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Football
Joe Glenn Press Conference

Football Bryan Boettcher, USD Sports Information

Joe Glenn retires from South Dakota

Joe Glenn Retires

VERMILLION, S.D.—University of South Dakota Head Football Coach Joe Glenn announced his retirement today in a press conference held in the Muenster University Center on the USD campus.
 
Glenn, 66, compiled a 200-134-1 record in 28 seasons as a head coach that included stops at Doane, Northern Colorado, Montana, Wyoming and South Dakota, his alma mater. He is one of 76 coaches in NCAA history to win 200 games.
 
Glenn led Northern Colorado to back-to-back NCAA Division II National Championships in 1996 and 1997. He compiled a 39-6 record in three seasons with Montana from 2000-02 and led the Griz to an FCS National Championship in 2001. He was 12-34 in four seasons at South Dakota.
 
"I'm overwhelmed. I think you can see that," said Glenn in his opening comments to a group of approximately 250 people that included USD faculty, staff, coaches, players, community members and members of the media.
 
"Thanks to the Davids for their confidence to bring me to Vermillion four years ago when USD was ready to move into the Missouri Valley Football Conference. USD's move up from Division II to Division I FCS and then to the powerful Missouri Valley Football Conference would be akin to a team from our conference joining the Big Ten."
 
The Coyotes finished 5-6 this season – the program's most wins since 2011 – with the highlight being a 24-21 win against four-time defending national champion North Dakota State in Fargo back on Oct. 17. It ended the Bison's MVFC record 27-game home winning streak. South Dakota finished with an NCAA SRS of 46 and received votes to the top 25 most of the season.
 
"I can't thank Joe enough for everything he's done for this football program, this department and this University," said USD Athletic Director David Herbster. "He has brought a life and an energy that is contagious and exemplified in his staff and his players.
 
"I had seen a change in the character and culture of this team that I would stack against anybody's in the country. Joe has elevated this program in ways that aren't easily seen from those outside the department, but I can assure you that what he has done, we should all stand proud to be a Coyote."
 
Glenn, the sixth of 12 children, grew up in Lincoln, Neb., and enrolled at USD in the fall of 1967. He played both quarterback and wide receiver for the Coyotes under coach Joe Salem.
 
Upon graduation in 1971, Glenn served two years as an ROTC officer with the Army. He returned to Vermillion in 1973 to begin work on his master's degree and was Salem's backfield coach in 1974.
 
"After the service, I stayed in touch with coach Salem to come back here and be a graduate assistant coach," said Glenn. "But they didn't have any graduate assistant money so I walked on, which was fine."
 
When Salem took the head gig at Northern Arizona in 1975, he brought Glenn with him.
 
With the exception of those two years in the Army, Glenn has been in and around the game of college football for nearly half a century.
 
Youngest Head Coach
At the age of 27, Glenn became the youngest head college football coach when he took over at Doane College in Crete, Neb. He was 5-5 in his first season and 21-18-1 in four years with the Tigers.
 
Glenn Dynasty
Glenn was elevated to head coach at Northern Colorado in 1989, thus igniting a 14-year string of success that few have matched. Glenn captained 14 consecutive winning seasons – 11 with Northern Colorado and three more at Montana. His teams reached the playoffs 10 times and brought home three national titles. Glenn's teams were 137-41 in that span.
 
Bowling with Wyoming
Glenn was handed the reins of the Wyoming Cowboys in December of 2002 and spent the next six seasons in Laramie. In year two, he guided the Cowboys to a 7-5 record and a thrilling 24-21 victory against UCLA in the Las Vegas Bowl on Dec. 23, 2004. It marked the first bowl appearance for Wyoming in 11 years and its first bowl victory in 38 years.
 
The Glenns
Joe and his wife, Michele, have been married for 43 years. They have two adult children – a daughter, Erin, and a son, Casey – and four grandchildren.
 
Glenn was inducted into the USD Hall of Fame in 2006. His bachelor's degree was in health, physical education, recreation and athletics. He received his master's degree in education from USD in 1975.
 
Closing Remarks
"Thank you to the wonderful people, the students, the faculty and the staff here at USD, and the beautiful people of Vermillion, who I've loved since I came here in 1967, for being so kind and supportive of Michelle and I," said Glenn. "We plan to grow old, or older here in beautiful South Dakota and we won't miss a game. Go Yotes."

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Players Mentioned

Derek Chancellor

#65 Derek Chancellor

OL
6' 5"
Senior
Riley Donovan

#1 Riley Donovan

WR
6' 1"
Junior

Players Mentioned

Derek Chancellor

#65 Derek Chancellor

6' 5"
Senior
OL
Riley Donovan

#1 Riley Donovan

6' 1"
Junior
WR