2010 Big 12 Championship Game Explained

Year Game Played:2010
Title Sponsor:Dr Pepper
Game Name:Big 12 Championship Game
Subheader:15th Big 12 Conference Championship
Football Season:2010
Visitor Name Short:Oklahoma
Visitor Nickname:Sooners
Visitor School:Oklahoma Sooners
Home Name Short:Nebraska
Home Nickname:Cornhuskers
Home School:Nebraska Cornhuskers
Visitor Record:10–2
Home Record:10–2
Visitor Coach:Bob Stoops
Home Coach:Bo Pelini
Visitor Rank Ap:10
Visitor Rank Coaches:9
Visitor Rank Bcs:9
Home Rank Ap:13
Home Rank Coaches:13
Home Rank Bcs:13
Visitor 1Q:0
Visitor 2Q:17
Visitor 3Q:3
Visitor 4Q:3
Home 1Q:10
Home 2Q:10
Home 3Q:0
Home 4Q:0
Date Game Played:December 4
Stadium:Cowboys Stadium
City:Arlington, Texas
Referee:Scott Novak
Attendance:78,802
Us Network:ABC
Us Announcers Link:List of announcers of major college bowl games
Us Announcers:Brent Musburger and Kirk Herbstreit
Different Next:2017

The 2010 Big 12 Championship Game was a college football game played on Saturday, December 4, 2010, at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington. This was the 15th Big 12 Championship Game and determined the 2010 champion of the Big 12 Conference.[1] The game featured the Nebraska Cornhuskers, champions of the North division, and the Oklahoma Sooners, champions of the South division. Sponsored by soft drink brand Dr Pepper, the game is officially known as the Dr Pepper Big 12 Championship Game.

Previous season

The 2009 Big 12 Championship Game featured Nebraska, champions of the North division against Texas, champions of the South division. The game was the third championship tilt between the Cornhuskers and Longhorns. Unranked Texas upset No. 3 Nebraska 37–27 in the inaugural Big 12 title game in St. Louis, while No. 2 Nebraska beat No. 12 Texas 22–6 in 1999 in San Antonio. Texas was victorious by a score of 13–12, winning their third Big 12 Conference championship.[2]

2010 conference realignment impact

See also: 2010–13 Big 12 Conference realignment. From 2009 through 2013, the Big 12 Championship Game was scheduled to be played at the venue now known as AT&T Stadium.[3] During June 2010, however, Nebraska and Colorado announced that they would leave the Big 12 for other conferences in 2011. Because then-current NCAA rules required that a conference have 12 members in order to stage a football championship game that was exempt from the organization's limits on regular-season games, it was announced on September 30, 2010, that the Big 12 would no longer have a conference championship game, starting with the 2011 football season.

Teams

Nebraska

See main article: 2010 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team.

Oklahoma

See main article: 2010 Oklahoma Sooners football team.

Game summary

Statistics

Return of championship game in 2017

Following a January 2016 NCAA rule change that allows FBS conferences to conduct football championship games regardless of their membership numbers, the Big 12 announced that the championship game would be reinstated in 2017.[4]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: All-Time Big 12 Championships. big12sports.com. Big 12 Conference. 23 October 2021.
  2. Web site: Texas vs. Nebraska – Game summary. https://web.archive.org/web/20210917053609/https://www.espn.com/college-football/recap/_/gameId/293390158. dead. September 17, 2021. ESPN.com.
  3. Web site: Big 12 Conference Concludes Spring Meetings; Future Championship Sites Approved For Football, Basketball . Big12sports.com: The Big 12 Conference Official Athletic Site . May 24, 2007 . June 21, 2010.
  4. Big 12 To Conduct Football Championship; Revenue Figures Announced . Big 12 Conference . June 3, 2016 . September 26, 2016.