Kickers [noun]

Definition of Kickers:

wrinkle

Synonyms of Kickers:


Opposite/Antonyms of Kickers:


Sentence/Example of Kickers:

Bob Warden, a former kicker for Brown’s football team, and his wife, Margaret Smith Walden, a former Yale hockey player, pushed the Ivy League Council of Presidents for a return to competition in January, according to Sports Business Journal.

Wherever she lands, the first time she steps on the field, she will be the first woman to play a position other than punter or kicker on an NCAA team.

He attended practice regularly, counseled Rivera during difficult decisions and provided feedback on how the coach could improve as a leader, including being nicer to his kicker.

Before that moment, though, kickers are treated like an afterthought — by the teams that will eventually count on them and by the schools that primarily spend their scholarships elsewhere.

Fuller became part of the Commodores’ football squad after the team’s regular kickers were sidelined by the coronavirus.

Two women have played in Football Bowl Subdivision games, both as kickers.

Late in the first half, Lengyel sent his new kicker Blake Smith in to try a 48-yard-field goal.

I did, of course, pull out my book, but it just doesn’t — it didn’t cover it because the kicker is, you have to have some kind of physical damage.

There was a game of foot-ball just about to begin, and Barney was conceded to be the best kicker for his size in all Hackerton.

If he fidgets, you will find a long day on his back most fatiguing, and should he be a kicker your enjoyment will be marred.