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Huskies To Face Orange in BIG EAST Opener
PDF VERSION CONNECTICUT HEAD COACH RANDY EDSALL
A veteran in his 23rd year of major college coaching with three years
in the NFL, Edsall has tackled the challenge of bringing a former NCAA
Division I-AA team up to par with the BIG EAST in a six year span head
on, guiding the Huskies to victory in the 2004 Motor City Bowl. He has
compiled a 35-38 career record in his seventh season at UConn,
including wins in 24 of UConn’s last 32 games. He is 0-1 vs. Syracuse.
Immediately prior to becoming UConn’s head coach in 1998, Edsall
served as defensive coordinator at Georgia Tech in 1998 under George
O’Leary. Edsall began his coaching career at his alma mater, Syracuse,
from 1980-1990, working under Frank Maloney and Dick MacPherson in a
variety of capacities. Among his highlights at Syracuse was being a
part of the 1987 team that went undefeated at 11-0-1, tying Auburn,
16-16, in the Sugar Bowl. Edsall moved on to Boston College where he
coached defensive backs under Tom Coughlin from 1991-93 before
following Coughlin to the NFL’s Jacksonville Jaguars, staying on the
First Coast through the 1997 season. Edsall is a native of Glen Rock,
Pa., and graduated from Susquehannock High School. Last winter, he was
inducted into the York Area Sports Hall of Fame.
SYRACUSE HEAD COACH GREG ROBINSON
Greg Robinson is 1-3 in his first year as a head coach. Robinson spent
30 years as an assistant in both college (16) and the NFL (14) before
taking over the Orange reigns. Robinson began his coaching career as
an assistant at Pacific (1975-76), Cal State Fullerton (1977-79), NC
State (1980-81) and UCLA (1982-89), serving as offensive coordinator
for his final season in Westwood. Robinson jumped to the pro ranks in
1990 as the defensive line coach of the New York Jets under Bruce
Coslet. Robinson then served as the Jets’ defensive coordinator in
1994, Pete Carroll’s one season in the Meadowlands. Robinson and
Carroll were teammates in college. He later served as an NFL defensive
coordinator in Denver (1995-2000) and Kansas City (2001-03) before
returning to the collegiate ranks in 2004 at Texas. His time with the
Broncos under Mike Shanahan was marked by victories in Super Bowl
XXXII and XXXIII. A native Los Angelean, Robinson graduated from
Pacific in 1975 where he played center, tight end and linebacker.
RADIO & TV COVERAGE
ESPN’S STATE U.
UConn will make the third of at least five national TV appearances
this year as ESPN2 televises the Syracuse game. Dave Pasch
(play-by-play), Trevor Matich (color), Rodney Gilmore (color) and
Stacey Dales-Schuman (sidelines) have the call.
RADIO COVERAGE
For the 14th consecutive season, WTIC 1080-AM in Hartford serves as
the flagship station for the UConn Radio Network. WTIC is the state’s
only 50,000 watt signal and can be heard in 23 states and parts of
Canada. Veteran UConn announcers Joe D’Ambrosio (play-by-play) and
Wayne Norman (color commentary) return to call the action with Bob
Joyce on the sidelines. The UConn pregame show begins 90 minutes prior
to kickoff, while at home games, the UConn Tailgate Show will air two
and a half hours prior to the game with Arnold Dean and Kevin Nathan.
The UConn Football Radio Network also includes WILI 1400-AM in
Willimantic, WXLM, 102.3-FM in New London, WLIS 1420-AM in Old
Saybrook, WMRD 1150-AM in Middletown and WLAD 800-AM in Danbury. UConn
football games are also broadcast over the internet at WTIC.com.
SERIES NOTES
SQUEEZED BY THE ORANGE
The Huskies are 0-1 all-time against Syracuse, dropping a frustrating
42-30 decision on Oct. 30, 2004 at the Carrier Dome in a game that saw
the Huskies rack up 566 yards of total offense but shoot themselves in
the foot with five turnovers. Dan Orlovsky set a UConn and Carrier
Dome record with his 445 passing yards in the contest. UConn has not
beat any team that wears orange since downing Morgan State, 41-14, on
Sept. 22, 1984.
NO EX-CUSES FOR NOT KNOWING EACH OTHER
COACHES: UConn head coach Randy Edsall is a 1980 Syracuse graduate
and served as an assistant coach for the then-Orangemen from 1980-90
under both Frank Maloney and Dick MacPherson. Edsall’s wife, Eileen,
is also a Syracuse graduate who played basketball and volleyball
there. She is a Rochester native...UConn running backs coach Terry
Richardson played for Syracuse from 1989-93 and was given the honor of
wearing the coveted number 44 as a senior...UConn defensive backs
coach Scott Lakatos was a graduate assistant coach for Syracuse during
the 1992 and 1993 seasons...Syracuse running backs coach Desmond
Robinson was an assistant at UConn from 1982-87. He also coached at
West Virginia from 1988-91 and 1995-96 alongside current Husky tackles
and tight ends coach Dave McMichael. The 1988 season saw Don Nehlen’s
Mountainers play Notre Dame in the Fiesta Bowl for the national
championship...Syracuse secondary coach Jim Salgado coached special
teams at Western Connecticut from 1994-95...Orange wide receivers
coach Chris White was a GA at Syracuse during the 1992-93 seasons when
Terry Richardson played there. His first season at Syracuse, 1990, was
also Edsall’s final year there as an assistant. White was followed as
GA at Syracuse by current Husky DB’s mentor Scott Lakatos. White’s
uncle, Gerry White, lettered at UConn from 1960-62 and will forever
hold the record for longest run in school history with his 99-yard TD
scamper against Rhode Island on Nov. 12, 1960. A100-yard run is
statistically impossible...In one of the bigger upsets of recent NFL
history, Edsall, then defensive backs coach for 9-7 wild card entrant
Jacksonville, came out on the winning end of a 30-27 divisional
playoff game over 13-3 Denver at infamously-boisterous Mile High
Stadium on Jan. 4, 1997, during Greg Robinson’s tenure as Broncos’
defensive coordinator and SU assistant Brian Pariani time there as
tight ends coach. Denver won seven straight playoff games after that
loss, including two Super Bowls. The Broncos were 11-2 all-time in
playoff games at Mile High Stadium, including a 42-17 win over the
Jaguars the following season en route to Super Bowl XXXII.
PLAYERS: The Huskies have six native New Yorkers, two of which
hail from upstate. Tyvon Branch is from Syracuse suburb Cicero while
Rob Lunn is from Penfield in the Rochester area...The Orange have four
native Nutmegers in Kadar Drame (New Haven), Breyone Evans (Bristol),
Chris Thorner (West Suffield) and Tim Washington (Bristol). Evans and
Washington were both teammates of Husky signal caller D.J. Hernandez
at Bristol Central...Syracuse defensive end James Wyche lined up
alongside UConn defensive tackle Ray Blagman at Roosevelt (N.Y.) High
School...Syracuse offensive tackle Ryan Ehrie was a linemate of
UConn’s Afa Anoai at Bethlehem, Pa’.s Freedom High School...Anoai and
SU’s Jeremy Sellers both prepped at Fork Union (Va.) Military Academy
but in different years...Patrick Shadle kicked at Morgantown High
School while Seth and Shane Fogarty of UConn played there...UConn wide
receiver Ellis Gaulden went up against SU cornerback Marcus Clayton
daily at Tallahassee’s Godby High School...Ernest Cole played with the
Orange’s Cornelius Campbell, Reggie McCoy, Quinn Ojinnaka and Anthony
Perkins at DeMatha Catholic outside of Washington, D.C. UConn Director
of Athletics Jeff Hathaway also attended DeMatha, but at a different
time.
BIG EAST PLAY FINALLY UNDERWAY
The Huskies will open BIG EAST Conference play on Friday night. Only
three schools in the nation will wait longer than UConn to play their
conference openers in 2005, and all three of them will open league
play on Saturday, Oct. 8. Just a day after UConn’s BIG EAST opener,
Cincinnati (at Pittsburgh), Sun Belt entrant UL-Lafayette (vs. Florida
Atlantic) and WAC-member Fresno State (at New Mexico State) will all
begin their conference slates.
EMPIRE STATE GAMES
For the second consecutive season, UConn will face every Division I-A
program in the state of New York. In fact, UConn will play each of New
York’s three Division I-A entries within the first five games of the
year. In addition to Syracuse, the Huskies traveled to West Point to
face Army on Oct. 1 and played host to Buffalo on Sept. 1. UConn is
6-1 against teams from New York since officially joining Division I-A
in 2002 (3-0 vs. Buffalo, 3-0 vs. Army, 0-1 vs. Syracuse). SQUAD
NOTES
HUSKY WIN TOTAL STANDS STRONG AMONGST NATIONAL ELITE
It has been quite a run for the UConn football program. Since Nov. 1,
2002, the Huskies have posted a 23-8 record in regular season games
(24-8 overall including the Motor City Bowl). The 23 wins are amongst
most regular-season wins of any school in the nation over that span.
USC holds the national lead with 31, followed by Oklahoma with 30 and
Boise State with 29 victories.
MOST REGULAR SEASON WINS SINCE NOV. 1, 2002
WINS SCHOOLS
31 USC
30 Oklahoma
29 Boise State
27 Georgia, Texas
26 Auburn, Florida State, Miami (Fla.), Tennessee, Utah
25 LSU, Michigan
24 Cal, Iowa, Louisville, Ohio State, Toledo, Va. Tech, West Virginia
23 CONNECTICUT, Boston College, Miami (Ohio), Oklahoma State
100-0 RUN
The Huskies opened their 2005 season by outscoring their opposition
100-0 over a span of 122:27. UConn shutout Buffalo, 38-0, and Liberty,
59-0, to open the season, and scored a field goal on its opening drive
at Georgia Tech in week three. The Yellow Jackets soon scored though
when Taylor Bennett hit Calvin Johnson for a 42-yard touchdown on
Tech’s first play from scrimmage at 12:13. Stretching from Sept. 17
back to the 11:47 mark of the third quarter of the 2004 Motor City
Bowl, UConn scored a total of 110 unanswered points over a span of
149:14.
WE’RE GOING STREAKING!!!
UConn held a five-game winning streak prior to its loss at Georgia
Tech on Sept. 17, one which stood tied with Oregon State for the
fifth-longest in the nation at the time. This string (from Nov. 20,
2004-Sept. 11, 2005) was UConn’s third winning streak of at least five
games during its brief 39-game Division I-A existence. The Huskies
rattled off seven straight wins from Oct. 18, 2003-Sept. 11, 2004 and
six straight from Nov. 2, 2002 to Sept. 6, 2003. Prior to these three
runs, UConn hadn’t strung together five consecutive wins since taking
seven straight from Nov. 19, 1994 to Oct. 14, 1995.
CONNECTICUT’S MOST SUCCESSFUL THREE-YEAR RUN EVER
The Huskies have posted .500 or better seasons in each of their past
three campaigns, the school’s first three Division I-A seasons,
finishing at 6-6 in 2002, 9-3 in 2003 and 8-4 in 2004. The 23 combined
wins over the 2002-04 seasons mark the winningest three-year span in
school history. UConn had previously won 22 games over a three-year
period three times, from 1996-98, 1987-89 and 1986-88.
I GET KNOCKED DOWN, BUT I GET UP AGAIN
After defeating Army last week, UConn is now 8-1 in games following a
loss since Oct. 26, 2002. The exception is last Nov. 13 when Georgia
Tech beat UConn after an Oct. 30 loss at Syracuse.
SKIP TO MY LOU
With a win over Army, head coach Randy Edsall moved past Skip Holtz
and into fifth place on UConn’s all-time coaching win list with his
35. Also a renowned baseball coach who led UConn to the College World
Series in 1957 and 1959, J.O. Christian is the torch bearer for UConn
gridiron mentors with 66 career wins from 1939-49. Tom Jackson won 62
games from 1983-93, Robert Ingalls beat 49 opponents from 1952-63 and
Sumner Dole stands in fourth place with his 36 career wins.
HUSKIES DOMINATING ON BOTH SIDES OF THE BALL
Over the past 32 games, UConn has outgained its opponent 27 times. The
first exception came when UConn was outgained by Rutgers 455-321 on
Nov. 8, 2003 in its home finale, a game the Huskies won 38-31. The
other three were on Sept. 17, 2004 at Boston College when the Eagles
held a 334-291 edge, on Oct. 13, 2004 when West Virginia held a
462-365 advantage and on Nov. 13, 2004 when Georgia Tech outgained
UConn 410-225. The Yellow Jackets repeated the feat on Sept. 17. The
Rutgers contest marked the first time since losing at Vanderbilt on
Oct. 26, 2002 that UConn had been outgained. Over this 32 game span,
UConn has averaged 446.7 yards per game of total offense and 308.2
yards per game of total defense.
CONN-TROLLING THE FLOW OF THE GAME
A telling sign of UConn’s strong performance on both sides of the ball
during its brief tenure as a Division I-A program has been its ability
to both record and prevent long drives. Since the start of the 2002
season, UConn’s offense has strung together 36 scoring drives of at
least 80 yards while the Husky defense has surrendered just 17 such
marches. UConn also holds an 8-2 advantage over its opponents in the
number of 90-yard and over drives since becoming a I-A program.
GAME BALLS
After each UConn victory, head coach Randy Edsall awards game balls
for the team’s top performer on offense, defense and special teams.
This year’s game ball recipients will receive a slightly different
prize. UConn has switched to Nike 3005 model game balls from the
Wilson GST model balls that the team used from 2002-04. The 2005
recipients are listed below.
Buffalo: Matt Bonislawski (offense), Deon McPhee (defense),
Larry Taylor (special teams).
Liberty: Matt Bonislawski (offense), Danny Lansanah (defense),
Matt Nuzie (special teams)
Army: Terry Caulley (offense), Darius Butler (defense), Graig
Vicidomino (special teams)
Active Career Game Ball Leaders: Terry Caulley (5), Cornell
Brockington (4), Larry Taylor (4), James Hargrave (3), Matt Nuzie (3),
Matt Bonislawski (2), Dan Murray (2), Jason Williams (2), Allan
Barnes, Darius Butler, Shane Hussar, Danny Lansanah, Deon McPhee,
Grant Preston, Graig Vicdomino, Brandon Young.
EAGLE SCOUTS
Each week head coach Randy Edsall issues an award for the Scout Team
Player of the Week on both offense and defense. In recognition of
their often-overlooked hard work, those players earn a spot on the
Husky travel squad and the dress list for that week’s game. The weekly
honorees are listed below.
Game Offense Defense
Buffalo
OL Jared Pratt
DB Terry Baltimore
Liberty
WR Todd Dorcelus DL Brandon Dillon
Georgia Tech OL Dan Ryan
LB Robert Theoudele
Army
OL Lawrence Green LB Bernie Huzar
NFL UPDATE
A total of six members of the 2004 UConn football team, and eight
former Huskies overall, worked their way into NFL training camps this
fall. Three Huskies have made their respective squads, giving UConn
three active players in the league for the first time since 1989 when
Glenn Antrum (New England), John Dorsey (Green Bay) and Eric Napolski
(Indianapolis) all carried the UConn flag in the professional ranks.
Alfred Fincher was a third round selection of the New Orleans Saints
and was joined there by free agent signee Keron Henry. Fincher broke
his right hand in a preseason game against Baltimore on Aug. 26 and
will make his debut soon after starting the year on the physically
unable to perform (PUP) list. Henry was cut on Sept. 3 but retained
for the Saints’ practice squad. Dan Orlovsky was a fifth round
selection of the Detroit Lions and was expected to make the club as
the number three quarterback. Instead, he made the top backup to Joey
Harrington in the wake of Jeff Garcia’s broken leg, suffered on Sept.
2. Orlovsky made his professional debut on Sept. 18 against Chicago.
Tyler King (Arizona), Ryan Krug (New England) and Justin Perkins
(Kansas City) all signed free agent deals but did not make their
respective teams. Krug is presently serving his second tour with the
Patriots practice squad. Uyi Osunde, a team captain in 2003, was in
Buffalo’s camp after spending the 2004 season on the Bills’ practice
squad, but was cut by the team on Aug. 28. Brian Kozlowski is suiting
up at tight end for the Washington Redskins in 2005, his 12th season
in the NFL.
FEWER FRESH FACES
With the development of the Husky program the past few seasons, UConn
has been able to redshirt more players and rely less on true freshmen
to make an immediate impact just months removed from high school. Only
five true freshmen have seen action so far in 2005 (Anthony Barksdale,
Cody Brown, Jimmy McClam, Courtney Robinson and walk-on Anthony
Rouzier), all of them in either reserve roles or on special teams.
Eight true freshmen appeared for UConn a year ago while six true
freshmen played for the Huskies in 2003.
AN ELITE EIGHT
UConn finished the 2004 season ranked 19th nationally in total offense
(429.8 ypg) and 27th in total defense (327.42 ypg). Nationally, UConn
was one of only eight well-balanced teams to rank in the top 27 of
both categories, joining Auburn, California, Louisville, Oklahoma,
Texas, Virginia and USC. All but No. 23 Virginia finished the year
ranked in the top nine of both polls, while the Cavaliers did climb as
high as number six during the season. The elite octet also includes
three of the four BCS bowl game winners (USC - Orange, Auburn - Sugar
and Texas - Rose).
WE ARE THE WORLD
While the overwhelming majority of the 2005 UConn football team is
comprised of players from the northeastern United States and Florida,
the Huskies have a far greater international influence than a typical
college football team with players hailing from three different
foreign countries. UConn has two Canadian players, in the Quebecois
duo of Shawn Mayne and Jason Ward. Offensive tackle Aloys Manga is a
native of Duana, Cameroon while defensive tackle Deon McPhee is from
the Bahamas.
CONNECTICUT CO-CAPTAINS
Senior linebacker James Hargrave and defensive tackle Deon McPhee were
named as team captains prior to the start of spring drills. It marked
a departure for UConn which typically names captains after the
conclusion of spring ball, but head coach Randy Edsall thought it was
a better idea to have a leadership group in place earlier with such a
young team. With only 51 varsity letters earned by the combined 2005
Husky squad, it ranks as the fifth least experienced in the nation.
OFFENSE NOTES
BONES’ BREAKTHROUGH
Matt Bonislawski became the sixth quarterback to make his first career
start under Randy Edsall and is just the second to win that game,
joining Dan Orlovsky. Completing 11-of-18 passes, he is also only the
second to complete over 50-percent of his passes, joining Chris
Willis, and the second to throw multiple touchdowns, joining Ryan
Tracey’s three. Against Liberty, he became the first Husky quarterback
to win his first two starts since Brian Hoffmann won three straight to
begin his tenure as a starter in 1998.
A BONUS FROM BONES
Matt Bonislawski’s 26-yard touchdown run against Buffalo was the first
by a UConn quarterback since Nov. 9, 2002 when Dan Orlovsky scored
from one-yard out against Kent State in the final game at Memorial
Stadium. It was the longest TD run by a UConn signal caller since
Peter Lane scored on a 30-yard rush against Northeastern on Sept. 14,
1985 at Memorial Stadium. Bonislawski's 71 rushing yards in the game
are the most by a UConn quarterback since Brian Hoffmann also ran for
71 on Oct. 2, 1999 in a 20-9 win over Rhode Island. On the year he has
rushed for 152 yards, fourth best on the Husky squad, with three
touchdown runs.
LET’S GET IT STARTED
UConn has scored on its opening drive in each of its four games this
year, five in a row overall, and eight of its last 10 contests in
total. UConn is 6-2 in those eight games with both of the losses
coming at Georgia Tech.
THE KIDS ARE ALRIGHT
UConn has an aggregate total of just 18 varsity letters earned by its
current offensive players, tying for the second fewest of any team in
the nation. Navy returns just a combined total of 17 offensive letters
while UConn’s 18 equals Louisiana-Lafayette. Although inexperienced,
the current two-deep is loaded with some of the most talented players
to ever come into the Husky program. UConn’s recruiting has advanced
dramatically with the ever-improving stature of the team and UConn’s
facilities. Proof positive that a low number of returnees can still be
reason for optimism is the team in fourth place directly behind UConn
and ULL...near-unanimous preseason No. 1 Southern California.
TEACH YOUR CHILDREN WELL
A year ago, UConn was benefiting from an offensive line that combined
to start an incredible 174 career games and powered the Huskies to the
BIG EAST’s top spot in both scoring and total offense. In 2005, seven
of the 10 student-athletes on UConn’s two-deep had never played a
single down on the Huskies’ offensive line prior to this season. Grant
Preston (39 career starts) and Craig Berry (15 career starts) are the
two veteran members of the line corps and have shifted roles to anchor
the group from the tackle sports. Those two will be asked to help
bring the unit along, in addition to position coaches Norries Wilson
(centers and guards) and Dave McMichael (tackles). Randy Edsall has
taken non-line duties off of the plates of both assistants so that
they can focus more on the daily development of the linemen. Reports
out of both spring practice and fall camp were that the group was
progressing quickly, but practice experience is no substitute for game
experience, something the group sorely lacks. In 2005, UConn has
started redshirt freshmen making their UConn debuts at both center
(Trey Tonsing) and right guard (Immanuel Hutcherson). The starting
left guard was junior Matt Applebaum, a converted defensive lineman
who had played sparingly in eight career games on defense. Of the five
backups, three are redshirt freshmen and only sophomore left guard
Brian Kersmanc (three games played) had ever seen action for the blue
and white prior to the season opener against Buffalo. Redshirt
freshman William Beatty made his first career start at Georgia Tech on
Sept. 17 when Berry was slowed by pneumonia.
BORN TO RUN
UConn ran for 290 yards on 55 carries against Buffalo in the season
opener on Sept. 1, both of which were highs for the Division I-A era.
The Huskies surpassed each total a week later when UConn gained 376
yards on 62 carries against Liberty. The previous Division I-A highs
of 287 and 50, respectively, both came on Sept. 20, 2003 during a 38-7
win at Buffalo. The 376 yards on the ground against Liberty was the
third best performance in school history and the best since gaining
394 at Yale on Sept. 30, 1995. UConn had not rushed for more than 290
yards in a game since scampering for 317 in a 45-7 win against Boston
University on Nov. 1, 1997 during the Terriers’ sad final days as a
varsity program. Conversely, UConn’s 21 passing attempts in the
Buffalo game were its fewest since attempting just 21 passes against
Eastern Washington on September 8, 2001. UConn ranks 11th in the
nation in rushing offense at 240.5 yards per game. The Huskies have
not averaged more than 200 yards per game on the ground for a season
since 1995 when UConn averaged 229.9 ypg.
BROCKING THE HISTORY BOOK
Cornell Brockington, who led the BIG EAST with 1,218 rushing yards in
2004, has an opportunity to make conference history this year. No
player has ever led the BIG EAST in rushing twice. Further, should
Terry Caulley, or another Husky, emerge as the team’s top threat at
tailback, they would also have a chance to make history on behalf of
UConn. No single school has ever produced the BIG EAST’s leading
rusher in consecutive seasons.
TOTAL RE-CAULL
UConn welcomed the return of junior tailback Terry Caulley in 2005.
With his knee not yet 100-percent recovered from a serious injury
suffered on September 27, 2003 at Virginia Tech, head coach Randy
Edsall decided prior to the start of fall 2004 drills to air on the
side of caution and redshirt Caulley for the season. Caulley, who
played as a true freshman in 2002 when he was named to the Freshman
All-America team, has two years of eligibility remaining. The shifty
Caulley was leading the nation with 601 rushing yards in 2003 when he
suffered a season-ending knee injury on a non-contact play as he made
a cut on only his second carry of the game against the Hokies.
CAULL-ECTING 100-YARD GAMES
With his 14-carry, 100-yard effort against Buffalo on Sept. 1, Terry
Caulley has reached the century mark in 11 of his 19 career games
played. His 11 career 100-yard rushing games rank second in school
history, just one shy of equaling the benchmark number of 12 set by
Vinny Clements from 1968-70. Not included on UConn’s 2006 schedule,
Buffalo will be happy to never face Caulley again. In three career
games played against the Bulls, Caulley racked up 470 rushing yards
(156.7 ypg) on 67 carries (7.0 ypc) with five touchdowns.
LONG DISTANCE CAULLEY
Terry Caulley ranks third in the nation amongst active players in
average rushing yards per game (minimum 2,000 career yards), trailing
only Oklahoma’s Adrian Peterson and DeAngelo Williams of Memphis.
Caulley is averaging 115.5 yards for each of his 19 career games
played, while Peterson averages 136.3 over his 17 and Williams 130.0
for his 37 games played as a Tiger. Cornell Brockington ranks 11th on
this list.
HUSKIES CELEBRATE Y2K
UConn is one of just three schools in the nation to have two active
players with over 2,000 career rushing yards. Terry Caulley has 2,195
to his credit while Cornell Brockington has gained 2,037 career yards
on the ground for the blue and white. UConn is joined in this regard
by Minnesota (Marion Barber III and Laurence Maroney) and TCU (Lonta
Hobbs and Robert Merrill).
EDSALL’S RUNNING NON-ISSUE
While the depth chart includes an “or” at tailback between
team-players Cornell Brockington and Terry Caulley, head coach Randy
Edsall views this as a strength of his entire team as opposed to a
lightning rod for controversy. Mutually respecting each other, both
players are content to share time and Edsall will use both regularly,
citing the creativity it will allow the offense to have by using the
two weapons either situationally or in tandem. In releasing the depth
chart on August 25, Edsall said “to me, we really don’t have a starter
in the traditional sense of the role. I feel totally confident in both
(of their) abilities which they have each demonstrated consistently
both in games the past few years and practices this fall. They are
both going to get a significant amount of playing time this year.
There isn’t a true starter there. I look at them as equals for the
most part and they can both do many things to help this team.” A quick
glance at the stats enforces this assessment. Entering the 2005
season, Brockington had 1,861 career rushing yards while Caulley had
1,854. Caulley had rushed for 22 touchdowns while Brockington had
rushed for 21. Brockington had 41 career receptions for 295 yards and
two touchdowns while Caulley had 39 catches for 286 yards and two
touchdowns.
ROLL THE BONES
Junior Matt Bonislawski earned the starting nod at quarterback as the
season opened. Used as a backup the past two years, throwing seven
career passes, the majority of Bonislawski’s previous playing time had
come as the holder for Matt Nuzie’s kicks. Bonislawski’s experience
with UConn’s system from his practice time over the years was a major
factor in him holding off a charge from redshirt freshman D.J.
Hernandez during their competition for the starting spot this past
spring and fall preseason. It marked the first time that a UConn
quarterback has made a starting debut since Dan Orlovsky was pressed
into action against Eastern Michigan on Oct. 6, 2001 after Keron Henry
suffered an injury the previous week at Rutgers. Orlovsky’s numbers
were average but effective that day as he completed 14-of-32 passes
for 180 yards with one touchdown and one interception in UConn’s 19-0
win. Orlovsky had started each of UConn’s last 41 games entering the
2005 season, including all 36 contests of the Division I-A era.
FINISHING IN THE RED IS GOOD
You wouldn’t want your financial ledgers to be full of red ink, but
UConn’s 2004 late season success was in part due to finishing its time
in the red zone in style. After going 5-for-5 in the regular season
finale at Rutgers with all five scores being touchdowns and 6-of-7 in
the Motor City Bowl, UConn scored on 43 of its 48 total red zone
possessions last season (90%) with 27 touchdowns. UConn went on a
similar tear to wrap up the 2003 season. The Huskies entered the Duke
game on Sept. 11, 2004 having scored on each of its last 29
possessions in the red zone, dating back to its Oct. 18, 2003 game at
Kent State. In the Division I-A era, UConn has tallied on 149 of 169
(88%) of its red zone possession with only one turnover during that
span. Of the 20 non-scoring drives, 13 came as a result of a missed
field goal attempt. UConn was a perfect 8-for-8 in the red zone
against Liberty on Sept. 10.
SHARING THE WEALTH
Edsall has made a point of having a deep rotation at wide receiver
throughout his time at UConn. The plan is the same for this year with
senior Jason Williams the most experienced of a group that includes
junior Brandon Young and a slew of promising freshmen and sophomores.
In fact, eight different Huskies caught a pass in the season opener
against Buffalo even though UConn completed just 14 passes in the
game. Through four games, 11 different Huskies have caught a pass
already in 2005. Regardless of who ends up in the mix, Edsall will
keep them involved. During the 2004 season, 13 different Huskies
caught a pass, nine hit double digits in receptions and nine different
UConn players have caught a touchdown pass. In 2003, 15 different
players caught a pass for UConn and eight Huskies hit double figures
in receptions. A total of 10 different Huskies caught a touchdown pass
in 2003. The stats were similarly diverse in 2002 when seven different
Huskies caught at least 20 passes which tied for the fourth in the
nation during the regular season. The shared receptions has also
created an even distribution of receiving yardage. Despite the fact
that UConn has thrown for 10,223 passing yards over the past
three-plus seasons combined (255.6 ypg), the Huskies have had just 11
100-yard receiving games, with six different receivers reaching the
plateau (Shaun Feldeisen, Keron Henry, Dan Murray, Williams, O’Neil
Wilson and Young).
DAN-IMAL HAS NOSE FOR THE END ZONE
Dan Murray caught a pair of passes from his tight end position on
Sept. 1 against Buffalo, both of them good for touchdowns. With 7:50
to play in the second quarter, Murray used his 6-5, 244 pound frame to
pull down a 15-yard touchdown pass over an undersized Bull defender.
Just minutes later, Murray repeated his feat at 4:15 on a 22-yard TD
grab in the end zone. It marked consecutive regular season games with
two touchdown catches for Murray. He put up career highs with six
catches for 135 yards and two TDs on Thanksgiving Day, 2004, helping
UConn cap its regular season with a 41-35 win at Rutgers. It was the
first 100-yard receiving game by a UConn tight end since Brian
Kozlowski had 151 at Boston University on Nov. 14, 1992. Murray’s
eight career touchdown receptions rank fourth in UConn history amongst
tight ends.
YOUNG IS RESTLESS
The Huskies welcomed back one of their top wide receivers for the 2005
season. Junior Brandon Young suffered a foot injury in a bad
automobile accident in his native Maryland the weekend before fall
2004 training camp started and missed the entire season. In addition
to his 28 receptions and four touchdowns as a sophomore in 2003, Young
also contributed as a kickoff and punt returner. He returned
triumphantly to the starting lineup against Liberty, leading UConn
with four catches, 61 yards and a touchdown. He also led the Huskies
in receiving the following week at Georgia Tech. Young had one catch
for 15 yards in the season opener against Buffalo.
QUARTERLY CONSISTENCY
UConn recently had a stretch in which it scored points in 22
consecutive quarters of action. The streak was bookended by games in
Atlanta against Georgia Tech. UConn’s run was halted in the second
quarter of its loss at Grant Field on Sept. 17. The last time that
UConn went a full 15-minute stanza without putting points on the board
prior to that was the third quarter of a 30-10 loss at Georgia Tech on
Nov. 13, 2004. DEFENSE NOTES
HUSKIES LEAD THE NATION IN TOTAL DEFENSE
Through four games, UConn leads the nation in total defense, averaging
213.50 yards per game. The Huskies rank ahead of second-place Tulane’s
220.33 average while the top five is rounded out by Virginia Tech
(226.40), Boston College (248.40) and Ohio State (249.00). UConn also
ranks first in passing defense (131.00 ypg) and fifth in scoring
defense (10.25 ppg).
THIRD DOWN INEFFICIENCY
UConn’s opponents have found third downs this year to be a tough row
to hoe. Through three games, UConn leads the nation in third down
conversion defense at 16% (9-for-58). North Carolina State is second
in the nation, but well behind UConn with a rate of 22-percent.
Helping UConn to this has been steady first and second down defense,
forcing teams to convert from longer distances on third down. Only
eight times this year has UConn’s defense faced a third down and three
yards or less. Of 58 third down conversion attempts faced by the
Huskies this year, 38 have been of seven yards or longer (66%). Teams
haven’t fared much better when going for it on fourth down against
UConn either as the Huskies are 4-for-12 (33%) in fourth down defense,
tying for 24th in the nation. Only Rutgers (15) and Notre Dame (14)
have seen opponents attempt more fourth down conversions than UConn.
UCONN DEFENSE RECORDS (DUNKIN’) DONUTS
UConn’s 38-0 shutout of Buffalo on Sept. 1 and 59-0 shutout of Liberty
on Sept. 10 were historic on several fronts. Coupled with its 29-0
shutout of Buffalo on Nov. 20, 2004 in its home finale, UConn recorded
shutouts in consecutive home games for the first time since a run of
three straight home shutouts from 1967-1986. The Huskies closed their
1967 home slate with a 3-0 win over Holy Cross on Nov. 25 and began
their 1968 home schedule with shutout wins over Vermont (21-0 on Sept.
20) and Maine (29-0 on Oct. 19)…The 59-0 margin was UConn’s most
lopsided shutout since the school’s 125-0 victory over the Newport
Naval Training Station in 1949…It marked the first time that UConn has
opened its season with consecutive shutouts since 1928 when the
Huskies rolled through their first seven games without allowing a
score, before dropping a 51-13 contest at Boston College on Nov. 24,
1928...The Buffalo game marked UConn’s first shutout in a home season
opener since a 7-0 whitewashing of Vermont on Sept. 23, 1972…UConn now
has at least one shutout in three of its four Division I-A seasons,
along with the blankings of Navy in 2002 and Buffalo in 2004. UConn
has not recorded a shutout in three out of four seasons since
1967-70…Prior to Buffalo, UConn last shutout the same team in
consecutive seasons by stopping Maine in both 1967 and 1968…Looking
beyond the borders of the Nutmeg State, the Buffalo game marked only
the second time ever that a BIG EAST school has opened its season with
a shutout of a Division I-A opponent, the other being West Virginia’s
34-0 win at Pittsburgh on Aug. 31, 1996.
MOST DOMINANT DEFENSE IN A DECADE
UConn is the first school in a decade to open its season with
consecutive shutouts. The last time any team shutout each of its first
two opponents was in 1996 when Auburn beat UAB 29-0 and Fresno State
62-0 to open the season. This early success though isn’t a harbinger
of great things to come for the Huskies as that Tiger team, under
coach Terry Bowden, went 5-4 the rest of the regular season,
surrendering a pedestrian average of 27.7 points per game. The closest
any team had come to matching those 1996 Tigers since then were Texas
Tech (1998), Virginia Tech (1998) and Kansas State (2002), each of
which allowed just three points in its first two games combined, each
throwing a shutout in one game and yielding only a field goal in the
other. With another shutout this season, UConn would be the first team
since 2002 to record three shutouts in a single season. Kansas State,
North Texas and Texas all accomplished that feat in 2002.
NO SOUTHERN HOSPITALITY ‘ROUND THESE PARTS
While Georgia Tech snapped an overall shutout streak of 149:14 that
dated back to the 2004 Motor City Bowl, UConn’s defense is still
riding a lengthy shutout streak on its home field. The Huskies have
not been scored upon at Rentschler Field in the last 182:51 of game
action. The last time visitors tallied at Rentschler Field came when
Temple’s Phil Goodman caught a six-yard TD pass from Walter Washington
with 2:51 to play in a 45-31 Husky win on Oct. 23, 2004.
THE QUARTERBACK MUST GO DOWN
One of the many benefits of the two lopsided season-opening wins was
that it allowed head coach Randy Edsall to use many of his young
players in game situations and let them gain experience. Not only did
they figuratively get their feet wet, but they also performed well
once they got on the field. A total of 19 different UConn defenders
have factored in a tackle for loss over the first four games and 11
different Huskies recorded a sack. All of last season, 17 different
UConn players recorded a TFL and nine different players had a sack,
numbers that UConn eclipsed after just four games this fall.
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY TACKLERS
UConn has seen a diverse defensive rush in 2005 as more UConn players
have factored in a tackle for loss (19) than any other school in the
nation. Arkansas State has 18 while Virginia Tech and North Carolina
both have had 17 players work their way into at least a half of a TFL.
Meanwhile, UConn’s 11 different sackers tie for the second most
diverse pass rush in the nation, trailing only Wisconsin’s 12 sackers.
The Huskies are tied with Florida and North Carolina with their 11,
ranking ahead of USC and Virginia Tech which are tied with 10.
THE BUTLER DID IT. THE BUTLER DID IT. THE BUTLER DID IT.
Darius Butler tied a school, BIG EAST, and Michie Stadium record when
he intercepted three passes in UConn’s win at Army on Oct. 1. It is
the only three-interception game in the nation this year to date and
the first at UConn since 1984. Butler returned his interceptions for a
school-record 122 yards, including an 86-yard touchdown. That run back
was the third longest in school history and UConn’s longest
interception return since Dave Korponai ran one back 100 yards against
Rhode Island on Nov. 17, 1962. Butler’s 122 total return yards is the
second-best effort in BIG EAST history, trailing only the 172 by Vann
Washington of West Virginia on Oct. 29, 1994 against Louisiana Tech.
The three interceptions tied, and the 122 yards broke, facility
records for Army’s fabled Michie Stadium which has seen many of
college football’s finest since it opened in 1924.
IT’S NO RUSE
True freshman walk-on Anthony Rouzier has seen a start to his Husky
career that none expected. A starter on the team’s kickoff coverage
unit, Rouzier has played 23 snaps as a reserve linebacker late in
routs of Liberty (14 plays) and Army (9). On those 23 career snaps,
Rouzier has made two interceptions, returning one 51 yards for a
touchdown at Army. It was the longest interception return by a UConn
linebacker since Jamal Lundy scored from 62 yards out against Temple
on Oct. 19, 2002. Amazingly, Rouzier ranks tied for 12th in the nation
in interceptions with two in three games played. His touchdown at
Army, coupled with Darius Butler’s 86-yard interception return for a
touchdown against the Cadets, marked the first time that UConn has
ever returned two interceptions for a touchdown in the same game.
BUFFALO AND LIBERTY NOT GIVEN FREEDOM TO MOVE
During the Buffalo game, the Bulls did not run a single offensive play
from UConn territory while Liberty ran just four plays (all in the
first quarter) from UConn territory. Neither team even got close
enough to attempt a field goal. This was made possible by UConn
forcing punts on 17 of Buffalo and Liberty’s combined 24 possessions,
including 10 three-and-outs.
DESPITE LOSSES, DEFENSIVE LINE LOOKED FINE
A year ago the defensive line was one of UConn’s biggest areas of
concern as the Huskies had to replace three great senior starters from
a solid 2003 unit, including one of the program’s best-ever ends in
Uyi Osunde. A year later, it is the most experienced area of the
defense and a formidable unit at that. Five different active Huskies
had started a game on the defensive line entering the 2005 season,
with four of those (Rhema Fuller, Shawn Mayne, Deon McPhee and Jason
Ward) starting at least half of the games last fall as the Huskies
marched to a berth on the Motor City Bowl. All but one face on the
current two-deep (true freshman Cody Brown) has prior UConn playing
experience, the lone defensive position group that can make that
claim. In all, 12 active Huskies have played at least one game for
UConn on the defensive line, 13 if you include Matt Applebaum who has
since been moved to the offensive line.
SOLID BACKING
Just as talented understudies stepped in to fill big shoes on the
defensive line a year ago, similar results will be expected for
UConn’s linebackers in 2005. The unit must replace two of the top five
tacklers in UConn history in departing seniors Alfred Fincher and
Maurice Lloyd. The central figure of the group in 2005 will be senior
co-captain James Hargrave who boasts 229 career stops, 32 of them for
a loss, from his familiar strongside “Husky” linebacker post. Senior
Taurien Sowell and sophomore Danny Lansanah held down the other two
starting roles as the curtain rose on the 2005 season. Sowell is a
fifth-year senior with 35 career games played to his credit, but most
of the time was spent on special teams. Lansanah saw action in 11
games last year and made 23 tackles. Backing up the trio are sophomore
Ryan Henegan, sophomore Justin DeRubertis and redshirt freshman
Jonathon Smith. Smith made his first career start on Oct. 1 at Army,
for an injured Lansanah, and led the Huskies with nine tackles.
SECONDARY HAS PLENTY OF SECONDARY OPTIONS
The UConn defensive backfield is spilling over the brim with
comparable talent, giving the Huskies numerous options at this
position and ensuring that competition will reign throughout the
season as players vie for playing time. Juniors M.J. Estep and Ernest
Cole are the most experienced members of a group that has steadily
improved during UConn’s time at the Division I-A level due to better
recruiting of athleticism. Redshirt freshmen Darius Butler and Dahna
Deleston are also starters. Junior Allan Barnes and sophomore Tyvon
Branch have both started games in the past for UConn but are presently
reserves.
THEY CALL IT FOOTBALL FOR A REASON
In the past two-plus seasons, UConn’s defense has done a far better
job than its opponents of forcing punts as the Huskies have been able
to receive 190 punts while booting the ball away just 133 times. In
2003, UConn forced its opponents to punt a staggering 85 times (7.1
per game). Although the NCAA does not keep this as a category leader,
on the flip side, only Arizona (98), Baylor (93), Iowa State (87) and
Stanford (86) were forced to punt more times as a team in 2003. By
comparison, the UConn offense punted just 60 times in 2003. Amongst
the seasonal highlights, the UConn defense swarmed over Buffalo’s
offense forcing 11 Bull punts out of 13 UB possessions. The trend
continued in the 2004 season opener as UConn forced Murray State to
punt 11 times on its 15 possessions. In all, UConn forced 73 punts in
2004 (6.0 per game) while the Huskies punted 54 times. UConn looks to
see more of the same in 2005 as for the second consecutive year, UConn
forced 11 punts on opening day, this time the victim was Buffalo. A
turnover on downs was all that prevented UConn from a perfect
12-for-12 mark in punt forcing against the Bulls on Sept. 1. UConn
forced another six punts the following week against Liberty, seven at
Georgia Tech and eight at Army to hold a 32-19 edge in punts forced so
far in 2005. SPECIAL TEAMS NOTES
TAYLOR MADE RETURNS
Larry Taylor ranks 24th in the nation in punt returns (12.64 average).
Last week he also ranked seventh in kickoff returns, but has since
fallen below the national minimum to be ranked because of both UConn’s
shutout wins the first two games and Army kicking the ball as far away
from him as possible on Oct. 1. Prior to Army, Taylor was one of only
two versatile players in the nation to rank in the top 20 of both
kickoff and punt return yards, joining Brandon Williams of Wisconsin.
He started the 2005 season off on the right foot with 118 punt return
yards against Buffalo on Sept. 1, marking the eighth-best performance
in BIG EAST history and the second-best ever by anyone not wearing
either a Miami or Virginia Tech uniform. Taylor was not far off of the
UConn record of 145 yards set by Joe Markus at Maine on Oct. 20, 1979.
The previous individual high for a Husky during the Division I-A era
was the 74 that Taylor had against both Murray State (Sept. 4, 2004)
and Pittsburgh (Sept. 30, 2004).
A LITTLE LT
Diminutive sophomore Larry Taylor returns after an electrifying true
freshman season during which he became only the second Husky ever (and
the first since 1975) to return both a kickoff and a punt for a
touchdown in the same season. Behind Taylor, UConn ranked 18th in the
nation in punt returns in 2004 after finishing the previous season
ranked 116th out of 117 Division I-A teams. Individually, he ranked
second in the nation last fall by averaging 31.3 yards per kickoff
return, including his 97-yard return for a touchdown on the game’s
opening kickoff against Temple on Oct. 23. It is believed to be the
first opening kickoff return for a touchdown in school history and it
was the first kickoff returned for a touchdown by a Husky at any stage
of a game since 1998. Taylor’s punt return for a touchdown came from
68 yards out during the Motor City Bowl and permanently swung the
game’s momentum in UConn’s favor during its 39-10 victory over Toledo.
Taylor was UConn’s only true freshman to earn a game ball last season,
picking up three of them in all.
ALL THE NUZIE THAT’S FIT TO PRINT
Matt Nuzie’s place on the field will be determined as this week
progresses after the Husky kicker injured his hip in coverage of a
kickoff at Army on Oct. 1 when he was blind-sided away from the play.
Having rode the rails through a roller coaster career, junior place
kicker Matt Nuzie stood on the cusp of greatness prior to the hit. He
broke the school’s career extra point record during the Army game and
is just a handful two field goals and six points away from
establishing UConn career records in both categories (see charts
below). Following an uneven freshman season and a slow start to his
sophomore campaign, Nuzie caught fire and, by the end of the 2004
season, he was named a semifinalist for the Lou Groza Award and
second-team All-BIG EAST. Nuzie ranked first in the BIG EAST, and
eighth in the nation, in 2004 by averaging 1.67 field goals per game.
His 20 made field goals set a UConn seasonal record. Nuzie capped a
school-record streak of 10 consecutive made field goals with a 51-yard
boot at Georgia Tech on Nov. 13, UConn’s longest since 1998. Against
Duke on Sept. 11, 2004, he hit the game-winning field goal with 3:40
to play in UConn's 22-20 win. After a key miss at Boston College a
week later, he rebounded. Against Pittsburgh he kicked his way to BIG
EAST Player of the Week honors and a game ball. Nuzie hit on all three
of his field goal tries and both of his extra point attempts. The
highlight of the field goals was the 49-yard boot he hit as time
expired in the first half after two "icing" time outs called by
Pittsburgh.
WHO BUT HUSSAR???
Sophomore Shane Hussar fended off a challenge over the offseason from
Chris Pavasaris to enter the 2005 campaign as UConn’s top punter.
Troubled by nagging injuries a a true freshman last year, Hussar
punted 46 times for a 36.9 yard average, playing in 11 of the team’s
12 games. Hussar had the best performance of his young UConn career
against Pittsburgh on Sept. 30, 2004 when he dropped five of his eight
punts inside of the 20. Field position proved critical in the Husky
win as UConn started drives at its own 39 as opposed to Pittsburgh
beginning its marches at its own 22. He has punted 19 times in 2005
for a 41.6 yard average. STADIUM/ATTENDANCE NOTES
MOVIN’ ON UP TO THE EAST SIDE
The Huskies moved into brand new Rentschler Field in East Hartford for
the 2003 season with the stadium opening its doors on August 30 when
UConn defeated Indiana, 34-10. Conveniently located within miles of
Interstates 91, 84 and 384, Adriaen’s Landing and downtown Hartford,
the new home of the Huskies lies on 75 acres of land donated to the
State of Connecticut from the historic Pratt & Whitney Airfield by
company founder Frederick Rentschler. The new stadium boasts a
capacity of 40,000 with 38 luxury suites in a massive press box tower
which helps enclose the natural grass field. The $91.2 million
construction project is an integral part of former Governor John
Rowland’s economic development program for the Hartford metro-area.
While UConn football serves as the primary tenant, the facility also
attracts other prominent events to Hartford. Rentschler Field hosted
two concerts by Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band, September 16
and 18 of 2003 and one by the Rolling Stones on Aug. 26, 2005. Several
prominent international soccer contests have been played on the pitch
at Rentschler Field, most notably a World Cup Qualifier between the
United States and Trinidad & Tobago on Aug. 17, 2005. Famed British
clubs Liverpool and Glasgow Celtic played a match at Rentschler Field
in July, 2004 while the soon to be gold medal winning United States
Olympic women’s soccer team played its final state-side exhibition in
East Hartford on August 1, 2004 when the Americans defeated China,
3-1.
STARTING A COMMOTION
Swelling interest in the Husky football program as it gradually moved
up into BIG EAST play can perhaps be best evidenced by the rise in
attendance. For the 2005 season, UConn has sold in excess of 32,000
season tickets at Rentschler Field, selling out 3,800 student season
tickets, a pair of staggering sums considering that the 2001 season
ticket base was around 4,000. In 2002, fueled by a season-ticket base
of 11,300, UConn ranked 23rd in the nation by playing to 97.58% of
Memorial Stadium’s 16,200 seat capacity. The burgeoning season ticket
base more than doubled to 24,000 for the inaugural season at
Rentschler Field and rose to 28,000 a year ago.
40,000 HUSKY FANS CAN’T BE WRONG
The Huskies sold out 10 of their first 15 dates at Rentschler Field
and each of the last eight. UConn has played to 96-percent of capacity
all-time in East Hartford, drawing 577,485 fans, or an average of
38,499 per game. UConn finished 2004 ranked 26th in the nation in
attendance based on percentage of capacity, a sum that led the BIG
EAST Conference and ranked ahead of Clemson, Boston College, Auburn
and Kansas State, amongst many others. In fact, UConn sold more
football tickets last year (275,129) than either men’s (234,109) or
women’s (217,815) basketball.
RENTSCHLER FIELD PROVES FRIENDLY FOR HUSKIES
With its win over Buffalo on Nov. 20, UConn compiled a 6-1 home record
at Rentschler Field last fall. The six home wins in 2004 set a school
record for a single season. Six times UConn had won five home games in
a season. UConn turned the trick last year and also managed the feat
five times at Memorial Stadium, going 5-0 in 1986 and 1989 and posting
a 5-1 mark in 1987, 1995 and 1998. UConn presently stands at 13-2
all-time at Rentschler Field.
CONSTRUCTION ONGOING FOR NEW CAMPUS FACILITIES
In addition to their new game day home of Rentschler Field, UConn is
less than a year away from having a top-notch daily home as well.
Construction is progressing smoothly in Storrs on the $42 million
Burton Family Football Complex and Mark R. Shenkman Training Center.
Due to open this upcoming summer, the two adjacent buildings will
house everything from the team’s locker room to coaches offices to a
120-yard indoor practice facility and an 85,000 square foot strength
and conditioning center. RADIO/TV COVERAGE NOTES
ESPN’S HOMETOWN TEAM
When ESPN got its start 25 years ago, it began by broadcasting all
sorts of UConn events, including soccer games and swimming meets. The
Bristol-based cable television titan returned to its roots last fall
as it broadcast five UConn football games on its family of networks
and the conglomerate will do likewise this fall. UConn made its
seasonal TV debut on Sept. 17 when ESPNU carried the Huskies’ game at
Georgia Tech. ESPNU also carried the Army game nationally on Oct. 1.
UConn will also appear on ESPN2 twice (Oct. 7 vs. Syracuse and Nov. 2
at West Virginia) and ESPN once (Dec. 3 vs. Louisville).
READY FOR PRIMETIME PLAYERS
Two of UConn’s five ESPN appearances will air in coveted weeknight
slots during the prime-time viewing hours. UConn’s tilt with Syracuse
on Oct. 7 is slated for an 8:00 p.m. kickoff while the Huskies’ debut
game at West Virginia will kick off at 7:30 p.m. on Nov. 2.
SCHEDULE NOTES
WORKING FOR THE WEEKEND
This season, for the second straight year, members of the UConn
coaching staff will have plenty of time to relax on Saturdays while
most of America is playing games. The team will have six Saturdays off
during the 2005 season. UConn has three bye weeks (Sept. 24, Oct. 29
and Nov. 19), while three weekday games creates three more open
Saturdays during the season (Sept. 3, Oct. 8 and Nov. 5). UConn also
enjoyed six Saturdays off during the 2004 season, compliments of four
midweek games and a pair of byes. In fact, in 2004 UConn played on
every day of the week except for Sunday and Tuesday. These schedules
stand in sharp contrast to the 2003 season when UConn was one of just
eight teams in the nation to play its 12 regular season games
consecutively with no byes.
FINALLY FAMILIAR FACES
Now in its fourth year as a Division I-A program and its second as a
member of the BIG EAST Conference, UConn’s schedule is starting to
take on an air of familiarity that hasn’t existed since the Huskies
left the Atlantic 10 Conference after the 1999 season. Of the 11
opponents on the 2005 schedule, UConn has previously faced 10 of them
(all but Liberty). Each of the first three seasons at a I-A level
brought an annual barrage of new faces to the Husky slate. Of the 36
games played by UConn from 2002-04, 16 of them inaugurated a new
series. UConn went 10-6 in those contests, including its historic
39-10 win over Toledo in the Motor City Bowl. Prior to the year 2000
when UConn began its transition to I-A status, Rutgers was the only
current BIG EAST team that UConn had ever faced and even that series
lay dormant from 1983-2001.
WISHING IT WAS A DIRTY DOZEN
The NCAA schedule reverts back to 12 games for the 2006 season, news
which will be welcomed by the Huskies. The NCAA permits only 11 game
regular seasons in 2005. In the 2002, 2003 and 2004 seasons, UConn
used its 12th game to post a monumental win. On Nov. 23, 2002, UConn
posted a 37-20 win over bowl-bound Iowa State on Senior Day in Ames.
On Nov. 15, 2003, the Huskies found more Week 12 magic with a 51-17
rout of Wake Forest, again on the road. The 2004 season was set up for
11 games but the Huskies earned a 12th opportunity to take the field
by securing its first ever bowl berth and seized victory, topping
Toledo, 39-10, in the Motor City Bowl on Dec. 27, 2004. The Huskies
would of course gladly welcome a 12th contest added to the 2005 season
as it would come in a bowl game.
SYMPATHY FOR THE SCHEDULE
Allowing a young team to benefit from three bye weeks, UConn will play
the longest regular-season schedule in the nation this year, covering
the full 94-day regular season playing period permitted by the NCAA.
September 1 is the first permissible playing date for Division I-A
football, while UConn is also scheduled to play on the last
permissible regular season date when the Huskies welcome Louisville to
Rentschler Field on Dec. 3. UConn is the only team in the nation to
have a regularly scheduled game on both the first and last days of the
season. However, Houston, Marshall, South Carolina, Tulsa, UCF,
Vanderbilt and Wake Forest can potentially match UConn’s 94-day
regular season. All open their 2005 seasons on Sept. 1 and would also
play on Dec. 3 should they advance to their respective conference’s
championship games. |