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2010 Big East Conference football season

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2010 Big East Conference football season
LeagueNCAA Division I FBS (Football Bowl Subdivision)
Sportfootball
DurationSeptember 2, 2010
through January 8, 2011
Number of teams8
TV partner(s)ESPN-Big East Network
Regular season
ChampionsConnecticut, West Virginia & Pitt
Football seasons
← 2009
2011 →
2010 Big East Conference football standings
Conf Overall
Team   W   L     W   L  
Connecticut $+   5 2     8 5  
West Virginia +   5 2     9 4  
Pittsburgh +   5 2     8 5  
Syracuse   4 3     8 5  
South Florida   3 4     8 5  
Louisville   3 4     7 6  
Cincinnati   2 5     4 8  
Rutgers   1 6     4 8  
  • $ – BCS representative as conference champion
  • + – Conference co-champions
As of January 11, 2011
Rankings from AP Poll

The 2010 Big East football season was the NCAA football season of the Big East Conference. Conference members began regular-season play on September 2, but did not begin conference play until October 8; the regular season continued through December 4. Following the regular season, six conference teams played in bowl games; although the bowl season concluded with the BCS National Championship Game on January 10, 2011, the last date on which a Big East team played was January 8, when Pittsburgh defeated Kentucky in the BBVA Compass Bowl in Birmingham, Alabama.

The conference consists of 8 football members: Cincinnati, Connecticut, Louisville, Pittsburgh, Rutgers, South Florida, Syracuse, and West Virginia.

The Big East title race came down to the last minute of the final game of the season on December 4 between UConn and South Florida. West Virginia and Pitt had claimed shares of the conference title with wins earlier that day. A UConn win would leave the Huskies tied with WVU and Pitt for the title, but UConn would claim the automatic Big East BCS berth by virtue of victories over both schools. A field goal in the last minute gave the Huskies a 19–16 win and their first-ever trip to a BCS game.

Previous season

[edit]

Cincinnati (12–1) was the Big East champions and received the conference's automatic bid into the BCS and went to the Sugar Bowl, losing to SEC runner-up Florida, 51–24.

Five other Big East teams went to bowl games in 2010, finishing bowl play with a record of 4–2 as a conference. Rutgers (9–4) beat Central Florida 45–24 in the St. Petersburg Bowl. Pittsburgh (10–3) defeated North Carolina 19–17 in the Meineke Car Care Bowl. West Virginia (9–4) lost to Florida State 33–21 in the Konica-Minolta Gator Bowl. South Florida (8–5) beat Northern Illinois 27–3 in the International Bowl. And, Connecticut (8–5) beat South Carolina 20–7 in the Papajohns.com Bowl. The only two teams not to go to a bowl game were Louisville (4–8) and Syracuse (4–8).

Preseason

[edit]

Coaching changes

[edit]

Three teams have new head coaches for the 2010 season. Charlie Strong replaces Steve Kragthorpe at Louisville, Butch Jones replaces Brian Kelly at Cincinnati, and Skip Holtz replaces Jim Leavitt at South Florida.

Preseason poll

[edit]

The 2010 Big East preseason poll was announced at the Big East Media Day in Newport, RI on August 3.[1] Pittsburgh was chosen as the favorite to win the conference.

Big East media poll

[edit]
  1. Pittsburgh – 190 (22)
  2. West Virginia – 142 (1)
  3. Cincinnati – 142
  4. Connecticut – 131 (1)
  5. Rutgers – 99
  6. South Florida – 79
  7. Syracuse – 41
  8. Louisville – 40

Award watch lists

[edit]

The following Big East players listed below have been named to the preseason award watch lists.

Regular season

[edit]
Index to colors and formatting
Big East member won
Big East member lost
Big East teams in bold

All times Eastern time.

Rankings reflect that of the AP poll for that week until week eight when the BCS rankings will be used.

Week One

[edit]
Date Time Visiting team Home team Site Broadcast Result Attendance
September 2 7:30 pm Norfolk State Rutgers Rutgers StadiumPiscataway, NJ espn3.com W 31–0 46,311
September 2 7:30 pm No. 15 Pittsburgh Utah Rice-Eccles StadiumSalt Lake City, UT Versus L 24–27OT 45,730
September 4 3:30 pm Connecticut Michigan Michigan StadiumAnn Arbor, MI ABC L 10–30 113,090
September 4 3:30 pm Kentucky Louisville Papa John's Cardinal StadiumLouisville, KY ABC L 16–23 55,327
September 4 3:30 pm Coastal Carolina No. 25 West Virginia Mountaineer FieldMorgantown, WV Big East Network W 31–0 57,867
September 4 6:00 pm Syracuse Akron InfoCision StadiumAkron, OH ESPN3 W 29–3 15,969
September 4 7:05 pm Stony Brook South Florida Raymond James StadiumTampa, FL ESPN3 W 59–14 40,201
September 4 10:00 pm Cincinnati Fresno State Bulldog StadiumFresno, CA ESPN2 L 14–28 37,238

Players of the week:[15]

Offensive Defensive Special teams
Player Team Player Team Player Team
Ryan Nassib Syracuse Mike Holmes Syracuse Brandon Bing Rutgers

Week Two

[edit]
Date Time Visiting team Home team Site Broadcast Result Attendance
September 10 7:00 pm No. 23 West Virginia Marshall Joan C. Edwards StadiumHuntington, WV ESPN2 W 24–21OT 41,382
September 11 12:00 pm South Florida No. 8 Florida Ben Hill Griffin StadiumGainesville, FL Big East Network L 14–38 90,612
September 11 12:00 pm Indiana State Cincinnati Nippert StadiumCincinnati, OH FSOHIO W 40–7 30,807
September 11 12:00 pm Texas Southern Connecticut Rentschler FieldEast Hartford, CT Big East Network W 62–3 37,359
September 11 1:00 pm New Hampshire Pittsburgh Heinz FieldPittsburgh, PA espn3.com W 38–16 50,120
September 11 3:30 pm Eastern Kentucky Louisville Papa John's Cardinal StadiumLouisville, KY Big East Network W 23–13 51,427
September 11 7:00 pm Syracuse Washington Husky StadiumSeattle, WA FSN Northwest L 20–41 62,418
September 11 8:00 pm Rutgers Florida International FIU StadiumMiami, FL Big East Network W 19–14 19,872

Players of the week:[16]

Offensive Defensive Special teams
Player Team Player Team Player Team
Noel Devine West Virginia Joe Lefeged Rutgers Joe Lefeged Rutgers

Week Three

[edit]
Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
September 16 7:30 pm Cincinnati NC State Carter–Finley StadiumRaleigh, NC ESPN L 19–30 55,934
September 18 12:00 pm Maryland #21 West Virginia Mountaineer Field • Morgantown, WV ESPNU W31–17 60,122
September 18 12:00 pm Connecticut Temple Lincoln Financial FieldPhiladelphia, PA Big East Network L 16–30 18,702
September 18 5:30 pm Louisville No. 25 Oregon State Reser StadiumCorvallis, OR FSN Northwest L 28–35 45,379
September 18 7:15 pm Maine Syracuse Carrier DomeSyracuse, NY W 38–14 37,758

Week off: Pittsburgh, Rutgers, South Florida

Players of the week:[17]

Offensive Defensive Special teams
Player Team Player Team Player Team
Geno Smith West Virginia Bruce Irvin West Virginia Mike Holmes Syracuse

Week Four

[edit]
Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
September 23 7:30 pm No. 19 Miami Pittsburgh Heinz Field • Pittsburgh, PA ESPN L 3–31 58,115
September 25 12:00 pm Buffalo Connecticut Rentschler Field • East Hartford, CT Big East Network W 45–21 36,738
September 25 3:30 pm Colgate Syracuse Carrier Dome • Syracuse, NY Espn3.com W 42–7 38,068
September 25 3:30 pm North Carolina Rutgers Rutgers Stadium • Piscataway, NJ ESPNU L 13–17 52,038
September 25 6:00 pm No. 8 Oklahoma Cincinnati Paul Brown Stadium • Cincinnati, ESPN 2 L 29–31 58,253
September 25 7:00 pm Western Kentucky South Florida Raymond James Stadium • Tampa, FL Big East Network W 24–12 40,206
September 25 9:00 pm No. 22 West Virginia No. 15 LSU Tiger StadiumBaton Rouge, LA ESPN 2 L 14–20 92,575

Week off: Louisville

Players of the week:[18]

Offensive Defensive Special teams
Player Team Player Team Player Team
Delone Carter Syracuse Sio Moore Connecticut Terrence Mitchell South Florida

Week Five

[edit]
Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
October 2 12:00 pm Vanderbilt Connecticut Rentschler Field • East Hartford, CT Big East Network W 40–21 40,000
October 2 2:00 pm Tulane Rutgers Rutgers Stadium • Piscataway, NJ Espn3.com L 14–17 47,963
October 2 3:30 pm Florida International Pittsburgh Heinz Field • Pittsburgh, PA Espn3.com W 44–17 45,207
October 2 7:00 pm Louisville Arkansas State ASU StadiumJonesboro, AR Espn3.com W 34–24 25,219
October 2 7:05 pm Florida Atlantic South Florida Raymond James Stadium • Tampa, FL Espn3.com W 31–3 38,434

Week off: Cincinnati, Syracuse, West Virginia

Players of the week:[19]

Offensive Defensive Special teams
Player Team Player Team Player Team
Ray Graham Pittsburgh Blidi Wreh-Wilson Connecticut Dan Hutchins Pittsburgh

Week Six

[edit]
Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
October 8 7:30 pm Connecticut Rutgers Rutgers Stadium • Piscataway, NJ ESPN RUT 27–24 48,431
October 9 12:00 pm Syracuse South Florida Raymond James Stadium • Tampa, FL Big East Network SYR 13–9 41,917
October 9 2:00 pm Memphis Louisville Papa John's Cardinal Stadium • Louisville, KY ESPN3.com W 56–0 48,427
October 9 3:30 pm Pittsburgh Notre Dame Notre Dame StadiumSouth Bend, IN NBC L 17–23 80,795
October 9 3:30 pm UNLV West Virginia Mountaineer Field • Morgantown, WV Big East Network W 49–10 58,234
October 9 7:00 pm Miami (OH) Cincinnati Nippert Stadium • Cincinnati, OH ESPN3.com W 45–3 33,909

Players of the week:

Offensive Defensive Special teams
Player Team Player Team Player Team
Chas Dodd Rutgers Max Suter Syracuse San San Te Rutgers

Week Seven

[edit]
Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
October 14 7:30 pm South Florida No. 25 West Virginia Mountaineer Field • Morgantown, WV ESPN WV 20–6 54,955
October 15 8:00 pm Cincinnati Louisville Papa John's Cardinal Stadium • Louisville, KY ESPN CIN 35–27 55,106
October 16 12:00 pm Pittsburgh Syracuse Carrier Dome • Syracuse, NY Big East Network PITT 45–15 40,168
October 16 2:00 pm Army Rutgers New Meadowlands StadiumEast Rutherford, N.J. ESPN3.com RUT 23–20OT 41,292

Week off: Connecticut

Players of the week:

Offensive Defensive Special teams
Player Team Player Team Player Team
Armon Binns Cincinnati Keith Tandy West Virginia Dan Hutchins Pittsburgh

Week Eight

[edit]
Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
October 22 7:30 pm South Florida Cincinnati Nippert Stadium • Cincinnati, OH ESPN2 USF 38–30 32,670
October 23 12:00 pm Rutgers Pittsburgh Heinz Field • Pittsburgh, PA Big East Network PITT 41–21 50,425
October 23 12:00 pm Syracuse No. 20 West Virginia Mountaineer Field • Morgantown, WV ESPN2 SYR 19–14 58,122
October 23 3:30 pm Connecticut Louisville Papa John's Cardinal Stadium • Louisville, KY ESPNU LOU 26–0 48,591

Players of the week:

Offensive Defensive Special teams
Player Team Player Team Player Team
B.J. Daniels South Florida Doug Hogue Syracuse Chris Philpott Louisville

Week Nine

[edit]
Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
October 29 8:00 pm West Virginia Connecticut Rentschler Field • East Hartford, CT ESPN2 CONN 16–13OT 40,000
October 30 12:00 pm Syracuse Cincinnati Nippert Stadium • Cincinnati, OH ESPNU SYR 31–7 32,072
October 30 12:00 pm Louisville Pittsburgh Heinz Field • Pittsburgh, PA Big East Network PITT 20–3 48,562

Week off: Rutgers, South Florida

Players of the week:

Offensive Defensive Special teams
Player Team Player Team Player Team
Jordan Todman Connecticut Sio Moore Connecticut Dave Teggart Connecticut

Week Ten

[edit]
Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
November 3 7:00 pm Rutgers South Florida Raymond James Stadium • Tampa, FL ESPN2 USF 28–27 39,465
November 6 12:00 pm Louisville Syracuse Carrier Dome • Syracuse, NY Big East Network LOU 28–20 40,735

Week off: Cincinnati, Connecticut, Pittsburgh, West Virginia

Players of the week:

Offensive Defensive Special teams
Player Team Player Team Player Team
Jeremy Wright Louisville Jacquain Williams South Florida Maikon Bonani South Florida

Week Eleven

[edit]
Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
November 11 7:30 pm Pittsburgh Connecticut Rentschler Field • East Hartford, CT ESPN CONN 30–28 35,391
November 13 12:00 pm Cincinnati West Virginia Mountaineer Field • Morgantown, WV Big East Network WVU 37–10 56,593
November 13 12:00 pm South Florida Louisville Papa John's Cardinal Stadium • Louisville, KY ESPNU USF 24–21OT 43,887
November 13 3:30 pm Syracuse Rutgers Rutgers Stadium • Piscataway, NJ ESPNU SYR 13–10 49,911

Players of the week:[20]

Offensive Defensive Special teams
Player Team Player Team Player Team
Geno Smith West Virginia Lawrence Wilson Connecticut Ross Krautman Syracuse

Week Twelve

[edit]
Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
November 20 12:00 pm West Virginia Louisville Papa John's Cardinal Stadium • Louisville, KY Big East Network WVU 17–10 51,772
November 20 12:00 pm Pittsburgh South Florida Raymond James Stadium • Tampa, FL ESPN2 PITT 17–10 43,844
November 20 7:00 pm Connecticut Syracuse Carrier Dome • Syracuse, NY ESPNU CONN 23–6 41,465
November 20 7:30 pm Rutgers Cincinnati Nippert Stadium • Cincinnati, OH Big East Network CIN 69–38 30,265

Players of the week:[21]

Offensive Defensive Special teams
Player Team Player Team Player Team
Isaiah Pead Cincinnati Brandon Mills Cincinnati Gregg Pugnetti West Virginia

Week Thirteen

[edit]
Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
November 26 11:00 am Louisville Rutgers Rutgers Stadium • Piscataway, NJ ESPN2 LOU 40–13 37,422
November 26 12:00 pm West Virginia Pittsburgh Heinz Field • Pittsburgh, PA ABC WVU 35–10 60,562
November 27 12:00 pm Cincinnati Connecticut Rentschler Field • East Hartford, CT Big East Network CONN 38–14 40,000
November 27 12:00 pm Boston College Syracuse Carrier Dome • Syracuse, NY ESPN2 L 7–16 42,191
November 27 12:00 pm South Florida Miami (FL) Sun Life StadiumMiami Gardens, FL ESPNU W 23–20OT 41,148

Players of the week:

Offensive Defensive Special teams
Player Team Player Team Player Team
Jordan Todman Connecticut Brandon Hogan West Virginia Justin Brockhaus-Kann South Florida

Week Fourteen

[edit]

Last week's results set up a wild final week in the Big East, with three teams—UConn, WVU, and Pitt—still in contention for the league's BCS berth, and a possibility that as many as five teams (the three aforementioned teams plus South Florida and Syracuse) could claim a share of the conference title. The conference noted in a November 29 press release, "There could be an outright winner, three different two-way ties, a three-way tie, or even a five-way tie for the title."[22]

Under Big East rules, the first tiebreaker is head-to-head results. In a multi-team tie, the first tiebreaker is record in games between the teams involved in the tie.

Going into the final games, the scenarios were:

  • If UConn defeated South Florida, it would claim the BCS berth regardless of any other results. The Huskies held the tiebreaker in any potential two-way or three-way tie with wins over both Pitt and WVU.
  • If the Huskies lost, WVU would claim the BCS berth with a win over Rutgers, as the Mountaineers held the tiebreaker over Pitt due to their win last week.
  • Pitt could only claim the BCS berth with a win over Cincinnati plus losses by UConn and WVU.
  • If all three teams lost, it would have created a five-way tie for the conference crown between them, USF, and Syracuse. In that event, UConn would have claimed the BCS berth as the only team with a 3–1 record in games between the five teams.

With Pitt and WVU both winning, they assured themselves a share of the Big East title. The BCS berth came down to the UConn-South Florida game, which itself went down to the final minute. Dave Teggart's 52-yard field goal, the longest of his career, with 17 seconds remaining gave the Huskies their first-ever BCS berth.

Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
December 4 12:00 pm Pittsburgh Cincinnati Nippert Stadium • Cincinnati, OH PITT 28–10
December 4 8:00 pm Connecticut South Florida Raymond James Stadium • Tampa, FL ESPN2 UCONN 19–16
December 4 12:00 pm Rutgers No. 24 West Virginia Mountaineer Field • Morgantown, WV ABC WVU 35–14

Week off: Louisville, Syracuse

Players of the week:[23]

Offensive Defensive Special teams
Player Team Player Team Player Team
Dion Lewis Pittsburgh J.T. Thomas West Virginia David Teggart Connecticut

Rankings

[edit]
Legend
    Improvement in ranking
  Drop in ranking
  Not ranked previous week
RV Received votes but were not ranked in Top 25 of poll
Ranking Movement
  Pre Wk
1
Wk
2
Wk
3
Wk
4
Wk
5
Wk
6
Wk
7
Wk
8
Wk
9
Wk
10
Wk
11
Wk
12
Wk
13
Wk
14
Wk
15
Final
Cincinnati AP RV RV
C RV RV RV
BCS Not released
Connecticut AP RV RV 25
C RV RV RV RV
BCS Not released
Louisville AP
C
BCS Not released
Pittsburgh AP 15 RV RV RV RV RV RV
C 15 RV RV RV RV RV
BCS Not released
Rutgers AP
C
BCS Not released
South Florida AP
C RV RV RV
BCS Not released
Syracuse AP RV RV RV RV
C RV RV RV
BCS Not released
West Virginia AP 25 23 21 22 RV 25 20 25 20 RV RV 23 22
C 24 22 21 21 RV 25 19 25 20 RV RV 24 21
BCS Not released 20 24 22

Records against other conferences

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Conference Wins Losses
ACC 2 4
Big 12 0 1
Big Ten 0 1
CUSA 3 1
Independents 1 1
MAC 3 1
Mountain West 1 1
Pac-10 0 2
SEC 1 3
Sun Belt 5 0
WAC 0 1
All FCS 9 0
Against BCS 3 11
Against FBS 16 16
Overall 25 16

Bowl games

[edit]
Bowl Game Date Stadium City Television Matchups/Results Attendance Payout (US$)
Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl December 21, 2010 Tropicana Field St. Petersburg, FL ESPN Louisville 31, Southern Miss 28 20,017 $1,000,000
Champs Sports Bowl December 28, 2010 Florida Citrus Bowl Orlando, FL ESPN NC State 23, West Virginia 7 48,962 $2,125,000
Pinstripe Bowl December 30, 2010 Yankee Stadium Bronx, NY ESPN Syracuse 36, Kansas State 34 38,274 $2,000,000
Meineke Car Care Bowl December 31, 2010 Bank of America Stadium Charlotte, NC ESPN South Florida 31, Clemson 26 41,122 $1,000,000
BBVA Compass Bowl January 8, 2011 Legion Field Birmingham, AL ESPN Pittsburgh 27, Kentucky 10 $900,000
Fiesta Bowl January 1, 2011 University of Phoenix Stadium Glendale, AZ ESPN Oklahoma 48, Connecticut 20 67,232 $17,000,000

Attendance

[edit]
Team Stadium (Capacity) Game 1 Game 2 Game 3 Game 4 Game 5 Game 6 Game 7 Total Average % of Capacity
Cincinnati Nippert Stadium (35,098) 30,807 58,253§ 33,909 32,670 32,072 30,265 27,496 245,472 35,067 88.9
Connecticut Rentschler Field (40,000) 37,359 36,738 40,000 40,000 35,391 40,000 229,488 38,248 95.6
Louisville Papa John's Cardinal Stadium (57,000) 55,327 51,427 48,427 55,106 48,591 43,887 51,772 354,537 50,648 88.9
Pittsburgh Heinz Field (65,050) 50,120 58,115 45,207 50,425 48,562 60,562 312,911 52,165 80.2
Rutgers Rutgers Stadium (52,454) 46,311 52,038 47,963 48,431 41,292 49,911 37,422 323,368 46,195 88.1
South Florida Raymond James Stadium (65,857) 40,201 40,206 38,434 41,917 39,465 43,844 41,809 285,876 40,839 62.0
Syracuse Carrier Dome (49,250) 37,758 38,068 40,168 40,735 41,465 42,191 240,385 40,064 81.3
West Virginia Mountaineer Field (60,000) 57,867 60,122 58,234 54,955 58,122 56,593 48,386 394,279 56,326 93.9

§Played at Paul Brown Stadium
Played at New Meadowlands Stadium

Awards and honors

[edit]

Big East Conference Awards

[edit]

The following individuals received postseason honors as voted by the Big East Conference football coaches.[24]

2010 Big East Football Individual Awards
Award Recipient(s)
Offensive Player of the Year Jordan Todman, RB, CONNECTICUT
Defensive Player of the Year Jabaal Sheard, DE, PITTSBURGH
Special Teams Player of the Year Lindsey Lamar, KR, SOUTH FLORIDA
Rookie of the Year Hakeem Smith, S, LOUISVILLE
Coach of the Year Randy Edsall, CONNECTICUT
Charlie Strong, LOUISVILLE
- denotes unanimous selection

Todman, who became the second Connecticut running back to win the award in three years, was the unanimous choice for Offensive Player of the Year. He was the first unanimous winner of the award since Gino Torretta in 1992.[25] Sheard marked the third consecutive year, and fourth time in five years, that a Pittsburgh player has won the defensive player award.

2010 All-Big East Conference Football Teams[24]
First Team Second Team
Offense Defense Offense Defense
QB – Zach Collaros, JR, CINCINNATI
RB – Jordan Todman, JR, CONNECTICUT
RB – Bilal Powell, SR, LOUISVILLE
WR – Armon Binns, SR, CINCINNATI
WR – Jon Baldwin, JR, PITTSBURGH
TE – Cameron Graham, JR, LOUISVILLE
OT – Mike Ryan, JR, CONNECTICUT
OT – Jason Pinkston, SR, PITTSBURGH
OG – Zach Hurd, SR, CONNECTICUT
OG – Mark Wetterer, SR, LOUISVILLE
C – Sampson Genus, SR, SOUTH FLORIDA
K – Dave Teggart, JR, CONNECTICUT
RS – Lindsey Lamar, SO, SOUTH FLORIDA
DL – Kendall Reyes, JR, CONNECTICUT
DL – Jabaal Sheard, SR, PITTSBURGH
DL – Terrell McClain, SR, SOUTH FLORIDA
DL – Chris Neild, SR, WEST VIRGINIA
LB – Lawrence Wilson, SR, CONNECTICUT
LB – Doug Hogue, SR, SYRACUSE
LB – J. T. Thomas, SR, WEST VIRGINIA
CB – Johnny Patrick, SR, LOUISVILLE
CB – Keith Tandy, JR, WEST VIRGINIA
S – Dom DeCicco, SR, PITTSBURGH
S – Robert Sands, JR, WEST VIRGINIA
P – Dan Hutchins, SR, PITTSBURGH
QB – Geno Smith, SO, WEST VIRGINIA
RB – Isaiah Pead, JR, CINCINNATI
RB – Delone Carter, SR, SYRACUSE
WR – D. J. Woods, JR, CINCINNATI
WR – Dontavia Bogan, SR, SOUTH FLORIDA
WR – Tavon Austin, SO, WEST VIRGINIA
WR – Jock Sanders, SR, WEST VIRGINIA
TE – Ben Guidugli, SR, CINCINNATI
OT – Justin Pugh, SO, SYRACUSE
OT – Don Barclay, JR, WEST VIRGINIA
OL – Jason Kelce, JR, CINCINNATI
OL – Byron Stingily, SR, LOUISVILLE
OL – Jacob Sims, SR, SOUTH FLORIDA
C – Moe Petrus, JR, CONNECTICUT
K – Ross Krautman, FR, SYRACUSE
RS – Nick Williams, SO, CONNECTICUT
DL – Brandon Lindsey, JR, PITTSBURGH
DL – Chandler Jones, JR, SYRACUSE
DL – Scooter Berry, SR, WEST VIRGINIA
DL – Bruce Irvin, JR, WEST VIRGINIA
LB – JK Schafer, JR, CINCINNATI
LB – Jacquain Williams, SR, SOUTH FLORIDA
LB – Derrell Smith, SR, SYRACUSE
CB – Mistral Raymond, SR, SOUTH FLORIDA
CB – Brandon Hogan, SR, WEST VIRGINIA
S – Hakeem Smith, FR, LOUISVILLE
S – Jared Holley, SO, PITTSBURGH
S – Joe Lefeged, SR, RUTGERS
P – Rob Long, SR, SYRACUSE
- denotes unanimous selection

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Pittsburgh Chosen As 2010 BIG EAST Football Favorite". Big East Conference. Archived from the original on August 18, 2010. Retrieved August 8, 2010.
  2. ^ "Watch List for the 2010 Golden Arm Award". Archived from the original on July 28, 2010. Retrieved 9 August 2010.
  3. ^ "2010 Rotary Lombardi Award Preliminary Watch List" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on May 19, 2011. Retrieved May 25, 2010.
  4. ^ "2010 OUTLAND TROPHY WATCH LIST ANNOUNCED". OutlandTrophy.com. Archived from the original on August 4, 2010. Retrieved August 1, 2010.
  5. ^ "2010 Spring Watch List Released". Archived from the original on May 25, 2010. Retrieved May 25, 2010.
  6. ^ a b "Maxwell Football Club Announces Maxwell And Bednarik Watch Lists". MaxwellFootballClub.com. Archived from the original on August 14, 2010. Retrieved August 9, 2010.
  7. ^ "2010 Player of the Year Watch List Announced". WalterCamp.org. Archived from the original on September 4, 2010. Retrieved August 9, 2010.
  8. ^ "2010 Davey O'Brien Quarterback Award Watch List Announced". Archived from the original on July 18, 2010. Retrieved August 9, 2010.
  9. ^ "2010 Biletnikoff Award Watch List". Archived from the original on September 7, 2008. Retrieved August 15, 2010.
  10. ^ "The Butkus Award 2010 Collegiate Finalist". Archived from the original on August 20, 2010. Retrieved August 21, 2010.
  11. ^ "Lou Groza Collegiate Place-Kicker Award Announces 2010 Preseason Watch List". Archived from the original on August 17, 2009. Retrieved August 21, 2010.
  12. ^ "2010 John Mackey Award Preseason Watch List Released" (PDF). Retrieved August 22, 2010.
  13. ^ "2010 Doak Walker Award Candidates Announced" (PDF). SMU.edu. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 17, 2010. Retrieved August 28, 2010.
  14. ^ "JIM THORPE AWARD NAMES 2010 PRE-SEASON "WATCH LIST"". Jim Thorpe Association. Archived from the original on August 9, 2010. Retrieved August 30, 2010.
  15. ^ "BIG EAST Weekly Football Honors – Sept. 6". The BIG EAST Conference. Archived from the original on September 9, 2010. Retrieved September 7, 2010.
  16. ^ "Devine, Lefeged Earn Weekly Football Honors". Big East Conference. Archived from the original on March 18, 2012. Retrieved September 15, 2010.
  17. ^ "WVU's Smith, Irvin Join Syracuse's Holmes As Weekly Honorees". The BIG EAST Conference. Archived from the original on July 20, 2012. Retrieved September 20, 2010.
  18. ^ "BIG EAST Weekly Football Honors – Sept. 27". The BIG EAST Conference. Archived from the original on March 18, 2012. Retrieved September 27, 2010.
  19. ^ "BIG EAST Weekly Football Honors – Oct. 4". The BIG EAST Conference. Archived from the original on November 2, 2010. Retrieved October 4, 2010.
  20. ^ "BIG EAST Weekly Football Honors – Nov. 15". BIG EAST Conference. Archived from the original on November 20, 2010. Retrieved November 21, 2010.
  21. ^ "BIG EAST Weekly Football Honors – Nov. 22". The BIG EAST Conference. Archived from the original on March 18, 2012. Retrieved November 28, 2010.
  22. ^ "Week 13 Football Recap – Conference Title Race Comes Down to the Wire" (Press release). Big East Conference. November 29, 2010. Archived from the original on July 25, 2011. Retrieved December 2, 2010.
  23. ^ "BIG EAST Weekly Football Honors – Dec. 6". BIG EAST Conference. Archived from the original on December 11, 2010. Retrieved December 11, 2010.
  24. ^ a b "BIG EAST Announces 2010 Postseason Football Honors". BIG EAST Conference. December 8, 2010. Archived from the original on January 21, 2011. Retrieved January 9, 2011.
  25. ^ "Todman Named BIG EAST Offensive Player of the Year". UConnHuskies.com. December 8, 2010. Retrieved January 9, 2011.