2/24/2026
Numbers tell stories in college athletics, and the number 350 tells a significant one for Glenn DeHaven. The Juniata College men’s volleyball head coach reached 350 career victories this past week, a milestone that reflects more than a decade of dedicated, disciplined coaching at the Division III level. The achievement arrived in the midst of one of his program’s best seasons to date, with the Eagles sitting at 16-1 and positioned among the elite programs in the country.
DeHaven’s path to 350 wins is rooted in Huntingdon, Pennsylvania, where he played for Juniata from 2003 to 2007. He was a four-year starter, a two-year captain, and a member of four Molten Championship squads during his playing career. After graduating with a Bachelor of Science in Sports Management, he spent two years as an assistant with the Eagles before moving into head coaching roles.
His first head coaching position came at Stevens Institute of Technology, where he led the women’s volleyball program from 2012 to 2016. DeHaven compiled a 132-50 record at Stevens, earned four Empire 8 Coach of the Year honors, guided the program to three regular-season conference titles and one tournament championship, and earned ECAC Metro and New York Region Coach of the Year recognition in 2016.

DeHaven returned to Juniata in 2017 to take over the men’s volleyball program, and the results have been consistent and impressive. By April 2025, he had recorded his 200th career win at Juniata and his 332nd overall. The 2024-25 Eagles finished 31-9 and advanced to the NCAA Division III semifinals, the program’s deepest postseason run in recent memory. That season cemented Juniata’s status as a perennial national contender.
The 2025-26 campaign has continued that trajectory. Entering the season ranked third in the AVCA Division III preseason poll, the Eagles have validated that standing with a dominant 16-1 start. The program’s culture of sustained winning, built carefully over nine seasons under DeHaven, has made Juniata a consistent presence in national rankings and a destination program for competitive Division III volleyball.
Reaching 350 career wins is a testament not only to DeHaven’s tactical acumen but also to the culture he has built at an institution he genuinely knows from the inside. He and his wife Brittany, a former Juniata women’s volleyball player, have a personal investment in the program that extends well beyond the court. With the postseason ahead and the Eagles firmly in national championship contention, win number 350 may be remembered as a milestone reached in the middle of his most accomplished season yet.
