 2022 First Team All-Mountain West Conference selection as voted by MW head coaches and media.  He led the MW and ranked No. 7 in the nation in field goals made (1.69 per game) in 2022.  He also ranked No. 2 in the MW and No. 18 in the FBS in field-goal percentage (88.0 percent), making 22 of 25 field goal attempts.  His 22 made field goals set a new Wyoming single-season school record, breaking the record of former Cowboy All-America kickers Cory Wedel, who made 20 field goals in 1996, and J.D. Wallum, who made 20 in 2001.  In 2022, Hoyland made four field goals of over 50 yards — 51, 53, 53 and 55.  His 55-yarder was tied for the fifth longest in the FBS last season and was the longest in the Mountain West in ’22.