
Honorary Spring Game Coaches Announced
STORRS, Conn. (March 10, 2008) -
Two former University of Connecticut head football coaches and a
pair of former Husky student-athletes who played for them will serve
as honorary coaches for the UConn Blue-White Spring Football Game on
Saturday, April 19.
The game will be played at Rentschler Field and
kickoff is slated for 12:00 p.m. with parking lots opening at 9:00
a.m. Both admission and parking are free.
Former UConn head coaches Larry Naviaux and Bob
Casciola will each guide a side along with their former players Ray
Tellier and Brian Usher.
Last spring, former Husky head coaches Rick
Forzano and John Toner were among the honorary coaches along with
former players Gary Blackney and Rick Robustelli.
Naviaux
was UConn’s head coach from 1973-76, a run which included the 1973
Yankee Conference Championship. Naviaux was raised in Lexington,
Neb. where he lettered for four years at Nebraska from 1955-58,
starting at halfback for the Huskers. He worked as an assistant
coach at Nebraska, Southwestern Louisiana (now Louisiana-Lafayette)
and Boston University before taking over as BU’s head coach in 1969.
He guided that 1969 Terrier team to a 9-1 mark and a berth in the
Pasadena Bowl, earning himself AFCA College Division Coach of the
Year honors. After UConn, Naviaux entered the insurance industry in
Connecticut, from which he has recently retired. Casciola was
Naviaux’s predecessor in Storrs as he guided the Huskies from
1971-72.
A
native of Hyde Park, N.Y., Casciola was an All-Ivy League tackle at
Princeton where he played on teams that won a pair of Ivy League
Championships. Casciola served as an assistant coach at Dartmouth
and Princeton before coming to UConn as an assistant coach under
John Toner in 1969, succeeding him when Toner left coaching to serve
full-time as UConn’s Director of Athletics. Casciola spent five
years as head coach at Princeton at 1973-77 before moving into the
private sector with First Fidelity Bank of New Jersey. In addition
to holding several college football broadcasting roles, he got back
into sports full-time in 1987 as the executive vice president and
C.O.O. of the New Jersey Nets. In 1991 he became the executive
director of the National Football Foundation and College Hall of
Fame, becoming the organization’s president in 1995. Casciola
received the NFF's Distinguished American Award in 2004 joining a
list of former recipients that includes Vince Lombardi, Bob Hope,
Pete Rozelle, Joe Paterno, Wellington Mara and UConn’s own John
Toner.
Tellier
was Casciola’s starting quarterback with the Huskies, lettering from
1970-72 following a stand-out prep career at Notre Dame of West
Haven. After graduating, he served as an assistant coach at several
schools before taking over as head coach at Rochester in 1984.
Tellier guided the Yellowjackets to a 9-1 record in 1987 and was
named the AFCA’s Regional Coach of the Year for Division III. From
there he went to New York City to serve as head coach at Columbia, a
position he held from 1989-2002, becoming the second-winningest
coach in Lion history. Since turning over the coaching reigns he has
continued in athletic administration at Columbia as an associate
athletics director.
Usher
played for both Casciola and Naviaux, lettering from 1971-73 as a
linebacker. He remains a familiar face around the program serving as
Associate Director of Admissions for the university. The former
all-state pick at Stamford High School returned to his prep roots
after graduation as an assistant coach at Westhill High School and
later as head coach at since-closed Rippowam High School, both in
his native Stamford. He led Rippowam to the 1980 Class L State
Championship with an 11-1 record. Usher returned to UConn as an
assistant coach in 1982 under Walt Nadzak and remained until 1989
under Tom Jackson, eventually rising to associate head coach and
defensive coordinator and helping the Huskies to four YanCon titles.
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Bob Casciola and Ray Tellier (14) pose together. |
Larry Naviaux receives the 1973 Yankee Conference championship
trophy from Dick MacPherson, coach of 1972 champion UMass. MacPherson would
later serve as head coach at Syracuse from 1981-90 where he mentored future
UConn head coach Randy Edsall. |
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