UConn vs. Temple Football
STORRS, Conn. (Sept. 2, 2008) – Here
are the UConn football notes for the Huskies game this Saturday
against Temple in Phladelphia.
PDF
Version
THE COACHES
CONNECTICUT
HEAD COACH RANDY EDSALL
A semifinalist
for the 2007 Bryant and Munger Coach of the Year Awards, Randy
Edsall has tackled the challenge of bringing a former NCAA Division
I-AA team up to par with the BIG EAST in a brief 10-year span head
on, guiding the Huskies to the 2007 BIG EAST Championship
and its first two bowl games.
He has
compiled a 51-55 career record in his 10th season at UConn,
including wins in 40 of UConn’s last 65 games.
Edsall is 2-2
vs. Temple, and has won his last two meetings against the Owls, with
the Huskies posting a 45-31 win on Oct. 23, 2004 and a 22-17 victory
in the most recent meeting between the programs, which came last
season (Sept. 15. 2007). Both of those UConn wins came at
Rentschler Field. Temple defeated UConn 56-7 in 2001 (one year
prior to the Huskies move to Division I-A) and claimed a 38-24 win
in 2002. Saturday’s game will mark Connecticut’s first road game at
Temple since Nov. 24, 2001.
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. 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.
TEMPLE
HEAD COACH AL GOLDEN
Al Golden is
in his third year in charge of the Temple program and at age 39 is
the fifth-youngest NCAA FBS head coach in the country.
Golden owns a
6-19 record entering Saturday’s game vs. Connecticut. Prior to
taking over the Owls, he was the defensive coordinator and defensive
backs coach at Virginia (2001-05) and was also a graduate assistant
at Virginia from 1994-96. Golden was also an assistant coach at
Boston College (1997-99) and Penn State (2000).
Golden is a
1991 Penn State graduate and was a tight end for the Nittany Lions,
serving as team captain his senior year.
RADIO & TV
COVERAGE
TV COVERAGE
Saturday’s
game with be televised nationally by ESPNU, which is now offered in
HDTV.
Dave Armstrong
in on play-by-play while former Miami (Fla.) head coach Larry Coker
provides color and Todd Jones is the producer.
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 and Eric Davis on production.
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
HUSKIES VS.
TEMPLE ALL-TIME
Connecticut
will be meeting Temple for the 11th time in the all-time series when
the two programs meet on Saturday afternoon before a
nationally-televised ESPNU audience at Lincoln Financial Field in
Philadelphia.
The series
began in 1963 and currently has Temple holding a 7-3 all-time edge
over the Huskies, but Connecticut has won each of the most two
recent games in the series, as it posted wins at Rentschler Field
over the Owls in 2004 and 2007.
The most
recent meeting between the programs came in 2007 as the Huskies
handed Temple a 22-17 setback on Sept. 15, 2007 at Rentschler Field.
Andre Dixon rushed for 129 yards and Donald Brown scored two
touchdowns in the Husky win.
Prior to that,
UConn defeated Temple by a 45-31 count at Rentschler Field on Oct.
23, 2004. Temple’s last win in the series was in 2002 – by a 38-24
score at Memorial Stadium in Storrs.
UConn’s last
trip to Temple came back on Nov. 24, 2001 – a 56-7 Owl win at
Franklin Field. That game was originally schedule for Sept. 16, but
moved because of the Sept. 11 attack.
Temple won
seven of the first eight games in the series with wins in 1963, ’65,
’66, ’70, ’71, ’01 and ’02.
TEMPLE CONN-ECTIONS
UConn has five
players from the Philadelphia area --- Greg Robinson (Philadelphia,
Pa.), C.J. Marck (Newtown, Pa.), Alex Polito (Reading, Pa.), Kashif
Moore (Burlington, N.J.) and Ryan Wirth (Medford, N.J.).
Temple
features eight players from the state of Connecticut – Colin Clancy
(Stonington), Dy’Onne Crudup (New Haven), Alex Joseph (Stamford),
Elijah and Elisha Joseph (Hartford), Terrance Knighton (Windsor),
James Nixon (New Haven) and Brian Sanford (Hartford).
UConn
assistant coach Scott Lakatos and Temple’s Mark D’Onofrio were both
on the Rutgers staff from 2001-03.
HUSKIES
ALL-TIME VS. MAC OPPONENTS
Connecticut
enters Saturday’s meeting at Temple with a 12-1 record against
opponents from the Mid-American Conference (MAC) since making the
move to Division I-A in 2002.
The Huskies
have won each of their last 10 games against MAC foes by an average
margin of 20.5 points over that span.
Connecticut’s
last loss to a MAC opponent came back on Sept. 28, 2002, when it
dropped a 24-21 overtime decision at Ball State.
Saturday’s
game at Temple will mark UConn’s first road game against a MAC foe
since traveling to Kent State on Oct. 18, 2003. it will also mark
the Huskies’ first trip to Temple since 2001 and its first-ever game
at Lincoln Financial Field.
Temple
is the only Mid-American Conference team that UConn will face this
season after meeting two MAC opponents (Temple & Akron) during the
2007 regular season.
The Huskies
have become quite familiar with MAC foes as the school transistioned
to FBS football. UConn faced four of its members in both the 2002
and 2003 seasons, two more in 2004, Buffalo in 2005 before playing
Temple and Akron last season.
UConn’s last
10 wins against the MAC also includes a 39-10 win over Toledo in the
2004 Motor City Bowl.
HUSKIES VS.
NON-CONFERENCE FOES SINCE 2002
Connecticut
boasts a 30-14 record against non-conference opponents in the
regular season since making the move to Division I-A in 2002.
The Huskies
have won five of their last six non-league games overall with the
only blemish coming via a one-point loss at Virginia (17-16) in
2007.
UConn has
posted the following records in non-conference games: 6-6 (2002),
9-3 (2003), 4-1 (2004), 3-1 (2005), 3-2 (2006), 4-1 (2007), 1-0
(2008).
LOOKING TO
OPEN 2-0
The Huskies
will be looking to open the season with two consecutive wins when
they play at Temple on Saturday afternoon.
Connecticut
has opened 2-0 four previous times since making the move to Division
I-A in 2002 and has accomplished the feat three times since 2004.
UConn has
opened 2-0 in 2003, 2004, 2005 and 2007.
HUSKIES ON THE
ROAD SINCE 2002
The road has
not always been kind to the Huskies as they have put together a
12-19 road record since 2002.
In
non-conference road affairs over that same span, Connecticut has
posted a mark of 11-8 and has won three of its last four such games
entering Saturday’s meeting with Temple.
The Huskies
posted a 1-1 mark in non-conference road games in 2007 with a win at
Duke and a loss at Virginia. In 2006, the Huskies won at Indiana
and in 2005 they defeated Army and lost at Georgia Tech.
HUSKIES
ALL-TIME IN NFL STADIUMS
On Saturday,
when the Huskies face Temple at Lincoln Financial Field, home of the
NFL’s Philadelphia Eagles, UConn will be playing in an active (at
the time of the game) NFL stadium for the ninth time in its history.
UConn owns a
3-5 record in such games entering Saturday’s clash with Temple.
UConn defeated
Toledo, 39-10, on Dec. 27, 2004 at Ford Field (home of the Detroit
Lions) in the Motor City Bowl.
UConn lost to
South Florida in 2001 and 2006 at Raymond James Stadium (home of the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers), lost the 2007 Meineke Car Care Bowl at Bank
of America Stadium in Charlotte (home of the Carolina Panthers),
split a pair of games at Pittsburgh (Heinz Field) in 2005 and ’07
Connecticut
also split a pair of games against Yale in 1973-74 at the Yale Bowl,
which was serving as a temporary home of the New York Giants during
the reconstruction of Yankee Stadium.
HUSKIES IN
ROAD OPENERS
Connecticut
enters Saturday’s game at Temple with a record of 3-3 in the first
road game of the season, dating back to 2002.
The Huskies
have won each of their last two road openers, having recorded a 14-7
win at Indiana in 2006 before posting a 45-14 win at Duke in 2007.
UConn dropped
its road opener in both 2004 (at Boston College) and 2005 (Georgia
Tech).
The Huskies
also lost to Boston College in 2002 before winning at Army in 2003.
HUSKIES IN
SEPTEMBER
Connecticut
boasts a record of 16-8 in games played during the month of
September dating back to the 2002 season.
The Huskies
enter Saturday’s meeting at Temple having won each of their last
five games played in September by an average margin of 25.6 ppg.
Connecticut
last loss in the month of September came on Sept. 30, 2006, when it
dropped a 41-17 decision against Navy at Rentschler Field.
UConn’s last
road loss in the month of September came during the 2005 campaign,
when it slipped up 28-13 at Georgia Tech (Sept. 17, 2005).
HUSKIES
IMPROVE TO 6-1 SINCE 2002 IN SEASON OPENERS
UConn’s 35-3
win over Hofstra on August 28 improved its mark to 6-1 in season
openers since making the jump to then-Division I-A in 2002.
UConn is
perfect in its five season openers at Rentschler Field
(2003-Indiana, 2004-Murray State, 2005-Buffalo, 2006-Rhode Island
and 2007-Hofstra).
The Huskies
also downed Duke, 45-14, on the road in Durham,
to open the 2007 season. UConn’s only I-A era opening day loss was
also its only road opener in that span, a 24-16 defeat at Boston
College on Aug. 31, 2002 in UConn’s first game as an official member
of Division I-A.
Overall, UConn
is 49-58-2 in season openers dating back to 1896.
HUSKIES TIE
RECORD FOR SEASON-OPENING WINS
UConn has won
each of its last six season openers. That marks most that UConn has
won since a string of five straight season-opening wins from
1985-89.
The streak
also matches the school record of six straight season-opening wins
from 1923-28 under head coach Sumner Dole.
Nationally,
only 12 schools have a longer active streak of opening day wins than
the Huskies.
LONGEST ACTIVE
OPENING DAY WINNING STREAKS
23
Nebraska
19
Florida
12
Georgia
11 USC, Wisconsin
9
Ohio State, South
Carolina, Texas
8
Iowa
7
Alabama, Missouri, Penn State
6
CONNECTICUT, Arizona State, LSU, TCU, Texas Tech
HUSKIES
CONTINUE DOMINANCE OVER I-AA FOES
UConn has
played one Division I-AA school (now called the Football Championship Subdivision) in
each season since joining Division I-A (Football Bowl
Subdivision) in
2002.
UConn has won
all seven of these games defeating Florida Atlantic in 2002, Lehigh
in 2003, Murray State in 2004, Liberty in 2005, Rhode Island in
2006, Maine in 2007 and Hofstra in 2008.
The closest of
these games has been a 35-17 win over Lehigh in 2003. Overall, UConn
has won the seven games by a combined score of 332-55.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
COACH EDSALL
Wednesday, August
27 marked head coach Randy Edsall’s 50th birthday. Much like his
team the past few seasons, Edsall is young but experienced as he
enters his 10th year at the helm of the UConn program at just 50
years old.
He is tied for
the 12th longest tenured FBS coach
at his current job.
In addition to
Edsall, Clemson’s Tommy Bowden, Iowa’s Kirk Ferentz (a UConn
graduate), Oklahoma’s Bob Stoops
and Auburn’s Tommy Tuberville were all hired for their current jobs
heading into the 1999 season.
The entire
nation of course trails Joe Paterno who embarks on his 43rd year as
head coach at Penn State.
LONG ROAD
AHEAD
For the third
time in four years, UConn is playing on both the first and last
permissible playing dates in a season.
The Huskies
started off the Thursday before Labor Day (Aug. 28) with
a 35-3 win against Hofstra and will finish up on the first Saturday
of December (Dec. 6) when
they play host to Pittsburgh.
UConn in one
of three teams nationally facing this type of schedule along with Cincinnati
and Troy.
Several teams
can join the Huskies, Bearcats and Trojans if they reach their
respective conference championship games.
UConn also
went the distance in 2005 and 2006. In each case UConn won its
opener, defeating Buffalo in 2005 and Rhode Island in 2006, but lost
its finale, falling twice to Louisville.
TOUGH SLATE IN
2008 FOR HUSKIES
Three of
UConn’s non-conference opponents this fall are members of BCS Conferences
as the Huskies will face North Carolina and Virginia of the ACC and
Baylor of the Big 12.
UConn is one
of just three schools who are members of a BCS conference
to play three fellow BCS conference
members out of league, joining Baylor and Wake Forest.
HUSKIES EARN
POLL VOTES
UConn received
nine votes in the preseason USA Today
Coaches Poll, tied for 39th-most nationally.
Last fall, the
Huskies were ranked for four weeks in the AP poll
and three weeks in the coaches poll, peaking at No. 16 in both on
Nov. 4.
The Huskies
received 10 points in the 2008 Preseason AP Poll, also 39th-most
nationally.
HOME SWEET
HOME
The Huskies
are presently riding an eight-game winning streak at Rentschler
Field and have won those games by an average margin of 19.0 ppg.
The Huskies
joined the 1993 West Virginia Mountaineers in 2007 as the only teams
in BIG EAST history
to ever a record a perfect 7-0 home record.
UConn’s streak
is amongst the longest active ones in the nation as the 2008 season
enters its second week.
LONGEST ACTIVE
FBS HOME
FIELD WINNING STREAKS
18
Oklahoma (Oklahoma Memorial Stadium)
15
Wisconsin (Camp Randall Stadium)
14
Boise
State
(Bronco Stadium)
13
BYU (Lavell
Edwards Stadium)
10
Kansas
(Memorial Stadium)
8
Tennessee (Neyland Stadium)
8
CONNECTICUT (Rentschler Field)
7
Missouri (Memorial Stadium)
SQUAD NOTES
BIG EAST
COACHES TAB HUSKIES SIXTH
Despite UConn
earning a share of the conference title in 2007 and returning a
total of 35 lettermen and 19 starters from that championship squad,
the BIG EAST
coaches have tabbed the Huskies to finish sixth in the preseason
poll.
Connecticut
garnered a total of 97 points, just one shy of fifth-place choice
Cincinnati (96) and 28 in front of seventh-place Louisville (69).
West Virginia
(189), USF (149) and Pittsburgh (128) were ranked 1-3 according to
the preseason list.
UConn will be
hoping for a repeat of 2007, when it was able to prove the
prognosticators wrong by capturing a piece of the league crown after
being selected to finish seventh in the conference in the preseason
by the coaches.
HUSKIES IN THE
NFL
UConn
currently has five former players that are currently on NFL rosters.
The veterans
of the group are both entering their fourth year in league.
Quarterback Dan Orlovsky is in his fourth year with the Detroit
Lions while linebacker Alfred Fincher is in his first year with the
Washington Redskins after playing his first three years with New
Orleans.
Fullback Deon
Anderson is entering his second year with the Dallas Cowboys after
starting four games for the team last year before an injury ended
his season.
UConn
currently has two rookies on NFL rosters: offensive lineman Donald
Thomas with the Miami Dolphins – a sixth round draft pick who is
currently starting for the team and defensive back Tyvon Branch of
the Oakland Raiders – a fourth round pick who injured his thumb
during an exhibition game.
Danny Lansanah
(Green Bay Packers) – a free agent signee who played in the first
two exhibition games; and defensive tackle Dan Davis (Indianapolis
Colts) – a free agent signee, were both recently released.
HUSKIES IN THE
CFL
In addition,
there are six former Huskies currently playing in the Canadian
Football League – O’Neill Wilson (Hamilton Tiger-Cats) and Jordan
Younger (Edmonton Eskimos), who are both in their fifth year in the
league.
Maurice Lloyd
(Saskatchewan Roughriders) who is in his third year with the team
after earning a Grey Cup ring with the team last year; Terry Caulley
(Hamilton Tiger-Cats) is in his second year; Shawn Mayne (Winnipeg
Blue Bombers), in his second year and Larry Taylor (Montreal
Alouettes) enters the season as a rookie
SCOUT TEAM
PLAYER OF THE WEEK
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 then dress list for that week’s game. The
weekly honorees are listed below.
HOFSTRA
Ben Chapman
(offense), Dwayne Gratz (defense), Sio Moore (special 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 2008 recipients are listed below.
HOFSTRA
Donald Brown
(offense), Cody Brown (defense), Robbie Frey (special teams).
ACTIVE CAREER
LEADERS:
Cody Brown
(4), Donald Brown (3), Darius Butler (3), Andre Dixon (3), William
Beatty (2), D.J. Hernandez (2), Scott Lutrus (2), Terry Baltimore,
Steve Brouse, Tony Ciaravino, Desi Cullen, Dahna Deleston, Robbie
Frey, Keith Gray, Mike Hicks, Alex LaMagdelaine, Tyler Lorenzen, Rob
Lunn, Lawrence Wilson.
UCONN
ASSISTANTS KNOW HOW THE “HEAD” GUY FEELS
Three members
of Connecticut’s coaching staff boast head coaching experience from
previous stops in their coaching career.
Offensive
Coordinator Rob Ambrose was the head coach at Catholic University
(Washington, D.C.) in 2001 just prior to his arrival at UConn in
2002.
Offensive line
coach Mike Foley was the head man at Colgate from 1987-92 and
current Director of Football Operations Tim Pendergast served as
head coach at Cornell from 2001-03 and Hamilton College (N.Y.) in
2000
HUSKIES IN
AUGUST
The Huskies
are 3-1 in August since 2002, its entire tenure in Division I-A.
UConn is 3-0 at home in August in the I-A era. UConn’s lone blemish
in the month of August since its move to I-A was a 24-16 setback at
Boston College in the 2002 season opener.
UConn’s
season-opening win over Hofstra on Aug. 28 marked the first time
that Connecticut has played a game in the month of August since it
defeated Rhode Island 52-7 on August 31, 2006.
HOFSTRA
POSTGAME THOUGHTS
Win moved
UConn’s record in night games at Rentschler Field to 8-3
overall….Huskies move to 3-2 all-time against Hofstra…UConn moves to
26-8 all-time at Rentschler Field dating back to its opening in
2003….UConn running back Donald Brown posted a pair of 1-yard TD
runs in the first quarter, marking the fifth time in his career he
has rushed for multiple touchdowns in the same game, with the most
recent prior to this evening coming on September 15, 2007 vs.
Temple….Anthony Sherman’s 33-yard reception in the first quarter
marked the longest of his career (previous long reception: 7 yards
vs. Syracuse, Nov. 17, 2007)….UConn’s 14 points in the first quarter
marked its highest scoring output in an opening quarter since it
posted 14 against Syracuse on Nov. 17, 2007….UConn has not allowed a
single first-quarter point in three of its last four games overall,
dating back to Nov. 17, 2007 vs. Syracuse….Donald Brown’s four
rushing touchdowns marked a personal career high and are the most by
a UConn player in a single game since Cornell Brockington scored
three vs. Liberty on Sept. 10, 2005….Donald Brown’s four rushing
touchdowns also tied for the third-most in a single game by a UConn
player in the program’s history (the feat has been accomplished nine
previous times)….The four touchdowns by Brown also tied the UConn
single-game rushing record since the program moved to Division I-A
in 2002 – matching Cornell Brockington’s four TD’s at Wake Forest on
Nov. 15, 2003….Donald Brown’s 146 rushing yards marked his seventh
career game with over 100 yards on the ground….UConn’s first two
touchdowns tonight came via 1-yard rushes, the last time UConn
posted a pair of 1-yard rushing TDs in the first quarter was against
Northeastern on Sept. 20, 1980….UConn’s 28-0 halftime advantage
marked its largest lead at the break since it led Liberty 38-0 on
Sept. 10, 2005….UConn held Hofstra without a single point through
the first half, the last time the Huskies shutout its opponent for
the opening half came in the 2007 Meineke Car Care Bowl against Wake
Forest on Dec. 29, 2007….UConn senior receiver Ellis Gaulden
finished with a career-best 62 receiving yards on four catches.
Gaulden entered tonight’s game with five career receptions for 29
yards….Tyler Lorenzen’s three interceptions marked a single-game
high. His previous high was one interception, which he did six times
last season, the most recent was against Wake Forest in the Meineke
Car Care Bowl on December 29, 2007….Redshirt freshman running back
Robbie Frey’s 2-yard TD run in the fourth quarter represented the
first touchdown of his career….UConn won despite committing five
turnovers – it marked the first time that the Huskies have won a
game with as many as five turnovers since it moved to Division I-A
in 2002….UConn’s 218 rushing yards marked its highest single-game
output since posting 256 yards on the ground vs. Rutgers on November
3, 2007….Donald Brown’s 146 rushing yards marked the highest total
by a UConn player since Donald Brown rushed for 154 yards against
Rutgers on Nov. 3, 2007.
HUSKIES WHEN
RANKED
UConn is 2-2
all-time when it is ranked nationally.
UConn made its
debut as a ranked team on Nov. 3, 2007 when the Huskies downed
Rutgers, 38-19, at Rentschler Field. At
the time, UConn was ranked No. 16 by the AP and
No. 20 by the coaches.
The Huskies
lost, 27-3, on Nov. 10, 2007 at Cincinnati when they were ranked No.
16 in both polls.
UConn was
ranked No. 25 by the AP for
its win over Syracuse on Nov. 17, 2007 and was ranked No. 20
entering its loss at West Virginia on Nov. 24, 2007.
HUSKIES NINE
WINS IN 2007 NEAR 109-YEAR MARK
UConn’s 9-4
record in 2007 tied for the second-winningest season in the school’s
109 years of football.
UConn won a
school-record 10 games in 1998 as it advanced to the Division I-AA
Quarterfinals.
The Huskies
also won nine games in 2003. UConn had previously won eight games in
a season six times (1901, 1973, 1986, 1989, 1995 and 2004).
SWEET 16!
HIGHEST AP POLL DEBUT IN 43 YEARS
UConn earned
its first ever AP
Poll ranking
on Oct. 28, 2007 when it checked into the poll at No. 16. That
marked the highest debut ranking for a school since Florida State,
led by All-American Fred Biletnikoff, first broke into the AP rankings
at No. 10 on Oct. 12, 1964.
The AP Poll
was just a Top 10 ranking from 1961-67. In the 43 years since
Florida State’s AP debut, the closest that any school has come to
debuting at No. 16 was when San Diego State debuted at No. 17 on
Oct. 24, 1970.
HUSKIES RUSH
PAST THE MARSHALL PLAN
With its Oct.
28 Associated Press and
USA Today Coaches rankings, UConn
became the second-fastest team to ever make the polls after moving
up from what was once called Division I-AA.
Only Marshall
which joined I-A in 1997, moved faster as it was ranked after two
years and four weeks.
Ironically,
UConn edged past South Florida for second place, the team it
defeated to earn its initial ranking. The Bulls became a
full-fledged I-A program in 2001 and also cracked the Top 25 in 2007
after six years and three weeks.
FASTEST FROM
DIVISION I-AA TO THE POLLS
SCHOOL
I-A DEBUT FIRST RANKING
Marshall
1997 Two
years, four weeks (9/12/99)
CONNECTICUT 2002 Five years, 10 weeks (10/28/07)
South Florida
2001 Six years, three weeks (9/9/07)
Boise State
1996 Six
years, 13 weeks (11/10/02)
THE QUEST FOR
A BIG EAST CHAMPIONSHIP
With a 5-2
record last season in BIG
EAST
play,
the Huskies earned a share of the 2007 BIG
EAST
Title with West Virginia.
The five wins
were just one shy of the six total BIG
EAST
wins by
the Huskies since joining the league in 2004.
In 2004, UConn
went 3-3 in its inaugural league slate while the Huskies won two
league games in 2005 and just one in 2006.
Prior to 2007,
when the Huskies stood at 4-0 in league play heading to Cincinnati
on
Nov.
10, UConn had never even started a BIG
EAST
slate
at 2-0.
The last time
UConn won more than five league games in a year was in 1998 when
UConn
went 6-2 in
the
Atlantic 10.
The Huskies
have not won a league championship outright since taking the Yankee
Conference crown in 1973. UConn last shared in a conference
championship in 1989 when it was YanCon Tri-Champion.
HUSKIES PAY
THE RENT ON TIME EVERY TIME
UConn went a
perfect 7-0 in 2007 at Rentschler Field. UConn joins the 1993 West
Virginia Mountaineers as the only teams in BIG
EAST
history
to complete a season with a perfect 7-0 record at home.
The seven home
wins topped the previous school record set in 2004 when the Huskies
went 6-1 in East Hartford.
UConn’s best
undefeated home season before 2007 was a 5-0 mark in 1989 at
Memorial
Stadium
in
Storrs.
HUSKIES GAIN
BOWL ELIGIBILITY ONCE AGAIN
For the third
time in the past five years the Huskies were bowl eligible in 2007
and earned a berth in the Meineke Car Care Bowl in Charlotte where
they dropped a 24-10 decision to Wake Forest.
UConn was also
bowl eligible in 2003 when the team went 9-3 as an independent but
was not selected for a bowl bid. In 2004 when UConn was 7-4 and went
on to win the Motor City Bowl.
HUSKIES ON THE
REBOUND
UConn is now
17-10 in games following a loss since Oct. 26, 2002, with its 35-3
win over Hostra on August 28.
The Huskies
posted a 3-1 in such games in 2007. The Huskies downed Duke to open
the 2007 season on the heels of a three-game losing skid to end the
2006 campaign.
The team later
beat Louisville six days after losing at Virginia on Oct. 13. The
Huskies downed Syracuse, 30-7 on Nov.
17 a week after losing at Cincinnati. UConn went 4-4 following a
loss in 2006.
SUCCESS IS
RELL-ATIVE IN CONNECTICUT
UConn’s
success on the gridiron in 2007 did not go 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."
ROAD
WORRIERS
While UConn is
26-8 all-time at Rentschler Field, the results on the road have not
always been as joyful for the Huskies.
Of UConn’s 31
losses in the Division I-A era, 19 have come on the road. During the
combined 2004-08 seasons, UConn is 5-14 on the road but 21-7 at home
with a 1-1 mark at neutral sites (Motor City and Meineke Car Care
Bowls).
UConn is 2-11
in BIG EAST road games with the lone wins coming at Rutgers on Nov.
25, 2004 and at Pittsburgh on
Sept.
22, 2007.
UConn won a
single road game each year from 2004-06 before winning a pair in
2007.
The Huskies
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.
EDSALL ERA
HITS THE CENTURY MARK
Connecticut’s
win over USF
on Oct.
27, 2007 was the 100th game in Randy Edsall’s 10-year tenure as head
coach at Connecticut. Edsall (106 games) 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 10-year tenure at UConn is tied for the 13th-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 43rd year as
head coach at Penn State.
Within the BIG
EAST,
only USF’s Jim
Leavitt
at 12 years has been in his current position longer than
Edsall.
The five
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),
Bob
Stoops
(Oklahoma) and Tommy Tuberville (Auburn).
EDSALL HITS
50-WIN MARK - AND COUNTING....
Randy Edsall
currently owns a 51-55 career record at UConn, including a 42-30
(.583)
mark
through the first 72 games of UConn’s tenure at the FBS (Division
I-A)
level.
By beating
Syracuse on Nov. 17, 2007, for his 50th win at UConn, Edsall
became just the third Husky mentor to ever win 50 games at the
school, joining J.O.
Christian (66) and Tom
Jackson
(62).
BALL CONTROL
IS THE KEY
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 58
scoring drives of at least 80 yards while the Husky defense has
surrendered just 32 such marches.
UConn also
holds a 16-5 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
65 games, UConn has outgained its opponent 43 times, including one
time in 2008.
This stretch,
like many UConn trends, dates back to a disheartening 28-24 loss at
Vanderbilt on Oct. 26, 2002.
CONNECTICUT’S
FOUR CAPTAINS
The UConn team
has selected four team captains for the 2008 season, Darius Butler,
Donald Brown, Tyler Lorenzen and D.J. Hernandez.
Butler and
Hernandez will be serving as captains for the second season, after
also holding the responsibility during their junior campaigns.
OFFENSE NOTES
TOUCHDOWN
BROWN WASTES NO TIME SETTING OFF 2008
UConn junior
running back Donald Brown got his 2008 season off to a fast start
against Hofstra with 23 carries for 146 yards and four touchdowns.
Brown has now
rushed for multiple touchdowns in five games during his career, the
four TDs marked the third-highest total in school history, having
been accomplished nine previous times.
The four
rushing touchdowns also tied the Husky record since the program
moved to the FBS in 2002 – joining Cornell Brockington with four at
Wake Forest in 2003.
Brown has now
rushed for 100 yards or more seven times in his career – four as a
freshman in 2006 and two last year.
GAULDEN BACK
IN ACTION
UConn senior
wide receiver Ellis Gaulden tallied a career-high 62 yards against
Hofstra on four catches.
Gaulden has
had an often-injured career with knee issues as he missed the first
three games of 2007, the entire 2006 season and played in just one
games in 2005.
Gaulden
entered the Hofstra game with five career receptions for 29 yards.
He almost doubled his reception number and did double his yardage
number.
A versatile
athlete, Gaulden is a two-time BIG EAST Conference high jump
champion.
HUSKIES AND
THE RED ZONE
The Huskies
made seven trips to the red zone against Hofstra and scored five
touchdowns and had two interceptions on those possessions.
Since 2002,
UConn has scored on 235 of 276 (85.1 percent) of its red zone
possessions. Of the 41 non-scoring drives, 25 have been missed field
goals.
ODDS AND ENDS
Sophomore
fullback Anthony Sherman had a 33-yard reception in the first
quarter of the Hofstra game, the longest of his career…UConn has not
allowed a point in the first quarter in three of its past four
games…UConn has now won six-straight home openers, something it last
accomplished in 1923-28…The Huskies 28-0 halftime lead was its
largest since a 38-0 mark against Liberty on Sept. 10, 2005…The win
over Hofstra was the first one in UConn’s FBS history where it
turned the ball over five times.
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
Iowa State out of high school.
The Cyclones
tried to switch him to wide receiver, Lorenzen, wanting to play
quarterback transferred to Palomar Community College near San Diego
where he was named a first-team JuCo All-American in 2006 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.
DIXON
BACK AFTER BREAKTHROUGH 2007
Tailback Andre
Dixon
saw his first significant action of his career at tailback against
Temple on Sept. 15, 2007, and made the most of his opportunity.
Dixon ran for
129 yards on 21 carries against the Owls. Dixon is one of three
active UConn players who have a 100-yard rushing game to their
credit as a Husky, joining Donald Brown (five 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 while
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.
DEFENSE NOTES
DEFENSE
DOESN’T LET TURNOVER PAY
Although the
UConn offense committed five turnovers in the win over Hofstra, the
Husky defense only allowed three points to be scored off those
turnovers.
The UConn
defense forced a punt, got the ball back on downs, had an
interception and the game ended on the other turnovers.
DEFENSE
AMONGST THE NATION’S BEST
UConn’s
defensive unit was amongst the best in the nation in 2007. The
Huskies ranked 37th nationally in total defense yielding just 351.38
yards per game.
The Huskies
ranked tied for 13th in scoring defense at 19.00 points per game.
UConn is 10th
in passing efficiency defense with a 121.67 rating. UConn’s 23
interceptions tied for fourth nationally, while its 29 total
turnovers gained ties for 20th.
SKIP TO MY
LUTRUS
UConn saw a
redshirt freshman make an immediate impact at the strongside
linebacker post in 2007. Brookfield’s Scott Lutrus ranked third on
the squad with 107 tackles, eight 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. Lutrus’ four interceptions
in 2007 tied for the most in the nation by a linebacker.
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. He won the honor again a week later against
USF.
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 in 2007.
His 22 field
goals made broke the UConn single-season record and represent the
fifth-most in BIG
EAST
history.
Ciaravino
ended up hitting three of his four field goals in the 2007 season
opener at
Duke
and has not looked back. The three field goals made were the most by
a Husky kicker since Matt Nuzie hit four in the 2004 Motor City
Bowl. Ciaravino Ciaravino 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 him 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 tallied a run of nine consecutive made field goal tries
during the 2007 season, bookended by a 52 yard miss at Virginia on
Oct. 13 and a 51-yard miss against Maine on
Sept.
8.
It was 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 matched David DeArmas’ nine straight in 1994 for the second
longest streak in school history.
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.
In 2007 he
earned the special teams game ball after the season opener against
Duke.
Last season,
Cullen averaged 40.7 yards on his 75 punts and also handled kickoffs
with 11 touchbacks on 74 kicks.
Cullen handled
kickoffs in five games in 2006 as a true freshman and was the
understudy to senior Chris Pavasaris at punter.
Cullen has
also showed a tendency towards not staying back in coverage as he
has aggressively made five tackles on the season.
STADIUM/ATTENDANCE NOTES
RENTSCHLER
FIELD
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, the 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. 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 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.
A HOT TICKET
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.
UConn sold
28,000 season tickets in 2008 and sold its entire allotment of
student season ticket at 4,700. The opening game against Hofstra saw
over 5,000 Husky students attend the game.
These figures
are staggering sums considering that the entire 2001 season ticket
base was around 4,000. In 2002, the number reached 11,300 in the
final season of Memorial Stadium. 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.
SELLOUTS THE
NORM
The Huskies
have sold out 22 of their first 34 dates at Rentschler Field,
including a stretch of 12 in a row.
UConn has
played to 96-percent of capacity all-time in East Hartford, drawing
1,306,179 fans, or an average of 38,417 per game.
RENTSCHLER
FIELD PROVES FRIENDLY FOR HUSKIES
The Huskies
went 7-0 at home in 2007 at Rentschler Field and 4-2 in 2005 after
compiling a 6-1 home record in 2004.
UConn’s 3-4
mark at home in 2006 was its only sub-.500 record at Rentschler
Field.
The seven home
wins in 2007 set a school record for a single season which was
previously set in 2004. In the process, the Huskies joined the 1993
West Virginia Mountaineers as the only BIG EAST schools to ever post
a perfect 7-0 home record.
UConn
presently stands at 26-8 all-time at Rentschler Field including a
17-3 mark in non-conference games.
Due to the
crowd noise, UConn’s opponents have been flagged for a total of 56
false starts and delay of game penalties in the past 25 games at
Rentschler Field.
UP NEXT
UConn returns
to Rentschler Field next Saturday as it entertains Virginia of the
Atlantic Coast Conference at 7:30 p.m.
The game will
be televised to a national audience on ESPNU.
The primetime
showdown will mark just the second meeting between the two schools
with the most recent seeing Virginia nip the Huskies 17-16 in a
classic game in Charlottesville on Oct. 13, 2007. |