CONNECTICUT HEAD COACH RANDY EDSALL
A veteran in his 25th 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 48-52 career record in
his ninth season at UConn, including wins in 37 of UConn’s last
59 games. He is 3-2 vs. Rutgers. 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. He was recently inducted into
the York Area Sports
Hall of Fame.
RUTGERS HEAD COACH GREG SCHIANO
Greg Schiano is 35-44 in his seventh year as head coach at
Rutgers and is 2-3 against UConn. He has guided Rutgers to each
of its first two bowl berths since 1978, including last year’s
victory over Kansas State in the Texas Bowl. Prior to returning
to his native New Jersey, Schiano served as the defensive
coordinator at Miami in 1999 and 2000 under Butch Davis. The
Hurricanes went a combined 20-5 those years, including a No. 2
national finish in 2000 after a 37-20 Nokia Sugar Bowl win over
Florida. Schiano served as an assistant with the Chicago Bears
from 1996-98 and worked at Penn State under Joe Paterno from
1990-96, coaching the Nittany Lion secondary. Penn State made
six bowl appearances during this time, including the 1992 Fiesta
Bowl and the 1995 Rose Bowl, which capped a 12-0 season. He also
served as a graduate assistant at Rutgers in 1989 and an
assistant coach at Ramapo High School in 1988. Schiano was an
All-Patriot League linebacker at Bucknell, from where he
graduated in 1988. He is a native of Wyckoff, N.J. and a
graduate of Ramapo High School.
RADIO & TV COVERAGE
ESPNU-CONN
For the third time this year, UConn
will have a game broadcast by ESPNU. The network also aired
UConn’s games at Pittsburgh and Virginia. Dave Armstrong
(play-by-play, Mike
Gottfried (color) and
Melissa Knowles (sidelines) have
the call.
RADIO COVERAGE
For the 16th 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 Kevin Nathan
on the sidelines. The UConn pregame show begins 90 minutes prior
to kickoff and is hosted by Bob Joyce, while at home games, the
UConn Tailgate Show will air two and a half hours prior to the
game with Arnold Dean. 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
ANYTHING BUT
STRANGERS IN THE KNIGHT
Saturday will mark the 27th meeting between UConn and Rutgers in
a series that dates back to 1940. The Scarlet Knights hold a
18-8 edge, but the Huskies have won three of the five meetings
in recent years. Four of the five recent meetings have been
settled by a touchdown or less. The teams are 1-1 against each
other at Rentschler
Field. UConn defeated Rutgers, 38-31, on Nov. 8, 2003 in East Hartford
but the Scarlet Knights got a measure of revenge with a 26-24
win there on Oct.
22, 2005. The most recent meeting overall was a 24-13 Scarlet
Knights win at Rutgers
on Sunday night, Oct. 29, 2006. On Sept. 29, 2001, the teams met
for the first time since 1983, and the Huskies produced a
thrilling, 20-19, win in Piscataway. That win was UConn’s first
ever over a member of the BIG EAST Conference. Prior to the 2001
contest, Rutgers had won six straight meetings dating back to a
9-7 UConn win in 1974.
SPRUNG FROM CAGES ON HIGHWAY NINE
The UConn roster features seven players from New Jersey in
Donald Brown (Atlantic Highlands), Dan Davis (Plainfield), Andre
Dixon (New Brunswick), Alex LaMagdelaine (Rumson), Kashif Moore
(Burlington, N.J.), Scott Schultz (Wayne) and Robert Theoudele
(Willingboro)...The Scarlet Knights have one player from
Connecticut in Kyle Kummer (New Britain)... There are also a
combined 30 Floridians between the two teams, most of them
hailing from Dade and Broward Counties (metro Miami/Fort
Lauderdale)...In addition to the many Florida and New
Jersey-based connections, UConn’s William Beatty and Rutgers’
Richard Muldrow both played line at William Penn
HS in York, Pa....UConn’s
Martin Bedard and Rutgers’ Jonathan Pierre-Etienne both played
at Cegep du Vieux Montreal...Amongst coaching staff connections,
UConn defensive backs coach Scott Lakatos is a native of Long
Valley, N.J. and a graduate of West Morris Central High School
who coached at Rutgers from 2001-03...Rutgers offensive
coordinator John McNulty was an assistant at UConn from 1995-97
under Skip Holtz...UConn offensive line coach Mike Foley worked
alongside RU linebackers coach Bob
Fraser at Colgate from 1998-2005. Foley was also offensive
coordinator at Harvard from 1994-95 when Rutgers running backs
coach Craig ver Steeg was the Crimson’s quarterbacks and wide
receivers coach. Ver Steeg was an assistant at Cincinnati in
1993 when Hank Hughes was with the Bearcats as their defensive
coordinator...Rutgers associate head coach Darren Rizzi is very
familiar with the Nutmeg State having served as the head coach
at New Haven from 1999 to 2001 and an assistant there from
1994-97...Rutgers director of speed and skill development Chris
Hewitt played at Cincinnati in 1993 when Hughes coached there.
WHO SAYS YOU CAN’T GO HOME?
UConn is in the middle of a three-game home stand as the Huskies
play host to Louisville, USF and Rutgers in consecutive weeks.
It is UConn’s first three-game home stand since the 2004 season
when the Huskies had a run of four straight home games from Sept.
25 until Oct. 23. The Huskies are 5-0 at home thus far in 2007
and are 23-8 all-time at Rentschler Field since its gates first
opened in 2003.
SPIRIT IN THE NIGHT
UConn will be playing its 10th game under the lights at
Rentschler Field with the Huskies posting a 6-3 record in their
previous forays into the East Hartford night, including a 2-0
mark in 2007. UConn's debut was auspicious as on Sept. 30, 2004
the Huskies defeated eventual BIG EAST champion Pittsburgh,
29-17, before a national television audience on ESPN2. Two weeks
later, the team was not as fortunate, falling to No. 17 West
Virginia, 31-19, on Oct. 13 live on ESPN. The 2005 season saw
three night games, two of which were nationally televised, with
UConn defeating Buffalo (38-0 on Sept. 1) and Syracuse (26-7 on
Oct. 7) while losing to No. 16 Louisville (30-20 on Dec. 3). In
2006, UConn downed Rhode Island (52-7 on Aug. 31) but
lost to No. 4 West
Virginia (37-11 on Oct.
20). The Huskies beat Maine, 38-0, on Sept.
8 of this year and then topped Louisville, 21-17, on Oct. 19.
SQUAD NOTES
7-1 IS A HISTORIC RUN
UConn’s 7-1 start to the 2007 season is the fastest the team has
burst from the gates since 1998 when the team also opened the
year at 7-1 en route to the school’s only appearance in the
Division I-AA Playoffs.
Since making the jump to Division I-A (since
renamed the Football Bowl Subdivision), UConn had gone 5-3
through its first eight games in 2003 and 2004 but never better. The
Huskies have been 7-1 through eight games only four times
previously, coming in 1926, 1944, 1945 and 1998. UConn was once
undefeated through eight games, going 6-0-2 in 1924. The Huskies
have never been 8-1 or better in their 109-year football
history.
HUSKIES HAVE POLL POSITION FOR FIRST
TIME
UConn earned its first ever AP ranking at No. 16 on Oct. 28 and
made its debut in the USA Today
Coaches’ Poll on the same day at No. 20. UConn first received
votes this year in the Sept. 23 AP poll
when the Huskies received three. The team cracked the coaches’
poll’s votes column the following week. UConn also received
votes in both polls at various times during the 2003 and 2004
seasons but has never earned a national Top 25 ranking. Prior to
this season, UConn’s last national poll votes came in the final
polls of the 2004 season following an 8-4 finish and 39-10 win
over Mid-American Conference Champion Toledo in the Motor City
Bowl. The Huskies earned their first ever ranking in the
three-year old Harris Interactive Poll on . The team also made
its first-ever appearance in the BCS rankings
on Oct. 21 at No. 23.
BULL RUSHING THE MARSHALL PLAN
With its Oct. 28 AP and
coaches rankings, UConn
became the second-fastest team to ever make the polls after
moving up from what was once called Division I-AA, trailing only
Marshall which joined I-A in 1997 and was ranked after two years
and four weeks. Ironically, UConn edges past South Florida for
second place, the team it defeated to earn a ranking. The Bulls
became a full-fledged I-A program in 2001 and cracked the Top 25
earlier this year after six years and three weeks.
SUCCESS IS RELL-ATIVE IN CONNECTICUT
UConn’s success on the gridiron this year has not gone unnoticed
by people in high places. Just a few hours after UConn earned
its first ever national ranking on Oct. 28 by beating then-No.
11 USF, Connecticut Governor M. Jodi Rell issued a statement
congratulating the team saying "The big dogs have hit the big
time. Coach Edsall and his team have made all of Connecticut
proud. I know the season is not over yet, but the team, the
university and state residents should celebrate this tremendous
win and this first ever national ranking."
ONE FOR THE MONEY, TWO FOR THE SHOW,
THREE TO GET READY...
At 3-0, UConn is the last remaining undefeated team in BIG EAST Conference
games this year. The three wins ties for the most the Huskies
have had in BIG EAST play
since joining the league in 2004. That
year, UConn went 3-3 in its inaugural league slate. The three
wins matches UConn’s BIG EAST win
total for the 2005 (two) and
2006 (one) seasons
combined. Prior to this season, UConn had never even started a
BIG EAST slate
at 2-0. The last time UConn won more than three league games in
a year was in 1998 when UConn
went 6-2 in the
Atlantic 10.
HUSKIES GAIN BOWL ELIGIBILITY
For the third time in the past five years the Huskies are bowl
eligible. UConn was also bowl eligible in 2003 when the team
went 9-3 as an independent and was not chosen and in 2004 when
UConn was 7-4 and went on to win the Motor City Bowl. Although
eligible, UConn is not guaranteed a bowl bid and more wins can
increase both the likelihood and prominence of a potential UConn
bowl game. The BIG EAST Champion
receives an automatic bid to the Bowl Championship
Series. The second selection will go to either the Konica
Minolta Gator Bowl (Jacksonville) or
the Brut Sun Bowl (El Paso) with the other game picking a Big 12
team. The third pick is made by the Meineke Car Care Bowl
(Charlotte). The fourth and fifth picks go to the PapaJohns.com
Bowl (Birmingham) and
the International Bowl (Toronto). Any remaining teams enter into
a national pool searching for possible, but not guaranteed, at
large bids.
IT AIN’T OVER...
UConn rallied from 10 points down in the fourth quarter to
defeat Louisville, 21-17, on Oct.
19 getting the game-winning touchdown with 1:32 to play as Andre
Dixon forced his way into the end zone. The clinching play came
when Danny Lansanah
intercepted Brian Brohm
with 15 seconds remaining in the game. The contest marked
UConn’s seventh win in the FBS (I-A) era
(since 2002) where
it overcame at least a 10 point deficit. It marked UConn’s
eighth win of the I-A era
where it came from behind in the final quarter and the third in
which it did so while erasing a double-digit deficit. The
Louisville game was also the fifth time in this period which UConn
won with a score in the game’s final two minutes or in overtime.
It was UConn’s second fourth quarter comeback win of the year
(UConn trailed Temple 17-16 in the fourth quarter). UConn last
had multiple fourth quarter comeback wins in the same season in
2003 when the Huskies had three (vs. Kent State, Akron and
Rutgers).
TURNING THE PAGE
One key to UConn’s early success in 2007 has been its impressive
+12 turnover margin as the Huskies have created 22 turnovers
while giving the ball away just 10 times. UConn’s ratio ranks
second in the nation in this critical category. Demonstrating
its importance, five of the nation’s top six teams in terms of
turnover margin are either 8-0 or 7-1. In 2006 UConn was -1 on
the season in turnover margin. UConn has made the most of its
opportunities this fall too, holding a 71-14 edge over its
opposition in points off of turnovers.
EDSALL ERA HITS THE CENTURY MARK
The win over USF on
Oct. 27 was the milestone 100th game in Randy Edsall’s nine-year
tenure as head coach at Connecticut. He stands at 48-52 overall
and a fairly remarkable 39-28 (.582) through
the first 67 games of UConn’s tenure at the FBS (Division I-A) level.
Edsall is the fourth coach to lead the Huskies into 100 career
games, joining J.O. Christian (121), Tom Jackson (119)
and Robert Ingalls (106). On a national level, his nine-year
tenure at UConn is tied for the 18th-longest tenure at his
current school of any coach at an active FBS school. The longest
active tenure is Joe Paterno who is in his 42nd year as head
coach at Penn State.
Within the BIG EAST,
only USF’s Jim Leavitt
at 11 years has been in his current position longer than Edsall.
The six members of the coaching hire class of 1999 who are still
at those schools is an especially strong one, also including
Tommy Bowden (Clemson), UConn graduate Kirk Ferentz (Iowa), June
Jones (Hawaii), Bob Stoops
(Oklahoma) and Tommy Tuberville (Auburn).
NOVEMBER REIGN
The Huskies are 11-5 in November over the past five seasons
combined, its entire tenure in Division I-A. UConn is 7-1 at
home in November in the I-A era, posting a 2-0 mark at Memorial Stadium
and a 5-1 record at Rentschler Field, the lone blemish being a
last-seconds loss to Cincinnati on Nov. 25, 2006. The Huskies
won their first seven I-A era November games before losing at
Georgia Tech on Nov. 13, 2004.
UNDEFEATED SEASON ALIVE THROUGH FIVE
UConn was 5-0 after five games for the first time since 1995,
prior to the team’s move to then-Division I-A
status. That season, the Huskies set a school record with six
straight wins to open the season. The Huskies do have two longer
unbeaten streaks to open a season coming in 1924 (6-0-2) and
1928 (4-0-3). The Huskies had never previously started better
than 2-0 in the I-A era. The Huskies also had never previously
started better than 2-0 during head coach Randy Edsall’s
nine-year tenure at UConn. Edsall though has seen a longer
streak in his coaching career as he was the defensive backs
coach at Syracuse in 1987 when the then-Orangemen went 11-0
before tying Auburn, 16-16, in the Sugar Bowl.
WINNING FIVE TIES FOR THREE
Winners of each of their last five games before losing at
Virginia, the Huskies tied for their third longest winning
streak of the Division I-A era with a run of five straight wins
from Nov. 20, 2004-Sept. 10, 2005. UConn won seven straight from
Oct. 25, 2003-Sept. 11, 2004. The Huskies also have a I-A era
streak of six wins (Nov. 2, 2002-Sept. 6, 2003) to their credit.
Within the context of a single season, it was UConn’s longest
winning streak since closing the 2003 campaign with five
straight wins.
HUSKIES ONLY LOSE ONCE IN NON-CONFERENCE
PLAY
UConn finished its 2007 non-conference slate on Oct.
13 with a 4-1 record, defeating Duke, Maine, Temple and Akron
but losing at Virginia. It ties for UConn’s best non-league
slate since joining the BIG EAST Conference
in 2004. The Huskies went 4-1 that year followed by a 3-1 mark
in 2005 and a 3-2 record in 2006. UConn was last undefeated in
non-conference play in 1998 when the Huskies downed Colgate,
Yale and Hofstra to go 3-0. UConn will likely never eclipse the
school benchmark for non-conference wins as in 2003, competing
as an independent, the Huskies went 9-3 on the year, all of
which were non-conference games.
A SEPTEMBER TO REMEMBER
UConn went a perfect 5-0 in the month of September marking the
first time in school history that the Huskies have ever won five
games in a single calendar month. UConn had previously won four
games in a month on numerous occasions, most recently in
November of 2002 when UConn beat Florida Atlantic, Kent State,
Navy and Iowa State. The
last time the Huskies completed a full calendar month without a
loss was when the squad went 3-0 in November
of 2003 with wins over Western Michigan, Rutgers and Wake
Forest. UConn’s last perfect September was in 1998 when the
Huskies downed Colgate, Maine
and Yale to open the season at 3-0. This year was UConn’s fifth
perfect September of all-time with a minimum of three games
played.
AND THEN THERE WERE 11
Prior to losing to Virginia on Oct. 13, UConn was one of the
last 11 remaining undefeated teams in the nation. The others
were Arizona State, Boston College, California,
Cincinnati, Hawaii, Kansas, LSU, Missouri,
Ohio State and South Florida. The list is now down to just five
(Arizona State, BC, Hawaii, Kansas
and Ohio State).
TAKING THE HARD ROAD AGAIN
Last fall UConn played what the NCAA ranked
as the nation’s sixth-toughest schedule, battling seven bowl
teams, including two BCS participants
and four teams that won 10 games during the regular season. The
Huskies are facing another tough slate in 2007 as five of the
team’s final six games will come against teams that won bowl
games a year ago in Louisville (Oct. 19), USF (Oct. 27), Rutgers
(Nov. 3), Cincinnati (Nov. 10) and West Virginia (Nov. 24). All
of those teams have been ranked during some point in the 2007
season. While the first half of the slate did not feature any
bowl teams from a year ago, it did include a pair of road games
in ACC country as the Huskies traveled to Duke (Sept. 1) and
Virginia (Oct. 13). UConn is one of just four BCS conference
schools this year to play two road games against BCS conference
foes. UConn joins Florida State (at Colorado and Florida),
Louisville (at Kentucky and NC State) and Pittsburgh (at
Michigan State and Virginia).
ONLY THE YOUNG CAN PLAY
UConn has played a total of 17 freshman, including six true
freshmen, so far in 2007. The six true freshmen are Aaron Bagsby,
Marcus Campbell, Kijuan Dabney, Jasper Howard, Greg Lloyd and
Anthony Sherman. Redshirt freshmen Scott Lutrus and Lawrence
Wilson both started the first five games at linebacker while
fellow redshirt freshmen Mike Cox, Anthony Davis, Doc Goudreau,
Zach Hurd, Mathieu Olivier, Kevin Poles, Alex Polito, Derek Rich
and Greg Robinson also have all seen action this season.
BRAVE, CRAZY, MOSTLY YOUNG
For the second straight year, UConn
is seeing plenty of underclassmen in prominent roles. The 2007
Huskies have just two senior starters on the offensive side of
the ball (WR Larry Taylor
and RG Donald
Thomas) and three on
defense (DT Dan
Davis, LB Danny Lansanah
and CB Tyvon Branch).
The youth is especially evident at the offensive skill positions
where UConn will likely start a pair of sophomore receivers
(Terence Jeffers and Brad Kanuch), a sophomore tailback (Donald
Brown) a redshirt
freshman fullback (Anthony Davis) and
a JuCo quarterback (Tyler Lorenzen). If games truly are won in
the trenches, UConn should be in great shape for 2008. Of the 10
offensive linemen on the preseason two-deep, nine are expected
back next fall and the same can be said of seven of the eight
two-deep defensive linemen.
JUST FOR STARTERS
UConn has been fortunate to have a fairly consistent starting
lineup this fall. The same 11 have started all eight games on
defense while the core of the offense has remained the same thus
far. No UConn player started all 12 games last year at the same
offensive position. Conversely, six Huskies started all 12 games
at the same defensive position. UConn started a total of nine
different offensive linemen last past year, including five
players making their first career start. It was tough a season
ago but has created a measure of depth that is helping UConn in
2007. Eight different Huskies started a game in UConn’s
defensive backfield in 2006. A total of 21 different players
started a game on offense, 10 of which were making their first
career start. A different offensive line combination started
each of the final four games. UConn started 17 different people
on defense in 2006 and has used four different place kickers
last year.
OUR DOCTORS DID NOT FEEL GOOD
UConn came through its 2007 fall camp and the first month of the
regular season with very few injuries of note and, while always
a welcome event, it was even more welcome than usual in Storrs
after the injury bug hit the Huskies hard in each of the past
two seasons. Some of UConn’s busiest staffers in 2006 were its
athletic trainers and physicians, much like in 2005. Out for the
whole 2006 season from the preseason were WR Seth Fogarty
(foot), WR Ellis Gaulden (knee), S Jahi Smith (multiple
concussions) and DE Jason Ward (foot). Players who saw action
this past year but were knocked out for the season due to injury
included OT William Beatty (lower leg), TE Martin Bedard
(elbow), DE Cody Brown (arm), C Keith Gray (shoulder), QB D.J.
Hernandez, OT Mike Hicks (ankle) and WR Brandon McLean (ankle).
TE Dan Murray missed the first three games with a high ankle
sprain and was limited by the injury in the first few games that
he did play. LB Ryan Henegan missed the first two games with a
hamstring injury. TB Terry Caulley played with a broken bone in
his hand after missing some action while LB Dontá Moore played
through a broken arm suffered on Sept. 30 against Navy. Another
pair of contributors to miss some time as the season progressed
were S Allan Barnes, who missed a pair of games with a hamstring
injury, and CB Darius Butler who missed the Syracuse game with a
hamstring injury. WR Larry Taylor did not play against
Cincinnati following a concussion suffered at Syracuse and CB
Ernest Cole also missed the Cincinnati game due to a knee
injury. WR Robert Theoudele was not available for the final four
weeks with a shoulder injury. FB Deon Anderson missed the season
finale at Louisville with a stinger. This trend, unfortunately,
continued from 2005 when 18 different players from UConn’s
preseason two-deep missed at least one game due to injury.
THE QUARTERLY REPORT
UConn has significantly outscored its opponents this year in
each of the four quarters. UConn has outscored its opponents
41-21 in the first quarter in 2007, 65-38 in the second quarter,
69-19 in the third quarter and 67-26 in the fourth quarter. The
four quarters add up to a 242-104 advantage for UConn in scoring
margin this year. UConn held a first quarter shutout streak of
87:38 stretching from the opening drive of the season opener at
Duke until the final seconds of the first quarter of the
Virginia game on Oct. 13.
ROAD WORRIERS
While UConn is 23-8 all-time at Rentschler Field, the results on
the road have not always been as joyful for the Huskies although
the team hopes that tide is turning. The Huskies won each of
their first two road games this year, taking contests at Duke
(Sept. 1) and at Pittsburgh (Sept. 22), UConn’s second BIG EAST road
win of all-time. UConn won a single road game each year from
2004-06 and last won multiple road games in 2003 when the
Huskies took four games away from Rentschler
Field with victories at Army, Buffalo, Kent State
and Wake Forest. Of UConn’s 28 losses in the Division I-A era,
17 have come on the road. During the combined 2004-07 seasons,
UConn is 5-12 on the road but 18-7 at home with an 1-0 mark at
neutral sites (Motor City Bowl vs. Toledo). UConn is 2-9 in BIG
EAST road games with the lone wins coming at Rutgers on Nov. 25,
2004 and at Pittsburgh on Sept.
22.
AFTER BREAKTHROUGH 2006, BIG EAST IS
BACK FOR MORE
Following its 2006 reemergence on the national scene after
posting a 5-0 record in bowl games, including its second
consecutive win in a BCS bowl,
the realigned BIG EAST is
showing that it is here to stay in 2007.
* The conference has three teams in the top 25 of the polls this
week. Overall, six of the BIG EAST’s
eight teams (75%) have
been ranked at some point this year (all but Pittsburgh and
Syracuse).
* Road wins over fellow BCS conference
opponents is always a good measure of success and the BIG EAST has
four so far this year with Louisville winning at NC State,
West Virginia winning at Maryland, USF winning
at Auburn and UConn
winning at Duke. The four wins by the BIG EAST are
the most of any conference. The ACC, Big 12 and Pac-10 each have
three BCS road wins
while the SEC has
one.
* Overall, the BIG EAST has
seven wins thus far over teams from other BCS conferences,
the four mentioned above plus Cincinnati’s win over Oregon State,
USF’s victory over North Carolina and West Virginia’s win over
Mississippi State. The BIG EAST’s
seven wins matches the ACC’s seven for the most of any BCS
league even though the BIG EAST has
the fewest teams to accumulate these wins. The SEC has
six while the Big Ten and Big 12 each have five wins over BCS conference
schools so far this year.
BIG EAST PERFECT IN BOWL GAMES
The BIG EAST Conference tied the record for best bowl record in
2006, going a perfect 5-0 as a group. It was just the third time
that a conference has gone 5-0 in bowl games. No league has gone
undefeated playing in more than five bowls, but the SEC in 1996
and Big Ten in 1998 matched the BIG EAST’s 2006 accomplishment.
Highlighting the five wins were victories over both of the ACC’s
division champions as Louisville downed Wake Forest in the FedEx
Orange Bowl and West Virginia took down Georgia Tech in the
Toyota Gator Bowl. Additionally, Rutgers topped Kansas State of
the Big 12 in the Texas Bowl, USF downed East Carolina in
Birmingham’s PapaJohns.com Bowl and Cincinnati beat Western
Michigan in the inaugural International Bowl at Toronto’s Rogers
Centre.
HUSKIES EARN HIGH MARKS AT OBEDIENCE
SCHOOL
For each of the past three years, UConn has been one of the
least penalized teams in the country. UConn was a disciplined
squad in 2005 as the Huskies led the BIG EAST in 2005 in fewest
penalty yards at 47.2 per game (519 yards in 11 games). This
average ranked 23rd in the nation. In addition, UConn’s 68
penalties on the year narrowly ranked second in the league, just
one behind Syracuse’s conference-low total of 67 accepted
infractions. UConn’s discipline in 2006 was in the same fashion,
with just 65 penalties on the year for 511 yards. The 511 yards
and 65 penalties were both the fewest in the BIG EAST. The
Huskies ranked 33rd and 43rd in the nation respectively in those
categories. Thus far in 2007, UConn is second only to West
Virginia in the BIG EAST in
fewest penalties and is first in the conference in fewest
penalty yards against.
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 54 scoring drives of at least 80 yards while the Husky
defense has surrendered just 29 such marches. UConn also holds a
14-5 advantage over its opponents in the number of 90-yard and
over drives since becoming a I-A program.
HUSKIES DOMINATING ON BOTH SIDES OF THE
BALL
Over the past 59 games, UConn has outgained its opponent 41
times, including four times in 2007. This stretch, like many
UConn trends, dates back to a disheartening 28-24 loss at
Vanderbilt on Oct. 26, 2002. Over this 59 game span, UConn has
averaged 393.6 yards per game of total offense and 318.6 yards
per game of total defense.
CONNECTICUT’S SIX CAPTAINS
The UConn team selected a school-record six team captains for
the 2007 season, Darius Butler, Dan Davis, Keith Gray, D.J.
Hernandez, Danny Lansanah and Larry Taylor. The diverse group
features three players on each side of the ball and one player
from each of the three defensive positional groups, spreading
the leadership roles evenly. The group consists of three seniors
and three juniors. Butler, Gray and Hernandez are the first
juniors to serve as a team captain at UConn since Roy Hopkins
and Jamal Lundy held the honor in 2001. Lundy was reelected as a
captain in 2002 but Hopkins was not. UConn had never previously
had more than four permanent captains, a sum used in 1979, 1991,
1992, 1998, 2001 and 2006. The six ties for the most nationally
with San Diego State while Wisconsin has five permanent captains
and one rotating game captain.
NFL ALUMNI WATCH
Three former Huskies have made active rosters for NFL teams on
opening day in 2007. Alfred Fincher (2001-04) was the backup
middle linebacker for the New Orleans Saints while Dan Orlovsky
(2001-04) continues to battle to be the number two quarterback
for the Detroit Lions behind Jon Kitna. Fullback Deon Anderson
(2002-06) was a sixth round selection of the Dallas Cowboys and
has made the 53-man roster for that proud franchise for his work
at fullback and on special teams. Additionally, four former
Huskies found themselves in preseason training camps Ray Blagman
(Arizona), James Hargrave (Detroit), Tyler King (Jacksonville)
and Sean Mulcahy (Cincinnati).
EAGLE SCOUTS
Each week head coach Randy Edsall issues an award for the Scout
Team Players of the Week. 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.
DUKE: Ellis Gaulden
(offense), Harris Agbor (defense), Doc Goudreau (special teams).
MAINE: Gary Bardzak
(offense), Scott Schultz
(defense), C.J. Marck
(special teams).
TEMPLE: Nathan Sherr
(offense), Doc
Goudreau (defense), John Yurek
(special teams).
PITT: Robbie Frey
(offense), C.J. Marck
(defense), Kendall Reyes (special teams).
AKRON: Zach Frazer
(offense), Jarrell Miller (defense), Alex Molina (special
teams).
VIRGINIA: Alex Molina (offense), Alex Folson (defense), Glen
Mourning (special teams).
LOUISVILLE: Mike Ryan (offense), Jarrell Miller (defense),
Jameson Davis
(special teams)
USF: Zach Frazer (offense), Johnathan Jean-Louis (defense), Alex
Molina (sepcial teams).
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. The 2007 recipients are listed below.
DUKE: Tyler Lorenzen
(offense), Cody
Brown (defense),
Desi Cullen (special
teams)
MAINE: William
Beatty (offense), Scott Lutrus (defense), Tyvon Branch (special
teams).
TEMPLE: Andre Dixon (offense),
Dahna Deleston (defense),
Tony Ciaravino (special teams).
PITT: Donald Thomas
(offense), Lawrence Wilson (defense), no special teams
recipient.
AKRON: Andre Dixon
(offense), Dan Davis (defense), Tyvon Branch (special teams).
LOUISVILLE: Andre
Dixon (offense), Scott Lutrus (defense), Larry Taylor (special
teams).
RUTGERS: Offensive
line and TE Steve
Brouse, Cody Brown (defense),
Tyvon Branch (special teams).
ACTIVE CAREER LEADERS:
Larry Taylor (8), Tyvon Branch (3), Cody Brown (3), Darius
Butler (3), Andre Dixon (3), William Beatty (2), D.J. Hernandez
(2), Danny Lansanah
(2), Scott Lutrus (2), Donald Thomas (2), Lou Allen, Steve
Brouse, Donald Brown, Tony Ciaravino, Desi Cullen,
Dan Davis, Dahna Deleston, Keith Gray, Mike Hicks, Alex
LaMagdelaine, Tyler Lorenzen, Lawrence Wilson.
NEW WALK-ONS INCLUDE TWO LITTLE INDIANS
Of the new walk-ons who joined the program prior to the 2007
season, two have a connection to the Cleveland Indians, one of
them real and the other fictional. Mike Conroy was a first round
draft pick by the Indians in 2001 out of high school and spent
six years in the team’s organization, most of them with Lake
County of the South Atlantic League. A native of Scituate,
Mass., Conroy played for six years at the single A level batting
.248 before retiring and going back to school to fulfill his
dream of playing college football. Conroy is one of seven former
minor league baseball players currently on Football Bowl Subdivision
rosters. Meanwhile, Oliver Bernsen is the son of actor Corbin
Bernsen who is perhaps best known for his role as Indians third
baseman Roger Dorn in the movie Major League. A native of Studio
City, Calif.,
Bernsen’s mother, Amanda Pays, is also an actress while his
grandmother, Jeanne Cooper, is the matriarch of the soap opera
The Young and the Restless in her role as Katherine Chancellor.
Also, his grandfather, Harry Bernsen, produced several movies
including Three the Hard Way starring NFL legend Jim Brown. The
younger Bernsen was looking for a school in the northeast where
he could pursue acting.
YOU KNOW GRAY IS MY FAVORITE COLOR
In an effort to help combat the heat at Duke by avoiding dark
colors, the Huskies wore their white uniforms with silver pants
in Durham as opposed
to the customary national flag blue pants on the road. After
defeating the Blue Devils, the team captains decided to keep the
same look for UConn’s second road game, Sept. 22 at Pittsburgh,
and the combination again resulted in a win. UConn wore this
ensemble at Virginia on Oct. 13 as well but lost the game. Prior
to this season, only once had UConn ever worn that combination.
That other instance was on Oct. 5, 2002 when UConn dressed as
such for a game against No. 1 Miami in the Orange Bowl, losing
to the Hurricanes, 48-14.
TANGLED UP IN BLUE
For the Louisville game on Oct. 19, UConn
wore an all-blue ensemble for the first time in almost exactly a
year after last wearing it against West
Virginia on Oct. 20, 2006. UConn’s win over the Cardinals marked
its first win in an all-blue uniform since downing Temple on
Oct. 23, 2004. The Huskies wore their blue pants at home again
on Oct. 27 against USF
and were once again victorious.
OFFENSE NOTES
TJ, KANUCH AND TYLER TOO
UConn’s offensive unit is a young one as the group features just
two seniors on its two deep in wide receiver Larry Taylor and
right guard Donald Thomas. Meanwhile, the silver lining to a
rash of injuries the past two years is that UConn is youthful
yet experienced at the skill positions in particular. True
sophomores Terence Jeffers and Brad Kanuch were thrown into the
fire last fall and both proved to be dependable pass catchers,
starting each of the final eight games of the year. Another
sophomore, Donald Brown, will start at tailback after earning
All-BIG EAST recognition last fall as a freshman. His backups
are a sophomore in Andre
Dixon and a junior in Lou Allen, a bruising tailback at 238
pounds. UConn has a pair of freshman at fullback and a
quarterbacking corps that features a junior (Tyler Lorenzen), a
sophomore (Dennis Brown) and two freshmen (Cody Endres and Notre
Dame transfer Zach Frazer). Each of UConn’s top three tight ends
will also return next fall yet starter Steve Brouse in
particular already possesses a wealth of gameday experience.
HUSKIES WASTING LITTLE TIME TO GET ON
TOP
UConn has scored on its opening drive in five of its eight games
this year. At Duke, Tony Ciaravino
hit a 30-yard field goal on the opening drive. Against Temple,
Donald Brown had an eight-yard touchdown run and, at Pittsburgh,
Lou Allen had a one-yard plunge. Tony Ciaravino hit a 45-yard
field goal at Virginia and a 22-yarder against USF. One
exception came against Maine when Ciaravino missed a 51-yard
field goal. However, UConn was still on the scoreboard very
early against the Black Bears as Scott Lutrus scored a touchdown
on a 25-yard interception return on the game’s second play,
coming at the 14:12 mark.
LINING THEM UP
The UConn offensive line is in the interesting position of being
both young and experienced at the same time. The Huskies have
just one senior on the two-deep yet also have eight players with
previous game experience at UConn, including seven people who
have started games on the offensive line for the blue and white.
The lone senior of the group is senior Donald Thomas at right
guard, a former walk-on. Entering the 2007 season, William
Beatty (9), captain Keith Gray (5), Mike Hicks (10), Alex
LaMagdelaine (10), Dan Ryan (7), Donald Thomas (1) and Trey
Tonsing (8) had all started games for the Huskies. UConn head
coach Randy Edsall has often called this the best line UConn has
had since the senior-laden group that pushed the Huskies to the
2004 Motor City Bowl. Better yet, this 2007 edition of the line
will be back in near entirety for more in 2008.
HERNANDEZ RECEIVES NEW ASSIGNMENT
D.J. Hernandez started six games a year ago at quarterback and
had fair success, highlighted on Nov. 11 against Pittsburgh as
he spurred UConn on to 46-45 double overtime victory in one of
the program’s most thrilling games as the Huskies erased a 31-17
fourth quarter deficit at Rentschler Field. Hernandez completed
20-of-29 passes for 164 yards with a career high four touchdowns
and no interceptions but it was his work running the ball that
was more noteworthy. His 17 carries were good for 130 yards
while he also scampered in for the game-winning two-point
conversion. Hernandez’s on-field leadership was crucial in the
rally to win the game. He led UConn on touchdown drives of 98
and 77 yards in the fourth quarter, the latter capped with a
touchdown pass to Dan Murray with just three seconds remaining
in regulation. Still, with the addition of Tyler Lorenzen and
Dennis Brown able to play after redshirting in 2006, Hernandez
quickly found himself in the third spot on the depth chart at
quarterback midway through spring practice. Too athletic to sit
on the bench, Hernandez approached Edsall about playing at wide
receiver and the results have been a tremendous positive for the
team. Using his athleticism and in-depth knowledge of the
offense to his advantage, Hernandez has made a smooth transition
to his new role and has been one of the team’s top receiving
threats in 2007. The move also allows Edsall to use him on
special teams while Hernandez has shown a passion for downfield
blocking and participating in some of the contact that he was
deprived of when wearing a red quarterback jersey in practice.
His smooth transition and the character and leadership he
displayed in making it helped get the junior elected as a team
captain.
DJ GOES TRIPLE PLATINUM
D.J. Hernandez
caught a 57-yard touchdown pass at Duke in the season opener on Sept.
1. It was UConn’s longest passing play since Hernandez threw a
61-yard touchdown pass to Brandon Young in the 2006
season-opener against Rhode Island. The scoring grab also put
him in very elite company as Hernandez became just the fourth
player in school history to catch a touchdown, rush for a
touchdown and throw for a touchdown in their UConn career,
joining Keron Henry
(2001-04), Tory Taylor (1995-98) and
Ken Sweitzer
(1978-81).
FROM IOWA TO CONNECTICUT VIA SAN DIEGO
Tyler Lorenzen took a circuitous route to being named UConn’s
starting quarterback. The native Iowan and first-team All-State
quarterback signed with his beloved Iowa State out of high
school but the Cyclones tried to switch him to wide receiver.
Wanting to play quarterback, he transferred to Palomar Community
College near San Diego where he was named a first-team JuCo
All-American last fall after completing 229-of-332 passes
(69-percent) for 2,960 yards with 26 touchdowns and three
interceptions. Lorenzen joined UConn in January after carrying a
4.0 grade point average at Palomar and was named the starting
quarterback on August 14. At Duke, he became the fourth
different starting quarterback for UConn in the past four
opening days. D.J. Hernandez started last year’s opener, Matt
Bonislawski was under center when the 2005 season began and Dan
Orlovsky started the third and final opening day contest of his
illustrious UConn career in 2004.
TYLER RE-TRACES HISTORY
In his starting debut on Sept. 1 at Duke, Tyler Lorenzen was
very impressive in leading the Huskies to a 45-14 win. Lorenzen
earned the offensive game ball and a BIG EAST weekly
honor roll mention after completing 22-of-30 passes for 298
yards with a pair of touchdowns and an interception. He
also rushed for 56 yards, giving him 354 total yards on the day.
The 298 yards were the most by a Husky since Dan Orlovsky’s
school-record 445 at Syracuse on Oct.
30, 2004 while also ranking as the most by a first-time Husky
signal caller since Ryan Tracey
threw for 340 on Sept. 2, 2000 in his first start.
SHARING THE WEALTH
Through three weeks, four UConn wide receivers (D.J. Hernandez,
Terence Jeffers, Brad Kanuch
and Larry Taylor) had
over 100 receiving yards on the year. Last fall it took six
games for the Huskies to reach that plateau with tight end Steve
Brouse going over the century mark against Army to
join Kanuch, Taylor and Brandon Young. Through four games, UConn
has two receivers (Hernandez and Kanuch) with
over 200 receiving yards on the year. Last year, UConn did not
have two 200-yard receivers for the season until after game nine
with Larry Taylor
hitting the plateau on Nov.
11 against Pitt.
DEFENSES DREADING DIXON
Sophomore Andre Dixon
saw his first significant action of his career at tailback
against Temple on Sept. 15 and made the most of his opportunity.
Dixon ran for 129 yards on 21 carries against the Owls. Dixon is
now one of four active UConn players who have a 100-yard rushing
game to their credit as a Husky, joining Lou Allen (2005 vs.
USF), Donald Brown (four times) and
D.J. Hernandez (2006
vs. Pitt). He continued to shine against Akron
on Sept. 29 rushing
for 116 yards and a touchdown on just 12 carries wile catching
four passes for 52 yards and a touchdown. On Oct 19 against Louisville,
he enjoyed his third 100-yard rushing game, gaining 115 and
scoring the game-winning touchdown with 1:32 to play. He made it
four 100-yard games out of six with a 167-yard rushing effort
against USF.
A BUNCH OF BALL HOGS
The UConn offense has done a wonderful job thus far in 2007 of
maintaining possession of the ball. The Huskies have just 10
turnovers on the year, tying for 12th in the nation. Only four
of the turnovers have been interceptions thrown, a sum that ties
for fifth nationally.
FINISHING IN THE RED IS GOOD
You wouldn’t want your financial ledgers to be full of red ink,
but UConn’s Division I-A era success is in part due to finishing
its time in the red zone in style. Since 2002, UConn has tallied
on 219 of 256 (86%) of its red zone possessions. Of the 37
non-scoring drives, 24 came as a result of a missed field goal
attempt. UConn has gotten off to a solid red zone start in 2007
by going 29-for-33. UConn had a stretch of 20 successful red
zone scores from Sept.
1 until Oct. 13.
PITT HAD NO CHANCE TO CATCH UP AT HEINZ
FIELD
UConn took control of the team’s game at Pittsburgh early on Sept.
22. The Huskies scored 27 first half points to take a 27-7 edge
into the spacious locker room at Heinz Field. It was the most
points that UConn had ever scored in the first half of a road
BIG EAST game. The previous high was 21 at Rutgers on Nov. 25,
2004. It was the most points that UConn had scored against any
Division I-A team in the first half since tallying 30 against
Toledo in the 2004 Motor City Bowl. It was the second-most
points that UConn had ever scored in the first half of a BIG
EAST game regardless of site. UConn scored 31 points in the
first half against Temple at Rentschler Field on Oct. 23, 2004.
DEFENSE NOTES
DEFENSE AMONGST THE NATION’S BEST
UConn’s defensive unit has been amongst the best in the nation
this year. The Huskies are 10th nationally in total defense
yielding just 293.25 yards per game. The Huskies rank third in
scoring defense at 13.00 points per game, a sum that would be
still lower were it not for a kickoff return touchdown at Duke
and a fumble return touchdown by Louisville. UConn is eighth in
passing defense (176.00 ypg) and
ninth in passing efficiency defense with an 98.89 rating. The
Huskies are 26th nationally against the run at 117.25 yards per
game. UConn is 18th with 7.38 tackles for loss per game. UConn’s
18 interceptions tie Boston College
for first nationally while its 22 total turnovers gained ties
for 11th.
PICK-SIX. PICK-12. PICK-18. PICK-24.
The Huskies have already returned four interceptions for
touchdowns this season. Darius
Butler ran one back 36 yards for a score at Duke on Sept.
1 while Scott Lutrus scored on a 26-yard interception return on
Sept. 8. Lawrence Wilson had a 51-yard score on an interception
at Pittsburgh on Sept.
22 and Lutrus scored from 23 yards out against USF on
Oct. 27. The four touchdowns break the previous the school
record of three set in 2002 and matched in 2004. The four
interception return touchdowns tie for fourth in BIG EAST history.
The league record is six set by Miami in 2000.
PASS DEFENSE=PASS OFFENSE
UConn’s passing defense as generated almost as many points as it
has allowed. UConn has surrendered just six passing touchdowns
in 2007 while returning four interceptions for touchdowns.
18 AND I LIKE IT
UConn’s defense has intercepted 18 passes through the first
eight games of the year. In 2006, UConn intercepted 12 passes
all season while the Huskies managed 14 in 2005. The 18
interceptions tie Boston College
for the most in the nation. UConn’s four interceptions at
Pittsburgh on Sept.
22 tied the Division I-A era school record set at Iowa State on
Nov. 23, 2002 and equaled at Army on Oct. 1, 2005. UConn made
three interceptions against Louisville on Oct.
19. The Cardinals had been intercepted just four times all year
entering the game. The Huskies have recorded at least one
interception in each of their last 10 games dating back to the
Nov. 18, 2006 tilt at Syracuse.
RUNNING IT IN HASN’T BEEN AN OPTION
EITHER
UConn has allowed just four rushing touchdowns through the first
eight games of the year, a sum that ties for seventh in the
nation. A year ago, UConn
yielded two or more rushing touchdowns in six separate games as
the Huskies ranked 105th in the nation against the run at 179.58
yards per game. UConn
presently ranks 26th nationally at 117.25 yards per game.
I’M ONLY ALLOWING SEVENTEEN
The UConn defense has not allowed an opponent to score more than
17 points in a game so far this year. This is a feat that UConn
has not accomplished for a full season since 1944 when the team
went 7-1 and yielded just 13 points for the entire campaign.
Nationally, UConn and Ohio State
are the only two teams that can make this claim in 2007. The
Buckeyes have allowed 17 points in a game twice but never more
than 17.
THIRD DOWN INEFFICIENCY
A critical element to UConn’s defensive success in 2005 and 2006
was that the team’s opponents found third down to be a tough row
to hoe. The 2007 season started off on the same path as Duke
converted just two of its 11 third down tries against UConn
and Maine just two of 14. At a rate of 29.2% through six games,
UConn ranked 11th in the nation but Louisville’s 11-of-18
conversion rate blew that percentage up to 35%. Teams haven’t
done much better on fourth down as UConn is tied for 16th
nationally with a rate of 33%. In 2005, UConn led the nation in
third down conversion defense at 24% (38-for-157). LSU was
second in the nation behind UConn with a rate of 28.2-percent
followed narrowly by SEC rival Alabama at 28.3. UConn did well
in this area as well in 2006. The Huskies ranked 29th nationally
with a 33.1% conversion rate.
INTERCEPTIONS ARE VAUGHN’S PRIDE AND JOY
Robert Vaughn has already intercepted five passes on the season
through just eight games, snaring an opposing pass in every game
except for Maine, Louisville and USF. Midway through the year,
Vaughn already has the most interceptions in a season for a
Husky since Justin Perkins had five in 2004. The Division I-A era
UConn record of six was set by Maurice Lloyd in 2002 and matched
by Perkins in 2003.
Vaughn is tied for fourth in the nation with his five
interceptions.
BAD, BAD CODY BROWN
In the 2007 season opener at Duke, Cody Brown earned UConn’s
defensive game ball after making six tackles, including a pair
of sacks. It had been two years since a Husky had two sacks in a
game, dating back to James Hargrave’s efforts against Syracuse
on Oct. 7, 2005. Brown was a disruptive force against Maine and
Temple as well making a pair of tackles for loss in each
contest. He had a sack at Pittsburgh. He earned another game
ball against USF. Brown is tied for 47th in the nation with 1.19
TFLs per game.
DAVIS MOVES INSIDE; ENDS THRIVING
After three strong years at defensive end where he amassed 18
tackles for loss as a Husky, senior captain Dan Davis shifted
his 284-pound frame inside to defensive tackle in 2007. The move
allows UConn to take advantage of Davis’ speed between the
tackles and also helps provide more opportunities for a glut of
talented young defensive ends. Juniors Julius Williams and Cody
Brown are starting outside while redshirt freshman Mike Cox and
sophomore Lindsay Witten rotate in. Williams is a first year
starter but is quick for his 261 pounds and is one of the
strongest players on the team. In six starts last year before
succumbing to a broken arm Brown made 24 tackles including an
impressive 7.5 for a loss, a sum that includes 4.5 sacks. Witten
started the final six games with Brown out and made 39 tackles
on the year as a true freshman, six of them for a loss including
3.5 sacks. Meanwhile, Davis is starting at tackle alongside
junior Rob Lunn who has had a very impressive offseason to earn
the starting nod.
HE’S BEEN A JEWEL
One of the beneficiaries of Dan Davis’ move inside to tackle has
been Julius Williams, a converted linebacker who bulked up and
has started every game this year at defensive end. Williams has
6.5 sacks on the year placing him second in the BIG EAST behind
only USF’s George
Selvie. For the entire 2006 season, no Husky collected more than
4.5 sacks. Williams has 25 tackles on the year, 8.5 of which
were for a loss. He has also forced two fumbles.
SIR LANS-ALOT
Linebacker Danny Lansanah turned up his play in 2006 and helped
become a defensive leader both on and off the field. The junior
led the Huskies with 99 tackles on the season, 9.5 of them for a
loss. He also made four interceptions including a spectacular
one-handed grab against Army. The four interceptions tied for
the team lead and are the most by a UConn linebacker since
Maurice Lloyd had four in 2002. Lansanah is off to a great start
in 2007 as he is tied for 31st in the nation with 1.25 TFLs per
game (10.0 total). His 10.2 tackles per game rank fourth in the
BIG EAST.
BRYANT HS GRAD WILSON BEARS DOWN
With Ryan Henegan sidelined for the first month-plus of the
season due to injury, redshirt freshman Lawrence Wilson, a
graduate of Paul W. Bryant High School
in Tuscaloosa, Ala.,
stepped in to play solidly at weakside linebacker. Wilson leads
the team lead with 83 tackles through eight games while also
chipping in 6.5 tackles for loss, recovering a fumble, breaking
up a pass and scoring a touchdown on a 51-yard interception
return. Hr is second in the BIG EAST
with his 10.4 tackles per game. Wilson’s 17 tackles at Virginia
at the time were the most by a Husky since Maurice Lloyd made 18
in the 2004 Motor City Bowl.
SKIP TO MY LUTRUS
UConn has also seen a redshirt freshman make an immediate impact
at the strongside linebacker post. Brookfield’s Scott Lutrus is
third on the team with 63 tackles, six of which were for a loss.
He also has four interceptions on the year, returning two for
touchdowns to tie both UConn’s season and career records. Justin Perkins
ran back two interceptions for touchdowns as a Husky, both in
2004. In his short time at UConn
he has shown a true knack for intercepting passes as he picked
off three passes in UConn’s Blue-White Spring Game, returning
two of them for touchdowns. Lutrus made a game-high 18 tackles
against Louisville and was named the BIG EAST Defensive Player
of the Week for his efforts. Lutrus’ three interceptions on the
year ties for the most nationally amongst linebackers.
HAWAII AND CONNECTICUT HAVE WHAT IN
COMMON?
Scott Lutrus’ four interceptions this year tie for the most in
the nation by a linebacker. Adam Leonard
of Hawaii has also intercepted four passes this year from his
linebacking post.
CARD SHARKS
UConn’s defense suffocated the vaunted Louisville offense in the
team’s 21-17 win over the Cardinals on Oct. 19. Louisville was
held to numbers not seen in extended periods of time by a Husky
defense that held its ground right down to Danny Lansanah’s
interception of Brian Brohm with 15 seconds to go on the
Cardinals’ last gasp drive. Louisville entered the game third in
the nation averaging 559.7 yards of total offense but got just
321 against UConn,
its fewest since a 2006 loss to Rutgers. Louisville’s 228
passing yards was also its lowest since last year’s Rutgers game
and well below its 397.7 average. Perhaps most impressive was
holding the Cardinals to 10 offensive points (discounting a
fumble recovery touchdown), the U of L offense’s lowest output
since a 37-7 loss to Memphis on Nov. 15, 2003. Blanketed by
Darius Butler, Harry Douglas’ 19 receiving yards was his lowest
total since the 2005 season; meanwhile, Mario Urrutia
was held without a reception for the first time since his
freshman year of 2005.
THE QUARTERBACK MUST GO DOWN
For the fourth year in a row, UConn not only recorded a high
number of tackles for loss in 2007, but the TFLs have been
spread out over a high number of players. Already in 2007 a sum
of 15 Huskies have contributed to a TFL and 10 have at least
half of a sack. A total of 18 different Huskies contributed to a
TFL in 2006 and 11 different UConn defenders had at least a half
of a sack. UConn was 24th in the nation with its 6.83 TFLs per
game and ranked 76th with 1.83 sacks per game, the latter total
coming despite the fact that only five teams faced fewer passing
attempts than UConn’s 275. A total of 23 different UConn
defenders factored in a tackle for loss in 2005 and 14 different
Huskies recorded at least a half of a sack.
SECONDARY NOW A PRIMARY OBSTACLE
It should not be a surprise that UConn was ranked 25th
nationally last year in passing defense at 178.50 yards per game
nor that it stands eighth through eight games in 2007 yielding
just 176.00 ypg. The Connecticut secondary a year ago blended
youth and experience as well as any team in the nation, as the
Huskies returned all but one letterwinner from the 2005
secondary which helped the team rank fourth in the nation in
passing defense by yielding just 158.5 yards per game. An
astounding six different active Huskies (at 2006 season’s end)
had started at least six games as a defensive back in their
UConn careers. A total of eight different Huskies started a game
last year in the secondary. This glut of talented players was a
problem for Edsall, but a good problem to have. The depth has
carried over to 2007 as all four of UConn’s starters in the
defensive backfield, corners Darius Butler and Tyvon Branch,
along with safeties Robert Vaughn and Dahna Deleston, held that
role at various times in 2006. As expected, the results on the
field have been solid as the Huskies presently ranking ninth
nationally in passing efficiency defense (98.89 rating) in
addition to the afore mentioned eighth place in passing defense
(176.00 ypg).
ZAK ATTACK FROM IRAQ
The Huskies have a rather unique person and a great role model
at defensive tackle in Zak Penwell. The fourth-oldest Football
Bowl Subdivision player in the county at 27 years and eight
months old, Penwell served six and a half years in the U.S. Air
Force working as a part of a Tactical Air Control Party in
Kuwait, Korea, Afghanistan and Iraq in addition to various
domestic deployments. Raised in Alaska, Penwell moved to El
Paso, Texas for high school with his father, a missionary, and
mother, a mid-wife. The couple now resides in the Philippines.
Married with two children, Zoe and Titus, Penwell was drawn to
UConn by its acclaimed kinesiology program. He came to the
football program as a walk-on but was awarded a scholarship on
Aug. 29. Penwell is one of 12 FBS players, outside of the
academies, who have actively served in the military. He is one
of 12 native Alaskans on FBS rosters.
SPECIAL TEAMS NOTES
TONY TONY TONY HAS DONE IT AGAIN
Tony Ciaravino edged out true freshman Dave Teggart to serve as
UConn’s extra point and field goal kicker as the curtain rose on
the 2007 season. He ended up hitting three of his four field
goals at Duke and
four of his five extra point attempts with the other one
blocked. The three field goals made were the most by a Husky
kicker since Matt Nuzie hit four in the 2004 Motor City Bowl. He
matched that total two weeks later in UConn’s win over Temple
when his three field goals included career-long boots from 47
and 50 yards, earning Ciaravino the special teams game ball and
BIG EAST Special
Teams Player of the Week accolades. Ciaravino handled UConn’s
field goals and extra points as the 2006 season drew to a close,
the third Husky to serve in that role last season. Ciaravino hit
both of his field goal tries last fall and went 12-for-13 on
extra points on the year.
NINE TIMES FOR CIARAVINO
Tony Ciaravino
recently completed a run of nine consecutive made field goal
tries, bookended by a 52 yard miss at Virginia on Oct. 13 and a
51-yard miss against Maine on Sept.
8. It is the longest streak by a Husky since Matt Nuzie’s
school-record string of 10 consecutive field goals during the
2004 season. Ciaravino’s run matches David DeArmas’ nine
straight in 1994 for the second longest streak in school
history. Thanks to this streak, Ciaravino is ranked sixth in the
nation with 2.00 field goals made per game. Meanwhile, his 9.00
points per game ranks 13th most nationally amongst kickers.
KENTUCKY HAMMER NAILS HIS AUDITION
Louisville native Desi Cullen, the self-proclaimed “Kentucky
Hammer,” solidified his role as the team’s starting punter and
kickoff specialist with a steady fall camp. He earned the
special teams game ball after the season opener against Duke.
For the season, he is averaging 39.4 yards on his 41 punts and
ably handling his kickoffs with a BIG EAST-best
10 touchbacks on his 51 kicks. Cullen handled kickoffs in five
games last season as a true freshman and was the understudy to
senior Chris Pavasaris at punter. The gregarious Cullen also
showed a proclivity towards not staying back in coverage as he
aggressively made a pair of tackles on the season in his limited
action.
TOUCHDOWN ROLL HAS A NEW BRANCH
With Akron scoring to take a 10-9 lead during the second quarter
on its game against UConn on Sept.
29, the Huskies needed a quick answer. Senior Tyvon Branch
provided it with a 97-yard kickoff return for a touchdown. It
was the first of Branch’s career and helped earn him BIG EAST Special
Teams Player of the Week honors. Impressively, Branch is now one
of three active UConn players who have returned a kickoff for a
touchdown in their careers joining Larry Taylor
(2004 vs. Temple) and
Darius Butler (2005 vs. USF).
Branch returned three kickoffs on the day for 150 yards, fourth
best for a single game in UConn
history.
TAYLOR MADE RETURNS
Larry Taylor reassumed his role as UConn’s top return specialist
for the first nine games last year before suffering a concussion
at Syracuse on Nov. 18. Taylor was 15th in the nation in punt
returns, averaging 12.75 yards per run back. Behind Taylor,
UConn was 26th in the nation in punt returns as a team. Taylor’s
25.36 kickoff return average ranked 24th nationally until he
fell out late in the season due to a low number of returns for
the year. Through the week when he fell out, he was one of two
players in the nation ranked in the top 25 of both categories,
joining Oklahoma State’s Perrish Cox. Taylor hurt his knee in
UConn’s game at Cincinnati on Oct. 15, 2005 and the loss was
felt hard in the team’s return game. Taylor ranked 18th in the
nation in punt returns (12.30 average) and seventh in kickoff
returns (34.2 avg.) when he was hurt, but would fall below the
national minimum to be ranked because of time missed due to
injury. 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. Taylor returned in
2005 after an electrifying true freshman season in 2004 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. His punt return score was a 68-yard scamper against
Toledo that blew the Motor City Bowl wide open. 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.
WITH OR WITHOUT LT
The field position edge that UConn gains from Larry Taylor is
palpable. In games when Taylor has played from start to finish,
the Huskies are 24-8. When Taylor does not play throughout,
UConn is 1-10.
TAYLOR LEAVES HIS MARKUS ON RECORD BOOK
Larry Taylor’s
second punt return at Pittsburgh on Sept.
22 moved him past Joe Markus (1979-82) to
break UConn’s career punt return yardage record. Taylor
presently has 1,104 career punt return yards, toppling Markus’
total of 1,013 yards. Markus did it on 99 returns (10.2 avg.) while
Taylor has needed just 84 to date (13.1 avg.). The 1,104 yards
also ranks second in BIG EAST history,
trailing only Santana Moss of Miami who returned 84 punts for
1,196 yards in his Hurricane career which spanned from
1997-2000. Taylor’s three career punt return touchdowns tie the
school record as well.
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. The stadium, like the former
airfield, is named for that company’s founder, Frederick
Rentschler. The 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
was 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,
one by the Rolling Stones and one this past summer by The
Police. 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.
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 2006 season, UConn sold in excess of
30,000 season tickets at Rentschler Field, including a record
5,000 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 later in 2004. UConn reached an
all-time high of 32,000 season tickets in 2005.
40,000 HUSKY FANS CAN’T BE WRONG
The Huskies have sold out 20 of their first 31 dates at
Rentschler Field including a recent stretch of 12 in a row.
UConn has played to 96-percent of capacity all-time in East
Hartford, drawing 1,188,596 fans, or an average of 38,341 per
game. UConn finished 2005 ranked 18th in the nation in
attendance based on percentage of capacity. In fact, UConn sold
more football tickets in 2004 (275,129), 2005 (240,000) and 2006
(272,576) than either men’s or women’s basketball tickets.
RENTSCHLER FIELD PROVES FRIENDLY FOR
HUSKIES
The Huskies are 5-0 at home so far in 2007. UConn went 4-2 at
Rentschler Field in 2005 after compiling a 6-1 home record in
2004. UConn’s 3-4 mark at home last year is its only sub-.500
record at Rentschler Field. The six home wins in 2004 set a
school record for a single season. UConn presently stands at
23-8 all-time at Rentschler Field including a 16-3 mark in
non-conference games. Due to the crowd noise, UConn’s opponents
have been flagged for a total of 50 false starts and delay of
game penalties in the past 22 games at Rentschler Field.