You can use yum and list all kernel versions that are available (from the enabled repositories at your system) with the following command
yum list--showduplicates kernel
If the kernel you want is on the list, you can install it directly with yum.
yum install kernel-
If you want another kernel that is not listed, you can search at Koji download and install with rpm --oldpackage (as indicated at the link you've provided
or you can even try yum.
You have to know that,
It is stronly recommended, always using the latest stable kernel version that Fedora provides.
Last, but not least, you should exclude the kernel updates from yum, through the /etc/yum.conf file.
Append
exclude=kernel
at the end of the file. This should do the trick. That way, yum will not update the kernel(eg 3.14 version) with the latest (eg 3.15) version.
change the default from 1 to 0 to use the new kernel. If you don't change this, the system is still using the old kernel.