Ty Bryant is taking over on punt returns after Kentucky 'lost some critical yardage' last season

Mark Stoops is switching up a key aspect of his special teams operation.
Among the most notable surprises on the Week 1 depth chart, which was released Monday morning, had to do with Kentucky’s return group. Ty Bryant, who will start at safety this year, was listed as the Wildcats’ starting punter ahead of Saturday’s season-opener against Toledo. That’s a significant change from last season, when wide receiver Ja’Mori Maclin was the man returning punts.
Stoops pointed to Bryant’s baseball background as a reason why the junior was given the nod as punt returner. Bryant was a five-year letterwinner on the Frederick Douglass baseball team as a middle infielder before committing himself solely to football in college. Stoops sees those skills translating.
“(Running backs/special teams coach) Jay (Boulware) wasn’t around when Ty was playing baseball back in the day. He’s a good baseball player,” Stoops said Monday. “He gets a good beat on it and he’s done a nice job of fielding the punts. A year ago, we lost some critical yardage from time to time, not fielding those things. Ty’s done a nice job, and he has that baseball background, which helps.”
Top 10
- 1Breaking
A new QB1
Boley will start, KSR has learned
- 2
DAMN GOOD
Hamdan Confident in UK Offense
- 3Hot
New Practice Gym Details
Barnhart talks UK's big news
- 4
Passing Problems
UK has the worst passing attack in FBS
- 5Trending
Top-10 battle for UKVB
Can Skinner's Winners do it again?
Get the Daily On3 Newsletter in your inbox every morning
By clicking "Subscribe to Newsletter", I agree to On3's Privacy Notice, Terms, and use of my personal information described therein.
Maclin, who came to Kentucky last offseason after an excellent year at North Texas, returned 14 punts a season ago for the Wildcats, accumulating just 103 yards for 7.4 yards per return. He struggled to put himself in a position to make explosive plays. Barion Brown and Quay’Sheed Scott also returned one punt each in 2024, but nothing came of it. Stoops is hoping Bryant can give Kentucky more opportunities to gain extra yards and put his offense in favorable starting field position with some consistency.
Bryant won’t be brand-new to returning punts, either. In high school, he spent time as the Broncos’ kickoff and punt return man. His experience locating baseballs as an infielder should give him an edge on the gridiron. The last time a member of the Kentucky defense returned a punt for a touchdown was David Jones’ 99-yarder in the 2009 Liberty Bowl — will Bryant add his name to the list in 2025?
Discuss This Article
Comments have moved.
Join the conversation and talk about this article and all things Kentucky Sports in the new KSR Message Board.
KSBoard