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    UConn Football
    Tuesday, May 07, 2024

    UConn football coach Edsall announces he will retire following the season

    UConn coach Randy Edsall coaches his team against Fresno State during the second half of a game on Aug. 28 in Fresno, Calif. (AP Photo/Gary Kazanjian)

    Storrs — UConn football coach Randy Edsall, whose teams have won just six games since he returned to the Huskies for a second stint as coach in 2017 has announced that he will retire at the end of the season.

    Edsall, 63, went 74-70 during his first go-around from 1999 through the 2010 season, leading UConn into the bowl subdivision and winning Big East titles in 2007 and 2010.

    "While the program has been unable to recapture that level of success on the field during Randy's second stint as our head football coach, the decision to retire at the end of the season was made by Randy," athletic director David Benedict said in a statement.

    "As is the case with all our teams, I am constantly evaluating the football program and will continue to make decisions that I feel are in the best interest of our student-athletes."

    Edsall was rehired by UConn in 2017, despite going 22-34 at Maryland, where he was fired six games into his fifth season.

    His rehiring puzzled many UConn faithful, who were still upset that he had left the Huskies after a Fiesta Bowl loss to Oklahoma in 2010, without notifying his players or flying home with the team.

    The Fiesta Bowl was the fifth under Edsall. The Huskies went 3-2 in those games, defeating Toledo in the 2004 Motor City Bowl in Detroit, Buffalo in the 2008 International Bowl in Toronto and South Carolina in the 2009 PapaJohns.com Bowl in Birmingham, Ala. They lost to Wake Forest in the 2007 Meineke Car Care Bowl in Charlotte, N.C.

    UConn went 3-9 during Edsall's first season back in 2017, then went 1-11 and 2-10 before sitting out last season amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

    The Huskies, in their first season as an independent after leaving the American Athletic Conference, are 0-2 this season, losing their opener 45-0 at Fresno State before falling Saturday at home, 38-28, to Holy Cross from the FCS.

    "Back in 2017 I made a commitment to the University, but felt it was better to make this announcement now rather than the end of the year, to allow the university ample time to prepare for the future of the football program," Edsall said in a statement.

    "All my focus and attention for the rest of the season will be to prepare our players and coaches to go out and win as many games as possible."

    UConn said it will immediately begin the search for Edsall's replacement.

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