SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. (FWAA) - Rutgers coach Greg Schiano
was named the winner of the 2006 FWAA/Eddie Robinson Coach of
the Year Award on Friday night at a reception at the Camelback
Golf Club.
The Eddie Robinson award is sponsored by the Fiesta Bowl and
was presented in conjunction with the BCS No. 1 vs. No. 2 game to
be played in Glendale, Ariz., on Monday night. The entire FWAA membership
votes on the association's Coach of the Year Award, which has gone
to both coaches in this season's national championship game, Ohio
State 's Jim Tressel (2002) and Florida's Urban Meyer (2004) when
he was coach at Utah.
"Greg Schiano is one of the greatest examples of perseverance
and hard work college football has known," Dennis Dodd, 2006 FWAA
President, said. "He single-handedly put Rutgers back on the map.
Being a Scarlet Knight now means something profound and lasting."
The FWAA has honored a major-college coach with its Coach of
the Year Award since 1957. Schiano is only the second coach from
a traditional Eastern school to win the award since Syracuse's Dick
MacPherson in 1987.
"It is a tremendous honor to be this year's recipient of the
Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year Award," said Schiano. "Coach Robinson's
ability to win games consistently, while keeping his players' development
into responsible men first and foremost, has served as a model for
me as a head coach."
Rutgers finished the 2006 season with an 11-2 record after solidly
beating Kansas State, 37-10, in the Texas Bowl, which was played
at Reliant Stadium in Houston. The Scarlet Knights were 5-2 in the
Big East Conference and posted a 11-victory season for only the
second time in the 137-year football history of the school.
A year ago, Schiano also was in Phoenix and led the Scarlet Knights
into the Insight Bowl, where they dropped a 45-40 decision to Arizona
State and finished 7-5.
Schiano, 40, a former Bucknell linebacker and New Jersey native,
inherited a Rutgers program which had six straight losing seasons
and had been to just one previous bowl in its history. But his previous
assistant defensive coaching stints at Miami, Fla., Chicago Bears
and Penn State had served him well.
This past season, Rutgers set a single-season attendance record
when it averaged more than 40,000 fans a game. Fourteen Scarlet
Knights captured All-Big East honors, including five first-team
selections.
The FWAA Coaching Award is named after Robinson, a coaching legend
at Grambling State University for 55 years. He has more Division
I victories (408) than any other coach. The winner of the FWAA/Eddie
Robinson Coach of the Year Award also will be honored at his campus
before next season.
The Football Writers Association of America, a non-profit
organization founded in 1941, consists of more than 900 men and
women across North America who cover college football for a living.
The membership includes journalists, broadcasters and publicists,
as well as key executives in all the areas that involve the game.
The FWAA works to govern areas that include game day operations,
major awards, a national poll and its annual All-America team.
For more information on the Eddie Robinson Award, contact FWAA
executive director Steve Richardson (972-713-6198 or
tiger@fwaa.com).
Eddie Robinson Award
• Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year
Award | All-time winners
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