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Rutgers Scarlet Knights
File:Rutgers athletics logo.svg
First season 1869
Athletic director Tim Pernetti
Head coach Greg Schiano
Home stadium High Point Solutions Stadium
Stadium capacity 52,454
Stadium surface Field Turf
Location Piscataway, New Jersey
Conference Big East
All-time record 599–590–42
Postseason bowl record 4–2–0
Claimed national titles 1 (1869-Shared w/ Princeton)
Conference titles 29
Heisman winners 0
Current uniform
BigEast-Uniform-Rutgers
Colors Scarlet             
Fight song The Bells Must Ring
Mascot Scarlet Knight
Marching band Marching Scarlet Knights
Rivals West Virginia Mountaineers
UConn Huskies
Army Black Knights
Navy Midshipmen
Temple Owls
Syracuse Orange
Pitt Panthers
Lafayette College (historical/defunct)
Lehigh University (historical/defunct)
Princeton Tigers (historical/defunct)
Website Rutgers Scarlet Knights

The Rutgers Scarlet Knights football team represents Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) play. Since the 1991 season, Rutgers has competed within the Big East Conference, having finally abandoned the status of an Independent team.

The Rutgers football program is one of the most historic in the nation. In 1869, the original Rutgers football team defeated Princeton University in the first intercollegiate game ever played.[1] Rutgers won the game by a score of 6 to 4.

Today, Rutgers is coached by Greg Schiano who has overseen a revival of the program. Schiano's teams struggled for the first four years of his tenure, until 2005, when Rutgers achieved its first winning record in more than a decade. Since 2001, the Scarlet Knights have compiled a 59–56 record.

History

Throughout its history, Rutgers has been known for putting dominating football teams on the field. It has fielded 52 ranked teams throughout its school history. In 1869, when Rutgers and Princeton met for the inaugural intercollegiate football game, they were the only two teams playing. Rutgers won the first game with a score of six "runs" to Princeton's four, on November 6, 1869.[2] However, Princeton was victorious in the next game, played the following week, with a score of eight to zero.[2] A planned third game, scheduled November 29, 1869, did not occur as the faculties of both schools presumably thought that the game would interfere with the studies of the respective school's student bodies.[3] Other sources claim that it may have been cancelled due to disagreement over what set of rules to play under.[4] In spite of the fact that there were only two teams playing "football" at the time, both showing 1–1 records, Princeton and Rutgers have been regarded as having shared the 1869 national championship.[5]

Firstfootballgame

Drawing from the first football game played between Rutgers and Princeton.

From 1929 to 1975, Rutgers was a member of the Middle Three Conference, which consisted of a round-robin against Lafayette College and Lehigh University.[6] Starting in 1940, the 'conference champion' received the Little Brass Cannon. Following Lehigh's capture of the Little Brass Cannon in 1951, Rutgers became an independent team in 1952, though it still played Lafayette and continued the Middle Three round-robin in 1953.[7] Although Rutgers continued to be a part of the Middle Three until 1975, the Scarlet Knights became a member of the Middle Atlantic Conference from 1958 to 1961. The college won the conference championship in three of those four years (1958, 1960, and 1961) and was awarded the Wilmington Touchdown Club Trophy. The 1961 season was particularly remarkable as it was the Scarlet Knights' first undefeated season (9–0)—with Alabama, one of only two undefeated teams in the nation—and the team was captained by future college football hall-of-famer Alex Kroll.[8] In 1961, Rutgers was considered a contender for the Rose Bowl, but was not selected because university president Mason Welch Gross did not express interest with the Rose Bowl's organizers.[9][10] The following year, Rutgers once again went independent, and remained so until it joined the Big East Conference in 1991. In 1976, Rutgers declined an invitation to play an unranked McNeese State University at the Independence Bowl, feeling snubbed by more prestigious bowls despite its undefeated 11–0 season.[11]

1882RutgersFootballTeam

The Rutgers College football team in 1882.

Greg Schiano took over as head coach for the 2001 season. His first four years resulted in losing seasons, however, in 2005, the team achieved its first winning season since 1992. In 2006, the Scarlet Knights achieved a record of 11–2, including a first-ever postseason victory. In the following year, Rutgers received its first ever preseason rank. Since that break-out year in 2005, Rutgers under Schiano achieved a winning season in five consecutive years.[12] The streak ended in 2010, a year marred by a spinal cord injury suffered by defensive lineman Eric LeGrand in the sixth game of the season. Rutgers lost its final six games to finish with a record of 4-8.[13]

The Scarlet Knights have had three players drafted in the first round of the NFL Draft. In 2010, Anthony Davis was chosen No. 11 overall by the San Francisco 49ers, and Devin McCourty was chosen No. 27 overall by the New England Patriots. In 2009, Kenny Britt was chosen No. 30 overall by the Tennessee Titans. Britt, an Associated Press All-America selection, is the first player in Rutgers history to be selected in the first round of the NFL Draft. Ten Scarlet Knights have been drafted in the last three years. 2010 also marked the fourth consecutive year that a Scarlet Knight has been taken on the draft’s first day after Brian Leonard (2007) and Ray Rice (2008) were both second round draft selections.

Logos and uniforms

Black jerseys and pants were worn only in the 2007 season, and have not been a part of the team's uniform combinations since. Although black pants were worn on a couple of occasions with white jerseys on the road, the black jerseys (with black pants) were worn one time in 2007. They were worn on October 27, 2007 at Rutgers Stadium versus West Virginia in a torrential rain storm during a 31-3 loss.

Bowl game results

Rutgers has gone to six bowl games in its 140-year history in college football of which it has won four. This includes consecutive bowls for the last five years, and consecutive wins for the last four.[2]

Date Bowl Opponent Result Score
December 16, 1978 Garden State Bowl Arizona State Loss 34 – 18
December 27, 2005 Insight Bowl Arizona State Loss 45 – 40
December 28, 2006 Texas Bowl Kansas State Win 37 – 10
January 5, 2008 International Bowl Ball State Win 52 – 30
December 29, 2008 PapaJohns.com Bowl North Carolina State Win 29 – 23
December 19, 2009 St. Petersburg Bowl University of Central Florida Win 45 – 24

Recent Seasons

Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs Coaches# AP°
Greg Schiano (Big East Conference) (2001–Present)
2001 Rutgers 2-9 0-7 8th
2002 Rutgers 1-11 0-7 8th
2003 Rutgers 5-7 2-5 7th
2004 Rutgers 4-7 1-5 6th
2005 Rutgers 7-5 4-3 3rd L Insight
2006 Rutgers 11-2 5-2 T-2nd W Texas 12 12
2007 Rutgers 8-5 3-4 T-5th W International
2008 Rutgers 8-5 5-2 T-2nd W Papajohns.com
2009 Rutgers 9-4 3-4 T-4th W St. Petersburg
2010 Rutgers 4-8 1-6 8th
Rutgers: 59-59 23-42
Total: 59-56
      National championship         Conference title         Conference division title
Indicates BCS bowl, Bowl Alliance or Bowl Coalition game. #Rankings from final Coaches' Poll.
°Rankings from final AP Poll.

Head coaches

Twenty-five men have served as head coach of the Rutgers football team since 1891, when the first coach was hired. From 1869 to 1890, and 1892 to 1894, there was no coach.

1869 - 1909
Coach Tenure Record (%)
No Coach 1869–1890 34-59-8 (.376)
William A. Reynolds 1891 8-6-0 (.571)
No Coach 1892–1894 7-15-1 (.326)
H. W. Ambruster 1895 3-4-0 (.429)
John C. B. Pendleton 1896–1897 8-12-0 (.400)
William V. B. Van Dyke, Jr. 1898–1899 3-15-1 (.184)
Michael F. Daly 1900 4-4-0 (.500)
Arthur P. Robinson 1901 0-7-0 (.000)
Harry W. Van Hovenberg 1902 3-7-0 (.300)
Oliver D. Mann 1903, 1905 7-10-1 (.417)
A. Ellet Hitchner 1904 1-6-2 (.222)
Frank H. Gorton 1906–1907 8-7-3 (.528)
Joseph Smith 1908 3-5-1 (.389)
Herman Pritchard 1909 3-5-1 (.389)
1910 - present
Coach Tenure Record (%)
Howard Gargan 1910–1912 12-10-4 (.538)
George Foster Sanford 1913–1923 56-32-5 (.629)
John H. Wallace 1924–1926 12-14-1 (.463)
Harry J. Rockafeller 1927–1930, 1942–1945 33-26-1 (.560)
J. Wilder Tasker 1931–1937 31-27-5 (.532)
Harvey Harman 1938–1941, 1946–1955 74-44-2 (.625)
John R. Steigman 1956–1959 22-15-0 (.595)
John F. Bateman 1960–1972 73-51-0 (.589)
Frank R. Burns 1973–1983 78-43-1 (.643)
Dick Anderson 1984–1989 27-34-4 (.446)
Doug Graber 1990–1995 29-36-1 (.447)
Terry Shea 1996–2000 11-44-0 (.200)
Greg Schiano 2001–present 59-55-0 (.518)
TOTAL 599-590-42 (.504)


Local media coverage

Rutgers has a contract with SportsNet New York to air various football-related programming during the season. This includes games broadcast by the Big East Network, which formerly aired over local television.

Football games air on the Rutgers Football Radio Network, which consists of three stations. The flagship is WOR in New York, a 50,000 watt clear channel station that is also the flagship for the university's men's basketball team. The other two stations in the network are WCTC, a low-power AM station that also carries Rutgers sports, and WPEN-FM, a Philadelphia area sports talk station. These games are produced by Nelligan Sports Marketing, a firm that finances college sports broadcasts throughout the nation.

Chris Carlin is the voice of Rutgers football, with Ray Lucas serving as his color analyst. Bruce Beck subs for Lucas when he isn't available. MSG Network reporter Anthony Fucilli works as the sideline reporter while WFAN radio host Marc Malusis is the studio host.

References

  1. Rutgers Football History Capsule, published by Rutgers Athletic Communications, accessed 8 June 2007.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Howell, James (Januaey 9, 2009). "Rutgers Historical Scores". Division I-A Historical Scores. James Howell. http://www.jhowell.net/cf/scores/Rutgers.htm.
  3. Rutgers - The Birthplace of College Football: The First Intercollegiate Game - November 6, 1869 at scarletknights.com, published by the Rutgers University Athletic Department, accessed 12 January 2007.
  4. NO CHRISTIAN END! The Beginnings of Football in America published by the Professional Football Research Association (no further authorship information available), accessed 12 January 2007.
  5. Football historian Parke H. Davis asserts that Rutgers shares the 1869 championship with Princeton at College Football Past National Championships at the National Collegiate Athletic Association website, accessed 29 December 2006.
  6. "CFB Data Warehouse". Middle Three Conference Champions. http://www.cfbdatawarehouse.com/data/conference_champs/champions.php?conid=113. Retrieved 8-5-2011.
  7. Burton, Chuck. "What Happened to the Cannon?". Lehigh Football Nation. http://lehighfootballnation.blogspot.com/2010/08/what-happened-to-cannon.html. Retrieved 8/5/2011.
  8. "Doing for Dear Old Rutgers" in Time Magazine (1 December 1961) (No further authorship information available). Accessed 12 January 2007.
  9. "Army, Navy May Hold Key to Rose Bowl" in The Washington Post (2 December 1961). Page A16. Only authorship information given "by a staff reporter".
  10. "Son of former Rutgers coach sees Schiano as reincarnation of dad" by Rick Malwitz in The Home News Tribune (30 November 2006). Accessed 12 January 2007.
  11. "Rutgers Votes to Skip Independence Bowl" in The Washington Post (23 November 1976). Page D6. (No further authorship information available).
  12. Rutgers Historical Scores, Stassen College Football Information, retrieved 18 January 2009.
  13. Associated Press article (6 January 2011). "Rutgers Eric LeGrand Has Sensation Throughout Body" (HTML). The New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2011/01/06/sports/ncaafootball/AP-FBC-Rutgers-LeGrand.html?_r=2&ref=sports. Retrieved 9 January 2011.

External links

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