2010 Bethune–Cookman Wildcats football team

The 2010 Bethune–Cookman Wildcats football team represented Bethune-Cookman University in the 2010 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Wildcats were led by first year head coach Brian Jenkins and played their home games at Municipal Stadium. They are a member of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. They finished the season 10–2, 7–1 in MEAC play to finish in first place.

2010 Bethune–Cookman Wildcats football
MEAC co-champion
ConferenceMid-Eastern Athletic Conference
2010 record10–2 (7–1 MEAC)
Head coachBrian Jenkins (1st season)
Home stadiumMunicipal Stadium
(Capacity: 9,601)
2010 Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
Team W L    W L 
No. 15 Bethune–Cookman +^  7 1     10 2  
No. 16 South Carolina State +^  7 1     9 3  
Florida A&M +  7 1     8 3  
Hampton  5 3     6 5  
Norfolk State  4 4     6 5  
Morgan State  3 5     4 7  
Delaware State  2 6     3 8  
North Carolina A&T  1 7     1 10  
Howard  0 8     1 10  
North Carolina Central *  0 0     3 8  
Savannah State *  0 0     1 10  
  • + Conference co-champions
  • ^ FCS playoff participant
  • * Not eligible for conference championship
Rankings from The Sports Network poll

Schedule

[1]

DateTimeOpponentRankSiteTVResultAttendance
September 44:00 PMEdward Waters*
W 70-105,664
September 184:00 PMSavannah State
W 42-74,764
September 254:00 PMNorfolk State
W 21-75,371
October 24:00 PMat Morgan State
W 69-3210,449
October 94:00 PMDelaware State
W 47-2410,151
October 161:30 PMat South Carolina State*W 14-010,077
October 232:00 PMat North Carolina CentralW 23-1012,716
October 287:30 PMNorth Carolina A&T
W 67-178,112
November 52:00 PMat HamptonW 23-189,649
November 131:00 PMHoward
W 35-205,431
November 202:30 PMvs. Florida A&M
ESPNCL 28-3761,712
December 41:00 PMNo. 7 New Hampshire*No. 15L 20-455,738
gollark: Just because your language theoretically has words composed of subwords doesn't mean you can ignore the various problems I mentioned (except possibly the grammar one). And "convert the words to semantic expressions" hides a lot of the complexity this would involve.
gollark: I'm pretty sure I've seen diagrams of pronounceable things of some kind, but they're more complex than just permutations of "high tone, low tone" and do not conveniently map to concepts.
gollark: What do you mean "all of the possible forms of a square diagram with two or more sides"? There are infinitely many of those. And how do I just pronounce a diagram without a predetermined mapping?
gollark: Also, I have no idea what an "objective → semantic buffer" is and I think you're underestimating the difficulty of implementing whatever it is.
gollark: I can't actually source this, having checked *at least* two internet things.

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2012-06-07. Retrieved 2014-12-20.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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