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2010 Maryland Terrapins football team

American college football season From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2010 Maryland Terrapins football team
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The 2010 Maryland Terrapins football team represented the University of Maryland in the 2010 NCAA Division I FBS football season. It was the Terrapins' (also officially known as the "Terps") 58th season as a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) and its sixth within the ACC's Atlantic Division. They played their home games at Byrd Stadium and were led by head coach Ralph Friedgen. Maryland finished the season 9–4 overall and 5–3 in ACC play. The Terrapins were invited to the Military Bowl, where they defeated East Carolina, 51–20.

Quick facts Maryland Terrapins football, Military Bowl champion ...
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Friedgen was fired at the end of the season. He was replaced on January 2, 2011, by Randy Edsall, who was the head coach at Connecticut for the previous 12 seasons (1999–2010).

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Schedule

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[1]

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Before the season

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The season prior, Maryland finished with a 2–10 (ACC 1–7) record, the worst in head coach Ralph Friedgen's tenure and the first ten-loss season in school history. Despite rumors to the contrary, Friedgen was retained, but then athletic director Deborah Yow stated the expectation was seven wins in the 2010 season.[2]

Key losses

From the already inconsistent offensive line, Maryland lost left tackle Bruce Campbell and center Phil Costa.[3] The 6-foot 7-inch, 310-pound Campbell elected to enter the NFL Draft a year early,[4] and was selected in the fourth round by the Oakland Raiders.[5] Backfield bulwark fullback Cory Jackson was lost to graduation, as was former starting quarterback Chris Turner. Other starters whose eligibility was exhausted were defensive tackle Travis Ivey, defensive ends Jared Harrell and Deege Galt, cornerback Anthony Wiseman, and safeties Jamari McCullough and Terrell Skinner.[6]

Key returns

Maryland's offensive unit returned seven starters. Jamarr Robinson, the only returning quarterback with game experience, entered the season as the starter as expected. In 2009, he filled in for an injured Turner and completed 46 of 85 pass attempts for 459 yards, two touchdowns, and no interceptions.[3] Former 1,000-yard rusher Da'Rel Scott amassed 425 yards and four touchdowns on 85 carries but sat out much of the 2009 season with a broken wrist. Davin Meggett also returned alongside Scott to split touches as the number-one running back. Torrey Smith returned as the leading wide receiver and a strong team leader. The offensive line's loss of Costa was replaced with former walk-on Paul Pinegar.[6] The defensive unit returned five starters, including returning tackle (131) leader linebacker Alex Wujciak, returning sack (6) leader Adrian Moten, and interception (4) leader Cameron Chism.[7]

Recruiting

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Personnel

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Depth chart

Information as of September 13, 2010[8]

 OFFENSE

 X-receiver

  • 7 Adrian Cannon – Sr-3V
  • 12 Kevin Dorsey – So-1V
  • 85 Tony Logan – Jr-2V

 Left tackle

  • 75 Justin Gilbert – So-1V
  • 74 Nick Klemm – Fr-RS

 Left guard

  • 77 Andrew Gonnella – Jr-1V
  • 67 Pete White – Fr-RS
  • 73 Max Garcia – Fr-HS

 Center

  • 71 Paul Pinegar – Sr-3V
  • 51 John Dillon – So-SQ
  • 60 Chris Rhodes – Jr-SQ

 Right guard

  • 78 Justin Lewis – So-1V
  • 63 Bennett Fulper – So-1V
  • 68 Josh Cary – Fr-RS
  • 61 Reginal Ricks – So-1V

 Right tackle

  • 76 R.J. Dill – So-1V
  • 79 Pete DeSouza – Fr-RS
  • 54 Cody Blue – Fr-RS

 Tight end-Y

  • 89 Matt Furstenburg – So-1V
  • 81 Ryan Schlothauer – So-SQ
  • Injured 80 Lansford Watson – Jr-2V
  • Injured 88 Will Yeatman – Sr-TR
  • Injured 34 Devonte Campbell – So-1V

 Quarterback

 Tailback

 Fullback

  • 30 Haroon Brown – Jr-2V
  • 49 Louis Berman – Jr-SQ
  • 47 Paul Lariviere – Jr-SQ
  • Injured 36 Taylor Watson – Jr-2V

 Z-receiver

  • 82 Torrey Smith – Jr-2V
  • 17 Quintin McCree – Jr-2V
  • 83 Emani Lee-Odai – Sr-3V

 F-receiver

 Tight end-F

  • 86 Dave Stinebaugh – Fr-RS
  • 89 Matt Furstenburg – So-SQ
 

 DEFENSE

 Defensive end

  • 15 Drew Gloster – Sr-2V
  • 44 Derek Drummond – Jr-2V
  • 58 Bradley Johnson – Fr-RS
  • Injured 91 De'Onte Arnett – Fr-RS
  • Injured 41 Marcus Whitfield – Fr-RS

 Nose tackle

  • 96 A.J. Francis – So-1V
  • 90 Maurice Hampton – Jr-1V
  • 50 Ian Davidson – Jr-1V

 Defensive tackle

  • 72 Joe Vellano – So-1V
  • 69 Zachariah Kerr – So-1V

 Anchor

  • 95 Justin Anderson – So-1V
  • 56 Isaiah Ross – So-1V
  • 99 Carl Russell – So-1V

 SAM linebacker

  • 1 Adrian Moten – Sr-3V
  • 52 Darin Drakeford – So-1V
  • 45 Nick Peterson – Jr-SQ

 MIKE linebacker

 WILL linebacker

  • 9 Demetrius Hartsfield – So-1V
  • 51 Ryan Donohue – So-1V
  • 53 Lorne Goree – Fr-HS
  • Injured 42 Ben Pooler – Jr-1V

 Cornerback

  • 21 Trenton Hughes – Jr-1V
  • 25 Dexter McDougle – Fr-RS
  • 38 Jeremiah Johnson – Fr-HS

 Free safety

  • 6 Kenny Tate – Jr-2V
  • 48 Eric Franklin – So-1V
  • 27 Titus Till – Fr-HS

 Strong safety

  • 2 Antwine Perez – Sr-2V
  • 19 Travis Hawkins – Fr-RS
  • 40 Matt Robinson – Fr-HS

 Cornerback

  • 22 Cameron Chism – Jr-2V
  • 24 Avery Graham – Fr-RS
  • 26 Michael Carter – Sr-1V
 

 SPECIAL TEAMS

 Placekicker

  • 35 Travis Baltz – Sr-3V
  • 37 Ted Townsley – Sr-1V
  • Injured 43 Nick Ferrara – So-1V

 Kickoff specialist

  • 37 Ted Townsley – Sr-1V
  • 35 Travis Baltz – Sr-3V

 Punter

 Punt returner

  • 85 Tony Logan – Jr-2V
  • 25 Dexter McDougle – Fr-RS

 Kick returner

 Holder

 Long snapper

  • 64 Tim Downs – Jr-1V

  Fr: Freshman
  So: Sophomore
  Jr: Junior
  Sr: Senior

  V: Number of prior seasons varsity experience
  RS: Redshirt status prior season
  TR: Sat out prior season due to NCAA transfer rules
  SQ: Practice squad prior season
  HS: High school experience only

     
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Game summaries

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Navy quarterback Ricky Dobbs rushes against Maryland.

Maryland and Navy renewed their intrastate rivalry for their second meeting in 45 years at M&T Bank Stadium in Baltimore. The Terrapins took a 14–0 first quarter lead before the Midshipmen equalized in the second half. Maryland punter Travis Baltz made good a final period field goal, which proved the margin of victory after a goal-line stop by Kenny Tate halted a Navy drive in the closing minutes. Navy gained 412 rushing yards, but the Maryland defense allowed them to convert only two of seven scoring opportunities in the red zone.[9]

Morgan State

In Maryland's home opener they faced Division I FCS Morgan State of Baltimore in their first ever meeting. Maryland routed Morgan State, 62–3. The Terrapins held their opponent to 85 yards of offense, the smallest number during Friedgen's tenure as head coach. It featured the most points scored by a Maryland team since the 1975 game against Virginia, and the second-largest margin in the Ralph Friedgen era (after the 61–0 shutout of The Citadel in 2003).[10]

West Virginia

Maryland started the game against West Virginia with four crowd noise-induced penalties that pushed them back against their own end zone. The Mountaineers took a 28–0 lead in the third quarter, but the Terrapins responded with 17 unanswered points. The Maryland passing attack exploited the absence of West Virginia cornerback Brandon Hogan who had been suspended for a drunk driving charge. Quarterback Jamarr Robinson completed long touchdown passes of 60 and 80 yards to Torrey Smith, who dropped a third would-be score in the end zone. Offensive lineman Justin Gilbert suffered a knee injury, and the Maryland line surrendered eight sacks, including one which re-injured backup quarterback Danny O'Brien's ankle in his only snap of the game. It was the most allowed by the offensive line during Friedgen's tenure.[11]

FIU

Redshirt freshman Danny O'Brien started as quarterback in place of Jamarr Robinson, who had a sore throwing arm from the West Virginia game. In the first three possessions, O'Brien managed only one first down, and Maryland fell behind, 7–0. The quarterback then connected with Torrey Smith for a 32-yard pass, which was advanced to the Florida International 9-yard line because of a ten-yard facemask penalty. On the next play, O'Brien floated a pass to LaQuan Williams in the back corner of the end zone, and the point after touchdown equalized the score.[12] In the second quarter, Tony Logan returned a punt 85 yards for a touchdown, which put Maryland up 14–7 at halftime.[13] It was the first time Maryland scored on a punt return since Steve Suter did so in the 2004 Gator Bowl.[14] After Florida International equalized, Da'Rel Scott scored on a 56-yard rush with 2:46 left in the first half. In the third quarter, Florida International scored again before Maryland retook the lead with a 68-yard pass from O'Brien to Smith. Both teams scored once more, and with four minutes remaining in the game, Davin Meggett ran for a 76-yard touchdown.[15] It was the first time Maryland had two 50-yard touchdown runs since Bruce Perry accomplished that feat in 2001.[16]

Duke

In the ACC season opener, Maryland was outgained for the fourth time of the season yet again escaped with a victory. The Terrapins surrendered no turnovers while taking away two from Duke, on two interceptions by safety Antwine Perez and linebacker Adrian Moten. Maryland held Duke to field goals in its first three possessions, and fell behind 9–0. Davin Meggett scored on a 9-yard run to cap a Maryland drive shortly before half time. In the third quarter, Tony Logan returned a punt 85 yards which helped the Terrapins a 14–9 advantage. In the final period, Da'Rel Scott caught a short pass from Danny O'Brien and broke free for a 71-yard touchdown. Duke scored to cut the margin to 21–16, and drove to the Maryland 38-yard line. Antwine Perez broke up a pass from quarterback Sean Renfree, which gave Maryland possession on downs and allowed them to run out the clock.[17]

Clemson

Boston College

Wake Forest

Miami (FL)

Virginia

Florida State

NC State

East Carolina

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Ralph Friedgen and the Maryland Terrapins take the field in the 2010 Military Bowl
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Awards

All-conference

Players of the week

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References

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