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Glenn Caruso

Glenn Caruso
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Sport(s) Football
Current position
Title Head coach
Team St. Thomas (MN)
Conference MIAC
Record 98-14
Biographical details
Born (1974-05-20) May 20, 1974 (age 42)
Greenwich, CT
Alma mater Ithaca College
Playing career
1992–1995 Ithaca
Position(s) Center
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1996 Ithaca (OL)
1997–2003 North Dakota State (RB/TE/OC)
2003 Wisconsin–Eau Claire (OL)
2004–2005 South Dakota (QB/OC)
2006–2007 Macalester
2008–present St. Thomas (MN)
Head coaching record
Overall 103–26
Bowls 15–6 (NCAA D-III playoffs)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
8 (MIAC 2010, 2011, 2012, 2015, 2016 NCAA West Region 2011, 2012, 2015)
Awards
6× National Coach of the Year

Glenn Caruso (born May 20, 1974) is an American football coach and former player. He is currently the head football coach at the University of St. Thomas in Minnesota Caruso served as the head football coach at Macalester College from 2006 to 2007. He has been awarded the Liberty Mutual Coach of the Year Award for NCAA Division III three times: 2010, 2011 and 2012.

Caruso, 42, has built a 96-14 record in his eight seasons at St. Thomas, with seven NCAA playoff berths and a 16-6 postseason mark in his 8 years. He's considered to be among Division III's most accomplished young coaches in any sport.

After guiding the 2015 Tommies to the National Championship Game (Stagg Bowl) with a 14-1 record, Caruso was voted by his peers as the Division III National Coach of the Year by the American Football Coaches’ Association (AFCA); It was Caruso’s 6th national coach of the year award in his 8 years at St Thomas, the most of any active DIII football coach.

Only 5 DIII coaches have won the AFCA COTY award twice in its history dating back to 1935: Caruso’s collegiate coach at Ithaca, Jim Butterfield, along with Larry Kehres (Mount Union), Lance Leipold (Wisconsin-Whitewater) and Bob Reade (Augustana)

In his inaugural season; Caruso took over a St. Thomas team that finished 2-8 the previous year and led the Tommies to a 7-3 record. Following that up with: An 11-2 record in 2009, including a 2-1 playoff record and a berth in the NCAA playoff quarterfinals

A 12-1 performance and a return NCAA quarterfinal run in the 2010 campaign

A 13-1 record and NCAA playoff semifinal trip in 2011

A 14-1 mark and national runner-up placing in 2012.

That five-year run completed the biggest turnaround in Division III football, bringing the Tommies from a 206th national ranking to No. 2 overall.

Only three D-III programs have more wins over the past seven seasons than St. Thomas' total of 80.

He has taken the team to the Division III Football Championship playoffs in all but one season since 2009.


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