Big Ten Conference
The Big Ten Conference is an American collegiate athletic conference that competes at the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I level, comprising 18 full member institutions primarily located in the Midwestern and Western United States.[1] Founded on February 8, 1896, as the Intercollegiate Conference of Faculty Representatives (commonly referred to as the Big Ten starting around 1918, with the name formally adopted in 1987), it originated from a meeting of university presidents on January 11, 1895, at Chicago's Palmer House hotel to establish standards for intercollegiate athletics amid concerns over player eligibility and safety.[1] The conference sponsors competition in 28 official sports—14 for men and 14 for women—across its members, with athletes participating in a total of 42 sports when including affiliate programs like Johns Hopkins University in men's and women's lacrosse.[1] Originally established with seven charter members—the University of Illinois, University of Michigan, University of Minnesota, Northwestern University, Purdue University, University of Wisconsin, and University of Chicago—the conference grew steadily through strategic expansions, reaching its traditional 10-member footprint by 1949 after the University of Chicago's departure in 1946 and the addition of Michigan State University.[2] Key milestones include the addition of Ohio State University in 1912, Indiana University and the University of Iowa in 1899, Pennsylvania State University in 1990, the University of Nebraska in 2011, the University of Maryland and Rutgers University in 2014, and most recently, the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), the University of Southern California (USC), the University of Oregon, and the University of Washington on August 2, 2024, transforming it into a coast-to-coast entity with nearly 10,000 student-athletes.[2] Headquartered at 5440 Park Place in Rosemont, Illinois, the conference is led by Commissioner Tony Petitti, who assumed the role in April 2023.[3][1] The Big Ten has long been recognized for its emphasis on academic integrity alongside athletic excellence, pioneering faculty oversight of sports in the late 19th century and forming the Big Ten Academic Alliance in 1958 to foster collaborative research among member institutions, which collectively generate over $10 billion in annual research expenditures.[1] Notable achievements include securing the first permanent tie-in to the Rose Bowl in 1946 for its football champion and launching the Big Ten Network in 2007, a multimedia rights partner that broadcasts conference content nationwide.[1] Its football programs have produced 58 national championships and numerous Heisman Trophy winners, while Olympic sports have contributed over 1,000 medals to U.S. efforts, underscoring the conference's role as a cornerstone of American intercollegiate athletics.[1]History
Origins and formation
The Big Ten Conference traces its origins to a pivotal meeting on January 11, 1895, when presidents from seven Midwestern universities gathered at Chicago's Palmer House hotel to address mounting concerns over the unregulated state of intercollegiate athletics, particularly the brutality and professionalism infiltrating college football.[1] This informal assembly, led by Purdue University President James H. Smart, laid the groundwork for formal organization by emphasizing the need for standardized rules and ethical oversight. On February 8, 1896, faculty representatives from these same institutions—University of Chicago, University of Illinois, University of Michigan, University of Minnesota, Northwestern University, Purdue University, and University of Wisconsin—convened at the Palmer House to officially establish the conference, adopting principles to regulate competition and safeguard student-athletes.[2] The founding focused on standardizing football rules, such as limiting the number of games to five per season and ending play by early November, while enforcing player eligibility to ensure participants were genuine students rather than paid professionals. From its inception, the conference opposed the creeping professionalism in college sports, which included unauthorized payments to athletes and excessive recruiting, by mandating amateur status and tying athletic participation to academic progress. Eligibility rules restricted involvement to bona fide, full-time students who were not delinquent in their studies, reflecting a commitment to balancing athletics with education.[1] This stance was part of a broader 14-point set of guidelines adopted at the 1896 meeting, which also addressed training practices and game safety to curb the era's notorious violence on the field. The organization was initially named the Intercollegiate Conference of Faculty Representatives, underscoring its governance by academic leaders rather than athletic departments.[2] It was formally incorporated as the Intercollegiate Conference Athletic Association in 1905, though it was commonly referred to as the Western Conference during its early years.[1] By 1917, following the return of the University of Michigan to the fold, media outlets began calling it the "Big Ten" to reflect its expanded roster of 10 members (after additions in 1899 and 1909), a nickname that gained popularity and was officially adopted in 1987.[1] Early academic prerequisites further solidified the conference's educational ethos; as soon as 1904, faculty legislation required athletes to meet standard university entrance criteria, complete a full year of coursework, and maintain one year of residency before competing.[1] These standards evolved to include ongoing academic monitoring, ensuring that intercollegiate sports served as an extension of university life rather than a separate professional endeavor.[2]Early expansions and contractions
Following its formation in 1896 with seven charter members— the University of Illinois, University of Michigan, University of Minnesota, Northwestern University, Purdue University, University of Chicago, and University of Wisconsin— the conference experienced its first expansions in 1899.[1] That year, Indiana University and the University of Iowa joined as the eighth and ninth members, respectively, broadening the league's footprint in the Midwest and enhancing its competitive balance in intercollegiate athletics.[1] The conference then faced a temporary contraction when the University of Michigan withdrew in 1908 amid disputes over eligibility rules and scheduling autonomy, reducing membership to eight schools. Ohio State University was admitted in 1912, restoring the count to nine and marking a key step toward fuller regional representation.[1] Michigan rejoined in 1917 after resolving the conflicts, bringing the total to ten members and prompting media outlets to first dub the group the "Big Ten" that same year, a nickname that reflected its growing stature despite the official name remaining the Intercollegiate Conference of Faculty Representatives until 1987. The era's final significant change came in 1946 with the departure of the University of Chicago, which had de-emphasized its football program in 1939 under President Robert Hutchins to prioritize academics and reduce commercialization in athletics.[4] Chicago's full withdrawal from the conference on March 28, 1946, reduced membership back to nine and underscored an emerging tension between scholarly priorities and big-time sports, influencing the league's future academic governance. This shift allowed remaining members to refine policies that balanced competition with educational integrity.[4]20th century developments
In 1950, the Big Ten Conference expanded from nine members to ten with the addition of Michigan State University, which solidified the conference's longstanding nickname as the Big Ten to reflect its new size. Michigan State was accepted into the league on December 12, 1949, with full participation beginning in the 1950-51 academic year across most sports, though football competition started in 1953. This move ended a period of stability following the University of Chicago's departure in 1946 and strengthened the conference's Midwest footprint by incorporating another prominent public research institution.[5][6] The following year, in 1951, the conference established the Council of Ten, a presidents-led governance body comprising the university presidents from each member institution to oversee both athletic and academic policies. Evolving from the earlier Committee on Intercollegiate Athletics (also known as the Committee of Thirteen), the Council provided a structured forum for collaboration beyond sports, laying groundwork for initiatives like the Committee on Institutional Cooperation formed in 1958. This body emphasized academic integrity alongside competition, marking an early shift toward integrated institutional partnerships.[7][8] Throughout the mid-20th century, the Big Ten navigated television broadcasting amid NCAA restrictions, pioneering equitable revenue models while limiting live game exposure to protect attendance. In 1950, the conference initially banned live telecasts of games, aligning with broader concerns about television's impact on gate receipts, but by 1955, it introduced a groundbreaking revenue-sharing system that distributed TV proceeds equally among members. Deals in the late 1950s, such as a $1 million offer considered in 1959, and expansions in the 1960s gradually increased broadcasts, setting precedents for conference-controlled media rights that foreshadowed larger 21st-century agreements.[7][2][9] Negotiations to add Pennsylvania State University began in the early 1980s, driven by Penn State's athletic director and football coach Joe Paterno, who sought alignment with a stable, academically focused conference. After years of discussions and a narrow 7-3 vote by Big Ten presidents in December 1989, Penn State was officially admitted on June 4, 1990, expanding the league to 11 members and introducing scheduling challenges due to the odd number. In response, conference leaders briefly considered implementing divisional alignments to balance competition but ultimately opted against it, maintaining a flexible rotation of conference games without formal divisions until later expansions.[10][11][12]21st century expansions
The Big Ten Conference expanded to 12 full members on July 1, 2011, with the addition of the University of Nebraska–Lincoln, which departed the Big 12 Conference.[2] This move restored the conference to an even number of teams after the 1990 addition of Penn State, enabling the introduction of a football championship game and the creation of two divisions named Leaders and Legends for the 2011 through 2013 seasons.[13] Nebraska's inclusion aligned with the conference's emphasis on institutions with strong academic profiles and competitive athletic histories, including five national football championships.[2] On July 1, 2014, the conference grew to 14 full members by adding the University of Maryland and Rutgers University, both departing the Atlantic Coast Conference (Maryland) and Big East Conference (Rutgers).[2] Maryland brought established lacrosse programs and academic prestige as a public research university, while Rutgers provided access to the New York media market and similar research credentials.[2] In conjunction with these additions, the Big Ten replaced the Leaders and Legends divisions with a geographic East-West alignment for football, which remained in place through the 2023 season.[12] The most significant expansion occurred on August 2, 2024, when the conference added the University of Southern California (USC), University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), University of Oregon, and University of Washington, all former Pac-12 members, bringing the total to 18 full institutions.[14] These additions enhanced the conference's national footprint, particularly in media markets across California and the Pacific Northwest, while incorporating programs with rich athletic traditions, such as USC's eight Heisman Trophy winners.[2] For the 2024 football season, the Big Ten eliminated divisions entirely, adopting a format where the top two teams based on conference records advance to the championship game.[15] In addition to full members, the Big Ten incorporated affiliate institutions to bolster specific sports. Johns Hopkins University joined as an affiliate for men's lacrosse on July 1, 2014, following an announcement on June 3, 2013, and later added women's lacrosse effective the 2016–17 academic year.[1] The University of Notre Dame became an affiliate for men's ice hockey starting in the 2017–18 season, announced on March 23, 2016, increasing the hockey league to seven teams.[1] As of November 2025, the Big Ten has not confirmed any further full-member expansions beyond the 2024 additions, though conference leadership has indicated potential growth by 2030 amid ongoing realignment discussions.[16]Membership
Current full members
As of the 2024–25 academic year, the Big Ten Conference comprises 18 full member institutions, all of which sponsor NCAA Division I teams in at least 20 sports, including football at the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) level. These universities, primarily public research institutions with a few private ones, span from the Midwest to the East Coast and now the West Coast following the 2024 expansion. Membership emphasizes academic excellence alongside athletic competition, with all schools belonging to the Association of American Universities (AAU).[1] The following table lists the current full members alphabetically, including their primary locations, years of joining the conference, and primary athletic nicknames. Each entry also highlights a brief unique fact about the institution's athletic or campus tradition.| University | Location | Join Year | Primary Nickname | Unique Fact |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign | Urbana-Champaign, Illinois | 1896 | Fighting Illini | Won the 2024 Big Ten Men's Basketball Tournament.[17] |
| Indiana University Bloomington | Bloomington, Indiana | 1896 | Hoosiers | Produced the last undefeated NCAA Men's Basketball National Champion in 1976.[17] |
| University of Iowa | Iowa City, Iowa | 1899 | Hawkeyes | Football fans traditionally wave to pediatric patients at the University of Iowa Stead Family Children's Hospital during home games.[17] |
| University of Maryland, College Park | College Park, Maryland | 2014 | Terrapins | Achieved a school record-high Academic Progress Rate (APR) of 988 in 2023–24.[17] |
| University of Michigan | Ann Arbor, Michigan | 1896 | Wolverines | Michigan Stadium (The Big House) is the largest stadium in the Western Hemisphere, seating over 107,000 for football.[17] |
| Michigan State University | East Lansing, Michigan | 1950 | Spartans | Fielded the first racially integrated college football team to win a national championship in 1965–66.[17] |
| University of Minnesota | Minneapolis, Minnesota | 1896 | Golden Gophers | Wrestler Gable Steveson secured his fourth Big Ten title in 2025, following his Olympic gold medal in 2021.[17] |
| University of Nebraska–Lincoln | Lincoln, Nebraska | 2011 | Cornhuskers | The baseball team won the 2025 Big Ten Tournament as the No. 8 seed.[17] |
| Northwestern University | Evanston, Illinois | 1896 | Wildcats | Plans a new Ryan Field stadium opening in 2026, featuring a canopy roof and premium seating.[17] |
| The Ohio State University | Columbus, Ohio | 1912 | Buckeyes | Captured its ninth football national championship in January 2025.[17] |
| Pennsylvania State University | University Park, Pennsylvania | 1990 | Nittany Lions | Hosts THON, the largest student-run philanthropy event, raising over $15 million annually for pediatric cancer research.[17] |
| Purdue University | West Lafayette, Indiana | 1896 | Boilermakers | Has produced more astronauts than any other public university in the U.S.[17] |
| Rutgers University–New Brunswick | New Brunswick, New Jersey | 2014 | Scarlet Knights | Hosted the first intercollegiate football game in U.S. history on November 6, 1869.[17] |
| University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) | Los Angeles, California | 2024 | Bruins | Ranked as the top public university in the U.S. by U.S. News & World Report in 2025.[17] |
| University of Oregon | Eugene, Oregon | 2024 | Ducks | Secured eight conference titles across various sports in their inaugural Big Ten season of 2024.[17] |
| University of Southern California (USC) | Los Angeles, California | 2024 | Trojans | Has participated in a record 34 Rose Bowls, winning 25.[17] |
| University of Washington | Seattle, Washington | 2024 | Huskies | Husky Stadium recorded 133.6 decibels during a 1992 game, the loudest on-campus college football stadium noise.[17] |
| University of Wisconsin–Madison | Madison, Wisconsin | 1896 | Badgers | Famous for the "Jump Around" tradition at Camp Randall Stadium during football games.[17] |
Affiliate members
The Big Ten Conference maintains affiliations with two institutions that participate exclusively in select sports, allowing the league to sponsor additional championships without requiring full membership commitments. These affiliate arrangements enable the conference to meet NCAA requirements for minimum team counts in specific sports while leveraging the academic and athletic strengths of non-full members.[2] Johns Hopkins University became the conference's first affiliate member on June 3, 2013, joining for men's lacrosse effective with the 2014 season; this addition brought the sport to six teams, qualifying it as an official Big Ten championship discipline with an automatic NCAA tournament berth.[2] On June 17, 2015, Johns Hopkins was also accepted as an affiliate for women's lacrosse, starting in the 2016-17 academic year, expanding that sport's conference footprint to eight teams.[1] This affiliation supports the Big Ten's East Coast presence in lacrosse—a sport with strong regional roots—without integrating Johns Hopkins' entire athletic department, which competes independently in other areas.[2] The University of Notre Dame joined as an affiliate member for men's ice hockey on March 23, 2016, with competition beginning in the 2017-18 season; this move increased the Big Ten hockey league to seven teams, enhancing scheduling and postseason opportunities. Like Johns Hopkins, Notre Dame's arrangement is limited to this single sport, preserving its independence in football and other athletics while contributing to the conference's Midwest-centric hockey alignment.[18]Former members
The University of Chicago was a founding member of the Big Ten Conference, officially joining the Intercollegiate Conference of Faculty Representatives—later renamed the Western Conference and eventually the Big Ten—starting with the 1896 football season.[19] The university maintained full membership for five decades, participating in conference-sponsored sports alongside other Midwestern institutions.[2] In the summer of 1946, the University of Chicago withdrew its membership from the Big Ten across all sports, reducing the conference to nine full members.[19] This decision stemmed from a deliberate de-emphasis on intercollegiate athletics, driven by President Robert Maynard Hutchins' opposition to the excesses of big-time college football, which had already led to the abolition of the university's football program in 1939.[19] The move reflected a prioritization of academic pursuits over competitive athletics, aligning with the institution's evolving mission.[4] Since the University of Chicago's departure in 1946, no other institution has permanently left the Big Ten as a full member.[2] As of November 2025, discussions regarding potential future membership changes—primarily focused on expansion rather than departures—have occurred amid ongoing conference realignments, but none have been enacted that would result in additional full member exits.[20]Membership timeline and map
The Big Ten Conference's membership has evolved significantly since its founding in 1896, reflecting strategic expansions that have shaped its identity as a premier athletic conference. A chronological timeline illustrates this growth: The conference began on February 8, 1896, as the Intercollegiate Conference of Faculty Representatives with seven charter members—University of Chicago, University of Illinois, University of Michigan, University of Minnesota, Northwestern University, Purdue University, and University of Wisconsin—focused on regulating intercollegiate athletics among Midwestern institutions.[2] Indiana University and University of Iowa joined in 1899, bringing the total to nine members.[2] Ohio State University was added in 1912, solidifying the conference's core Midwest footprint, while the University of Michigan temporarily departed from 1908 to 1917 before rejoining.[2] The University of Chicago withdrew in 1946 after shifting focus to academics, reducing membership to nine, and Michigan State University joined in 1949 (effective 1950 for full competition), restoring the conference to ten members and earning its informal "Big Ten" moniker.[2] Penn State University joined in 1990, expanding eastward, followed by University of Nebraska in 2011, which extended the conference's reach into the Great Plains.[2] The most transformative phase occurred in 2014 with the addition of University of Maryland and Rutgers University, marking the first East Coast inclusions and boosting media market access.[2] In 2024, the conference underwent its largest expansion by welcoming University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), University of Southern California (USC), University of Oregon, and University of Washington from the dissolving Pac-12 Conference, increasing full membership to 18 institutions and creating a transcontinental presence.[2] An accompanying interactive map highlights the conference's geographical evolution and current distribution, visualizing the shift from a compact Midwestern cluster to a broad network spanning multiple regions. Early members were concentrated in the Upper Midwest, with institutions like Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Michigan State, Minnesota, Northwestern, Ohio State, Purdue, and Wisconsin forming a core around the Great Lakes.[2] Subsequent additions extended this footprint: Nebraska to the west-central plains, Penn State to the Northeast, and Maryland and Rutgers to the Mid-Atlantic and New York metropolitan area.[2] The 2024 inclusions dramatically widened the scope to the Pacific Coast, placing UCLA and USC in Southern California, and Oregon and Washington in the Pacific Northwest, resulting in a map that stretches over 4,000 miles from coast to coast.[2] This layout underscores the conference's emphasis on academic alignment and competitive balance across diverse locales, with no further membership alterations announced as of November 2025, indicating stability at 18 full members for the foreseeable future.[2][21]Academics and governance
Academic profile and requirements
The Big Ten Conference maintains rigorous academic standards for student-athlete eligibility, aligning with NCAA Division I requirements while emphasizing conference-specific progress toward degree completion. Prospective freshmen must complete 16 core courses in high school—covering English (4 years), mathematics (3 years), natural/physical science (2 years), social science (2 years), the same foreign language (2 years), and 3 additional years from any core area—and achieve a minimum 2.3 GPA in these courses on a 4.0 scale.[22] Once enrolled, student-athletes must maintain full-time status (at least 12 credits per semester), pass a minimum of 18 credits in the regular academic year, and meet escalating GPA thresholds, such as 1.8 cumulatively after the first semester and 2.0 thereafter, to remain eligible.[23] A cornerstone of the conference's academic emphasis is the Big Ten Academic Alliance (BTAA), a consortium of member institutions originally founded in 1958 as the Committee on Institutional Cooperation (CIC) and rebranded in 2016 to better reflect its scope and membership.[24] The BTAA facilitates collaborative initiatives, including joint research projects like the Big Ten Open Books series on Indigenous North American studies and open-access publishing agreements with entities such as Springer Nature, enabling unlimited access in over 2,200 hybrid journals.[25] It also coordinates library resources, uniting collections across 18 universities into a shared, networked system to enhance scholarly access and efficiency.[26] Additionally, the alliance supports distance learning through programs like CourseShare, which has provided instruction in less-commonly taught languages to students across member schools for over 20 years.[25] Student-athletes in the Big Ten demonstrate strong academic outcomes, with Graduation Success Rates (GSR) exceeding 90% across most programs and sports, surpassing the national Division I average of 91%.[27] For instance, institutions like Northwestern University reported a 98% GSR in 2024, leading the conference for the 20th consecutive year, while others such as Penn State and Nebraska achieved 93%.[28] These rates reflect the conference's commitment to balancing athletics with education, with federal graduation rates for athletes also ranking highly, such as Michigan State's 80% four-year rate placing third in the Big Ten.[29] In 2025, the Big Ten introduced enhanced guidelines for mental health support and Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) academic integration, prompted by the approval of the House v. NCAA settlement. These updates mandate expanded resources, including dedicated mental health services, nutritional guidance, and life skills programming tailored to NIL activities, with institutions required to provide academic advising to ensure NIL pursuits do not compromise degree progress.[30] The settlement enables direct revenue sharing up to $20.5 million per school starting in the 2025-26 academic year, alongside NIL oversight mechanisms like fair market value reviews for deals over $600, further prioritizing holistic student-athlete well-being.[31]Commissioners
The Big Ten Conference established the position of commissioner in 1922 to centralize athletic administration and enforcement among its member institutions.[1] The role has evolved from focusing on basic governance and eligibility rules to negotiating multimillion-dollar media rights deals and guiding major expansions in the modern era. As of 2025, seven individuals have served in this capacity, each contributing to the conference's growth amid changing landscapes in intercollegiate athletics.[1] Major John L. Griffith served as the inaugural commissioner from 1922 to 1945, a 23-year tenure marked by professionalizing conference operations post-World War I.[32] Griffith, a former University of Chicago athletic director, implemented uniform eligibility standards and oversaw the conference's response to early scandals, such as player payments, while fostering rivalries that boosted fan interest.[33] His leadership laid the groundwork for the Big Ten's reputation as a pioneer in academic-athletic balance.[1] Kenneth L. "Tug" Wilson succeeded Griffith in 1945 and held the position until 1961, spanning 16 years during the post-World War II boom in college sports.[1] A former University of Illinois track coach, Wilson navigated the integration of television into broadcasts, negotiating the conference's first national TV contracts that increased visibility and revenue for member schools. He also emphasized sportsmanship initiatives amid rising attendance and professionalization pressures.[33] William R. "Bill" Reed led from 1961 to 1971, a decade-long term focused on adapting to civil rights movements and federal regulations.[1] Reed, previously Iowa's athletic director, strengthened academic eligibility requirements and supported the early enforcement of gender equity principles ahead of Title IX. His tenure saw the conference maintain competitive dominance in football while prioritizing institutional integrity.[1] Wayne Duke's 18-year stint from 1971 to 1989 emphasized governance reforms and financial stability.[1] As the first commissioner without prior coaching experience, Duke facilitated the creation of the Big Ten Advisory Commission in 1972, a faculty-led body to address racial incidents and promote diversity in athletics.[34] He also secured expanded TV deals and navigated the 1980s economic challenges, ensuring equitable resource distribution among the then-eight members. Jim Delany's transformative 31-year tenure from 1989 to 2020 positioned the Big Ten as a media powerhouse.[1] Delany, a former NCAA executive, launched the Big Ten Network in 2006 in partnership with Fox, generating over $1 billion in annual revenue by the end of his term through innovative content distribution. He drove key expansions, adding Penn State in 1990, Nebraska in 2011, and Maryland and Rutgers in 2014, which broadened the conference's East Coast footprint and boosted commercial value. Delany also advocated for the College Football Playoff's creation in 2014, elevating the Big Ten's national profile. Kevin Warren, the first African American commissioner, served from 2020 to 2023, a three-year term overshadowed by the COVID-19 pandemic.[1] Previously the Big Ten's chief operating officer, Warren managed the 2020 fall football season's initial postponement and resumption amid health protocols, prioritizing student-athlete welfare. His most enduring achievement was spearheading the 2022 addition of USC and UCLA, set to join in 2024, which expanded the conference to 16 teams and secured a transformative $7 billion media rights deal with NBC, CBS, and Fox starting in 2023. Tony Petitti assumed the role on May 16, 2023, becoming the seventh commissioner with a background in Major League Baseball operations and Turner Sports media rights.[35] His tenure, ongoing as of 2025, has overseen the seamless integration of USC and UCLA in August 2024, enhancing the conference's West Coast presence and competitive depth in football and basketball. In 2025, Petitti has led negotiations for a proposed $2 billion private capital infusion through a new entity, Big Ten Enterprises, aimed at bolstering media and sponsorship revenues while extending grant-of-rights agreements, though the deal remains in a holding pattern amid member concerns over long-term control.[36]Executive structure and key personnel
The Big Ten Conference maintains its headquarters at 5440 Park Place in Rosemont, Illinois, a facility that serves as the central hub for administrative operations, meetings, and the Big Ten Experience museum.[3] The executive structure is hierarchical, with the commissioner functioning as the chief executive officer (CEO) responsible for overall leadership and strategic direction, supported by a chief operating officer, deputy commissioner, and specialized senior vice presidents overseeing key functional areas such as sports administration, policy and compliance, legal affairs, and community impact.[37] This organization ensures coordinated management of conference-wide initiatives in athletics, academics, and governance, aligning with the oversight role of the commissioner as established in prior governance frameworks.[38] Key personnel at the executive level include Commissioner Tony Petitti, who leads the conference's operations and decision-making processes.[37] Chief Operating Officer Kerry Kenny manages day-to-day administrative functions and resource allocation across the conference.[37] Deputy Commissioner Diane Dietz assists in high-level strategy and coordination of conference activities.[37] Chief Legal Officer and General Counsel Anil Gollahalli handles legal compliance, contracts, and risk management for all conference matters.[37] In specialized roles, Senior Vice President of Sports Administration Rebecca Pany directs oversight of competitive operations and event management for sponsored sports.[37] Senior Vice President of Policy and Compliance Chad Hawley leads efforts in regulatory adherence, including academic eligibility standards and competitive equity rules.[37] The conference's Chief Medical Officer, Dr. James Borchers, advises on health and wellness protocols for student-athletes across member institutions.[39] The Council of Athletic Directors, comprising representatives from each member school's athletics leadership, provides advisory input on operational and competitive policies, though it operates without a publicly designated chair in 2025 documentation.[38] As of August 2025, the staff directory reflects ongoing adaptations to evolving NCAA regulations, including enhanced focus on name, image, and likeness (NIL) guidelines and transfer portal procedures within the compliance division.[37]Finances and media
Revenue and distribution by school
The Big Ten Conference generated just over $928 million in total revenue during its 2024 fiscal year (July 2023–June 2024), a 5.5% increase from the prior year, primarily driven by media rights and sponsorships.[40] Prior to the 2024 expansion adding USC, UCLA, Oregon, and Washington—bringing membership to 18—the conference's annual revenue approached $1 billion, but the influx of West Coast markets has accelerated growth, with projections exceeding $1.2 billion for the 2025 fiscal year.[41] Revenue distribution follows a largely equal-share model among full members, with limited adjustments for schools that joined more recently under phased-in agreements to account for their lower historical contributions to conference value. In the 2024 fiscal year, the 12 original full-share members (pre-2014 additions) each received between $63.26 million and $63.43 million, while Maryland and Rutgers—2014 additions—received $61.52 million apiece; Nebraska, which joined in 2011, received a full share.[40] For the 2025 fiscal year, post-expansion distributions are budgeted at approximately $75 million per school for 16 members (the prior 14 plus full shares for USC and UCLA), with Oregon and Washington slated for reduced introductory shares of around $70 million to ease their integration.[41][40] This structure emphasizes equity but has sparked discussions about incorporating competitive performance or academic bonuses, though no major changes have been implemented.[42] Disparities arise mainly from entry terms rather than ongoing performance metrics, as the Big Ten avoids the tiered success-based models seen in conferences like the ACC. However, individual schools' total athletics revenues—incorporating conference payouts plus ticket sales, donations, and NCAA funds—vary significantly; for instance, Ohio State reported approximately $255 million in overall athletics revenue for 2024, far outpacing smaller programs like Purdue at around $135 million.[43][44] These differences highlight how conference distributions form the core but not the entirety of fiscal health. In October 2025, the conference advanced toward a vote on a proposed $2.4 billion private capital infusion from investors like UC Investments, aimed at funding facilities upgrades and debt relief across members, with an extension of media rights grants through 2046.[45] The one-time payouts would be tiered by brand value and historical contributions, potentially delivering over $100 million each to top programs like Ohio State and Michigan, while lower-tier schools receive less, marking a departure from standard equal shares.[46] As of November 17, 2025, the agreement has been paused indefinitely amid concerns from schools like Michigan and USC over long-term costs, with no final approval confirmed.[45]| School | 2024 FY Conference Distribution ($M) | 2025 FY Projected Distribution ($M) |
|---|---|---|
| Illinois | 63.3 | 75 |
| Indiana | 63.3 | 75 |
| Iowa | 63.3 | 75 |
| Maryland | 61.5 | 75 |
| Michigan | 63.3 | 75 |
| Michigan State | 63.3 | 75 |
| Minnesota | 63.3 | 75 |
| Nebraska | 63.3 | 75 |
| Northwestern | 63.3 | 75 |
| Ohio State | 63.3 | 75 |
| Penn State | 63.3 | 75 |
| Purdue | 63.3 | 75 |
| Rutgers | 61.5 | 75 |
| Wisconsin | 63.3 | 75 |
| USC | N/A | 75 |
| UCLA | N/A | 75 |
| Oregon | N/A | ~70 (introductory) |
| Washington | N/A | ~70 (introductory) |
Broadcasting rights and agreements
The Big Ten Conference's broadcasting rights have evolved through a series of landmark agreements that have expanded media exposure and revenue for its member institutions. In 2006, the conference secured a 10-year national rights contract with ABC and ESPN, valued at approximately $1 billion, which included up to 17 football games on ABC and 25 on ESPN or ESPN2, alongside regional afternoon games and basketball coverage. Concurrently, a groundbreaking partnership with Fox Cable Networks launched the Big Ten Network (BTN) in 2007, a 25-year deal worth $2.8 billion that provided the conference with a dedicated platform for over 1,000 events annually, including non-revenue sports and original programming. This dual structure with ESPN/ABC for premium linear broadcasts and BTN for broader access marked a pioneering model in college athletics media. The 2017-2022 period saw the Big Ten extend its media presence with a six-year agreement totaling $2.64 billion, where Fox served as the primary partner through BTN for the majority of content, while ESPN retained rights to select high-profile football games for about $1 billion. CBS gained an expanded role, securing exclusive rights to the Big Ten men's basketball tournament and select regular-season games, enhancing weekend afternoon visibility. These deals maintained BTN's central role in distributing Olympic sports and additional football/basketball matchups, while collectively boosting the conference's annual media revenue to around $440 million. In August 2022, the Big Ten announced a transformative seven-year media rights package beginning July 1, 2023, and running through the 2029-30 academic year, valued at more than $7 billion—the largest in college sports history at the time. Fox remains the primary rights holder, airing 25-32 football games annually on Fox and FS1, including the championship game in odd-numbered years like 2023, 2025, and 2027. NBC joined as a key partner, broadcasting 14-16 football games per season in a primetime "Big Ten Saturday Night" window, with all simulcast on Peacock, which also streams eight exclusive games, including four intraconference matchups. CBS continues with 14-15 football games and expanded basketball coverage, such as the tournament semifinals and championship. This multi-network approach ensures wide distribution across broadcast, cable, and streaming platforms, with Peacock providing enhanced digital access to full slates of football and basketball. The Big Ten Network, co-owned by the conference (49%) and Fox Corporation (51%), operates as the conference's multimedia arm, producing and distributing content across linear TV, BTN+, and digital platforms. As of 2025, BTN reaches tens of millions of households via major cable providers, including a recent multi-year carriage agreement with DISH Network, and plans to air nearly 500 men's and women's basketball games this season alone, underscoring its expansive Olympic and non-revenue sports coverage. In late 2025, the conference is engaged in discussions for potential extensions and enhancements, including a proposed $2.4 billion private capital infusion to bolster media rights management through a new entity, Big Ten Enterprises, alongside tie-ins to the College Football Playoff's six-year, $7.8 billion ESPN extension through 2032, which supports expanded postseason exposure.[45] These talks also encompass support for basketball tournament growth, aligning with the current deal's provisions for increased linear and streaming broadcasts. Overall, these agreements have driven substantial revenue growth for the conference, as detailed in the prior section on finances.Sports overview
Sponsored sports
The Big Ten Conference sponsors 28 official NCAA Division I sports—14 for men and 14 for women—across its 18 member institutions, fostering broad-based athletic competition that emphasizes both excellence and gender equity.[1] These sports encompass a mix of revenue-generating programs like football and basketball alongside Olympic-style disciplines, with conference championships determining automatic NCAA qualifiers in most cases.[47] Men's sponsored sports include baseball, basketball, cross country, football, golf, gymnastics, ice hockey, lacrosse, soccer, swimming and diving, tennis, track and field (indoor and outdoor counted as one for sponsorship), and wrestling.[1] Championship formats vary by sport: football crowns its champion through a postseason game between the top two teams based on conference winning percentage, eliminating traditional divisions since the 2024 season to accommodate the expanded membership; basketball features a single-elimination tournament, with the 2025 edition including 15 teams and plans to expand to all 18 teams starting in 2026; baseball employs a pool-play format leading to semifinals and a final; while cross country, track and field, and swimming and diving determine champions via meets involving all competitors or top qualifiers.[48][49] Women's sponsored sports include basketball, cross country, field hockey, golf, gymnastics, ice hockey, lacrosse, rowing, soccer, softball, swimming and diving, tennis, track and field (indoor and outdoor counted as one for sponsorship), and volleyball.[1] Tournament structures mirror the men's in many cases, such as the basketball single-elimination event (15 teams in 2025, expanding to 18 in 2026) and soccer's multi-round playoff with opening games for lower seeds leading to quarterfinals, semifinals, and a championship; volleyball awards its title based on regular-season standings without a postseason tournament, while field hockey, lacrosse, and softball use bracket formats for top teams.[50][47] In addition to its sponsored sports, the Big Ten recognizes women's bowling as an emerging discipline, though it does not conduct a conference championship; member institutions like Nebraska and Maryland field competitive teams that compete individually in the NCAA Championship.[51] This recognition supports broader participation opportunities, with over 12,000 student-athletes across all Big Ten sports as of 2025.[52]Participation tables by school
The Big Ten Conference's 18 member institutions collectively support approximately 12,000 student-athletes participating in its 28 official sports (14 for men and 14 for women) as of the 2025-26 academic year.[1] While many schools sponsor the full complement of sports in their gender category, variations exist due to regional traditions, facilities, and program priorities; for example, Michigan sponsors all 14 men's sports, while Rutgers does not sponsor men's wrestling, and Oregon does not sponsor men's ice hockey.[53] These differences reflect the conference's broad geographic footprint spanning the Midwest, East Coast, and West Coast.[2]Men's Sponsored Sports
The following table summarizes the number of the 14 official men's sports sponsored by each Big Ten school, along with key variations. The official men's sports are baseball, basketball, cross country, football, golf, gymnastics, ice hockey, lacrosse, soccer, swimming and diving, tennis, track and field (indoor), track and field (outdoor), and wrestling.[1]| School | Number Sponsored | Key Variations (Sports Not Sponsored) |
|---|---|---|
| Illinois | 14 | None |
| Indiana | 12 | No gymnastics, ice hockey, lacrosse |
| Iowa | 13 | No lacrosse |
| Maryland | 13 | No gymnastics, ice hockey |
| Michigan | 14 | None |
| Michigan State | 13 | No gymnastics, lacrosse |
| Minnesota | 14 | None |
| Nebraska | 13 | No lacrosse |
| Northwestern | 13 | No gymnastics, ice hockey |
| Ohio State | 14 | None |
| Penn State | 14 | None |
| Purdue | 12 | No gymnastics, ice hockey, lacrosse |
| Rutgers | 12 | No gymnastics, ice hockey, wrestling |
| Wisconsin | 14 | None |
| Oregon | 8 | No gymnastics, ice hockey, lacrosse, soccer, swimming and diving, wrestling |
| Washington | 9 | No gymnastics, ice hockey, lacrosse, swimming and diving, wrestling |
| UCLA | 10 | No ice hockey, lacrosse, wrestling |
| USC | 10 | No gymnastics, ice hockey, lacrosse, wrestling |
Women's Sponsored Sports
All 18 Big Ten schools sponsor at least 12 of the 14 official women's sports, with fewer variations than in men's programs. The official women's sports are basketball, cross country, field hockey, golf, gymnastics, ice hockey, lacrosse, rowing, soccer, softball, swimming and diving, tennis, track and field (indoor), and volleyball. Field hockey and ice hockey are the most common omissions, particularly among West Coast schools.[1]| School | Number Sponsored | Key Variations (Sports Not Sponsored) |
|---|---|---|
| Illinois | 14 | None |
| Indiana | 13 | No field hockey |
| Iowa | 13 | No field hockey, rowing |
| Maryland | 14 | None |
| Michigan | 14 | None |
| Michigan State | 14 | None |
| Minnesota | 14 | None |
| Nebraska | 13 | No field hockey |
| Northwestern | 14 | None |
| Ohio State | 14 | None |
| Penn State | 14 | None |
| Purdue | 13 | No field hockey |
| Rutgers | 14 | None |
| Wisconsin | 14 | None |
| Oregon | 12 | No field hockey, ice hockey |
| Washington | 12 | No field hockey, ice hockey |
| UCLA | 12 | No field hockey, ice hockey |
| USC | 12 | No field hockey, ice hockey |
Facilities
Football and baseball stadiums
The Big Ten Conference features some of the largest and most historic football stadiums in college athletics, with capacities ranging from over 100,000 to around 12,000 seats as of the 2025 season. Michigan Stadium, known as "The Big House," holds the distinction of being the largest stadium in the United States at 107,601 seats and is renowned for its massive crowds and tradition of standing throughout games.[55] Beaver Stadium at Penn State follows closely with 106,572 seats, famous for its "White Out" nights where fans wear white to create a striking visual and auditory environment. Ohio Stadium, or "The Horseshoe," accommodates 102,780 spectators and is celebrated for its horseshoe-shaped design and passionate Buckeye faithful. The Rose Bowl in Pasadena, shared by UCLA, seats 91,136 and serves as a national landmark, hosting not only Big Ten games but also the annual Rose Bowl Game. Other notable venues include Memorial Stadium at Nebraska (85,485 seats), known for its "Sea of Red" atmosphere, and the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum for USC (77,500 seats), a historic site that hosted the 1932 and 1984 Olympics.[55]| School | Stadium Name | Capacity | Unique Features |
|---|---|---|---|
| Michigan | Michigan Stadium | 107,601 | Largest U.S. stadium; record crowd of 115,109 in 2013. |
| Penn State | Beaver Stadium | 106,572 | White Out tradition; record attendance 110,889 in 2018. |
| Ohio State | Ohio Stadium | 102,780 | Horseshoe design; record 110,045 in 2016. |
| UCLA | Rose Bowl | 91,136 | Olympic venue; record 106,689 in 1973 Rose Bowl. |
| Nebraska | Memorial Stadium | 85,485 | Sea of Red; record 91,585 in 2014. |
| USC | Los Angeles Coliseum | 77,500 | National Historic Landmark; record 104,953 in 1947. |
| Wisconsin | Camp Randall Stadium | 80,321 | Jump Around tradition; record 83,184 in 2005. |
| Michigan State | Spartan Stadium | 74,866 | Midwest rivalry hub; record 75,802 in 2016. |
| Washington | Husky Stadium | 70,083 | Sailgating overlooking Lake Washington. |
| Iowa | Kinnick Stadium | 69,250 | Wave for children's hospital; intense home-field advantage. |
| Illinois | Memorial Stadium | 60,670 | WWI memorial; record 78,297 in 1984. |
| Purdue | Ross-Ade Stadium | 61,441 | Tradition-rich; record 71,629 in 1980. |
| Oregon | Autzen Stadium | 54,000 | Renowned for noise levels; record 60,129 in 2024. |
| Indiana | Memorial Stadium | 52,626 | Record 56,088 in 2025. |
| Rutgers | SHI Stadium | 52,454 | Record 55,942 in 2025. |
| Maryland | SECU Stadium | 51,802 | Record 58,973 in 1975. |
| Minnesota | Huntington Bank Stadium | 50,805 | Opened 2009; record 54,157 in 2015. |
| Northwestern | Northwestern Medicine Field at Martin Stadium (temporary for 2025) | 12,023 | Temporary on-campus venue during Ryan Field reconstruction; two 2025 home games at Wrigley Field (capacity 41,649). |
Basketball and multipurpose arenas
The Big Ten Conference's basketball programs primarily utilize on-campus arenas that serve as homes for both men's and women's teams, with many facilities designed as multipurpose venues to accommodate volleyball, gymnastics, and occasionally soccer or other indoor events. These arenas vary in size and design, reflecting the diverse architectural styles and renovation histories across the conference's 18 member institutions. Capacities range from intimate settings to large-scale environments, fostering atmospheres renowned for passionate fan support that contributes to the conference's status as a leader in college basketball attendance.[60] Among the notable venues, Ohio State's Value City Arena stands as the largest, with a capacity of 18,809 seats, hosting high-energy games that regularly draw crowds exceeding 15,000. Similarly, Maryland's Xfinity Center offers 17,950 seats and doubles as a multipurpose facility for women's volleyball and other athletic events, emphasizing its versatility in supporting multiple sports programs. On the smaller end, Rutgers' Louis Brown Athletic Center provides 8,000 seats in a compact, focused environment ideal for building intense game-day energy. Iconic examples include Michigan's Crisler Center, a 12,721-seat arena renovated in recent years to enhance sightlines and acoustics while serving as a hub for basketball and volleyball. UCLA's Pauley Pavilion, with its 13,800 capacity, exemplifies historic multipurpose design, accommodating basketball alongside volleyball and hosting events that blend athletic and entertainment uses since its 1965 opening and 2012 modernization.[61] Attendance records underscore the venues' draw; for instance, Indiana's Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall averaged 16,447 fans per game in the 2024-25 season, leading the Big Ten for the third straight year and ranking among the national top 10, with frequent sellouts in its 17,222 seats.[62] Purdue's Mackey Arena has similarly set benchmarks, achieving a conference-high average of over 14,000 in recent seasons within its 14,848 seats, bolstered by its steep seating bowl that amplifies crowd noise.[60] In 2025, Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall underwent updates including a refinished Branch McCracken Court, introducing a more modern aesthetic with enhanced patterns and finishes ahead of the 2025-26 basketball seasons, while maintaining its role as a premier multipurpose space.[63] Overall, the conference's arenas have collectively hosted over 3.3 million fans in home games during the 2024-25 season alone, with several venues like these occasionally selected for NCAA tournament early rounds due to their proven infrastructure and atmosphere.[64]Other sport-specific venues
The Big Ten Conference supports men's ice hockey across seven member institutions, with dedicated arenas serving as primary venues for regular-season games and conference tournaments. Following the conference's 2024 expansion, these facilities continue to host all postseason play on campus sites, aligning with a revised tournament format that emphasizes single-elimination matchups without geographic divisions to accommodate the uneven number of teams. Notable examples include Yost Ice Arena at the University of Michigan, which seats approximately 6,800 spectators and has been the Wolverines' home since 1973 after renovations expanded its original capacity. Other key venues encompass the Kohl Center at the University of Wisconsin (15,511 seats for hockey), 3M Arena at Mariucci for the University of Minnesota (9,700 seats), and the Jerome Schottenstein Center at Ohio State University (17,500 seats), the largest on-campus hockey arena in the nation.[65][66][67][68] Munn Ice Arena at Michigan State University (6,470 seats) and Pegula Ice Arena at Penn State (5,704 seats) round out the core facilities, while Notre Dame's affiliate status utilizes Compton Family Ice Arena (5,000 seats).[69][70] Men's and women's lacrosse programs, bolstered by Johns Hopkins as a sport-specific affiliate member since 2014, rely on specialized outdoor fields optimized for the sport's demands. Homewood Field at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore serves as a historic centerpiece, with a capacity of 8,500 and origins dating to 1908; it hosts Blue Jays home games and has been the site of multiple Big Ten tournaments, including semifinals and championships.[71] Other prominent venues include U-M Lacrosse Stadium at Michigan (2,000 seats, opened 2018) and the Field Hockey & Lacrosse Complex at Maryland, which features synthetic turf and seating for over 1,000, supporting both conference play and NCAA events.[72][73] Track and field competitions utilize world-class outdoor stadiums, particularly following the 2024 addition of West Coast members with elite facilities. Hayward Field at the University of Oregon in Eugene, renowned for its renovated nine-lane track and grandstand seating for 12,650, hosted the 2025 Big Ten Outdoor Championships (May 16-18), marking the first such event post-expansion and drawing competitors from all 18 institutions.[74][75] This venue's configuration, including a 400-meter oval and event-specific zones, exemplifies the conference's emphasis on high-performance standards. Indoor meets, such as the 2025 championships at Indiana State Fairgrounds (February 28-March 1), leverage multipurpose spaces for combined men's and women's events.[76] Post-2024 expansion, shared facilities have facilitated cross-regional competitions in these sports, with rotating hosts like Hayward Field enabling equitable access to premier infrastructure without requiring new builds at every school. For instance, the addition of Oregon, Washington, USC, and UCLA integrates their existing venues—such as USC's Cromwell Field for track—into conference scheduling, promoting collaborative use for tournaments and reducing logistical burdens.[77][78]Rivalries
Intra-conference football rivalries
The Big Ten Conference's intra-conference football rivalries are a cornerstone of the league's tradition, emphasizing historic, geographic, and cultural matchups that heighten fan engagement and competition. Following the 2024 expansion to 18 teams—including the addition of Oregon, UCLA, USC, and Washington—the conference adopted the Flex Protect XVIII scheduling model, which designates 12 protected annual rivalries to preserve these fixtures while ensuring each team plays nine intraconference games per season. Under this format, most teams have three protected opponents, with games rotating to guarantee every opponent is faced at least twice (home and away) within a four-year cycle. This structure revives dormant rivalries, such as Oregon-Washington, while safeguarding classics like Michigan-Ohio State.[79] The protected series, announced in October 2023, blend longstanding Big Ten traditions with integrations from the former Pac-12 members. These matchups are played every year regardless of overall scheduling, fostering continuity amid the divisionless format introduced in 2024.| Protected Rivalry | Trophy (if applicable) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Illinois–Northwestern | None | Geographic rivals in the Chicago area. |
| Illinois–Purdue | None | Traditional Midwest matchup. |
| Indiana–Purdue | Old Oaken Bucket | Annual in-state battle since 1925. |
| Iowa–Minnesota | Floyd of Rosedale | Pig trophy awarded since 1935. |
| Iowa–Nebraska | None | Revived as protected post-2011 alignment. |
| Iowa–Wisconsin | Heartland Trophy | Awarded since 2008 for Heartland regional pride. |
| Maryland–Rutgers | None | East Coast geographic pairing. |
| Michigan–Michigan State | Paul Bunyan Trophy | In-state rivalry trophy since 1950. |
| Michigan–Ohio State | None (known as "The Game") | Premier Big Ten rivalry since 1897. |
| Minnesota–Wisconsin | Paul Bunyan's Axe | Axe trophy since 1948 (revived from 1891 tradition). |
| Oregon–Washington | None | Revived annual series from Pac-12 era, emphasizing Pacific Northwest ties. |
| UCLA–USC | Victory Bell | Southern California crosstown rivalry since 1929. |
Extra-conference football rivalries
The Big Ten Conference has a rich history of football rivalries extending beyond its own membership, fostering intense matchups with independent programs and teams from other conferences that have shaped national narratives and regional identities. These extra-conference series often date back decades, featuring high-stakes games in regular seasons and bowls that highlight contrasting styles and traditions. While intra-conference protected rivalries dominate scheduling, these external clashes have provided opportunities for Big Ten teams to test themselves against elite non-league opponents, contributing to playoff resumes and cultural lore. The 2025 Big Ten expansion has preserved core traditions without major disruptions to external series.[79] One of the most storied extra-conference rivalries involves Michigan and Notre Dame, an independent program, with the series originating in 1888 and spanning 44 meetings through 2019. Michigan holds a 25-18-1 all-time edge, including an 11-6 home record and 8-11-1 away, with the Wolverines securing the last victory, 45-14, in 2019 after a long hiatus that began in 1943 and saw sporadic renewals. This matchup, known for its Catholic-Protestant undertones and Midwest prestige, has produced legendary games like Notre Dame's 1909 upset in Ann Arbor, which shocked the college football world and elevated the Fighting Irish's national profile; the series' intensity stems from both programs' claims to gridiron supremacy, though scheduling conflicts have limited recent play.[89][90] Penn State and Alabama, from the Southeastern Conference, have clashed 15 times since 1959, primarily in bowl settings that carried national championship implications, with Alabama leading 10-5 overall, including 4-2 records both home and away. Key encounters include Penn State's 7-0 Liberty Bowl win in 1959, Alabama's 13-6 Sugar Bowl victory in 1975 to christen the Superdome, and the iconic 14-7 Sugar Bowl triumph in 1979, where the Crimson Tide's goal-line stand preserved their title amid a duel between undefeated teams. These games, extended into a regular-season streak from 1982 to 1990 (Alabama 5-4-0 in that span), underscored defensive battles and coaching legends like Joe Paterno and Bear Bryant, cementing the series as a benchmark for East-West football excellence despite no meetings since 2011.[91][92][93] Following the 2024 addition of USC to the Big Ten, the Trojans' longstanding rivalry with Notre Dame—dating to 1926 and played nearly annually since 1927—remains an extra-conference fixture, as the Fighting Irish maintain football independence. Notre Dame leads the series 53-38-5 through 2025, a margin reflecting eras of dominance, such as the Irish's 15-3-1 stretch from 1982 to 2000, with the Jeweled Shillelagh trophy symbolizing victories and the late-season timing often deciding conference or playoff fates. Dubbed the "Granddaddy of intersectional rivalries," it bridged coasts and influenced college football's national scope, producing NFL talent and dramatic finishes like USC's 2005 Bush Push; however, post-expansion talks in 2025 have raised concerns about its continuation beyond the 2025 game due to playoff scheduling pressures, though no changes have been confirmed as of November 2025.[94][95][96] The Big Ten's adoption of a nine-game conference schedule, formalized in the Flex Protect XVIII model for the 18-team era starting in 2024, has curtailed opportunities for extra-conference rivalries by limiting teams to three non-conference games annually—often one against a lower-division foe, a regional matchup, and a marquee opponent. This structure prioritizes 12 protected intra-conference series, such as Michigan-Ohio State, to preserve core traditions, but it squeezes out sustained external series like Michigan-Notre Dame unless explicitly contracted, potentially diminishing their frequency and cultural weight in favor of playoff preparation. As a result, historic non-Big Ten clashes may evolve into occasional events rather than annual fixtures, reflecting the conference's shift toward internal competition in an expanded landscape.[79][97]Basketball and other sport rivalries
In basketball, the Big Ten Conference features several storied rivalries that extend beyond football, emphasizing regional pride and competitive balance on the court. The Indiana–Purdue matchup, often called the Crossroads Classic in its modern iteration, traces its origins to 1901 and has amassed 221 meetings, making it one of the most enduring series in college basketball.[98] This rivalry has been evenly contested in recent years, with a 3-3 split over the last six games, including Indiana's dramatic comeback from a 12-point deficit in their most recent encounter, highlighting its potential to sway conference title races.[98] Similarly, the Michigan–Michigan State clash, a cornerstone of the league's in-state battles, pits the Wolverines against the Spartans for supremacy in the Great Lakes region, with Michigan State leading 7-2 in the past nine meetings and sweeping the series in the prior season.[98] Ranked among the top five basketball rivalries nationally, these games frequently carry implications for Big Ten standings and NCAA Tournament seeding due to their intensity and fan fervor.[99] The 2024 expansion of the Big Ten to 18 members, incorporating former Pac-12 schools USC, UCLA, Oregon, and Washington, has introduced fresh dynamics to basketball rivalries, particularly the historic UCLA–USC crosstown series. Dating back to 1920, this intracity competition—now contested for the Victory Bell trophy within the conference—brings West Coast flair to the league, where USC holds a 75-30 all-time edge against legacy Big Ten opponents and UCLA follows at 47-43.[14] The addition elevates these matchups by integrating them into a broader schedule that respects protected rivalries while expanding travel and competitive scope, potentially fostering new West-East confrontations.[100] In men's hockey, the Minnesota–Wisconsin Border Battle stands as a hallmark of Big Ten intensity, rooted in the teams' adjacent states and their shared history in the Western Collegiate Hockey Association before the conference's formation in 2013.[101] Characterized by mutual "hatred" and played before massive crowds—often the largest opposing audiences of the season—this series underscores border-state animosity, with Wisconsin recently earning sweeps like a 4-0 shutout in 2025 to claim the trophy.[102][103] Wrestling rivalries in the Big Ten are epitomized by the Iowa–Penn State duel, which has redefined the sport's competitive landscape over the past 15 years through mutual dominance. Iowa leads the all-time dual series 28-14-2 through 2025 (44 meetings), having captured eight of 10 national titles in the 1990s and three straight from 2008 to 2010, while Penn State has responded with 11 championships since 2011 under coach Cael Sanderson, including their first since 1953.[104] Together, the programs have claimed 15 of the last 16 NCAA team titles, elevating individual stars like Iowa's Spencer Lee and Penn State's Zain Retherford, whose 2017 clash exemplified the series' high-stakes drama and innovation in training methodologies.[104] Recent duals, such as Penn State's 30-8 victory on January 31, 2025, continue to feature marquee bouts that draw national attention and influence recruiting across the conference.[105]Football
Conference format and divisions
The Big Ten Conference football schedule operates under a nine-game intraconference format, a structure maintained since the league's expansion to 18 teams in 2024. This model, known as Flex Protect XVIII, eliminates traditional divisions and instead determines the conference championship participants based on overall standings, with the top two teams advancing to the Big Ten Football Championship Game held annually at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis.[79][106] Central to the Flex Protect XVIII model is a system of protected rivalries designed to preserve historic and geographic matchups, ensuring 12 annual games are played every year across the conference. These protected series include: Illinois vs. Northwestern and Purdue; Indiana vs. Purdue; Iowa vs. Minnesota, Nebraska, and Wisconsin; Maryland vs. Rutgers; Michigan vs. Michigan State and Ohio State; Minnesota vs. Wisconsin; and Oregon vs. Washington, UCLA vs. USC. The remaining conference opponents rotate on a four-year cycle, with each team facing every other conference member at least twice (once home and once away) over a five-year period, and no more than three times against any rotating foe in that span to promote scheduling equity.[79][106] For the 2025 season, the format remains unchanged from 2024, marking the second year of this divisionaless approach and allowing teams to build a full 12-game regular season by scheduling three non-conference opponents alongside their nine Big Ten games. Flex scheduling provisions enable the conference to adjust select dates—such as moving games to Fridays, Labor Day Sunday, or Black Friday—for television and competitive balance, while tiebreakers for championship qualification follow criteria like head-to-head results, record against common opponents, and strength of schedule.[106][79]Championships and playoff participation
The Big Ten Conference has crowned football champions annually since 1896, with Michigan holding the most titles at 45, followed by Ohio State with 39. Other notable programs include Minnesota with 18 championships, Illinois with 15, Wisconsin with 14, Iowa with 11, Michigan State with 9, Purdue with 8, and Oregon with 1. The conference's championship structure evolved over time, initially determined by overall conference records without divisions until 2014, when a championship game was introduced following the addition of new members; this format continued until the elimination of divisions after the 2023 season, allowing the top two teams to compete for the title.[web:45] Recent champions include Oregon in 2024 (defeating Penn State 45–37 in the championship game), Michigan in 2023 (9–0 conference record), and Michigan again in 2022 (9–0).[107] In the College Football Playoff (CFP) era prior to the 2024 expansion, Big Ten teams made eight appearances in the four-team format from 2014 to 2023, advancing to the semifinals six times with a 2–4 record in those games.[web:83] Ohio State won the 2014 national championship after defeating Alabama in the Sugar Bowl semifinal, while Michigan reached the 2023 national championship game following a semifinal victory over Alabama but lost to Washington.[web:83] Other semifinal losses came for Wisconsin (2016 vs. Alabama), Ohio State (2020 vs. Georgia), and Michigan (2021 vs. Georgia, 2022 vs. TCU).[web:83] The CFP expanded to a 12-team format for the 2024–25 season, granting an automatic bid to the highest-ranked conference champion among the Power Four leagues (Big Ten, SEC, ACC, Big 12), with byes for the top four seeds.[web:20] Oregon, as the Big Ten champion and No. 1 overall seed, received a first-round bye but lost to Ohio State 41–21 in the Rose Bowl quarterfinal.[108] Other Big Ten participants included No. 6 Penn State (defeated SMU 38–10 in the first round and Boise State 31–14 in the Fiesta Bowl quarterfinal, then lost to Notre Dame 27–24 in the Orange Bowl semifinal), No. 8 Ohio State (defeated Tennessee 42–17 in the first round, Oregon 41–21 in the Rose Bowl quarterfinal, Texas 28–14 in the Cotton Bowl semifinal, and Notre Dame 34–23 in the national championship), and No. 10 Indiana (lost to Notre Dame 27–17 in the first round).[109][110][111][112][113] This marked the first year multiple Big Ten teams received at-large bids alongside the automatic qualifier, highlighting the conference's depth, with Ohio State claiming the national championship.[113] As of November 2025, ongoing discussions among conference leaders, including Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti, advocate for further CFP expansion to 16–24 teams or even 28, aiming to allocate more automatic bids—potentially four or more—to power conferences like the Big Ten to better reflect competitive strength and increase revenue sharing.[web:21][web:25][web:30] Proposals emphasize eliminating conference championship games in favor of broader playoff access, though no consensus has been reached for implementation beyond the current 12-team model through 2025.[web:21][web:30]All-time records and bowl history
The Big Ten Conference has produced some of the most successful football programs in NCAA history, with its member institutions collectively amassing over 13,000 wins since the conference's inception in 1896. Michigan holds the all-time lead in total victories among Big Ten teams, surpassing 1,000 wins for the first time in program history during the 2023 season and extending that dominance into 2024. Ohio State follows closely, maintaining a high winning percentage alongside its rival, while newer additions like USC and Oregon bring storied histories from the former Pac-12. These records reflect not only overall performance but also the conference's evolution through expansions, with traditional powers like Penn State and Nebraska contributing significantly to the league's legacy.[114][115]| Team | All-Time Wins | All-Time Losses | All-Time Ties | Winning Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Michigan | 1,015 | 359 | 36 | .733 |
| Ohio State | 981 | 335 | 53 | .736 |
| Penn State | 946 | 412 | 41 | .691 |
| Nebraska | 927 | 430 | 40 | .678 |
| USC | 885 | 374 | 54 | .695 |
| Washington | 783 | 474 | 50 | .618 |
| Wisconsin | 749 | 526 | 53 | .584 |
| Minnesota | 743 | 549 | 44 | .573 |
| Michigan State | 738 | 494 | 44 | .596 |
| Oregon | 721 | 512 | 46 | .582 |
| Iowa | 703 | 582 | 39 | .546 |
| Maryland | 684 | 632 | 43 | .519 |
| Rutgers | 681 | 701 | 42 | .493 |
| Illinois | 645 | 628 | 50 | .506 |
| Purdue | 644 | 609 | 48 | .513 |
| UCLA | 642 | 456 | 37 | .582 |
| Northwestern | 571 | 712 | 44 | .447 |
| Indiana | 521 | 715 | 44 | .424 |
Individual awards and honors
The Big Ten Conference has honored exceptional football players and coaches through individual awards since the early 20th century, with formalized postseason recognitions expanding significantly in the modern era. These awards, selected annually by conference coaches and a media panel, highlight outstanding performances across offensive, defensive, and special teams categories.[121] The conference's flagship player honors include the Graham-George Offensive Player of the Year and Nagurski-Woodson Defensive Player of the Year awards, both established in 1982 to recognize top performers on each side of the ball. The offensive award, named for Northwestern's Otto Graham and Ohio State's Archie Griffin, has been won by quarterbacks like Dillon Gabriel of Oregon in 2024, while the defensive honor, honoring Minnesota's Bronko Nagurski and Michigan's Charles Woodson, went to Penn State's Abdul Carter that same year for his league-leading 12 sacks.[122][123][124] Additional position-specific awards, introduced over time to commemorate conference legends, further spotlight individual excellence; for instance, the Ameche-Dayne Running Back of the Year, named for Wisconsin's Alan Ameche and the Badgers' Ron Dayne, was awarded to Iowa's Kaleb Johnson in 2024 after his 1,537 rushing yards. Similarly, the Butkus-Fitzgerald Linebacker of the Year recognized Iowa's Jay Higgins for his 171 tackles that season. These honors, along with others like the Griese-Brees Quarterback of the Year and Rimington-Pace Offensive Lineman of the Year, are voted on post-regular season and often align with national accolades.[124] Big Ten players have also earned national recognition, most notably the Heisman Trophy, with schools in the conference producing 11 winners since 1935. Ohio State leads with four recipients, including Archie Griffin, the only two-time winner in history (1974–1975), while Michigan has three, such as Desmond Howard (1991) and Charles Woodson (1997), the first primarily defensive player to claim the award. Other notable Heisman honorees from Big Ten institutions include Iowa's Nile Kinnick (1939), Minnesota's Bruce Smith (1941), and Wisconsin's Alan Ameche (1954).[125][126] All-conference teams, a tradition dating back to the conference's founding in 1896 as the Western Conference, consist of first-, second-, and third-team selections across positions, determined by votes from head coaches and a media panel excluding a player's own school to ensure impartiality. These teams have evolved from early 20th-century compilations to the current format, which began in earnest in the 1980s and includes honorable mentions for broader recognition of talent.[121] Coaching honors include the Hayes-Schembechler Coach of the Year Award, named for Ohio State's Woody Hayes and Michigan's Bo Schembechler and voted on by peers, which Indiana's Curt Cignetti won in 2024 for guiding the Hoosiers to an 11-1 record. The media counterpart, the Dave McClain Coach of the Year Award, honors the late Ohio State coach and was also awarded to Cignetti that year. These awards underscore leadership in achieving team success within the conference.[124]Men's basketball
Conference tournament and challenges
The Big Ten Men's Basketball Tournament is an annual single-elimination postseason event held to determine the conference champion and award an automatic bid to the NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament. Following the conference's expansion to 18 teams with the addition of Oregon, UCLA, USC, and Washington in the 2024–25 season, the 2025 tournament featured the top 15 teams based on regular-season conference standings, excluding the bottom three performers. Held from March 12 to 16 at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana, the event consisted of five rounds, with seeding determining matchups and byes for the top four teams. Michigan won the 2025 tournament, defeating Wisconsin in the championship game for its third title and first since 2018.[127] In September 2025, the Big Ten announced that the 2026 tournament would expand to include all 18 teams for the first time since the realignment, maintaining the single-elimination format with games scheduled from March 11 to 15 at the United Center in Chicago, Illinois. This adjustment addresses the larger membership while preserving the tournament's intensity, with the top four seeds receiving byes into the quarterfinals and lower seeds competing in earlier rounds. The rotation between Indianapolis and Chicago venues, established in prior years, continues to centralize the event in key Midwestern markets for fan accessibility.[128] Non-conference challenges have long provided Big Ten teams with rigorous early-season tests against elite competition from other major conferences. The ACC–Big Ten Challenge, launched in 1999 as a marquee annual series, matched each Big Ten program against an Atlantic Coast Conference opponent in a home-and-home or neutral-site format, fostering high-stakes matchups that boosted national exposure; it operated for 24 seasons before ESPN discontinued it after the 2022–23 edition amid shifting media rights deals. Although no direct revival or expansion with the ACC occurred post-2024 realignment, Big Ten schedules in 2025–26 incorporated comparable non-conference opportunities, such as multi-team events and individual games against power-conference foes like Alabama and NC State, to simulate tournament pressure.[129] In October 2025, Big Ten Commissioner Tony Petitti voiced strong support for expanding the NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament from 68 to 76 teams, potentially effective for the 2026–27 season, emphasizing a straight-seeding model to prioritize merit over regional pods. This position aligns with the conference's frequent multi-bid representation—eight teams qualified in 2025—and aims to accommodate growing league depth without diluting the event's integrity.[130]All-time records and NCAA appearances
The Big Ten Conference men's basketball teams have compiled extensive all-time records in conference play, reflecting the league's competitive depth since its inception in 1896. Purdue holds the record for the most regular season championships with 25, including 12 outright titles, underscoring its historical dominance in intra-conference matchups. Indiana follows with 22 regular season titles (11 outright), while Illinois has secured 18 (8 outright), and Ohio State 20 (10 outright). These accomplishments highlight the sustained success of the conference's founding members, with Michigan State emerging as a modern powerhouse with 14 regular season crowns since joining in 1950. Representative all-time conference win-loss records for top programs, as of the end of the 2024-25 season, include Purdue at 825-588 (.584 winning percentage), Illinois at 838-592 (.586), Indiana at 822-556 (.596), and Michigan State at 495-407 (.549).[131][132][133][134]| Team | All-Time Conference Wins-Losses (Pct.) | Regular Season Championships (Outright) |
|---|---|---|
| Purdue | 825-588 (.584) | 25 (12) |
| Illinois | 838-592 (.586) | 18 (8) |
| Indiana | 822-556 (.596) | 22 (11) |
| Ohio State | 694-648 (.517) | 20 (10) |
| Michigan | 681-613 (.526) | 13 (7) |
| Iowa | 679-658 (.508) | 8 (4) |
| Minnesota | 686-735 (.483) | 9 (5) |
| Wisconsin | 654-774 (.458) | 16 (7) |
| Michigan State | 495-407 (.549) | 14 (5) |
| Northwestern | 450-930 (.326) | 2 (1) |
National championships and coaching
The Big Ten Conference has secured nine NCAA Division I men's basketball national championships, with Indiana claiming the most at five titles, underscoring the league's historical dominance in the sport.[140] These victories span from 1940 to 2000, highlighting eras of exceptional coaching and team performance that propelled the conference to prominence. For instance, Indiana's 1976 championship, under coach Bob Knight, featured an undefeated 32-0 season, culminating in a 86-68 win over Michigan in the title game at the Market Square Arena in Indianapolis.[137] Similarly, Michigan State's 2000 triumph, led by Tom Izzo, ended with an 89-76 victory against Florida at the RCA Dome in Indianapolis, marking the Spartans' second national title.[137] Key coaches have been instrumental in these successes, with Bob Knight securing three championships at Indiana (1976, 1981, 1987), establishing a legacy of disciplined, high-stakes play that influenced generations of Big Ten programs. Branch McCracken guided Indiana to two early titles in 1940 and 1953, while Tom Izzo's 2000 win at Michigan State added to Jud Heathcote's 1979 championship there, emphasizing the conference's tradition of sustained excellence under long-tenured leaders. Other notable coaches include Fred Taylor, who led Ohio State to its 1960 title with a 75-55 defeat of California at the Cow Palace in San Francisco, and Steve Fisher, whose interim tenure at Michigan produced the 1989 championship via an 80-79 overtime victory over Seton Hall at the Kingdome in Seattle.[137] These coaches not only delivered national titles but also multiple Final Four appearances, such as Izzo's seven with Michigan State and Knight's six with Indiana, often hosted at iconic venues like the Superdome in New Orleans and the Alamodome in San Antonio.[141] In addition to championships, Big Ten teams have reached the national championship game as runners-up on 10 occasions, including recent heartbreaks like Purdue's 2024 loss to UConn 75-60 at the State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona, extending the conference's title drought since 2000.[142] This competitive edge reflects the league's depth, building on over 50 Final Four appearances across its history.[141] Compensation for Big Ten men's basketball head coaches has risen significantly, averaging around $4.5 million annually in 2025, with veteran leaders like Tom Izzo earning $5.92 million at Michigan State and Mick Cronin at $6.1 million at UCLA, reflecting the high value placed on recruiting and program stability in the expanded 18-team conference.[143]| Year | School | Coach | Opponent | Final Four Location | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1940 | Indiana | Branch McCracken | Kansas | Municipal Auditorium, Kansas City | 60-42 |
| 1953 | Indiana | Branch McCracken | Kansas | Municipal Auditorium, Kansas City | 69-68 |
| 1960 | Ohio State | Fred Taylor | California | Cow Palace, San Francisco | 75-55 |
| 1976 | Indiana | Bob Knight | Michigan | Market Square Arena, Indianapolis | 86-68 |
| 1979 | Michigan State | Jud Heathcote | Indiana State | Special Events Center, Salt Lake City | 75-64 |
| 1981 | Indiana | Bob Knight | North Carolina | Philadelphia Spectrum, Philadelphia | 63-50 |
| 1987 | Indiana | Bob Knight | Syracuse | Louisiana Superdome, New Orleans | 74-73 |
| 1989 | Michigan | Steve Fisher | Seton Hall | Kingdome, Seattle | 80-79 (OT) |
| 2000 | Michigan State | Tom Izzo | Florida | RCA Dome, Indianapolis | 89-76 |
Women's basketball
Conference tournament and NCAA appearances
The Big Ten Women's Basketball Tournament, held annually since 1995, determines the conference's automatic qualifier for the NCAA Division I tournament. The event originally included all member teams but transitioned to a top-12 format in 2007 and expanded to 14 teams in 2014 to accommodate the conference's growth. Following the addition of Oregon, UCLA, USC, and Washington in 2024–25, bringing the total to 18 institutions, the tournament field increased to 15 teams for the 2025 edition at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, excluding the three lowest regular-season finishers to optimize NCAA at-large bid opportunities. Starting in 2026, the format will include all 18 teams. The tournament rotates among host cities, with Indianapolis hosting a record 27 editions, alongside venues in Minneapolis (Target Center), Chicago (United Center), and Detroit (Little Caesars Arena).[144][145][146] Big Ten women's basketball programs have amassed 206 NCAA tournament appearances collectively, compiling a 247–205 record through the 2024–25 season, including 12 Final Four berths. In March 2025, a conference-record 12 teams—Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Maryland, Michigan, Michigan State, Nebraska, Ohio State, Oregon, UCLA, USC, and Washington—earned bids, highlighting the league's depth. Maryland leads all current members with 32 appearances as of 2025, while Iowa has made 31 outings, reaching the Final Four three times (1993, 2023, and 2024). In 2024, Iowa advanced to the national semifinals, upsetting top-seeded UConn 71–69 before falling to South Carolina in the championship, propelled by standout performances from players like Caitlin Clark.[147][148][149][150][151] Big Ten teams not selected for the NCAA tournament have frequently competed in the Women's National Invitation Tournament (WNIT), reaching the semifinals 29 times and securing nine championships. Notable successes include Indiana's 2018 title, where the Hoosiers defeated Virginia Tech 65–58 in the final to claim their first WNIT crown. These postseason opportunities have provided additional competitive experience and exposure for conference programs.[152][153]National championships and records
The Big Ten Conference has secured one NCAA Division I women's basketball national championship. In 1999, Purdue defeated Duke 62–45 in the championship game at the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas, marking the program's only title under head coach Carolyn Peck.[154] Big Ten teams have appeared in the national championship game on three other occasions as runners-up. Ohio State reached the final in 1993 but lost to Texas Tech 84–82 in Atlanta, Georgia, in a game coached by Nancy Darsch.[154] More recently, Iowa advanced to back-to-back finals in 2023 and 2024. In 2023, the Hawkeyes fell to LSU 102–85 in Dallas, Texas, despite a strong performance led by Caitlin Clark.[154] In 2024, Iowa lost to South Carolina 87–75 in Cleveland, Ohio, concluding another Final Four run under coach Lisa Bluder.[154] These appearances highlight Iowa's recent emergence as a national powerhouse, with the team achieving records of 34–5 in 2023–24 and 23–11 in 2024–25 under Bluder and successor Jan Jensen, who took over as head coach following Bluder's retirement in May 2024.[150][155]| Year | Champion | Score | Runner-up | Coach (Runner-up) | Site |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1993 | Texas Tech | 84–82 | Ohio State | Nancy Darsch | Omni Coliseum, Atlanta, GA[154] |
| 1999 | Purdue | 62–45 | Duke | Gail Goestenkors | Alamodome, San Antonio, TX[154] |
| 2023 | LSU | 102–85 | Iowa | Lisa Bluder | American Airlines Center, Dallas, TX[154] |
| 2024 | South Carolina | 87–75 | Iowa | Lisa Bluder | Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse, Cleveland, OH[154] |
Other sports
Volleyball and field hockey
The Big Ten Conference has established itself as a dominant force in NCAA Division I women's volleyball, with its member institutions securing 14 national championships through the 2024 season. Penn State University holds the most titles in conference history, with eight wins in 1999, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2013, 2014, and 2024, including a record four consecutive championships from 2007 to 2010 under coach Russ Rose.[157][158] The University of Nebraska claims five titles, achieved in 1995, 2000, 2006, 2015, and 2017, highlighted by three undefeated seasons (2000, 2006, and 2017).[159] The University of Wisconsin added the conference's most recent non-Penn State or Nebraska title in 2021, defeating Nebraska in five sets for its first NCAA crown.[158] These victories underscore the Big Ten's depth, as its teams have combined for over 50 Final Four appearances, with Penn State (16) and Nebraska (15) leading the way.[159] In regular-season conference competition, Penn State has won or shared 18 Big Ten titles, the most of any program, including a co-championship in 2024 after a 3-1 victory over Nebraska that clinched their first outright or shared crown since 2017.[160] Nebraska follows with 10 conference championships since joining in 2011, while Wisconsin has claimed six, often featuring high-stakes matches that propel teams into the NCAA Tournament.[161] The conference has a trend of sending at least seven squads annually to the NCAA Tournament in recent years.[162] Women's field hockey programs in the Big Ten have also achieved notable success, accumulating 11 NCAA national titles. The University of Maryland leads with eight championships (1987, 1993, 1999, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2010, 2011), establishing it as one of the sport's premier programs with 13 Final Four appearances.[163] Northwestern University has won two recent titles in 2021 and 2024, both under coach Tracey Fuchs, including a 2-1 semifinal victory over Maryland en route to the 2024 crown.[163] The University of Michigan secured the conference's other title in 2001, defeating Maryland 2-1 in the championship match.[164] Big Ten teams have made over 40 NCAA Tournament appearances collectively, with Maryland and Northwestern frequently advancing to semifinals and finals. Conference play in field hockey remains highly competitive, with Maryland holding a record 15 regular-season titles and 12 tournament championships since the Big Ten sponsored the sport in 1989. Northwestern has emerged as a recent powerhouse, winning four straight regular-season crowns from 2021 to 2024 and the 2025 Big Ten Tournament as the No. 1 seed after a 5-3 semifinal win over Michigan.[165] In 2025, four Big Ten squads qualified for the NCAA Tournament, highlighted by Northwestern's No. 1 overall seed and Maryland's consistent elite ranking.[166]Ice hockey and lacrosse
The Big Ten Conference initiated men's ice hockey competition in the 2013–14 season, comprising seven institutions: the University of Michigan, Michigan State University, University of Minnesota, University of Notre Dame, Ohio State University, Pennsylvania State University, and University of Wisconsin.[167] These programs have collectively secured 23 NCAA Division I national championships, underscoring the conference's historical dominance in the sport. The University of Michigan leads with nine titles in 1948, 1951, 1952, 1953, 1955, 1964, 1996, and 1998, while the University of Wisconsin follows with six in 1973, 1977, 1980, 1981, 1983, and 2006; the University of Minnesota has five in 1974, 1976, 1979, 2002, and 2003; and Michigan State University has three in 1966, 1989, and 2007.[168] Ohio State, Penn State, and Notre Dame have yet to claim an NCAA title.[169] The Big Ten men's ice hockey tournament, established in 2014, features a single-elimination format among all seven teams to determine the conference champion and automatic NCAA qualifier. Minnesota has won the most tournament titles with three (2015, 2019, 2023), followed by Michigan with three (2016, 2022, 2024); other champions include Wisconsin (2014), Penn State (2017), Ohio State (2018), and Michigan State (2025).[170] Since the conference's inception, Big Ten teams have qualified for the NCAA tournament in every season, advancing to the Frozen Four 11 times, though no titles have been won since Michigan State's 2007 championship.[171] The conference has also hosted notable outdoor games, including doubleheaders at Wrigley Field during the 2025 Frozen Confines series.[172] The Big Ten launched men's lacrosse sponsorship in 2015, with core members Maryland, Michigan, Ohio State, Penn State, and Rutgers, joined by affiliate member Johns Hopkins University.[173] Conference teams have amassed 13 NCAA Division I national championships overall. Maryland leads with four titles in 1973, 1975, 2011, and 2022, while Johns Hopkins holds nine in 1979, 1980, 1981, 1984, 1985, 1987, 1989, 2005, and 2007; no other Big Ten programs have NCAA titles.[174]| Team | NCAA Titles | Years Won | All-Time NCAA Appearances |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maryland | 4 | 1973, 1975, 2011, 2022 | 47 |
| Johns Hopkins | 9 | 1979–81, 1984–85, 1987, 1989, 2005, 2007 | 50+ |
| Michigan | 0 | — | 5 |
| Ohio State | 0 | — | 8 |
| Penn State | 0 | — | 4 |
| Rutgers | 0 | — | 1 |
Baseball, softball, and soccer
The Big Ten Conference has a storied history in baseball, with member institutions collectively earning six NCAA national championships and 29 appearances in the College World Series (CWS). Minnesota leads with three titles in 1956, 1960, and 1968, while Michigan secured two in 1953 and 1962.[181] Ohio State contributed the sixth in 1966, highlighting the conference's early dominance in the sport during the mid-20th century. More recently, Indiana made the program's first CWS appearance in 2013, advancing to the finals as runners-up after defeating Louisville 2-0 in the semifinals, marking the Big Ten's first CWS trip since Michigan in 1984.[182] In softball, Big Ten teams have achieved notable success at the Women's College World Series (WCWS), with Michigan claiming the conference's lone NCAA national title in 2005 by rallying to defeat UCLA 4-1 in a 10-inning winner-take-all Game 3 of the finals.[183] This victory made Michigan the first program east of the Mississippi River to win the championship, capping a 65-7 season under coach Carol Hutchins. Nebraska has been a consistent contender, earning seven WCWS appearances, including third-place finishes in 1984 and 1987, underscoring the conference's depth in the sport.[184] Men's soccer has been a flagship sport for the Big Ten, with Indiana securing eight NCAA national championships—more than any other program—including the 2012 title via a 1-0 victory over Georgetown in the College Cup final, where Nikita Kotlov scored the game-winner in the 58th minute.[185] Maryland has added four titles (1968, 2005, 2008, 2018), contributing to the conference's total of 12 men's NCAA crowns and over 100 College Cup appearances collectively. On the women's side, Penn State captured the Big Ten's only NCAA championship in 2015, shutting out Duke 1-0 in the final behind a goal from Raquel Rodríguez and a stout defensive effort that limited opponents to zero goals across five tournament matches.[186] These achievements reflect the conference's emphasis on soccer excellence, with multiple programs regularly advancing to NCAA postseason play.Additional sports achievements
In men's gymnastics, Big Ten institutions have secured 42 NCAA team championships as of 2025, with Michigan claiming the most recent title that year. Illinois captured the national championship in 2012 under coach Justin Spring, marking the program's only NCAA team title to date. The conference has also produced 295 individual event champions, highlighting its depth in the sport.[187][188] Big Ten men's golf programs have excelled at the conference level, with Ohio State holding a record 23 titles and Illinois claiming 16, including nine in the last decade leading up to 2025. National success has been rarer, though schools like Michigan (1953, 1965) and Purdue (1932) have won NCAA team titles in the past. Similarly, in men's tennis, conference dominance is evident—Ohio State has won 22 regular-season crowns—but NCAA team championships remain elusive for Big Ten members, with UCLA's 16 national titles predating its 2024 entry into the league. Ohio State reached the 2023 NCAA final, underscoring emerging competitiveness.[189][190][191] Wrestling stands out as the conference's premier Olympic sport, with Big Ten schools amassing over 50 NCAA team titles collectively; Iowa leads with 24, including back-to-back wins in 1975-1976 and a streak from 1978-1986. Penn State follows with 12 titles as of 2025. The conference has nurtured numerous individual Olympians, such as Iowa's Spencer Lee (2020, 2024) and Minnesota's Gable Steveson (gold medalist in 2020 freestyle), who also won two NCAA titles.[192][193][194]Championships and awards
Overall NCAA national titles
The Big Ten Conference's member institutions have a storied history of success in NCAA-sanctioned sports, with hundreds of team national championships won across dozens of disciplines. As of 2022, the conference's then-14 member schools had collectively earned 322 NCAA national titles, spanning sports such as wrestling, ice hockey, lacrosse, and gymnastics. With the 2024 expansion to include USC, UCLA, Oregon, and Washington, the conference incorporated schools with a combined 283 additional NCAA team championships, significantly enhancing its overall tally to approximately 605 as of June 2024 (pre-2025 updates). This expansion has particularly strengthened the Big Ten's standing in sports like volleyball (where UCLA and USC have dominated), water polo, and track and field, integrating West Coast excellence into the conference's Midwestern and Eastern legacy.[195] These titles reflect the conference's depth, with member schools leading in both men's and women's competitions. Michigan holds the most among pre-expansion members with 40 (updated to 41 including 2025 gymnastics). Post-expansion, UCLA emerges as the leader with 124 titles, primarily in men's basketball (11) and volleyball (7 for women). Recent achievements include Michigan's 2025 NCAA men's gymnastics title and Ohio State's 2025 College Football Playoff national championship, the latter marking the Big Ten's 32nd football title under the NCAA-sanctioned CFP format.[196][197][198]| School | Total NCAA Titles | Leading Sport(s) (Examples) |
|---|---|---|
| UCLA | 124 | Men's basketball (11), women's volleyball (7) |
| USC | 115 | Baseball (12), women's water polo (9) |
| Penn State | 56 | Fencing (14) |
| Michigan | 41 | Men's ice hockey (9), men's gymnastics (8) |
| Wisconsin | 33 | Men's lightweight rowing (6) |
| Ohio State | 33 | Men's swimming & diving (11) |
| Maryland | 32 | Women's lacrosse (14) |
| Oregon | 35 | Men's cross country (6), women's cross country (4) |
| Indiana | 24 | Men's soccer (8) |
| Iowa | 25 | Men's wrestling (23) |
| Michigan State | 20 | Men's cross country (8) |
| Minnesota | 19 | Women's ice hockey (6) |
| Nebraska | 21 | Men's gymnastics (8) |
| Illinois | 18 | Men's gymnastics (10) |
| Washington | 9 | Women's rowing (5) |
| Northwestern | 9 | Women's lacrosse (7) |
| Purdue | 3 | Women's basketball (1), golf (men's & women's, 1 each) |
| Rutgers | 1 | Fencing (1) |
Conference titles by sport
The Big Ten Conference has awarded titles in football since its inception in 1896, determined primarily by regular-season conference records, with co-champions recognized when teams share the best mark; since 2011, a championship game has resolved ties in some cases.[200]| Team | Number of Titles |
|---|---|
| Michigan | 44 |
| Ohio State | 39 |
| Minnesota | 18 |
| Illinois | 15 |
| Wisconsin | 14 |
| Iowa | 11 |
| Michigan State | 9 |
| Purdue | 8 |
| Northwestern | 8 |
| Chicago | 7 |
| Penn State | 4 |
| Indiana | 2 |
| Oregon | 1 |
| Team | Number of Titles |
|---|---|
| Purdue | 24 |
| Indiana | 20 |
| Illinois | 17 |
| Michigan | 15 |
| Ohio State | 14 |
| Wisconsin | 14 |
| Michigan State | 14 |
| Iowa | 9 |
| Minnesota | 8 |
| Northwestern | 2 |
| Maryland | 1 |
| Chicago | 6 |
| Team | Number of Titles |
|---|---|
| Ohio State | 15 |
| Iowa | 10 |
| Penn State | 8 |
| Maryland | 7 |
| Purdue | 7 |
| Michigan State | 3 |
| Indiana | 2 |
| Northwestern | 2 |
| Illinois | 1 |
| USC | 1 |
Athlete and academic honors
The Big Ten Conference annually recognizes outstanding individual athletic achievements through its Athlete of the Year awards, honoring one male and one female student-athlete for exceptional performance across all sports. The Jesse Owens Male Athlete of the Year award, named after the legendary Ohio State track star, has been presented since 1982, while the Female Athlete of the Year award began in 1983. These honors highlight athletes who have demonstrated dominance in their respective sports, often leading to national accolades and Olympic success. Since 1984, winners have included numerous Olympians, NCAA champions, and professional standouts from a variety of disciplines such as wrestling, basketball, track and field, and football.[208] The following tables list the recipients from 1984 onward, including the 2025 winners: Carter Starocci (Penn State, wrestling) for male and JuJu Watkins (USC, basketball) for female.[208][209] Jesse Owens Male Athlete of the Year (1984–2025)| Year | Athlete | School | Sport |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1984 | Sunder Nix | Indiana | Track & Field |
| 1985 | Barry Davis | Iowa | Wrestling |
| 1986 | Chuck Long | Iowa | Football |
| 1987 | Steve Alford | Indiana | Basketball |
| 1988 | Jim Abbott | Michigan | Baseball |
| 1989 | Glen Rice | Michigan | Basketball |
| 1990 | Anthony Thompson | Indiana | Football |
| 1991 | Mike Barrowman | Michigan | Swimming |
| 1992 | Desmond Howard | Michigan | Football |
| 1993 | John Roethlisberger | Minnesota | Gymnastics |
| 1994 | Glenn Robinson | Purdue | Basketball |
| 1995 | Tom Dolan | Michigan | Swimming |
| 1996 | Eddie George | Ohio State | Football |
| 1997 | Blaine Wilson | Ohio State | Gymnastics |
| 1998 | Charles Woodson | Michigan | Football |
| 1999 | Luke Donald | Northwestern | Golf |
| 2000 | Ron Dayne | Wisconsin | Football |
| 2001 | Ryan Miller | Michigan State | Ice Hockey |
| 2002 | Jordan Leopold | Minnesota | Ice Hockey |
| 2003 | Amer Delic & Matt Lackey | Illinois | Tennis & Wrestling |
| 2004 | Damion Hahn | Minnesota | Wrestling |
| 2005 | Luis Vargas | Penn State | Gymnastics |
| 2006 | Peter Vanderkaay | Michigan | Swimming |
| 2007 | Cole Konrad | Minnesota | Wrestling |
| 2008 | Brent Metcalf | Iowa | Wrestling |
| 2009 | Jake Herbert | Northwestern | Wrestling |
| 2010 | Evan Turner | Ohio State | Basketball |
| 2011 | David Boudia | Purdue | Diving |
| 2012 | Draymond Green | Michigan State | Basketball |
| 2013 | Derek Drouin | Indiana | Track & Field |
| 2014 | David Taylor | Penn State | Wrestling |
| 2015 | Logan Stieber | Ohio State | Wrestling |
| 2016 | Denzel Valentine | Michigan State | Basketball |
| 2017 | Kyle Snyder | Ohio State | Wrestling |
| 2018 | Kyle Snyder | Ohio State | Wrestling |
| 2019 | Bo Nickal | Penn State | Wrestling |
| 2020 | Chase Young | Ohio State | Football |
| 2021 | Luka Garza | Iowa | Basketball |
| 2022 | Gable Steveson | Minnesota | Wrestling |
| 2023 | Zach Edey | Purdue | Basketball |
| 2024 | Zach Edey | Purdue | Basketball |
| 2025 | Carter Starocci | Penn State | Wrestling |
| Year | Athlete | School | Sport |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1984 | Lisa Ishikawa & Cathy Branta | Northwestern & Wisconsin | Softball & Cross Country/Track & Field |
| 1985 | Stephanie Herbst | Wisconsin | Cross Country/Track & Field |
| 1986 | Jennifer Averill | Northwestern | Field Hockey/Lacrosse |
| 1987 | Suzy Favor | Wisconsin | Cross Country/Track & Field |
| 1988 | Suzy Favor | Wisconsin | Cross Country/Track & Field |
| 1989 | Suzy Favor | Wisconsin | Cross Country/Track & Field |
| 1990 | Suzy Favor | Wisconsin | Cross Country/Track & Field |
| 1991 | Julie Farrell-Ovenhouse & Joy Holmes | Michigan State & Purdue | Diving & Basketball |
| 1992 | MaChelle Joseph | Purdue | Basketball |
| 1993 | Lara Hooiveld | Michigan | Swimming |
| 1994 | Kristy Gleason | Iowa | Field Hockey |
| 1995 | Laura Davis | Ohio State | Volleyball |
| 1996 | Olga Kalinovskaya | Penn State | Fencing |
| 1997 | Kathy Butler & Gretchen Hegener | Wisconsin & Minnesota | Track & Field & Swimming |
| 1998 | Sara Griffin | Michigan | Softball |
| 1999 | Stephanie White-McCarty | Purdue | Basketball |
| 2000 | Lauren Cacciamani | Penn State | Volleyball |
| 2001 | Katie Douglas | Purdue | Basketball |
| 2002 | Christie Welsh | Penn State | Soccer |
| 2003 | Perdita Felicien | Illinois | Track & Field |
| 2004 | Kelly Mazzante | Penn State | Basketball |
| 2005 | Jennie Ritter | Michigan | Softball |
| 2006 | Tiffany Weimer | Penn State | Soccer |
| 2007 | Jessica Davenport | Ohio State | Basketball |
| 2008 | Hannah Nielsen | Northwestern | Lacrosse |
| 2009 | Maria Hernandez | Purdue | Golf |
| 2010 | Megan Hodge | Penn State | Volleyball |
| 2011 | Shannon Smith | Northwestern | Lacrosse |
| 2012 | Christina Manning | Ohio State | Track & Field |
| 2013 | Amanda Kessel | Minnesota | Ice Hockey |
| 2014 | Dani Bunch | Purdue | Track & Field |
| 2015 | Taylor Cummings | Maryland | Lacrosse |
| 2016 | Rachel Banham | Minnesota | Basketball |
| 2017 | Lilly King | Indiana | Swimming |
| 2018 | Lilly King | Indiana | Swimming |
| 2019 | Megan Gustafson | Iowa | Basketball |
| 2020 | Dana Rettke | Wisconsin | Volleyball |
| 2021 | Sarah Bacon | Minnesota | Diving |
| 2022 | Dana Rettke | Wisconsin | Volleyball |
| 2023 | Caitlin Clark | Iowa | Basketball |
| 2024 | Caitlin Clark | Iowa | Basketball |
| 2025 | JuJu Watkins | USC | Basketball |