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Alabama A&M Athletics

The Official Website for the Alabama A&M Bulldogs

Alabama A&M Bulldogs

Connell Maynor

Connell Maynor

  • Title
    Head Coach
  • Phone
    (256) 372-5306
One of the most successful coaches over the past two decades, Maynor was named head coach at Alabama A&M on January 16, 2018, bringing with him an extensive background at both the collegiate and professional levels as a player and coach.
 

Upon his hiring that included being part of 10 championship teams with six of those rings coming as a player and four as a coach. He currently enters the 2023 season with a 94-51 (.648) overall record as a head coach in 13 years at three institutions.

ALABAMA A&M (2018-PRESENT, HEAD COACH)
Since taking the reins of the Bulldogs in 2018 Maynor has compiled an 29-20 overall record, 21-12 mark in the Southwestern Athletic Conference and accomplished things no other coach has at A&M.

The Bulldogs struggled in 2022 in a bit of a rebuilding year, starting 0-3 on the season with losses to UAB, Troy, and Austin Peay. Despite the slow start, A&M won three straight conference games to start the month of October, however fell down the stratch, including the first loss in the Magic City Classic under the watch of Maynor.

After the tremedous spring season, Maynor and his squad went 7-3 during the fall, starting with a three-game win streak to start the year with a home win over South Carolina State, Bethune-Cookman on the road, and Tuskegee in the Gulf Coast Challenge. After a trio of SWAC losses over the next three games, the Bulldogs finished strong to win the last four for the 7-3 mark.

The Spring 2021 season saw him add to not only his personal championship ring collection but to that of his players as he guided Alabama A&M to a perfect 5-0 record and 3-0 league mark, accomplishing three impressive milestones in one fell swoop on May 1.

That day would see a thrilling 40-33 victory over No. 25 Arkansas-Pine Bluff that delivered the first SWAC Championship in 15 years (and second in program history), the first undefeated season since the 1966 season 53 seasons prior and the first ever Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) National Championship for the program.

Those accomplishments earned him a spot as one of 16 national finalists for the Eddie Robinson Award as the nation’s top FCS coach but were fueled by the efforts of the players he recruited.

Headlining that group was quarterback Aqeel Glass (St. Louis, Mo.) as he was named Player of the Year by the Black College Football Hall of Fame, BOXTOROW and the SWAC – all program firsts. He was also a finalist for the prestigious Walter Payton Award as the top player at the FCS level. Those would also be honors that Glass would duplicate in Fall 2021, finishing ninth in the Payton voting.

The accolades from that championship season also included a Division I Era program record 11 All-SWAC selections with seven on the First-Team.

It was also a season marked by 12 All-Americans between postseason and preseason honors, headlined by the first American Football Coaches Association (AFCA) honoree as sophomore wide out Abdul-Fatai Ibrahim (Miramar, Fla.) was named to the Second-Team. That honor made him just the fourth in program history, second in the DI Era and first since 2007.

He was also among six BOXTOROW postseason All-Americans and four preseason honorees for that organization. Additionally, junior defensive end Marcus Cushine (Broward County, Fla.) became the first player in 29 years to earn College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA) Academic All-District and All-America recognition for his work on the field and in the classroom.

Ibrahim would join those ranks in Fall 2021 as he became just the fourth football player to earn CoSIDA Academic All-District honors, doing so out of a district that features schools from Alabama, South Carolina, Georgia and Florida.

The Spring 2021 season marked a steady improvement for the program from a 6-5 overall record and 5-2 mark in the SWAC in 2018 and 7-5 and 4-3 records, respectively, in 2019. The 2018 campaign also represented the first winning season for the program since 2012.

Most recently, the Fall 2021 campaign would see the Bulldogs go 7-3 overall, see the team earn AFCA Minority Offensive Staff of the Year and offensive coordinator Duane Taylor be named to that role for the National Football League Player’s Association (NFLPA) Collegiate Bowl at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California.

In just four seasons at the helm, Maynor has delivered 31 All-SWAC honors with 17 of those being First-Team selections. A total of 21 of those came in 2020 and Spring 2021 with five, including four First-Team, in Fall 2021.

HAMPTON (2014-17, HEAD COACH)
Maynor came to The Hill following four seasons as head coach at Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC) member Hampton from 2014-17.

In that time he posted a 20-25 overall record that included a pair of winning seasons, the program’s first since 2011. The first of those was a 2015 campaign that saw a 6-5 overall record and 5-3 mark in the MEAC and those records would be repeated in his final season with the Pirates in 2017.

He would pick up his first victory as a Division I head coach with a 34-30 decision over Miles on September 20, 2014 and also delivered the program’s first shutout in five years, and his first at the DI level, with a 23-0 win over Delaware State that first season.

In those four years he also produced 32 All-MEAC performers over three teams, including seven on the First-Team. Those would come with seven in 2014 (two First-Team), 10 in 2015 (4), eight in 2016 (1) and seven in 2017.

WINSTON-SALEM STATE (2010-13, HEAD COACH)
An established program builder, Maynor inherited a program that went 1-10 against a DI schedule the year before his arrival and immediately turned things around.
 
That first season would see the Rams deliver a sterling 8-2 record that would be the beginning of a 45-6 stretch over that four-year span and one that would include an incredible 29-2 mark in the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association (CIAA).
 
In 2011 Maynor lead WSSU to a 13-1 overall record, a CIAA Championship with a perfect 8-0 record and a berth in the NCAA Division II Semifinals before taking even further in 2012. That year would see them earn a second straight league championship with a 14-1 record before falling in the national championship game.
 
The 2013 season would make for a third consecutive CIAA title behind a 10-2 overall record and 7-0 mark in league play. It would culminate in a third straight NCAA appearance and include a home 27-20 victory over Slippery Rock in the opening round.
 
Among the accomplishments over that stretch were a pair of HBCU National Championships in 2011 and 2012, two Super Region One titles and a bevy of personal accolades.
 
The latter included CIAA Coach of the Year honors in 2011 and 2012, BOXTOROW HBCU Coach of the Year, Pigskin Club of Washington, D.C. CIAA Coach of the Year, Black College Sports Page BAAD Team Coach of the Year and Don Hansen Football Gazette Super Region One Coach of the Year. He was also named the 2011 Sheridan Broadcasting National HBCU Coach of the Year.

FAYETTEVILLE STATE (2000-09, OFFENSIVE COORDINATOR, QUARTERBACKS COACH)
No stranger to success in the CIAA, Maynor spent a decade in the league as the offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Division II Fayetteville State.
 
In that time, he helped lead FSU to four CIAA title game appearances, three of them resulting in championships in 2002, 2003 and 2009.
 
Additionally, he worked with All-CIAA quarterback selections in the first two of those seasons and his offense led the league in rushing offense, total offense and scoring in 2008. That offense also ranked No. 13 in the country in points per game and helped lead the Broncos to 64 wins in his time in Fayetteville.

PROFESSIONAL PLAYING CAREER (1995-2006, ARENA FOOTBALL LEAGUE)
A veteran of 12 seasons in the Arena Football League (AFL), Maynor played for seven teams and threw for 9,285 yards and 160 touchdowns against just 33 interceptions.
 
A versatile player, he concluded his AFL career as the only individual to play quarterback, wide receiver, linebacker and serve as a kick return specialist and is the only player to throw for more than 5,000 yards, accumulate at least 500 yards receiving (795), 400 rushing yards (642) and 400 yards in kick returns (465).
 
His best season would come in 2003 when he posted career-highs in every passing category, going 235-of-400 for 3,167 yards with 54 touchdowns and only 10 interceptions.
 
Over the course of his 13-year professional career Maynor was part of four AFL World Championship teams, going back-to-back with the Tampa Bay Storm in 1995 and 1996 and twice with the Orlando Predators in 1998 and 2000. The latter would see him earn Arena Bowl Most Valuable Player honors with a 41-38 victory over the Nashville Kats.
 
In 2012, as part of the league’s Silver Anniversary celebration, he was named as one of the league’s 25 greatest quarterbacks.

PROFESSIONAL COACHING CAREER (2006-08, PHILADELPHIA SOUL - AFL) 
Following his prolific playing career, Maynor transitioned into the professional ranks for coaching, moving up stairs to the offensive coordinator role with his final team, the Philadelphia Soul of the Arena Football League.
 
In that role he guided the Soul to first place statistical rankings in scoring offense (62.0 ppg), touchdowns (132), touchdown passes (102) and red zone efficiency (85-percent) in 2008. That effort led to Philadelphia claiming Arena Bowl XXII as they held off a furious comeback by the San Jose SaberCats for a 59-56 victory.

COLLEGIATE PLAYING CAREER (1987, WINSTON-SALEM STATE, 1989-91 NORTH CAROLINA A&T)
Prior to his impressive coaching career, Maynor starred at quarterback at Winston-Salem State in 1987 under William “Bill” Hayes, leading the team to a CIAA Championship and earning All-CIAA honors after passing for 1,071 yards.
 
He would then follow Hayes to North Carolina A&T where he would proceed to become the first Aggie to be named MEAC Offensive Player of the Year, doing so in back-to-back years in 1990 and 1991. Maynor also earned All-MEAC First-Team honors in each of those seasons while leading A&T to the league championship in 1991.
 
That year he led the club to a 9-2 record while throwing for 1,527 yards, 18 touchdowns and only five interceptions and rushing for 288 yards and eight more scores. It also marked the second straight season that the Aggies posted a nine-win season.
 
Over the course of his three seasons he accounted for 58 touchdowns with 39 coming through the air and 19 on the ground, a number that currently ranks third in the program’s history. Additionally, his 141.82 career passing efficiency rating is the best in Aggie history, as is his .561 completion percentage.
 
ADDITIONAL HONORS AND ACCOLADES
As a result of his stellar collegiate and professional playing and coaching careers, Maynor has been inducted into both the MEAC and NC A&T Halls of Fame. The Aggies honored him in 2014 while the MEAC inducted him into their ranks in 2020.
 
Additionally, he has appeared on the silver screen, serving as Jamie Foxx’s stand-in in the movie Any Given Sunday (1999) and did stunt work in the blockbuster Remember The Titans (2000).

EDUCATION 
Maynor holds a Bachelor of Arts in Recreation Administration earned from North Carolina A&T in 1995.