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Michael Turk
Michael Turk
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Michael Turk
Profile
PositionPunter
Personal information
Born (1998-03-14) March 14, 1998 (age 27)
Davie, Florida, U.S.
Height6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
Weight231 lb (105 kg)
Career information
High schoolRidge Point
(Sienna, Texas)
CollegeLafayette (2017)
Arizona State (2018–2020)
Oklahoma (2021–2022)
NFL draft2023: undrafted
Career history
* Offseason and/or practice squad member only
Awards and highlights
Stats at Pro Football Reference

Michael Matthew-Paul Turk[1] (born March 14, 1998) is an American professional football punter. He played college football for the Lafayette Leopards, Oklahoma Sooners, and Arizona State Sun Devils. Despite declaring for the 2020 NFL draft, he would regain two years of eligibility after not being selected and not being signed following the draft. After playing for two years at Oklahoma, he declared for the 2023 NFL draft and signed with the Miami Dolphins as an undrafted free agent, before being waived prior to the pre-season.

Key Information

Early years

[edit]

Turk attended Ridge Point High School, where he played safety, contributing to the school winning the 6A Region Championship in 2014 and 2015. In less than three years, Turk suffered three ACL tears, which hampered his ability to become a safety at the next level.[2]

After graduating, he took a year off to train with his brother, Ben Turk, a former punter for Notre Dame, during which he decided that he wanted to become a punter.[2]

College career

[edit]

Lafayette

[edit]

Turk accepted a football scholarship from Lafayette College. As a true freshman in 2017, where he registered over 2,800 punting yards and setting a school single-season record with an average of 42.7 yards per attempt.[2] He received second-team All-Patriot League honors.[3]

Arizona State

[edit]

In 2018 after Turk's freshman season, he transferred to Arizona State University and was redshirted to comply with the NCAA transfer rules.

As a sophomore in 2019, against Kent State University, Turk recorded punts of 64, 62, 65, 49 and 75 yards, setting an NCAA single-game record with a 63.0-yard average per attempt.[4] He earned honorable-mention All-American honors from GPR Analytics while ranking fourth in the nation with a 95.80 GPR Punt Rating.[5]

On January 6, 2020, he opted to declare for the 2020 NFL draft.[6] On June 3, 2020, after failing to be selected by a team, in an unprecedented decision, the NCAA restored Turk's remaining two years of eligibility and allowed him to return to Arizona State.[7][8]

As a junior in 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Arizona State only played 4 contests during the season.[9] He registered a career-high 47.2-yard average on 14 punts and received first-team All-Pac-12 honors.

On August 5, 2021, Turk entered his name into the NCAA transfer portal, in part due to his opposition to Arizona State requiring the COVID-19 vaccine to travel to road games.[10] On August 12, he announced that he would be transferring to the University of Oklahoma.[11]

Oklahoma

[edit]

As a senior in 2021, he appeared in 11 games, averaging 51.2 yards on 35 punts, with 16 punts downed inside 20-yard line. His 51.2-yard average would have ranked second nationally, but he did not have enough attempts to qualify. He received All-Big 12 honors. He had 20 punts that went over 50 yards and 8 that went over 60 yards. The team did not punt against Tulane University and Kansas State University. He had an 85-yard punt (tied for third in school history) and averaged 58 yards on three punts against the University of Texas.

As a super senior in 2022, he appeared in all 13 games, averaging 46.8 yards (ranked third nationally) on 63 punts, with 22 punts downed inside the 20-yard line. He received All-Big 12 honors. He had 22 punts that went over 50 yards and 6 that went at least 60 yards. He also completed two passes on fake field goals plays, which included a 3-yarder for a first down against the University of Texas and a 2-yarder for a touchdown against Iowa State University. He averaged 49.3 yards on 6 punts, including two critical punts of at least 60 yards in the fourth quarter against Iowa State University, earning Big 12 Co-Special Teams Player of the Week honors.

Professional career

[edit]

2020 NFL Combine

[edit]
Pre-draft measurables
Height Weight Arm length Hand span 40-yard dash 10-yard split 20-yard split 20-yard shuttle Vertical jump Broad jump Bench press
6 ft 0+12 in
(1.84 m)
226 lb
(103 kg)
31+18 in
(0.79 m)
9+78 in
(0.25 m)
4.79 s 1.68 s 2.78 s 4.72 s 34.5 in
(0.88 m)
9 ft 0 in
(2.74 m)
25 reps
All values from NFL Combine[12][13]

On February 27, 2020, Turk set an NFL Scouting Combine record for punters, with 25 bench press repetitions of 225 pounds.[14] Of those who participated, Turk's total bench reps were more than all 33 wide receivers, 12 out of 13 tight ends, with Josiah Deguara tying him, and 19 offensive lineman out of 34. His bench reps also tied for second among special teams participants since 2006.[15][16]

2023 NFL Combine

[edit]

On March 3, 2023, Turk competed in his second NFL Combine in preparation for the 2023 NFL draft.[17]

Pre-draft measurables
Height Weight Arm length Hand span 40-yard dash 10-yard split 20-yard split Vertical jump Broad jump
6 ft 0+14 in
(1.84 m)
227 lb
(103 kg)
30+12 in
(0.77 m)
10+18 in
(0.26 m)
4.83 s 1.65 s 2.75 s 34 in
(0.86 m)
9 ft 1 in
(2.77 m)
All values from NFL Combine[18][19]

Miami Dolphins

[edit]

After going undrafted, Turk signed with the Miami Dolphins as an undrafted free agent on April 29, 2023.[20] He was waived by the team in favor of Jake Bailey on August 2.[21]

In November 2023, Turk worked out with the New England Patriots.[22] Turk was not signed.

Personal life

[edit]

Turk's uncles are former NFL punter Matt Turk and former NFL long snapper Dan Turk.[23] Turk has a YouTube channel called Hangtime, where he makes videos about his experience playing for Oklahoma, fitness, and his Baptist faith, often mentioning some of his favorite Bible verses.[24] As of March 2, 2025, he has over 1,900,000 subscribers to his YouTube channel.[24]

On November 19, 2022, he proposed to his now wife, Oklahoma Sooners softball All-American Grace Lyons, on the field following the Bedlam football game. The couple got married on June 23, 2023.[24][25][26] They have one child, a daughter, born in 2025.[27][28]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Michael Turk (born March 14, 1998) is an American former college football punter and content creator who gained recognition for his athletic achievements and personal resilience in overcoming multiple injuries to excel in the sport. Turk's collegiate career spanned Lafayette College, where he set a single-season punting average record of 42.7 yards per attempt as a freshman, Arizona State University, averaging 46 yards per punt with 23 punts exceeding 50 yards, and the University of Oklahoma, where he emerged as a standout specialist despite entering punting late after three ACL surgeries that derailed his safety aspirations. His transition to punting, fueled by family NFL ties—including uncles Matt and Ben Turk—and a strong Christian faith, showcased his adaptability and power, highlighted by 25 bench-press reps at the 2020 NFL Scouting Combine, the most by a punter since records began in 2003. After going undrafted, Turk signed with the Miami Dolphins as a professional punter but was later waived and continued as a free agent, pivoting to content creation on his YouTube channel "Hangtime," which features vlogs on athletic challenges, lifestyle, and post-NFL experiences, drawing hundreds of thousands of followers across platforms. Notable for his evangelical perspective, Turk has publicly linked personal faith to his career perseverance and critiqued cultural events through a religious lens, such as interpreting the 2021 Travis Scott concert tragedy as a demonic ritual, reflecting his defining emphasis on spiritual convictions amid athletic pursuits.

Early life

Family and upbringing

Michael Turk was born on March 14, 1998, in Dallas, Texas, to parents Anthony Turk and Kelly Turk. He grew up in the Dallas area, immersed in an environment shaped by his family's longstanding involvement in American football, which fostered early exposure to competitive sports and physical conditioning. Turk's extended family includes two uncles with extensive NFL careers: Matt Turk, a punter who played 19 seasons across multiple teams and earned three Pro Bowl selections, and Dan Turk, a center and long snapper who appeared in 15 seasons with franchises including the Pittsburgh Steelers and Washington Redskins. This heritage provided direct mentorship, as evidenced by Turk training with uncle Matt during the offseason leading into his freshman college year in 2016, emphasizing technique refinement and the discipline required for sustained athletic performance. The familial pattern of specialization in kicking and snapping roles suggests environmental influences, including hands-on coaching from relatives with professional experience, alongside potential genetic predispositions for leg strength and coordination observed across generations in the Turk lineage. Turk also has an older brother, Ben Turk, who served as a punter for the University of Notre Dame from 2011 to 2012, and an older sister, Jessica. This sibling dynamic reinforced a household culture of perseverance and competition, with Ben's college-level play offering additional role modeling during Turk's formative years in Texas. The collective family emphasis on football fundamentals, drawn from the uncles' longevity in the NFL—Matt's 19 seasons and Dan's 15—highlighted practical lessons in work ethic and resilience, contributing to Turk's early development without formal metrics at that stage.

High school career

Michael Turk attended Ridge Point High School in Missouri City, Texas, where he competed in football as a safety and linebacker during his early years. He transitioned to punting starting in his junior year (2015), motivated by a desire to reduce contact after experiencing the physical demands of defensive positions. This shift aligned with his family's NFL punting legacy, including uncles Matt Turk (19 seasons) and Dan Turk (15 seasons), providing informal guidance on technique and raw leg strength development, though formal specialization intensified post-graduation. As a multi-position contributor, Turk helped Ridge Point secure the Texas 6A Region II championship in both 2014 and 2015, with the team advancing in the playoffs during his tenure. No publicly documented punting statistics from his high school games are available, but his athletic profile at graduation—standing 6 feet 1 inch and weighing approximately 228 pounds—highlighted the physical foundation for his later specialist role. This period marked Turk's pragmatic adaptation from contact-heavy defense to kicking, leveraging inherent power evident in family-trained drills, setting a baseline for collegiate evaluation despite limited recruiting attention as a punter.

College career

Lafayette Leopards (2016–2017)

Michael Turk did not play during the 2016 season, instead spending the year training intensively with his uncle, former NFL punter Matt Turk, to develop his skills ahead of college competition. This preparatory period allowed him to refine techniques such as directional punting and hang time, drawing on familial expertise from a 19-year NFL veteran. As a true freshman in 2017, Turk assumed the role of primary punter for the Lafayette Leopards, an FCS program in the Patriot League, handling all punting duties across the team's schedule. He recorded 67 punts for a gross average of 42.7 yards per attempt, totaling over 2,800 yards and establishing a Lafayette single-season record for punting average that still stands. This performance included 16 punts exceeding 50 yards, demonstrating raw leg strength, while his placement accuracy was evident in multiple games, such as averaging 44.7 yards per punt with three inside the opponent's 20-yard line against Georgetown on November 4, 2017. Turk's contributions earned him All-Patriot League Second-Team honors, recognizing his role in field position battles despite the Leopards' 3-8 overall record that season. At the FCS level, where rosters and support staff are typically smaller than in FBS programs, his consistent output—averaging over 43 yards per punt midway through the year—highlighted emerging reliability and potential for higher competition, with no reported injuries limiting his participation.

Arizona State Sun Devils (2018–2020)

Turk transferred to Arizona State University ahead of the 2018 season, marking his debut at the FBS level as the Sun Devils' punter. In his first game against the University of Texas at San Antonio on September 1, 2018, he punted five times for 315 yards, including distances of 64, 62, 65, 49, and a career-long 75 yards, demonstrating immediate impact in a higher competitive tier than his prior FCS experience. Turk's performance peaked in 2019, when he appeared in all 13 games, punting 59 times for 2,767 yards at an average of 46.0 yards per punt—a school record that ranked 11th nationally. He recorded 23 punts exceeding 50 yards and pinned 32 inside the opponents' 20-yard line (54.2 percent), the second-highest rate in the nation, contributing to Arizona State's defensive field position advantages. These metrics earned him first-team All-Pac-12 honors from conference coaches. Following the 2019 season, Turk declared for the 2020 NFL Draft on January 10, 2020, hired an agent, and participated in the NFL Scouting Combine on February 27, 2020, where he set a punter record with 28 bench press repetitions. He went undrafted in April 2020 and signed no undrafted free agent contracts, prompting Arizona State to seek an NCAA eligibility waiver citing the disruptions from the COVID-19 pandemic, including canceled pro opportunities and the one-time transfer exception's limitations for those who had hired agents. The NCAA granted the rare waiver on June 3, 2020, restoring his eligibility and allowing a return for the shortened, pandemic-altered season without forfeiting amateur status—a decision highlighting institutional flexibility amid causal disruptions to career timelines over rigid eligibility precedents. In the 2020 season, disrupted by COVID-19 protocols such as limited practices, testing requirements, and a condensed Pac-12 schedule starting in November, Turk maintained high output, averaging 47.2 yards per punt across appearances and earning Pac-12 Player of the Week honors after a November 7 game against Washington State, where his punts flipped field position effectively. He secured second consecutive first-team All-Pac-12 recognition, underscoring adaptability in a year of empirical challenges to training consistency and game preparation.

Oklahoma Sooners (2021–2022)

Turk transferred to Oklahoma from Arizona State ahead of the 2021 season, utilizing his graduate transfer eligibility to compete as the Sooners' primary punter in the competitive Big 12 Conference. Over his two seasons with Oklahoma (2021–2022), he recorded 98 punts for 4,739 yards, averaging 48.4 yards per punt—a mark that established school records for volume and efficiency in that span. This performance contributed to his FBS career punting average of 47.4 yards across 176 attempts, ranking among the highest in Division I history (min. 150 punts) at the time. A highlight came on October 9, 2021, during the Red River Rivalry against Texas, when Turk unleashed an 85-yard punt—assisted by wind but executed from his own 15-yard line—that tied for the third-longest in Oklahoma history and dramatically shifted field position in a 55–48 Sooners victory. In 2021 alone, he averaged 51.2 yards per punt across 35 attempts in 11 games, with a long of 85 yards. Entering 2022 as a super senior, Turk maintained elite production with 63 punts averaging 46.8 yards, including 18 boots of 50+ yards and 19 inside the opponent's 20-yard line, earning him semifinalist status for the Ray Guy Award recognizing the nation's top punter. Having endured three ACL surgeries in high school—two on his left knee and one on his right—which severely curtailed his prep playing time and raw athletic development, Turk compensated through refined technique and hang time to maximize net field position. His approach emphasized directional punting and consistency over power, aligning with Oklahoma's high-stakes offensive environment where field-flipping kicks proved crucial in close contests. In October 2022, he was named Big 12 Special Teams Player of the Week after a performance featuring multiple long punts that tested Iowa State's return game during a Sooners road win. Turk adopted a leadership role among specialists, mentoring younger players on mental resilience and repeatable mechanics amid the pressures of SEC transition preparations, describing his mindset as professional and team-oriented despite personal injury history. This culminated his college tenure with peak efficiency metrics, positioning him as a reliable asset in Oklahoma's punting unit during a period of roster flux.

Professional career

NFL combines and pre-draft evaluation

Michael Turk participated in the 2020 NFL Scouting Combine as a punter from Arizona State University, where he showcased exceptional upper-body strength by completing 25 repetitions of 225 pounds on the bench press, setting a modern-era record for his position. This performance exceeded that of several offensive linemen and highlighted his atypical athleticism for a specialist, though punters rarely receive draft priority due to the position's perceived replaceability and low positional value in NFL scouting. Despite strong kicking demonstrations intended to display his leg power—rooted in college averages exceeding 46 yards per punt in prior seasons—Turk went undrafted after declaring early, underscoring the systemic undervaluation of punters who prioritize raw distance over consistent inside-20 placement in pre-draft metrics. His subsequent NCAA eligibility restoration allowed a return to college, delaying professional entry. Returning for the 2023 NFL Scouting Combine as an Oklahoma Sooner, Turk measured 6 feet ¼ inch tall and 227 pounds, then recorded a 4.83-second 40-yard dash, a 34-inch vertical jump, and a 10-foot-9-inch broad jump, demonstrating above-average speed and explosiveness for a punter typically focused on stationary leg swing rather than linear athletic testing. These metrics, combined with his established college punting averages of 46+ yards per attempt over four seasons—including a 51.2-yard gross average in 2021—positioned him as a high-upside prospect with elite leg strength capable of field-flipping punts, though evaluators noted room for refinement in operational consistency under pressure. Pre-draft scouting reports emphasized his directional control and ability to execute coffin-corner kicks with precision, often favoring tactical placement over maximal hang time (around 4.2 seconds in peak seasons) to minimize return opportunities, a trait derived from film analysis of his Big 12 performances where he ranked third nationally in gross punting average in 2022. Turk conducted pre-draft workouts and visits, including Oklahoma's Pro Day and team-hosted sessions such as the Dallas Cowboys' Dallas Day, where his physical profile and punting tape were scrutinized for NFL adaptability. Despite these efforts and a consensus projection as a top specialist with 81st-percentile leg strength ratings, he remained undrafted in 2023, reflecting ongoing NFL tendencies to address punting needs via undrafted free agency or incumbents rather than expending finite draft capital on the position. This outcome, paralleling his 2020 experience, illustrates causal factors in specialist evaluation: while measurable power (e.g., consistent 46+ yard outputs) garners attention, the rarity of drafted punters—fewer than five in the prior decade—prioritizes cost efficiency over proven college dominance.

Undrafted free agent signing and Miami Dolphins tenure

Following the 2023 NFL Draft on April 29, Turk signed with the Miami Dolphins as an undrafted free agent, securing a three-year contract valued at $2,695,000 with an average annual salary of $898,333. The signing capitalized on his college punting pedigree, including two-time All-Big 12 honors, though he faced immediate competition from veteran Jake Bailey, whom the Dolphins had acquired in free agency earlier that offseason. During organized team activities, minicamp, and training camp, Turk vied for the starting punter role, showcasing his leg strength from Oklahoma—where he averaged 47.4 gross yards per punt over 243 attempts—but struggled to displace Bailey amid evaluations of consistency and NFL adaptation. Preseason opportunities were limited for specialists, and Turk recorded no regular-season or postseason statistics during his brief tenure, reflecting the position's low volume of snaps. On August 2, 2023, the Dolphins waived Turk to finalize their 53-man roster, retaining Bailey as punter; no subsequent re-signing to the practice squad or active roster occurred with Miami through the 2025 season. This release ended Turk's Dolphins affiliation without game appearances, underscoring the challenges for undrafted specialists in securing initial roster spots.

Personal life

Religious faith and worldview

Michael Turk identifies as a devout Christian, integrating his faith deeply into his worldview and public persona. In a 2022 Sports Spectrum interview, he emphasized, "My faith is really important to me. I've always been a faith-based person. I believe that God has a plan for me and my life," framing football not as an end in itself but as a means to glorify God. Turk has described his athletic endeavors as a platform for evangelism, consistently attributing personal growth and performance to divine guidance rather than self-reliance or external circumstances. His Christian convictions underpin a resilient mindset, particularly in overcoming physical setbacks like three ACL tears and navigating the uncertainties of an undrafted NFL entry. Turk rejects attributions of success or failure to luck or institutional privileges, instead invoking biblical principles of providence and eternal priorities to sustain motivation. In a 2022 YouTube video titled "D1 College Football Player: Why I Need Jesus," he outlined personal reliance on Christ for purpose, stating that faith provides the foundational drive absent in secular approaches. This perspective manifests in his public advocacy, where he uses platforms like social media to affirm Christianity's endurance and critique cultural dilutions of biblical truth. Turk extends his faith into content creation, leveraging his YouTube channel "Hangtime"—which blends punting tutorials with scriptural discussions—to direct viewers toward Jesus and the Bible, positioning athletic visibility as a tool for spiritual witness. Such expressions reflect a causal framework where divine sovereignty, not temporal metrics, governs outcomes, informing decisions across his career and personal life.

Family influences and post-football aspirations

Michael Turk hails from a family with deep roots in professional and collegiate football, particularly in special teams roles. His father, Tony Turk, briefly played tight end for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers before a knee injury ended his career after one year. Turk's uncles include Matt Turk, a three-time Pro Bowl punter who played 19 NFL seasons across multiple teams, and Dan Turk, a long snapper and center who appeared in 15 NFL seasons with four franchises. His older brother, Ben Turk, punted for Notre Dame from 2013 to 2016. This lineage provided early exposure to high-level techniques, with family members conducting training sessions that emphasized precision, consistency, and mental resilience in punting—skills Turk adopted despite initially avoiding the position in high school to pursue "traditional" offensive roles like quarterback and wide receiver, demonstrating a drive for personal achievement independent of familial expectations. The family's emphasis on discipline and preparation fostered Turk's work ethic, as evidenced by his transition to punting in college after multiple ACL injuries sidelined his original ambitions, where he credited relative guidance for refining his form without relying solely on inherited talent. This support balanced encouragement with accountability, avoiding any sense of entitlement; Turk has noted motivation from his relatives' longevity to build his own "lasting impact" through deliberate practice rather than pedigree alone. Beyond an NFL pursuit, Turk has expressed interest in roles extending his football involvement through mentorship and faith-driven outreach, joining the Fellowship of Christian Athletes (FCA) staff in June 2023 to invest in young athletes as a former player. This aligns with his long-term orientation toward coaching or community initiatives rooted in personal values, prioritizing sustained influence over transient athletic success, as seen in his YouTube channel "Hangtime" where he shares training insights and life reflections to guide aspiring punters.

References

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