2010 Millsaps Majors football
ConferenceSouthern Collegiate Athletic Conference
Record7–3 (5–1 SCAC)
Head coach
2010 Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference football standings
ConfOverall
Team W L  W L 
DePauw $^  6 0   9 2  
Millsaps  5 1   7 3  
Centre  3 3   6 4  
Rhodes  3 3   4 6  
Austin  2 4   4 5  
Trinity (TX)  2 4   4 6  
Sewanee  0 6   1 9  
Birmingham–Southern #     6 4  
  • $ Conference champion
  • ^ NCAA Division III playoff participant
  • # – Provisional Division III member; games not counted in standings

The 2010 Millsaps Majors football team represented Millsaps College as a member of the Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference (SCAC) during the 2010 NCAA Division III football season. On March 1, 2010, Aaron Pelch was named head coach to succeed Mike DuBose. Pelch, a former Weber State University player and 2001 graduate, was a defensive assistant for DuBose's Majors from 2006 to 2008, before joining Tom Cable's Oakland Raiders staff as a special teams coach in 2009.

Pelch guided the Majors to a 7–3 overall record in his first season, but the team saw its streak of four consecutive SCAC championships snapped by virtue of a 35–21 home loss to DePauw, who finished the year 6–0 in conference play. The Majors' 2011 senior class tied the record set by the previous year's senior class of most career victories, with 33 in a four-year span. For the fifth year in a row, the Majors' offense was the SCAC's highest scoring unit.

Schedule

DateTimeOpponentSiteResultAttendance
September 47:00 pmMississippi College*
L 23–271,510
September 1112:00 pmat LaGrange*L 21–27 OT1,450
September 181:00 pmAustin
  • Harper Davis Field
  • Jackson, MS
W 38–24302
September 251:30 pmat Trinity (TX)
W 27–232,121
October 21:00 pmDePauw
  • Harper Davis Field
  • Jackson, MS
L 21–351,674
October 91:00 pmHuntingdon*dagger
  • Harper Davis Field
  • Jackson, MS
W 35–191,434
October 161:00 pmat Rhodes
W 70–31929
October 231:30 pmat CentreW 30–181,034
October 301:00 pmSewanee
  • Harper Davis Field
  • Jackson, MS
W 30–01,123
November 131:00 pmat Birmingham–Southern*W 28–172,847

References

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