University of Connecticut Athletics
Football Hopes to Strike Gold at Kent State
10/13/2003 12:00:00 AM | Football
October 13, 2003
THE COACHES
CONNECTICUT HEAD COACH RANDY EDSALL
A veteran of 21 years 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. He has compiled a 19-33 career record in his fifth season at UConn, including wins in eight of UConn’s last 11 games. He is 1-0 against Kent State. Immediately prior to becoming UConn’s 27th head coach on December 21, 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 McPherson in a variety of capacities. Amongst 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.
KENT STATE HEAD COACH DEAN PEES
Dean Pees is 15-48 in his sixth year as head coach at Kent State and he is 0-1 against Connecticut. A native of Dunkirk, Ohio, and a 1972 graduate of Bowling Green, one of four Ohio-based MAC schools on his resume, Pees started his coaching career as head coach at Elmwood High School in Bloomdale, Ohio, from 1975-78. Pees went from there to Findlay where we worked from 1979-82 before returning to the MAC as defensive coordinator at Miami from 1983-86. Pees coached the secondary at Navy from 1987-89 and then came back to the MAC as defensive coordinator at Toledo from 1990-93. Pees spent the 1994 season coaching the secondary at Notre Dame under KSU grad Lou Holtz before moving into the Big Ten for three years as Nick Saban’s defensive coordinator at Michigan State from 1995-97, helping the Spartans to three-straight bowl berths.
RADIO/TV COVERAGE NOTES
RADIO COVERAGE
For the 12th consecutive season, WTIC 1080-AM in Hartford serves as the flagship station for the UConn Radio Network. WTIC is the state’s only 50,000 watt signal and can be heard in 23 states and parts of Canada. Veteran UConn announcers Joe D’Ambrosio (play-by-play) and Wayne Norman (color commentary) return to call the action with Bob Joyce on the sidelines. The UConn pregame show begins 90 minutes prior to kickoff, while at home games, the UConn Tailgate Show will air two and a half hours prior the game with Arnold Dean and Kevin Nathan. The UConn Football Radio Network also includes WILI 1400-AM in Willimantic, WLIS 1420-AM in Old Saybrook and WMRD 1150-AM in Middletown. UConn football games are also broadcast over the internet, with assistance from Yahoo!, at www.UConnHuskies.com.
GAME 3 OF FIVE ON CHANNEL 3
WFSB, TV-3, Hartford’s CBS affiliate, will broadcast the Kent State game as the third of its five telecasts during the 2003 season, along with Indiana and BC, and the first on the road. Mark Brown (play-by-play), Don McPherson (color) and Dina Falco (sidelines) will call the action with Paul Karlsson producing. FOX Sports Net Pittsburgh will have a delayed broadcast of the game.
THE UCONN HUSKIES: MUST SEE TV
UConn will have seven of its 12 games this fall broadcast on live television in Connecticut, for a total of 15 live telecasts over the past two seasons, despite not having a conference television package as an independent school. WFSB-TV 3, Hartford’s CBS affiliate, is carrying five games as the Huskies battle Indiana, Boston College, Kent State, Rutgers and Wake Forest. The Virginia Tech game aired on ESPN Regional as the BIG EAST Conference Game of the Week and aired locally on WTXX TV-20 in Hartford. The YES Network will broadcast the Akron game live from Rentschler Field to its cable audience in New York, New Jersey, Connecticut and eastern Pennsylvania. Also, FOX Sports Net Pittsburgh will pickup WFSB’s feed of the Kent State game. UConn is 5-6 when on Connecticut TV over the past two years.
PLENTY OF FOLKS ARE TUNING IN
The Nielsen numbers continue to grow as WFSB recorded an 8.6 rating and 23 share for its coverage of the UConn-Boston College game on Sept. 13, a UConn football record. The previous high for UConn football on WFSB had been set just two weeks prior when the Indiana game garnered a 6.6 rating and 19 share. UConn’s five games last season on WFSB drew a good crowd to their televisions in the Nutmeg State, averaging a 4.3 rating and an 11.6 share in the Hartford TV market. The highest rated game last fall was against Navy, which despite a 38-0 final score, drew a strong 6.1 rating and a 16 share. Comparing these numbers with typical Connecticut college football TV audiences, on Nov. 16, 2002, the lopsided Navy game saw a 6.1 local rating which blew away ABC’s Big Ten game (Ohio State-Illinois - 1.5) and CBS’s SEC game (Georgia-Auburn - 3.7), each of which went down to the final play and had both national and conference championship implications.
EDSALL ON THE AIR
UConn head coach Randy Edsall will have weekly television and radio shows this year. The television show will air on Sunday nights at 11:45 p.m. on WFSB TV-3 in Hartford with Dina Falco. Edsall, along with a selected player each week, will also be featured on an hour-long radio call-in show Thursday nights from 6:00 to 7:00 p.m. on WTIC 1080-AM with Joe D’Ambrosio.
SERIES NOTES
UCONN-KENT STATE HISTORY
Connecticut and Kent State are meeting for the fourth time ever this week, on the tail end of a home-and-home series that also included a 63-21 UConn victory last Nov. 9 in the final game at Memorial Stadium. The other two meetings came a half-century ago when the Golden Flashes swept a home-and-home series between the teams in the late 1940s, taking a 42-26 decision in Storrs in 1948 and posting a 27-0 shutout of UConn back in Ohio in 1949. UConn is 4-5 all-time against teams from the Buckeye State, having faced Akron (1-0), Baldwin-Wallace (0-1), Cincinnati (0-1), Kent State (1-2), Ohio (1-0) and Ohio Wesleyan (1-1). It is the third time that UConn has faced two teams from Ohio in the same season joining 1949 (Kent State and Ohio Wesleyan) and 2002 (Ohio and Kent State) as the Huskies will play host to Akron next Saturday for Homecoming.
MAC-NIFICENT
The Huskies have become quite familiar with the Mid-American Conference and the Huskies play four more teams from the league this fall. UConn posted a 3-1 record in four games against MAC members in 2002, facing Buffalo (W, 24-3), Ohio (W, 37-19), Ball State (L, 21-24 OT) and Kent State (W, 63-21). The Huskies won their 2003 MAC opener, taking a 38-7 decision at Buffalo (Sept. 20). UConn also faced four MAC teams in 2000, posting a 2-2 record, and three MAC schools in 2001, going 1-2. UConn stands at 14-10 all-time against MAC schools. While the Huskies won three MAC games in 2002, six different MAC schools had fewer wins last year within the conference. Seven of UConn’s last 14 wins overall have come against schools from the MAC.
HEY, DON’T I KNOW YOU FROM SOMEWHERE?
Kent State head coach Dean Pees and UConn assistant coach Dave McMichael were teammates at Bowling Green in the early 1970s under Don Nehlen...UConn’s Ernest Cole and Kent State’s Elijah Brooks were teammates at DeMatha Catholic in Hyattsville, Md...Each team has several players that prepped at either Hargrave or Fork Union Military Academies, both in Virginia... UConn RB Cornell Brockington and Kent State RB David Alston both played at Willingboro High School in New Jersey...Brockington and Kent State WR Najah Pruden are both natives of Burlington, N.J...Although none of the Golden Flashes are from Connecticut, Anthony Henriquez prepped at Milford Academy...KSU defensive line coach Larry McDaniel was a graduate assistant at Indiana in 1997, UConn Director of Football Operations Don Corzine’s senior year in Bloomington.
SQUAD NOTES
HUSKIES ON ONE OF BEST TEN-GAME STREAKS EVER
UConn posted an 8-2 record in its 10 games between Florida Atlantic last fall and Lehigh (Oct. 4), marking one of the finest stretches in the program’s football history. UConn has never won 10 consecutive games, but the Huskies had an 8-0-2 stretch under J.O. Christian that spanned portions of the 1923, 1924 and 1925 seasons. UConn also posted 8-2 runs in 1998, and from 1901-02. UConn had an 8-1-1 stretch in 1973 and from 1937-38 while going 9-1 from 1926-27 and 1944-45.
HUSKIES POST LONGEST WINNING STREAK IN EIGHT YEARS
UConn had a six-game winning streak snapped, one which ranked as the sixth-longest in the nation at the point of termination with a 24-14 loss to Boston College on Sept. 13. The Huskies won the final four games of the 2002 season, defeating Florida Atlantic, Kent State, Navy and Iowa State, and then captured the first two games of the 2003 campaign with wins over Indiana and Army. UConn’s six-game winning streak was the Huskies’ longest since winning seven in a row between the 1994 and 1995 seasons and tied for the fourth longest in school history. The Husky football squad’s winning streak though pales in comparison to the UConn record for all sports, the NCAA-record 70 consecutive wins rattled off by the women’s basketball team that was snapped in March by Villanova. Also noteworthy is that during UConn’s six-game winning streak, no two wins have come over members of the same conference, as UConn has defeated a foe from the Big Ten (Indiana), Big 12 (Iowa State), Conference USA (Army), Mid-American (Kent State), an Independent (Navy) and a Division I-AA team (Florida Atlantic). During the six-game streak, UConn outscored its opponents 281-86 while holding a 2,830-1,569 yard advantage in total offense, advantages of 32.5 points per game and 210.2 yards per game.
SOME TURNOVER ON TURNOVER DOMINANCE
One critical element to UConn’s 2002 success was it’s large advantage in turnover margin. The 2002 Huskies finished the year +12 in turnover margin and outscored their opposition 110-49 off of turnovers (+61). So far this season, UConn is -1 in turnover margin and stands at +14 points in scoring margin off of turnovers. In all, UConn still holds a staggering 125-28 advantage in points off of turnovers over its last 12 contests. The only scores in this stretch came at Buffalo on Sept. 20 after a muffed punt gave UB the ball deep in UConn territory, on an 84-yard interception return for a touchdown by Eric Green at Virginia Tech and on Freddie Aughtry-Lindsay’s fumble and interception returns for touchdowns at NC State.
FIRST THINGS FIRST
Continuing a trend of strong starts that the Huskies began last fall, UConn has posted eight first-quarter shutouts in its last 12 games and held its opponents without a touchdown in the opening stanza 10 times in that span. Only Boston College and Virginia Tech have reached the end zone over that span which started on Oct. 26, 2002 at Vanderbilt. Prior to the Eagles’ Horace Dodd’s eight-yard TD run on Sept. 13, UConn had not allowed an offensive touchdown in the first quarter since Oct. 5, 2002 when Miami’s Willis McGahee scored on a 15-yard run at the Orange Bowl, a stretch that covered 115:44 of first quarter playing time. The last touchdown of any kind scored against UConn in the first quarter of a game prior to BC came when Temple’s Zamir Cobb fell on a muffed punt in the end zone on Oct. 19, 2002. Since the start of the 2002 season, UConn is 9-2 when holding its opponent without a first quarter touchdown and 1-7 when the opponent scores a first quarter touchdown. The losses came on the road at Vanderbilt (Oct. 26, 2002) and NC State (Oct. 11, 2003) while the lone win came last Sept. 21 at home against Ohio.
2003 SEASON GAME BALLS
After each UConn win, head coach Randy Edsall awards a game ball to an offensive, defense and special teams player of the game in recognition of their efforts. After UConn’s 34-10 win over Indiana in Rentschler Field’s inaugural game, Edsall also presented special game balls in the locker room to both UConn President Philip Austin and Athletics Director Jeffrey Hathaway for their vision and hard work towards making both Rentschler Field and UConn’s Division I-A status a reality.
INDIANA: O’Neil Wilson (offense), Sean Mulcahy (defense), Kinnan Herriott (special teams).
ARMY: Dan Orlovsky (offense), Tyler King (defense), no special teams.
BUFFALO: Offensive line (Ryan Krug, Brian Markowski, Billy Irwin, LeAndre Dupree, Grant Preston), Dan Murray and Terry Caulley (offense), Terrance Smith (defense), Jason Williams (special teams).
LEHIGH: Brandon Young (offense), Justin Perkins (defense), Cedric Baylor (special teams).
HUSKIES RECEIVE FIRST EVER DIVISION I-A POLL VOTES
Connecticut received six votes in the ESPN/USA Today coaches poll on Sept. 1, the first Division I-A votes in the program’s history. The votes were not homegrown either as although he votes in the poll, UConn head coach Randy Edsall did not include the Huskies on his ballot. UConn dropped from the Sept. 7 poll.
HONORABLE HUSKIES
As a team, the 2003 Huskies’ preseason rankings in preseason Top 117 polls were about 30 places better than 2002 on average. Most national publications had the Huskies in the 80s for their rankings, with a high mark of 74th by CBS SportsLine and a low of 98th from The Sporting News. Additionally, the following Huskies received national recognition this preseason:
Terry Caulley: Named to the Doak Walker Award Watch List...Preseason Independent Offensive Player of the Year by ESPN.com and CollegeFootballNews.com...All-Independent by Street & Smith’s and CollegeFootballNews.com...Top Independent NFL prospect by Street & Smith’s...19th best running back in the nation by Lindy’s...Named the second best player overall at an Independent school by CollegeFootballNews.com and also named to their preseason All-America Watch List.
Alfred Fincher: Preseason All-Independent by Street & Smith’s.
Ryan Krug: Named to the Rotary Lombardi Award Watch List...Preseason All-Independent by Street & Smith’s and CollegeFootballNews.com...Named to the CollegeFootballNews.com preseason All-America Watch List.
Maurice Lloyd: Preseason All-Independent by CollegeFootballNews.com.
Brian Markowski: Preseason All-Independent by CollegeFootballNews.com.
Dan Orlovsky: Preseason All-Independent by Street & Smith’s and CollegeFootballNews.com.
Uyi Osunde: Named to the Rotary Lombardi Award Watch List...Preseason All-Independent by Street & Smith’s and CollegeFootballNews.com...Named the third best player overall at an Independent by CollegeFootballNews.com and also named to their preseason All-America Watch List.
YOUTH IS SERVED
Six true freshmen have played for the Huskies thus far in 2003. The secondary has seen the largest infusion of freshman talent as Allan Barnes, Dontá Moore, and Jahi Smith have all gotten into the defensive backfield mix in addition to working on special teams. Offensively Sam Dorvil and Matt Lawrence have been the lone true freshmen to see action, with Dorvil spelling Deon Anderson at fullback and Lawrence stepping up to help fill the void left by Terry Caulley’s injury. Graig Vicidomino has also seen action as a place kicker for the Huskies. Brian Ushler is listed on the UConn two-deep but has yet to play. Overall, seven true freshmen played for UConn in 2002.
OUR OWN LITTLE EPCOT CENTER HERE IN STORRS
While the overwhelming majority of the 2003 UConn football team is comprised of players from the northeastern United States, the Huskies have a far greater foreign influence than your typical college football team with players hailing from three different continents. UConn has five Canadian players, two from Ontario (Hakeem Kashama and O’Neil Wilson) and a trio of Quebecois (Dan Desriveaux, Shawn Mayne and Jason Ward). Although now a Canadian citizen, Kashama was actually born in Zaire. Punter Adam Coles is a native Australian while offensive tackle Aloys Manga is a native of Duana, Cameroon. Although not a foreign nation, UConn’s Conn Davis grew up outside of the 50 states in the Virgin Islands.
CONNECTICUT TRI-CAPTAINS
Senior wide receiver Shaun Feldeisen, defensive tackle Sean Mulcahy and defensive end Uyi Osunde were named as the team’s tri-captains this past spring in a vote of their teammates who could not have chosen better personifications of where the UConn program has gone during their careers. None of the three were heavily recruited - Feldeisen was originally a walk-on and spent a year as a place kicker - but through hard work, all three currently harbor realistic thoughts of playing the NFL.
OFFENSE NOTES
DAN-O STILL PUTTING ON A SHOW
Junior Dan Orlovsky, highly-recruited out of high school, continues to live up to the local hype he generated as a high school All-American and the Connecticut Player of the Year in 2000 at Shelton. In the opening seven games of 2003, Orlovsky has hit on 161-of-275 passes (58.5%) for 2,015 yards with 19 touchdowns and nine interceptions for a 136.35 rating. This run includes a school-record five touchdown passes in UConn’s 48-21 win at Army. His third career and second consecutive 300-yard passing effort, done at Army, pushed Orlovsky into fourth place on the UConn career passing yardage chart. He has since taken over third place on that listing. He has a total of three 300-yard passing games to his credit this year (Indiana, Army and Virginia Tech). With 19 touchdown passes he has now thrown a whopping 30 during the last 11 games (2.7 per game) and stands in third place in UConn history with 47 career TD strikes. Orlovsky also extended his streak of consecutive games with a TD pass to 19 against NC State, the second longest such streak in UConn history. Orlovsky presently ranks 16th in the nation in total offense, seventh in points responsible for, tied for 11th in passing with Ole Miss’ Eli Manning and fourth in passing yards, while his 19 TD passes ties him for third in the nation.
HOKIE HI
By throwing for 316 yards in UConn’s game at Virginia Tech on Sept. 27, Dan Orlovsky joined some elite company. Since the start of the 2001 season, only five quarterbacks have thrown for 300 yards in a game against the Hokies’ stringent defense. In that regard, Orlovsky joins Florida State’s Chris Rix, Miami’s Ken Dorsey, Marshall’s Byron Leftwich, and Syracuse’s Troy Nunes.
CAULL TO THE BULLPEN
A season-ending right knee injury (torn ACL and a posterolateral corner tear) to tailback Terry Caulley created an opening for two freshmen and one junior to display their talents for the remainder of the season. Junior Chris Bellamy, redshirt freshman Cornell Brockington and true freshman Matt Lawrence of Bloomfield each have had an opportunity to rush the ball for the Huskies. Brockington has carried the ball 45 times this year for 169 yards, seeing reserve action in the first five games behind Caulley. Lawrence, who the coaching staff had hoped to redshirt but kept prepared just in case, stepped onto the field for the first time at Virginia Tech and started against Lehigh and NC State. Lawrence’s starting debut against the Mountain Hawks was a successful one, carrying 19 times for 88 yards with one touchdown. Against NC State though, Bellamy asserted himself, gaining a career-high 166 yards on 29 carries.
THAT NAME RINGS A BELLAMY
Junior tailback Chris Bellamy played in nine games as a redshirt freshman in 2001 with one start, and five more last year, including a start against Georgia Tech, before Terry Caulley blew past him on the depth chart, running to Freshman All-America honors. With strong depth in the preseason at tailback compliments of Caulley and promising freshmen Cornell Brockington and Matt Lawrence, Bellamy moved to wide receiver, where he worked until Caulley’s Sept. 27 knee injury. Bellamy was quickly switched back to tailback and played well in relief of Lawrence a week later against Lehigh, picking up 42 yards on eight carries, including his first career touchdown. Given an opportunity to see significant playing time at NC State, Bellamy seized the moment, rushing for 166 yards on 29 carries (5.7 avg.). Bellamy’s performance against the Wolfpack was the best by a UConn runner, other than Caulley, in a non-overtime game since Tory Taylor ran for 256 yards against Boston University on Nov. 4, 1995. Not even listed on the two-deep for the NC State game, Bellamy is scheduled to start on Saturday against Kent State.
BUSTING OUT OF THE GATES
The UConn offense has wasted little time in putting points on the scoreboard in 2003, scoring 34 in the opener against Indiana and 48 in the second game of the season, last Saturday at Army. The Huskies scored 82 points through two games in 2003, setting a school record for the most points scored through the first two games of a season. The previous highest scoring start came in 1998 when UConn scored a combined 80 points in wins over Colgate and Maine. Through seven games, UConn is 46th in the nation, averaging 29.4 points per game.
HENRY’S HAT TRICK
When he caught a 30-yard touchdown pass from Dan Orlovsky during the second quarter of the Buffalo game, Keron Henry completed a rare career trifecta. Henry has now caught, thrown and rushed for touchdowns in his UConn career. He joins Ken Sweitzer (1978-81) and Tory Taylor (1995-98) as the only Huskies to accomplish this impressive feat.
RECAULLING SOME HIGHLIGHTS
The UConn offense suffered a blow when starting tailback Terry Caulley was lost for the remainder of the season after suffering a right knee injury early in the Virginia Tech game. At the time of the injury, Caulley was leading the nation with 601 rushing yards and ranked second by average at 150.3 yards per game. He stood tied for fourth nationally in rushing touchdowns (seven), fifth in scoring (12.0 ppg), and Caulley also ranked eighth in all-purpose running (170.5 ypg) despite the fact that he does not return either punts or kickoffs. Entering the Virginia Tech game, his 1,848 career rushing yards led all other sophomore rushers in the nation by a margin of 442 yards on the heels of a 2002 campaign in which he was the nation’s leading freshman rusher. Earlier in the season, at Army, Caulley broke Vin Clements’ school record set in 1968 by hitting the century mark on the ground for the sixth consecutive game. Caulley currently has 10 career 100-yard rushing efforts in just 15 career games played, good for a tie for second on the UConn career chart. Caulley had also scored at least one touchdown in each of his last 12 games played prior to the injury.
BALANCED ATTACK STRIKES BACK
Head coach Randy Edsall preaches a balanced offensive attack, evenly mixing rushing and passing plays throughout his tenure at UConn. The 2003 season has been no exception. The Huskies have 282 passing plays to their credit this fall and 271 rushing plays.
GOING THE DISTANCE
UConn’s offense has put together some impressive marches of late. The Huskies have made eight touchdown drives of at least 80 yards in the past five games, including three at Buffalo. This continues a trend from last season when UConn had 14 drives of 80-yards or more, including four of 90 yards or longer. UConn’s 28 touchdown drives this year have averaged 65.9 yards.
100-YARD TWO-PACK AGAINST WOLFPACK
In UConn’s Oct. 11 game at NC State, Chris Bellamy gained 166 yards rushing while O’Neil Wilson gained 106 receiving yards. This was the 29th time that UConn had a 100-yard rusher and a 100-yard receiver in the same game, and the first such instance in a regulation contest since Oct. 10, 1998 when Barry Chandler ran for 130 and Carl Bond picked up 104 through the air against Hofstra. In a three-overtime game against Villanova on Oct. 16, 1999, Taber Small rushed for 175 yards while John Fitzsimmons gained 107 through the air.
JUNIORS DOMINATE OFFENSIVE LINE
UConn’s offensive line has a wonderful combination of both youth and experience in 2003. Starting four juniors and a sophomore, the group will all return for the 2004 season, but combined had a total of 79 career starts worth of experience with 84 combined games played between them at the start of the 2003 season.
SHARING THE WEALTH
For the second consecutive season, Randy Edsall hopes to utilize a deep rotation of wide receivers to help the offense flourish. Seven different Huskies caught at least 20 passes in 2002 which tied for the fourth in the nation during the regular season. In 2003, Edsall has a variety of weapons at the position, where O’Neil Wilson and Keron Henry may be listed as starters, but Edsall considers all within the group worthy of the honor. Shaun Feldeisen, Jason Williams, Brandon Young form the core of a formidable group that will be without the services of Matt Cutaia who hurt his left hand during practice on Oct. 8. So far in 2003, 13 different players have caught a pass for UConn and seven Huskies (Feldeisen, Wilson, Henry, Terry Caulley, Young, Cutaia and Williams) have already hit double figures in receptions. The shared receptions also creates an even distribution of receiving yardage. Despite the fact that UConn has thrown for 4,776 passing yards over the past two seasons combined (251.4 ypg), the Huskies have had just three 100-yard receivers, Shaun Feldeisen last year against Georgia Tech, Brandon Young on Oct. 4 against Lehigh and O’Neil Wilson on Oct. 11 at NC State.
TIGHT CALL AT TIGHT END
After losing tight end Tommy Collins, the team’s leading receiver in 2002, to graduation, the race at tight end was one of the more difficult to call of the offseason. Sophomore Tim Lassen seemed to step forward as the heir apparent to Collins, but suffered a shoulder injury during fall drills. Senior Terry McClowry edged out redshirt freshman Dan Murray for the starting post although both saw playing time in the season opener against Indiana. Murray started against Army, BC, Buffalo and Virginia Tech when McClowry suffered a shoulder stinger and he was backed up by an interesting combination of fellow redshirt freshmen. Ziggy Goryn played a majority of the downs, but in goal line situations, tackle Craig Berry checked in as an eligible receiver at tight end wearing number 94. McClowry returned for Virginia Tech and started against Lehigh. Lassen recovered from his inuury in time to make his debut at NC State where he started along with McClowry as UConn opened the game in a two tight end set.
YOUTH REIGNS IN CONNECTICUT BACKFIELD
Fullback Deon Anderson and tailback Terry Caulley started last season as true freshmen and with a year of experience, they lead a very talented young backfield. The group will be bolstered by a trio of freshmen this year. True freshman Sam Dorvil has been playing Anderson this fall. Redshirt freshman Cornell Brockington and true freshman Matt Lawrence dueled all season for the top backup role behind Terry Caulley and now both will battle for the starting role in the wake of Caulley’s season-ending injury.
DEFENSE NOTES
THREE AND OUTS BECOMING COMMON FOR UCONN FOES
The UConn defense forced Indiana into five three-and-outs in the season opener and have followed that performance up with several similarly showings throughout the season. UConn has forced its 2003 opponents to go three-and-out 30 times in 97 possessions, a strong 31-percent. Last year, UConn also forced a three-and-out on 30-percent of opposing possessions, including a season high eight on just 12 possessions at Navy.
HUSKIES SHOW UB PUNTER MILANO WHO’S THE BOSS
The UConn defense swarmed over Buffalo’s offense forcing 11 Bull punts by Dominic Milano out of 13 UB possessions. The lone exceptions came with the end of the first half and a failed fourth-down try late in the game. UConn’s defense was also solid against Virginia Tech in this category. The Huskies forced the Hokies to punt six times in the game, the same number of punts that Virginia Tech had made in its first three games of the year combined. Two weeks later, NC State had to punt nine times against the Huskies, the Wolfpack’s most punts in a game since at least 1999. Overall, UConn has forced it’s opponents to punt a staggering 59 times through seven games (8.4 per game). Although the NCAA does not keep this as a category leader, on the flip side, only Buffalo has made as many as 58 punts as a team in 2003 while Arizona has made 57 punts and Fresno State 51. By comparison, the UConn offense has punted just 39 times this year.
LINEBACKERS FINALLY JOIN SACK ATTACK
Linebacker James Hargrave’s sack of NC State quarterback Philip Rivers on third-and-10 on the UConn 11 yard-line with seconds remaining in the first half was critical as it held the Wolfpack to a field goal. However, it was also noteworthy. Coming at the mid point of the seventh game of the year, it was UConn’s 17th sack of the year, but its first sack by someone other than a defensive lineman. To date, UConn has made 18 sacks this year with 17 of them coming from the defensive line. Last year, non-linemen recorded 7.5 of UConn’s 23 sacks with the linemen making the other 15.5.
PRESSURE PUSHING DOWN ON QUARTERBACKS
The UConn defense has been doing a much better job this season of pressuring opposing quarterbacks. UConn has been credited by the coaches with 78 pass pressures through seven games this fall. All of last year, UConn was credited with 76 pass pressures. At this juncture last fall, UConn had just 54 pass pressures. Not surprisingly, UConn has held its opponents to a .500 completion percentage and 102.41 efficiency rating where as at this junction last year, UConn foes had hit on .534 percent of their passes with a 111.43 rating. Meanwhile, UConn’s 18 sacks to date is 50% more than its 12 through seven games in 2002.
RIVERS DOESN’T FLOW AGAINST HUSKIES
NC State quarterback Philip Rivers, a prime Heisman Trophy candidate who Dan Orlovsky called "far and away the best quarterback in the country" during a recent live chat on UConnHuskies.com, found himself stifled by the Husky defense. The efficient Rivers, who entered the game with an amazing .751 completion percentage, was held to a season-low .548 (23-for-42) by the Huskies. It was his lowest completion percentage of the season and the senior’s lowest ever in a non-conference game, including three bowl appearances. Rivers’ 234 passing yards against UConn was also a season low.
ON ANY GIVEN OSUNDE
With his sack at NC State, Uyi Osunde became UConn’s all-time career tackles for loss leader. He presently has 33. The previous record of 31 was shared by Razul Wallace (1999-2002) and Jamar Wilkins (1997-2000). Osunde leads the Huskies with five sacks thus far in 2003 and 8.5 total tackles for loss. His 43 tackles on the season leads all UConn defensive linemen.
POTENT HOKIES SHUTOUT ON THIRD DOWN
A concern for UConn entering the Virginia Tech game was the Hokies’ startling third down efficiency. Virginia Tech had converted on 67% of its third down tries in 2003 entering the contest (26-for-39) but against UConn the Hokies went 0-for-8. It is the second year in a row that UConn has held a team without a third down conversion, after stopping Navy on each of the Midshipmen’s 12 attempts last Nov. 16.
EXPERIENCE ON THE LINE
UConn boasts a tremendous amount of experience amongst its starters on the defensive line, which includes three seniors and a junior who have all seen considerable playing time in their UConn careers. The unit is further bolstered by the guidance of two of the team’s three captains in Sean Mulcahy and Uyi Osunde. Entering the season, the four starters on the defensive line averaged 21.3 career starts between them. Osunde is first in UConn history with his 33 career tackles for loss, a sum which includes 9.5 sacks in 2002 alone. Osunde’s sack of Bryan Randall is the only one Virginia Tech has yielded thus far in 2003. Tyler King is a perfect complement to Osunde at the other defensive end spot. The 6-6 255 pound junior has an ever-charging motor that propelled him to 37 tackles last year, including six for a loss. The tackles are both seniors in Mulcahy and Ryan Bushey. Bushey missed much of the 2002 season, but hopes to regain his form from 2001 where he started all 11 games. One of the team’s most media-friendly personas, Mulcahy has 128 career tackles to his credit with 18.5 for a loss. With the exception of senior end Hakeem Kashama, the reserves are young though. Sophomores Shawn Mayne and Deon McPhee plus redshirt freshmen Rhema Fuller will look to spell the starters on game day.
DEFENSE RANKS IN THE TOP QUARTER NATIONALLY
Last year the Huskies finished in the top 20 in the nation in total defense, and despite the loss of five starters, the fall off has been minimal. UConn presently ranks 22nd in the nation in total defense, out of 117 schools, allowing 313.57 yards per game. UConn is also 15th in passing efficiency defense (102.41 rating) and also 15th in passing defense (176.57 ypg). UConn’s lone deficiency has been rushing defense where it ranks 50th (137.00 ypg). The Huskies also rank 52nd in scoring defense (22.43 ppg) although UConn has surrendered six non-defensive touchdowns in 2003.
LINEBACKERS LIVING UP TO EXPECTATIONS
Before the season, it appeared that the UConn linebacking corps would be one of the team’s stronger units and the group has not disappointed thus far in 2003. The three starters on the unit rank first, third and fourth on the team in tackles and are separated by just three stops. James Hargrave, the lone new starter of the bunch, ranks fourth overall with 53 tackles, including five tackles for loss, which leads the team’s linebackers. Alfred Fincher leads the with 67 total tackles on the young season after making a whopping 17 (11 solo) at NC State. The weakside post has seen not only strong play by Maurice Lloyd (57 tackles, 4.5 TFLs), but also exceptional play off of the bench by Taurien Sowell. Starting in place of an injured Lloyd at Army, Sowell led UConn with 14 tackles in the game. He has also made noteworthy contributions on special teams.
SECONDARY TURNS TO SOME SECONDARY PLAYERS
With the unexpected losses of Jason Dellaselva, Marlon Jones and Chris Meyer over the summer, the UConn secondary has some fresh but capable faces in 2003. The unit that ranked fifth in the nation in passing defense last fall has already benefited from the return of a healthy Justin Perkins. Perkins was the Huskies’ top cover corner in 2001 but missed all but the first half of the season opener at Boston College with a knee injury. Ernest Cole won a tight battle with Cathlyn Clarke for the starting role at the other corner, but both will see ample playing time. Terrance Smith is the team’s lone returning starter from 2002 as he is again manning the right safety post. Junior John Fletcher earned the other safety spot during fall camp. A trio of true freshmen, Allan Barnes, Dontá Moore, and Jahi Smith find themselves in the mix for playing time in the defensive backfield along with redshirt freshman safety M.J. Estep.
SPECIAL TEAMS NOTES
THE CROCODILE PUNTER
Senior Adam Coles, a native of Gladesville, Australia and a former Australian Rules Football player, has made a solid transition to the American version of football and is quietly making noise in UConn’s record book. Coles is presently UConn’s career leader with a 39.8 average for a minimum of 80 career punts and holds the school’s career record for both number of punts and yardage. Coles entered his senior campaign off of another consistent season in 2002, kicking for a 39.9 average, including a long of 64 at Miami. He picked up on the right foot (his left) in 2003, punting 38 times thus far for a 40.2 yard average. He has left three punts inside the 20-yard line in two of UConn’s last three outings. With 9,997 career punting yards to his credit, Coles stands just three yards shy of becoming the first Husky to ever eclipse the 10,000-yard plateau.
RETURNERS ROTATE AGAIN
UConn’s return game, both on punts and kickoffs, has seen some personnel adjustments as the 2003 season has progressed. M.J. Estep started the year as the lone deep back for kickoffs and averaged a solid 20.0 yards for the two that he returned. Estep was replaced by Jason Williams for the Boston College game after Williams recovered fully from a shoulder injury suffered during fall camp. Williams has done a solid job in that role, earning a game ball on special teams at Buffalo after an 82-yard kick return that was stopped just shy of becoming UConn’s first kickoff return touchdown since 1998. Due to a nagging injury, Williams was replaced as the kickoff returner at NC State by true freshman Allan Barnes so he could get some more plays in as a wide receiver. Barnes shined brightly in his collegiate kickoff returning debut, averaging 39.5 yards on his two kickoff returns. Meanwhile, the punt return chores have already come full circle. David Sanchez began the year in that role but was lifted for Brandon Young when Young recovered from a hamstring injury suffered during fall camp. Young played well against Boston College, averaging 6.5 yards per return, but was replaced by Sanchez at Buffalo after muffing consecutive punts in the second quarter. Sanchez is presently the team’s top punt returner.
START SPREADING THE NUZIE: KICKING JOB FAIRLY OPEN
So far, replacing three-year starting place kicker Marc Hickok has been a chore for UConn. Redshirt freshman Matt Nuzie won the job during fall camp and started out strong in UConn’s wins over Indiana and Army. He has since faltered though, missing eight of his last 10 tries, including two each of 34-yards or less against both Boston College and Buffalo. True freshman Graig Vicidomino is also getting a hard look at possibly filling the place kicking post but didn’t help his chances by missing a PAT try against the Hokies and two field goals against Lehigh. Nuzie enters the Kent State game as the projected starter after hitting on all three of his point after attempts against NC State and adding a 21-yard field goal.
SCHEDULE NOTES
BYE BYE BYE
Weeks off have been a rather foreign concept to the Huskies of late and 2003 is no exception. For the 13th time in the last 21 seasons, UConn will roll through its schedule without a breather. The stretch includes a run of eight straight such seasons from 1983-90. This may not be a bad thing as UConn is 1-4 under Randy Edsall after a bye week and just 2-6 since 1991. UConn is one of eight teams nationally without a bye this year, joining Akron, California, Louisiana-Lafayette, Minnesota, Purdue, Stanford and UCLA.
WHO ARE YOU? WHO? WHO? WHO? WHO?
As a part of their move to Division I-A status the Huskies are facing a revamped schedule. In 2002, the UConn football slate featured six first time opponents for UConn and 2003 is no different as the Huskies will face four opponents for the first time in Indiana, North Carolina State, Western Michigan and Wake Forest. In 2002, the Huskies opposed Georgia Tech, Ohio, Miami (Fla.), Vanderbilt, Florida Atlantic and Iowa State for the first time ever on the gridiron, posting a 3-3 record in these games. In fact, fellow-Division I-A neophyte Buffalo and Rutgers are the only 2003 opponents that UConn had faced more than 10 times. Entering the season, a total of just 61 games had been played all-time between UConn and its 2003 opponents combined. In addition to its new opponents, UConn faced its first ever member of the Big Ten Conference in Indiana and will face its fourth and fifth members of the ACC in North Carolina State and Wake Forest.
HUSKIES PLAY THE BCS FIELD
UConn will face opponents from three different BCS Conferences this season, playing teams from the ACC (NC State and Wake Forest), BIG EAST (Boston College, Rutgers, and Virginia Tech) and the Big Ten (Indiana). Over the past two seasons, UConn has faced members of five of the six BCS conferences, also playing against the Big 12 (Iowa State) and SEC (Vanderbilt) last season. UConn presently has no scheduled games against the BCS’s sixth member, the Pac-10.
WEEK TWELVE????
For just the third time in school history, and the second consecutive season, UConn will play 12 games in a season this fall. The Huskies are a perfect 2-0 in their previous 12th games. Last year, UConn posted a 37-20 upset win over bowl-bound Iowa State in Ames in the Week 12 season finale. The first such instance at UConn came in 1998 when UConn was chosen for the NCAA Division I-AA Playoffs after a 9-2 regular season. UConn defeated Hampton, 42-34, in the first round on Nov. 28 in Storrs in that inaugural 12th game. The Huskies fell at Georgia Southern the following week in its only 13th game to a season. In 2003, as in 2002, schools are allowed by the NCAA to schedule 12 games because there are 14 Saturdays between the first permissible playing date and the last playing date in November.
HUSKIES TO JOIN BIG EAST FOR 2004 SEASON
After playing for the past four years as an independent, UConn will become a member of the BIG EAST Football Conference for the 2004 season. UConn was originally scheduled to enter the league in 2005 but the program was accepted for early admission into the league on July 10.
STADIUM/ATTENDANCE NOTES
MOVIN’ ON UP TO THE EAST SIDE
The Huskies moved into brand new Rentschler Field in East Hartford for the 2003 season with the stadium opening its doors on August 30 when UConn defeated Indiana, 34-10. Conveniently located within miles of Interstates 91, 84 and 384, Adriaen’s Landing and downtown Hartford, the new home of the Huskies lies on 75 acres of land donated to the State of Connecticut from the historic Pratt & Whitney Airfield by company founder Frederick Rentschler. The new stadium boasts a capacity of 40,000 with 38 luxury suites in a massive press box tower which helps enclose the natural grass field. The $91.2 million construction project is an integral part of Governor John Rowland’s economic development program for the Hartford metro-area. While UConn football will serve as the primary tenant, the facility will also attract other prominent events to Hartford. Rentschler Field recently hosted two concerts by Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band, September 16 and 18. The opening ceremonies for the State Games of America were held at Rentschler Field on August 8.
STARTING A COMMOTION
Swelling interest in the Husky football program as it gradually moves up into BIG EAST play can be evidenced by a rise in attendance. For the 2003 season, UConn has sold approximately 24,000 season tickets at Rentschler Field, a staggering sum considering that the 2001 season ticket base was around 5,000. Last year, UConn, 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. After just three home games in its new home, UConn’s season attendance of 113,431 by far eclipses the previous record of 94,843 set last fall.
MISCELLANEOUS NOTES
LOOK AWAY (FROM) DIXIELAND
The land of cotton hasn’t been very friendly to UConn historically as the Huskies hope that old times there are soon forgotten. The Huskies are just 8-35-1 all-time in games played south of the Mason-Dixon line, including losses in 11 of the last 12 such games. The Huskies dropped a 47-13 decision on Sept. 27 at Virginia Tech and a narrow 31-24 game at NC State on Oct. 11, while they team heads south again to Wake Forest on Nov. 15. UConn won its last such game in 2002, defeating Navy, 38-0 on Nov. 16 in Annapolis but lost it’s two other southern swings in 2002, falling at Vanderbilt and Miami. All-time, UConn is: 0-1 at Davidson, 2-12 at Delaware, 0-1 at Delaware State, 0-1 at Furman, 0-1 at Georgia Southern, 0-3 at James Madison, 0-1 at Kentucky, 0-1 at Louisville, 0-1 at Miami, 0-1 at Middle Tennessee, 1-3 at Navy, 0-1 at North Carolina, 0-1 at NC State, 4-0 at Richmond, 0-1 at South Florida, 0-1 at SMU, 0-1 at Vanderbilt, 0-0-1 at VMI, 0-2 at Virginia Tech and 1-2 at William & Mary.
MAKING A BRAND NEW START OF IT IN OLD NEW YORK
By beating Army on Sept. 6 at Michie Stadium, the Huskies won their road opener for the first time since a 45-35 win at Colgate in 1998. Each of the last four seasons in which UConn has won it’s first road game, that game was played in the state of New York. In addition to the afore mentioned wins over Army (West Point) and Colgate (Hamilton), UConn won its road opener in 1997 at Hofstra (Hempstead) and 1996 Buffalo (Amherst). The Empire State trend stops at 1995 when UConn won its road opener by defeating Yale, 39-20, at the Yale Bowl in New Haven, Conn. Including wins this fall at Army and Buffalo, UConn is now 7-1 overall in the Empire State since 1984.
CONNECTICUT’S NEW CLOTHES
The UConn football team has a new look in 2003 as it moves into its new home at Rentschler Field, one the program will maintain for a while and build a tradition upon for years to come. The simple yet bold monogram "C" on the side of the football helmet harkens back to Connecticut’s athletic heritage from the 1920s through the 1960s when the simple "C" stood as the university’s primary athletic symbol. UConn’s football helmets also featured a version of the letter "C" elongated into a football shape for much of the late 1960s through the mid 1970s. The "C" logo also appears on the sleeves of the uniforms which have been slightly modified for the 2003 season by UConn sponsor Aéropostale. The solid stripe that went across the shoulder in 2002 has been replaced with a set of alternating navy, white and silver bands around the sleeve. Keeping with a notion of the Huskies representing the whole state and not just the university, the word "Connecticut" will again appear on the chest of the jerseys with the font matching that of the "C" on the helmet. The Huskies will continue to wear navy jerseys for home games and white on the road with the team choosing from either navy or silver pants to complete each ensemble.
HOME IS WHERE THE HEART IS
After this week’s game at Kent State, their fourth road game in the last five weeks, the Huskies will return to Connecticut for a three-game homestand at Rentschler Field. UConn welcomes Akron on Oct. 25 for Homecoming while Western Michigan (Nov. 1) and Rutgers (Nov. 8) will also pay a visit to East Hartford. All three games start at 12:00 p.m. and tickets are still available. Tickets can be purchased either by calling the UConn Ticket Office at (877) AT-UCONN, logging on to TicketMaster.com, or by stopping by the UConn Ticket Office in Storrs. The Rentschler Field box office is only open on game days.