2010 Iowa Hawkeyes football team

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2010 Iowa Hawkeyes football
Insight Bowl champion
Insight Bowl, W 27–24 vs. Missouri
ConferenceBig Ten Conference
Record8–5 (4–4 Big Ten)
Head coach
Offensive coordinatorKen O'Keefe (12th season)
Offensive schemePro-style
Defensive coordinatorNorm Parker (12th season)
Base defense4–3
Home stadiumKinnick Stadium
(Capacity: 70,585)
Seasons
← 2009
2011 →
2010 Big Ten Conference football standings
Conf Overall
Team   W   L     W   L  
No. 14 Michigan State +   7 1     11 2  
No. 7 Wisconsin $+   7 1     11 2  
Iowa   4 4     8 5  
Illinois   4 4     7 6  
Penn State   4 4     7 6  
Michigan   3 5     7 6  
Northwestern   3 5     7 6  
Purdue   2 6     4 8  
Minnesota   2 6     3 9  
Indiana   1 7     5 7  
No. 5 Ohio State† %   0 1     0 1  
  • $ – BCS representative as conference champion
  • % – BCS at-large representative
  • + – Conference co-champions
  • † – Ohio State (12–1, 7–1) self-vacated all of their wins[1]
Rankings from AP Poll[2][3]

The 2010 Iowa Hawkeyes football team represented the University of Iowa in the 2010 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Hawkeyes, led by 12th year head coach Kirk Ferentz, were members of the Big Ten Conference and played their home games at Kinnick Stadium in Iowa City, Iowa.

The Hawkeyes finished the regular season 7–5 (4–4 Big Ten) and earned a trip to the Insight Bowl, where they faced the Missouri Tigers. The Hawkeyes won the game 27–24 and finished the season 8–5.

Preseason[edit]

Iowa came off of an 11–2 season in 2009, in which they finished with a victory over Georgia Tech in the 2010 Orange Bowl and a final ranking of No. 7 in both major polls. Many players from the previous season returned, including Ricky Stanzi, Derrell Johnson-Koulianos, Marvin McNutt, Adrian Clayborn and Tyler Sash, which led to high expectations among Hawkeye fans. Iowa entered the season ranked 9th in the AP Poll and 10th in the Coaches' Poll.

[4]

Schedule[edit]

[5]

DateTimeOpponentRankSiteTVResultAttendance
September 411:05 amEastern Illinois*No. 9BTNW 37–770,585[6]
September 112:30 pmIowa State*No. 9
ABC/ESPN2W 35–770,585[7]
September 189:30 pmat No. 24 Arizona*No. 9ESPNL 27–3457,864[8]
September 2511:00 amBall State*No. 18
  • Kinnick Stadium
  • Iowa City, IA
BTNW 45–070,585[9]
October 27:00 pmNo. 22 Penn StatedaggerNo. 17
  • Kinnick Stadium
  • Iowa City, IA
ESPNW 24–370,585[10]
October 162:30 pmat MichiganNo. 15ABC/ESPNW 38–28112,784[11]
October 232:30 pmNo. 10 WisconsinNo. 13
ABC/ESPNL 30–3170,585[12]
October 302:30 pmNo. 5 Michigan StateNo. 18
  • Kinnick Stadium
  • Iowa City, IA
ABC/ESPNW 37–670,585[13]
November 611:00 amat IndianaNo. 15BTNW 18–1342,991[14]
November 1311:00 amat NorthwesternNo. 13ESPNL 17–2147,130[15]
November 202:30 pmNo. 8 Ohio StateNo. 21
  • Kinnick Stadium
  • Iowa City, IA
ABCL 17–2070,585[16]
November 272:30 pmat MinnesotaNo. 24BTNL 24–2750,805[17]
December 2810:00 pmvs. No. 14 Missouri*ESPNW 27–2453,453[18]
  • *Non-conference game
  • daggerHomecoming
  • Rankings from AP Poll released prior to the game
  • All times are in Central time

Rankings[edit]

Ranking movements
Legend: ██ Increase in ranking ██ Decrease in ranking
— = Not ranked RV = Received votes
Week
PollPre1234567891011121314Final
AP99918171515151318152124RVRV
Coaches1091018181514121219162124RVRVRV
HarrisNot released15121714121924RVRVNot released
BCSNot released151816132024Not released

Roster[edit]

2010 Iowa Hawkeyes football team roster
Players Coaches
Offense
Pos. # Name Class
QB 12 Ricky Stanzi Sr
QB 16 James Vandenberg So
QB 17 A. J. Derby Fr
RB 27 Jewel Hampton Injured Jr
RB 36 Brett Morse Sr
RB 25 Paki O'Meara Sr
RB 32 Adam Robinson So
RB 34 Marcus Coker Fr
RB 38 Brad Rogers  Fr
RB 3 Brandon Wegher So
WR 26 Paul Chaney Jr. Sr
WR 23 Jordan Cotton  Fr
WR 6 Keenan Davis So
WR 15 Derrell Johnson-Koulianos Sr
WR 7 Marvin McNutt Jr
WR 22 Colin Sandeman Sr
TE 85 Zach Derby So
TE 86 C.J. Fiedorowicz Fr
TE 39 Brad Herman Jr
TE 82 Allen Reisner Sr
OL 78 Andrew Donnal Fr
OL 53 James Ferentz So
OL 73 Adam Gettis Jr
OL 77 Riley Reiff So
OL 68 Brandon Scherff Fr
OL 63 Julian Vandervelde Sr
OL 56 Markus Zusevics Jr
Defense
Pos. # Name Class
DL 79 Dominic Alvis So
DL 46 Christian Ballard Sr
DL 91 Broderick Binns Jr
DL 94 Adrian Clayborn Sr
DL 93 Mike Daniels Jr
DL 71 Carl Davis Fr
DL 95 Karl Klug Sr
DL 90 Louis Trinca-Pasat Fr
LB 31 Anthony Hitchens Fr
LB 42 Jeremiha Hunter Sr
LB 20 Christian Kirksey Fr
LB 48 Troy Johnson Sr
LB 44 James Morris Fr
LB 45 Tyler Nielsen Jr
LB 33 Jeff Tarpinian Sr
DB 4 Jordan Bernstine Jr
DB 2 Greg Castillo So
DB 13 Tom Donatell So
DB 30 Brett Greenwood Sr
DB 18 Micah Hyde So
DB 10 William Lowe Jr
DB 28 Shaun Prater Jr
DB 9 Tyler Sash Jr
Special teams
Pos. # Name Class
K 96 Mike Meyer Fr
K 8 Trent Mossbrucker Jr
K 1 Daniel Murray Sr
P 5 Ryan Donahue Sr
LS 69 Charlie Knipper So
LS 61 Casey Kreiter Fr
LS 65 Andrew Schulze Sr


Head coach
Coordinators/assistant coaches

Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • (S) Suspended
  • (I) Ineligible
  • Injured Injured
  • Redshirt Redshirt

Roster

Game summaries[edit]

Eastern Illinois[edit]

1 234Total
Eastern Illinois 0 700 7
#9/10 Iowa 21 727 37

Running back Adam Robinson carried the ball 24 times for 109 yards and 3 touchdowns, while Stanzi, the quarterback, threw for 229 yards and one touchdown as the Hawkeyes won with relative ease. Also scoring for Iowa was Paki O'Meara, who blocked an Eastern Illinois punt and returned it 42 yards. Trailing 21–0, Eastern Illinois' only points came on a second-quarter drive that included a fake punt and an 11-yard touchdown pass from Brandon Large to Von Wise. On the next possession, Stanzi took a tumble onto the turf and limped off to the sidelines, creating concern among the sellout crowd, but Robinson and backup James Vandenberg would lead them down the field for another score. Stanzi would later return.[21]

[22][23]

Iowa State[edit]

1 234Total
Iowa State 0 007 7
#9/9 Iowa 7 2170 35

From the get-go, the Hawkeyes were in control of the game, receiving the opening kickoff and scoring seven minutes later on a 9-yard Marvin McNutt pass from Ricky Stanzi. Iowa State would see the ball for just 1:26 in the first quarter, going three and out on their only drive, giving it back to Iowa, who would increase its lead to 14–0 on the next possession, which lasted into the early second quarter. In all, Iowa possessed the ball for over 35 minutes, passing for 275 yards and rushing for another 204 along the way.

The Cyclones, meanwhile, endured a replica of the poor performance they put forward against Iowa in 2009, being limited to 179 yards in three quarters. Quarterback Austen Arnaud, who threw for four interceptions in that game, was picked off three more times this year. However, after going 17 quarters without scoring an offensive touchdown against Iowa, ISU finally found the end zone with 1:46 remaining in the game, on an 8-yard touchdown pass from Arnaud to Darius Darks.[26]

[27][28]

At No. 24 Arizona[edit]

1 234Total
#9/9 Iowa 0 7713 27
#24/18 Arizona 14 1307 34
  • Date: September 18
  • Location: Arizona Stadium
    Tucson, AZ
  • Game start: 9:41 p.m. CDT
  • Elapsed time: 3:34
  • Game attendance: 57,864
  • Game weather: 97 °F (36 °C), Clear, Wind NW 8 mph (13 km/h)
  • Referee: Larry Farina
  • TV announcers (ESPN): Mark Jones (Play-by-play) & Bob Davie (Color)[29]

After allowing long interception and kickoff returns for touchdowns, the #9 Hawkeyes found themselves down by 20 at halftime. Despite the sizable deficit on the road, Iowa mounted a comeback with a strong second half. Ricky Stanzi tossed a third quarter touchdown to Derrell Johnson-Koulianos, and another in the fourth to Marvin McNutt to bring the Hawkeyes to within six at 27–21. Moments later, defensive end Broderick Binns snatched a Nick Foles pass out of the air and returned it 20 yards for the tying touchdown. The extra point was blocked, denying the Hawkeyes their first lead of the game. On the ensuing possession, Foles led the Wildcats on a 9-play, 72-yard drive capped with a 4-yard touchdown pass on third and goal. Stanzi was sacked three times on Iowa's next possession, effectively ending the game. Arizona would go on to start 7–1 before dropping their final five games of the season to finish 7–6.

[30][31][32]

Ball State[edit]

1 234Total
Ball State 0 000 0
#18/18 Iowa 7 141410 45

The Hawkeyes came off the tough loss at Arizona by dominating Ball State, outgaining the Cardinals 562–112 in total yards. Ricky Stanzi threw for 288 yards and 3 touchdowns, with two of those scores being hauled in by Derrell Johnson-Koulianos (4 total receptions for 87 yards). Adam Robinson had 115 yards rushing and 2 touchdowns.

[34][35][36]

No. 22 Penn State[edit]

1 234Total
#22/20 Penn State 0 300 3
#17/18 Iowa 10 707 24

Iowa opened up Big Ten play in dominating fashion, holding a ranked Penn State team to 54 yards rushing en route to its largest margin of victory over the Nittany Lions, 24–3. It was the Hawkeyes' eighth win in nine games against Penn State.

[37][38][39]

At Michigan[edit]

1 234Total
#15/14 Iowa 7 14710 38
NR/#24 Michigan 7 0021 28
  • Date: October 16
  • Location: Michigan Stadium, Ann Arbor, MI
  • Game start: 2:30 p.m.[40] CDT
  • Game attendance: 112,784[40]
  • Game weather: <!-−62 °F (−52 °C), Partly Cloudy, Wind WNW 10 mph-->
  • Television network: ABC

After twice holding a 21-point lead in Ann Arbor (28–7 end of 3rd quarter, 35–14 early in the 4th quarter), Iowa held on to win its Big Ten road opener, 38–28. Adam Robinson rushed for 143 yards and 2 touchdowns, and Derrell Johnson-Koulianos hauled in 3 touchdown receptions. After this win, the Hawkeyes had won 20 of 23 games dating back to the 2008 season.

[41][42][43]

No. 10 Wisconsin[edit]

1 234Total
#10/11 Wisconsin 3 7147 31
#13/12 Iowa 6 7710 30

The two teams traded scores until the Hawkeyes kicked a field goal with 8:35 remaining to go up 30–24. Iowa forced the Badgers into a punting situation on their next possession, but were not prepared for a fake on 4th down and 4 from Wisconsin's own 26. Badger punter Brad Nortman ran for 17 yards on the play, and Wisconsin methodically marched down the field for the go-ahead score. The Hawkeyes also had an extra point blocked after their first touchdown, and the two special teams miscues proved costly. The victory catapulted Wisconsin toward a share of the Big Ten title and the Rose Bowl, as they won their final four regular season games by an average of 37.8 points.

[45][46][47]

No. 5 Michigan State[edit]

1 234Total
#5 Michigan State 0 006 6
#18/19 Iowa 17 1370 37

The Hawkeyes dismantled previously unbeaten, fifth-ranked Michigan State. After leading 30–0 at halftime, Iowa opened up a 37–0 advantage before the Spartans scored their only points of the game in the fourth quarter. This effort was a showcase of what could have been in 2010 for Iowa.

[50][51][52][53]

At Indiana[edit]

1 234Total
#15/16 Iowa 3 339 18
Indiana 3 370 13
  • Date: November 6
  • Location: Memorial Stadium
    Bloomington, IN
  • Game start: 11:02 a.m. CST
  • Elapsed time: 3:05
  • Game attendance: 42,991
  • Game weather: 39 °F (4 °C), Sunny, Wind N 4 mph (6.4 km/h)
  • Referee: John O'Neill

[54][55]

At Northwestern[edit]

1 234Total
#13/13 Iowa 0 3140 17
Northwestern 7 0014 21
  • Date: November 13
  • Location: Ryan Field
    Evanston, IL
  • Game start: 11:00 a.m. CST
  • Elapsed time: 3:09
  • Game attendance: 47,130
  • Game weather: 56 °F (13 °C), Cloudy, light precipitation, Wind WSW 10 mph (16 km/h)
  • Referee: Dan Capron
  • TV announcers (ESPN): Dave Pasch (Play-by-play), Bob Griese & Chris Spielman (Color)[56]

After the Wildcats scored a touchdown midway through the first quarter, Iowa rattled off the next 17 points and led by 10 entering the 4th quarter. The Hawkeyes were threatening again when Stanzi was picked off near the end zone. That play changed momentum and Northwestern scored touchdowns after 85- and 91-yard drives. Wildcat quarterback Dan Persa ruptured his Achilles' tendon after throwing the winning touchdown. This marked the fifth win over Iowa in six tries for Northwestern, building off their stunning victory over the 9–0 #4-ranked Hawkeyes in Kinnick Stadium the prior year.

[57][58][59]

No. 8 Ohio State[edit]

1 234Total
#9/7 Ohio State 0 3710 20
#21/20 Iowa 7 037 17

With Iowa leading 17–13 late in the fourth quarter, Buckeye quarterback Terrelle Pryor scrambled for 14 yards on 4th and 10. Four plays later, Dan Herron scored from a yard out giving Ohio State the lead for good. The loss was the Hawkeyes' third in five weeks where Iowa gave up the game-winning score inside the final two minutes of the game.

[61][62]

In July 2011 Ohio State vacated all of their 2010 victories in response to the NCAA infractions committed by five players, which Coach Jim Tressel had covered up at the time. This included their victory against the Hawkeyes.[63]

At Minnesota[edit]

1 234Total
#24/24 Iowa 0 1707 24
Minnesota 10 1007 27
  • Date: November 27
  • Location: TCF Bank Stadium
    Minneapolis, MN
  • Game start: 2:37 p.m. CDT
  • Elapsed time: 3:00
  • Game attendance: 50,805
  • Game weather: 23 °F (−5 °C), Sunny, Wind WSW 8 mph (13 km/h)
  • Referee: Todd Geerlings

In Iowa's first trip to TCF Bank Stadium, Minnesota – 2–9 entering the game – handed the Hawkeyes their third straight loss to end the regular season. The loss also dropped Iowa out of the Top 25 rankings for the first time since Week 3 of the 2009 season.

[64][65][66]

Vs. No. 14 Missouri (Insight Bowl)[edit]

1 234Total
#12 Missouri 3 7140 24
Iowa 7 1037 27
     

Despite the disappointing season, Iowa mopped up Missouri, the third place Big 12 Conference team, 27–24 to end the season on a high note. Freshman Marcus Coker ran for an Iowa bowl game record 219 yards and scored two touchdowns. Micah Hyde’s 72-yard interception return in the fourth quarter was the go-ahead score.

It was the first meeting between the schools in 100 years.

[69][70][71][72]

All-Conference honors[edit]

[73]

All-America honors[edit]

Players in the 2011 NFL Draft[edit]

Player Position Round Pick NFL club Ref
Adrian Clayborn Defensive End 1 20 Tampa Bay Buccaneers [74]
Christian Ballard Defensive Tackle 4 106 Minnesota Vikings [74]
Ricky Stanzi Quarterback 5 135 Kansas City Chiefs [74]
Karl Klug Defensive Tackle 5 142 Tennessee Titans [74]
Julian Vandervelde Offensive Guard 5 161 Philadelphia Eagles [74]
Tyler Sash Safety 6 198 New York Giants [74]

References[edit]

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