PHOENIX (January 10, 2011) - Liberty Mutual Insurance, in partnership
with the College Football Hall of Fame, today announced its 2010 Liberty Mutual
Coach of the Year Award winners, celebrating college football coaches from the
Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS), Football Championship Subdivision (FCS),
Division II and Division III whose seasons were marked by success of their teams
on the field, achievements by their student-athletes in the classroom, and
selfless support of their communities and charities. The Liberty Mutual Coach of
the Year Award is the leading college football honor recognizing coaches for
their sportsmanship, integrity, responsibility and excellence, on and off field.
The 2010 Liberty Mutual Coach of the Year winners - Gene Chizik of Auburn
University, K.C. Keeler of the University of Delaware, Bob Nielson
of the University of Minnesota Duluth, and Glenn Caruso of the University
of St. Thomas (Minn.) - were selected through fan votes cast December 13-28 at
www.CoachoftheYear.com and ballots from elite selection committees of
national media and College Football Hall of Fame players and coaches. Fans votes
contributed 20 percent to each coach's final score, and the media and College
Football Hall of Fame accounted for 25 percent and 55 percent, respectively.
The four winning coaches each earn a $50,000 charitable donation from Liberty
Mutual and a $20,000 scholarship award for their school's alumni association.
They also will be honored in the permanent Liberty Mutual Coach of the Year
display at the College Football Hall of Fame. With this year's awards, the
Liberty Mutual Coach of the Year winners have now donated more than $1.2 million
to over 70 charities since 2006.
"These four coaches embody the spirit of college football by inspiring
excellence and leadership in their players, whether in the stadium, the
classroom, or in their communities," said Archie Manning, chair of the
National Football Foundation and College Football Hall of Fame.
"Student-athletes and communities benefit from the leadership and commitment of
these four men, selected by fans, national media and College Football Hall of
Fame players and coaches for displaying the pillars of the Liberty Mutual Coach
of the Year: sportsmanship, integrity, responsibility and excellence, on and off
the field."
The 2010 Liberty Mutual Coach of the Year Award winners are:
Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) - Gene Chizik, Auburn
Auburn's return to national prominence began in December 2008, when it hired
Gene Chizik shortly after completing a 5-7 campaign. Over the next two years,
Coach Chizik's teams have amassed a 21-5 record (the school's all-time
second-best record for a coach after 26 games), won the Outback Bowl last
January, won the school's seventh Southeastern Conference title this year, and
is riding a 14-game winning streak heading into this evening's BCS Championship
Game against Oregon.
Preaching team discipline and a never-say-quit attitude, Coach Chizik's Tigers
had fewer penalties on average than the rest of the SEC, and were masters at
pulling out close games with six wins this year by single digits. Under his
guidance, players on both sides of the ball have achieved national awards this
season: quarterback Cam Newton (Heisman, Walter Camp and Davey O'Brien
awards) and defensive lineman Nick Fairley (Lombardi Award), both of whom
also were among four Tigers to earn All-American honors this year.
Coach Chizik and his staff emphasize classroom achievement as well, evidenced by
19 Tigers named to the 2009 SEC Academic Honor Roll. In addition, center Ryan
Pugh was named to the 2010 ESPN/CoSIDA academic all-district first team and
the first team for Lowe's Senior CLASS Award for notable achievements in
community, classroom, character and competition.
Off the field, Coach Chizik is an active supporter of the Boys and Girls Clubs
wherever he has coached; works with aTeam Ministries, a non-profit organization
providing emotional, spiritual and financial support to families with children
fighting cancer; and a regular visitor to patients at Children's Hospital in
Birmingham.
Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) - K.C. Keeler, Delaware
Delaware Coach K.C. Keeler this season led his alma mater Blue Hens to the FCS
national title game for the third time in 2010. Led by an FCS-leading defense
(12.1 points allowed per game) and tremendous on-field discipline (total team
penalties that were 23 percent fewer than the Colonial Athletic Association
conference average), Coach Keeler's Blue Hens posted a 12-3 record giving him 74
victories in nine seasons in Newark, including one national title, ranking him
third in all-time coaching wins at Delaware behind his own college coach, Tubby
Raymond, for whom he played as a linebacker from 1978-1980 and won an NCAA
Division II title in 1979.
Coach Keeler's Blue Hens excel in the classroom as well. Three student-athletes
- quarterback Pat Devlin, wide receiver Mark Mackey and tight end
Zack Reed - were named to the 2010 ESPN/CoSIDA district all-academic
team; and 12 Blue Hens achieved CAA all-conference academic honors in 2009.
Off the field, Coach Keeler and his team are renowned leaders in the Newark area
and throughout the state. His seemingly endless list of philanthropic activities
include co-chairing with his wife Janice the Boys and Girls Clubs of Delaware's
2006 One Campaign; acting as an AFCA ambassador to the Jason Foundation, a
non-profit dedicated to youth suicide prevention; supporting Autism Delaware,
and leading statewide support of the National Marrow Donor program, doubling
Delaware participants in 2010. Coach Keeler, his staff, and the Blue Hen players
regularly volunteer at local food banks and Special Olympics events, participate
in the Turkey Roundup, which collects and delivers holiday turkeys for needy
families, and twice a season visit patients at the A.I. duPont Children's
Hospital in Wilmington, Del.
Division II - Bob Nielson, Minnesota Duluth
For the second time in three years, Coach Bob Nielson and the University of
Minnesota Duluth sit atop NCAA Division II as national champions, having their
perfect 15-0 season capped by a last-second field goal to help the Bulldogs
defeat Delta State, 20-17, in the title game. Through two head coaching stints
totaling eight seasons at UMD, Coach Nielson has won four Northern Sun
Intercollegiate Conference titles en route to amassing a 79-21 career record,
the best in the school's 78-year football history. Coach Nielson has had his
share of talented players to help produce this on-field success (14
All-Americans at UMD and several more in previous coaching tenures at
Wisconsin-Eau Claire, Wartburg College and Ripon College), and he has helped
nurture classroom champions as well (nine Bulldogs named to the 2010 NSIC
all-academic team, including senior running back Isaac Odim who was named
a National Football Foundation Scholar-Athlete). Coach Nielson also has served
as UMD's director of intercollegiate athletics since 2004.
Coach Nielson is known throughout the Duluth area for his civic and
philanthropic endeavors. This year, he was the honorary chairman of the Udac
"Walk a Mile in Our Shoes" campaign, helping to provide fitness services for
individuals with severe physical, mental or developmental disabilities. Coach
Nielson also organizes and leads a Junior Football League clinic, and he and his
players and staff participate in an annual fishing tournament to raise money for
ALS research.
Division III - Glenn Caruso, St. Thomas
In just three years at the helm of the University of St. Thomas football
program, Glenn Caruso's Tommies have become a national force. Taking over a
two-win team following the 2007 season, Coach Caruso has led St. Thomas to 30
victories in 36 games, including a school-record 12-1 mark this year and the
school's first conference championship in 20 seasons. UST reached the Division
III quarterfinals for the second straight year, and earn a season-ending
D3football.com ranking of #7 in the nation. Under his leadership, four different
Tommies earned academic All-American or on-field All-American honors this
season.
Off the field, Coach Caruso and his program is making a great impact in the
community as well. He is a founder of a Reading Recess program, and the Tommie
players and he regularly participate in the American Cancer Society Relay for
Life and volunteer at the annual Vision Walk for the Foundation for Fighting
Blindness.
"Once again, some of the most deserving coaches in the game are the recipients
of the Liberty Mutual Coach of the Year Award, and fans should be proud of the
significant impact they made through their votes and support for their teams,
alma maters and coaches," said Greg Gordon, Liberty Mutual senior vice
president, Consumer Marketing. "As a company that values 'doing the right thing'
as its core responsibility, we introduced the Liberty Mutual Coach of the Year
Award in 2006 to celebrate responsibility in coaching because we believe it is
one of the clearest examples of a positive influence one can have on young
people, their families and their communities. Liberty Mutual is delighted to
celebrate these coaches through this award and help them further support their
communities and institutions through charitable contributions in their names."
2010 Liberty Mutual Coach of the Year Selection Committee
College Football Hall of Fame Voters included:
Archie Griffin, Archie Manning, Billy Joe, Bob Anderson, Bob Griese, Bob Reade,
Brian Kelley, Bruce Smith, Carmen Cozza, Chad Hennings, Chuck Cecil, Curt
Warner, Dan Dierdorf, Darrell Mudra, Dick Farley, Don James, Don McPherson, Don
Nehlen, Fred Martinelli, Frosty Westering, Gordie Lockbaum, Herschel Walker,
James Saxton, Jeff Davis, Jeff Siemon, Jessie Tuggle, Jim Ballard, Jim
Christopherson, Jim Dombrowski, Jim Donnan, Jim Houston, Jim Sochor, Joe Dudek,
Joe Fusco, John Cooper, John Robinson, Johnnie Johnson, LaVell Edwards, Lou
Holtz, Marino Casem, Mark May, Paul Wiggin, Randall McDaniel, Reggie Williams,
Richard Wood, Roger Brown, Roger Harring, Ron Johnson, Ron Yary, Ronnie Lott,
Roy Kidd, Rueben Mayes, Ted Kessinger, Teel Bruner, Terry Donahue, Tom Beck, Tom
Brahaney, Tom Osborne, Tubby Raymond, Vince Dooley.
National media voters included:
Bill King (Rivals Sports Radio Network), Bob Eblen (D2football.com), Brandon
Misener (D2football.com), Bud Withers (Seattle Times), Chris Childers (Rivals
Sports Radio Network), Christine Brennan (USA Today), Clyde Hughes
(D3football.com), Colin Cowherd (ESPN Radio), Craig Bennett (USA Today), Dan
Jenkins (Sportswriter/National Football Foundation historian), Gordie Mann
(D3football.com), Greg Dewalt (D2 Hall of Fame), Ivan Maisel (ESPN.com), Jack
Bogaczyk (Charleston Daily Mail), Keith McMillan (D3football.com), Kelly
Whiteside (USA Today), Kirk Herbstreit (ESPN), Marcus Fitzsimmons (Maryville
Daily Times), Patrick Stevens (College Football Columnist/Washington Post), Ryan
Tipps (D3football.com), Steve Conroy (Boston Herald), Stewart Mandel (Sports
Illustrated), Teddy Greenstein (Chicago Tribune), Tim Brando (CBS Sports,
Sporting News Radio).

ABOUT LIBERTY MUTUAL GROUP
"Helping people live safer, more secure lives" since 1912, Boston-based Liberty
Mutual Group (Libertymutualgroup.com)
is a diversified global insurer and fifth-largest property and casualty insurer
in the U.S. based on 2009 direct written premium. Liberty Mutual Group ranks
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revenue. The company has over 45,000 employees located in more than 900 offices
throughout the world.
The eighth-largest auto and home insurer in the U.S., Liberty Mutual (libertymutual.com)
sells full lines of coverage for automobile, homeowners, valuable possessions,
personal liability, and individual life insurance. The company is an industry
leader in affinity partnerships, offering car and home insurance to employees
and members of more than 12,000 companies, credit unions, professional
associations and alumni groups.
ABOUT THE NATIONAL FOOTBALL FOUNDATION & COLLEGE HALL OF FAME
Founded in 1947 with early leadership from General Douglas MacArthur, legendary
Army coach Earl "Red" Blaik and immortal journalist Grantland Rice, The National
Football Foundation & College Hall of Fame, a non-profit educational
organization, runs programs designed to use the power of amateur football in
developing scholarship, citizenship and athletic achievement in young people.
With 121 chapters and 12,000 members nationwide, NFF programs include the
College Football Hall of Fame, Play It Smart, the NFF Hampshire Honor Society,
the NFF National Scholar-Athlete Alumni Association, the NFF Gridiron Clubs of
New York City, Dallas, and Los Angeles, and annual scholarships of more than
$1.3 million for college and high school scholar-athletes. The NFF presents the
MacArthur Bowl, the Campbell Trophy, endowed by HealthSouth, and releases the
Bowl Championship Series (BCS) Standings. Learn more at
www.footballfoundation.org.