Florida Atlantic Owls football

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See also: 2008 Florida Atlantic Owls football team
Florida Atlantic Owls football
First season 2001
Staff
Athletic director Craig Angelos
Head coach Howard Schnellenberger
7th year, 41–42–0
Stadium
Home stadium Lockhart Stadium
Stadium capacity 20,000
Stadium surface Grass
Location Fort Lauderdale, Florida (stadium)
Boca Raton, Florida (campus)
League/Conference
Conference Sun Belt
Team records
All-time record 41–42–0 (.494)
Postseason bowl record 1–0–0
Awards
Conference titles 1
Pageantry
Colors Blue and Red            
Fight song Florida Atlantic Fight Song
Mascot Owsley the Owl
Marching band Florida Atlantic Marching Owls
Rivals FIU Golden Panthers
Troy Trojans
Website FAUSports.com

The Florida Atlantic Owls football team represents Florida Atlantic University, a mid-major NCAA Division I-A college football team.

Contents

[edit] Overview and history

Florida Atlantic University football began play in 2001 and has had only one head coach, Howard Schnellenberger. After competing their first four years as an NCAA Division I-AA independent, the Owls moved to Division I-A and the Sun Belt Conference.

[edit] The Schnellenberger Era: The Beginning (1998 - present)

In 1998, Florida Atlantic University announced it was pursuing the creation of an NCAA football program and that Howard Schnellenberger was going to lead the charge, as director of football operations and head coach. After his success in rebuilding programs at the University of Miami and the University of Louisville, Coach Schnellenberger now undertook the role of building a program from scratch. Much like his time at Miami and Louisville, Coach Schnellenberger did not shy from placing lofty expectations and high goals on his newly-created program. Even before FAU would play an intercollegiate game, Coach Schnellenberger explained the goal of FAU football would be to play the best teams it can schedule, in order for the program to aim for a National Championship in Division I-A football. These extreme goals were not unusual from a man like Coach Schnellenberger. At Lousiville, facing threats from the administration that the football team would be terminated, Schnellenberger made the bold (and now famous) prediction, "[We are] on a collision course with the national championship. The only variable is time.” [1]

On August 29, 2000, the first practice was held at the Boca Raton campus of FAU, and 164 students showed up to try out for the team. Florida Atlantic joined the NCAA Division I-AA as an Independent team for the 2001 season. Its first-ever intercollegiate competition was against Slippery Rock University, which the Owls lost 40-7 in front of 25,632 fans at Pro Player Stadium. [2]

Lockhart Stadium
Lockhart Stadium

The team finished its inaugural season at 4-6 and followed the next season at 2-9. Major accomplishments in its first two seasons include the program's first win, which came in its second game, against Bethune Cookman, 31-28, and won in the first meeting with newly-created South Florida rival, Florida International University, 31-21.

On September 15th, 2007 FAU defeated its first Big Ten opponent with a 42-39 victory over the University of Minnesota. [3] Furthermore FAU beat Troy University in the final game of the 2007 season to become Sun Belt Conference champions and received an invitation to the 2007 New Orleans Bowl, its first ever bowl bid. As a result, in just the seventh year of the football program's history, and the third year playing in Division I, Florida Atlantic set an NCAA record by becoming the youngest program ever to receive an invitation to a bowl game.

[edit] Records

[edit] Past seasons

Year Record Conference Finish Coach Bowl Poll
2001 4-6 -- -- Howard Schnellenberger -- --
2002 2-9 -- -- Howard Schnellenberger -- --
2003 11-3 -- -- Howard Schnellenberger -- 4*
2004 9-3 -- -- Howard Schnellenberger -- --
2005 2-9 2-5 T-8 Howard Schnellenberger -- --
2006 5-7 4-3 T-2 Howard Schnellenberger -- --
2007 8-5 6-1 T-1 Howard Schnellenberger New Orleans Bowl --
2008 0-0 0-0 -- Howard Schnellenberger -- --
All-time
41-42
12-9
All-time
1 coach
All-time
AP
"Poll" indicates team tanking at end of season from the Associated Press Poll.
*Ranked by the AP Poll for Division I-AA Football.

[edit] Bowl games

Date Bowl W/L Opponent PF PA
December 21, 2007 New Orleans Bowl W Memphis 44 27
Total
1 bowl game
1-0
Total
44
27

[edit] Against the Sun Belt Conference

Team FAU Record First Meeting
Arkansas State 1-1 2005
FIU 5-1 2002
Middle Tennessee 3-2 2003
Troy 1-4 2003
Louisiana-Lafayette 2-1 2005
Louisiana-Monroe 1-2 2004
North Texas 4-0 2004
Western Kentucky 0-0 2008

[edit] Against nationally ranked opponents

Team Date Ranking Outcome
Bethune-Cookman 9/8/01 22 W 31-28
James Madison 9/14/02 22 L 16-13
Eastern Kentucky 9/21/02 20 L 22-6
Nicholls State 10/5/02 24 L 33-22
Youngstown State 10/12/02 17 L 24-17
Eastern Illinois 11/16/02 3 L 47-6
Illinois State 9/27/03 23 W 28-10
Bethune-Cookman 11/29/03 14 W 32-24
Northern Arizona 12/6/03 16 W 48-25
Colgate 12/13/03 6 L 36-24
Louisville 10/1/05 11 L 61-10
Kentucky 9/29/07 14 L 45-17
South Florida 10/6/07 6 L 35-23
Florida 11/17/07 12 L 59-20
All-time 4-10
GREY indicates games played while FAU competed in Division I-AA and against a Division I-AA opponent.

[edit] Individual awards and honors

[edit] Conference honors

  • Player of the Year
    • Rusty Smith (2007, QB, So.)
  • Coach of the Year
    • Howard Schnellenberger (2007)

[edit] Post-season bowl honors

  • Hula Bowl Invitations
    • Jared Allen (2004)
    • Chris Laskowski (2004)
    • Cergile Sincere (2007)
  • Most Valuable Player Award, Bowl game

[edit] Push for a new stadium

See also: FAU football stadium

Since football's inception at FAU in 1998, Coach Schnellenberger has publicly led a campaign to build a football stadium on FAU's main campus in Boca Raton. In seven seasons of competition, the FAU Owls have called two stadiums "home" (Dolphin Stadium located in Miami Gardens and currently Lockhart Stadium in Fort Lauderdale, neither of which are in the same county as Boca Raton). Coach Schnellenberger argued that an on-campus stadium increases popularity of the program and attracts high-caliber recruits.

In 2006, the Florida Atlantic University Board of Trustees (FAU BoT) approved the idea of moving forward with plans to build a football stadium on Boca's campus. HOK Sport, Inc. and FAU Athletics Department are currently designing an open-air, 30,000-seat football stadium (that can eventually be expanded to 100,000 seats) and are due to report back to the FAU BoT on Sept.17th, 2007[4] to report projected costs and a timetable to break ground on the project.

The stadium is just a part of the university's broader concept of an "Innovation Village", covering the north end of Boca's campus. The Village will include the football stadium, a multi-use Convocation Center for volleyball, basketball and recreation, two parking garages, student housing complexes, an Alumni Center, a wellness and fitness center and strip shopping centers. The Innovation Village will be funded and constructed in stages, with the football stadium being the main concern of the first phase. All relative information on the Innovation Village can be found at FAU's Campus Master Plan (2006-2013).[1]

[edit] Current coaching staff

Name Current Title Joined
FAU
Alma mater
Howard Schnellenberger Head Coach 1998 - Kentucky
Gary Nord Offensive Coordinator
Quarterbacks
2004 - Louisville
Kirk Hoza Defensive Coordinator
Secondary
1999 - Louisville
Kurt VanValkenburgh Assistant Head Coach
Linebackers
1998 - SUNY Albany
Joe Corozza Tight Ends 2001 - Florida Atlantic
David Serna Running Backs 2005 - UTEP
Daryl Jackson Wide Receivers 2007 -
Dale Williams Offensive Line 2005 - West Virginia
Eli Rasheed Defensive Tackles 2003 - Indiana
Johny Frost Defensive Ends 2006 - Louisville
Peter Moore Offensive Graduate Assistant 2004 - North Florida

[edit] Owls in the NFL

Alumni of Florida Atlantic to have signed contracts in the NFL.

Name Pos Team
Brian Pare OL Chicago Bears
Chris Laskowski LB Indianapolis Colts
Kevin Fischer OL Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Jared Allen QB Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Willie Hughley CB Cleveland Browns
Nello Faulk OL Jacksonville Jaguars

[edit] Uniforms

Florida Atlantic wears two sets of uniforms (one for home games and one for road games). Produced and endorsed by Nike, the uniforms are traditional in style and simple in color-schemes. The home jersey is the color of "FAU Blue" with white letters and numbers - which are outlined in "FAU Red." The chest plate sports the FAU winged logo. On the shoulder area of the jersey, the traditional, varsity three-stripes highlight the break from the shoulders to the arms. The pattern of the stripes are FAU Red- White - FAU Blue - White - FAU Red. Lastly, the arms of the jersey contain the players' numbers in white, outlined in FAU Red (not shown in picture). The road jerseys are identical in pattern of the home jerseys, simply swapping the blue body for white, and the letters and numbers combination is in FAU Blue.

The home and road pants are same in style. A white body is highlighted with a belt the color of FAU Blue. On the left side directly under the belt, "OWLS" in spelled in FAU Blue outlined in FAU Red in a traditional, varsity typeface font. The three-striped pattern which is on the jersey's shoulder section is found on the pants, as well - in the same color pattern.

Lastly, the helmet is white with the FAU winged logo on both sides. Again, the three-stripe pattern is down the middle of the helmet, in the same color pattern as the jersey and pant.

To date, the Owls have worn the home uniforms at every home game and the road uniforms at every road game - there is no switching roles of the uniforms. Additionally, there is no alternate uniform for the Owls and there have not been plans for any. The uniform set is believed to be traditional and simple due to the old-fashioned, throwback style and attitude of Coach Schnellenberger.

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ "FAU Master Plan 2006-2013". Florida Atlantic University. Retrieved on 2006-10-10.