Homepage > College Football

College Football


Delaware State Grants Lavan Contract Extension

POSTED: 5:52 pm HST May 1, 2008

(Sports Network) - Delaware State has granted head football coach Al Lavan a contract extension through the 2012 season, the school announced on Thursday.

"Under Coach Lavan's watch our program has continued to excel, both on and off the field," said DSU director of athletics Rick Costello. "In just four seasons, he has brought this program back to the elite of the MEAC. We look forward to many more years of academic and athletic success."

DSU named Lavan its 16th head football coach back in 2004, and he has compiled a 29-16 record over that span, including a 10-2 record in 2007. The Hornets won their first Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference title since 1991 with a perfect 8-0 mark, and earned their first-ever berth in the Football Championship Subdivision playoff where they fell to the University of Delaware in the first round.

Lavan spent over 18 years in the NFL as an assistant with the Atlanta Falcons, Dallas Cowboys, San Francisco 49ers, Baltimore Ravens, and Kansas City Chiefs. He was on the staff of the 49ers' club that won the 1990 Super Bowl, a team that also included former Hornet standout receiver John Taylor.

The 61-year-old alum of Colorado State coached at his alma mater as well as at Louisville, Iowa State, Georgia Tech, Stanford, the University of Washington and Eastern Michigan.


Sports E-News

Sign up to receive daily sports headlines.
 


Links We Like
Sponsored Content
Learn about the signs, symptoms of ADHD and get information on how to treat it in this helpful guide. More

Think you can’t own a little slice of personal heaven for less than $100,000? Think again. Check out these less well known spots where you can relax and get away from it all without breaking the bank. More

Don’t let your boring job get you down. Use these tips to keep the daily grind from burning you out. More

House, home, garage
Been reading stories about the increase in home foreclosures? In the market to invest? Search a national database of homes on the block. More


Like online video? Then you'll love Now See This.

Sponsored Links