NC State heads into fall camp at the end of the month with plenty of familiar pieces back in place, but the Wolfpack also enters 2026 with a roster that looks different in a lot of spots. Quarterback CJ Bailey, right tackle Teague Andersen, center Spike Sowells Jr. and running back Duke Scott are back on offense.
On defense, Jackson Vick and Brian Nelson II return in the secondary, while the front six has to be rebuilt. The Pack also dipped into the portal for help, landing Tulane transfer Edge Harvey Dyson, Penn State safety King Mack, Miami transfer linebacker Popo Aguirre and left tackle Jimarion McCrimon.
Against that backdrop, Pack Power 247 is counting down NC State’s most important players for the 2026 season. At No. 18 is graduate kicker Kanoah Vinesett.
Vinesett arrived in Raleigh with a strong résumé from Rock Hill (S.C.) Northwestern, where he put together a decorated high school career.
Over three varsity seasons, he made 21 of 26 field goals and drilled a city-record 53-yarder as a junior in 2020. He also hit 101 of 102 extra points, including 84 in a row, which set a state record.
As a senior, his 4,823 kickoff yards and 64 touchbacks led the state. He was a North vs.
South selection in his final prep season and earned all-region and all-state honors in both 2020 and 2021.
After high school, Vinesett joined NC State as a preferred walk-on in 2022. He redshirted that first year, served as the backup kicker the following fall and made his lone PAT attempt in 2023. He won the starting job before the 2024 season and handled the role for most of that year, going 18 of 24 on field goals and 34 of 35 on extra points.
That first season as the starter had its rough patches. Starting in game six against Wake Forest, Vinesett missed a field goal in four straight games. He finished 3 of 6 on attempts from 40 to 49 yards and 1 of 2 from 50-plus, while ranking 10th in the ACC in scoring and third in field goals per game.
The job changed again before 2025, when then redshirt freshman Nick Konieczynski beat him out after a strong fall camp. But Konieczynski struggled in the opener against ECU, making just 1 of 3 field goal attempts, and Vinesett reclaimed the starting role for the rest of the season. He responded by hitting 5 of 6 field goals and going a perfect 31 of 31 on PATs.
Taking over as NC State’s kicker in 2024 came with real pressure, especially with the program’s recent history at the position, including Christopher Dunn and Brayden Narveson. Vinesett has already lived through a few twists in the job battle, and last season’s numbers showed he can steady things when called upon.
Still, the Wolfpack’s willingness to go for it on fourth down 26 times - six more than in 2024 - says plenty about how often the staff trusted the offense over a kick. State converted 50 percent of those tries, which ranked 12th in the ACC.
The schedule looks manageable on paper, but there’s a good chance NC State finds itself in tight games. In that kind of season, every point carries weight, and Vinesett could end up mattering a lot if the Wolfpack is going to push as a dark horse contender in the ACC.
