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2024 Big Ten Conference football season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2024 Big Ten Conference football season
LeagueNCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision
SportFootball
DurationAugust 24, 2024
through January 1, 2025
Number of teams18
TV partner(s)Fox Sports (Fox, FS1, Big Ten Network)
CBS Sports (CBS, Paramount+)
NBC Sports (NBC, Peacock)
2025 NFL draft
Top draft pickAbdul Carter, DE, Penn State
Picked byNew York Giants, 3rd overall
Regular season
Championship Game
ChampionsOregon
  Runners-upPenn State
Football seasons
← 2023
2025 →
2024 Big Ten Conference football standings
Conf. Overall
Team   W   L     W   L  
No. 3 Oregon y$^   9 0     13 1  
No. 5 Penn State y^   8 1     13 3  
No. 10 Indiana ^   8 1     11 2  
No. 1 Ohio State #^   7 2     14 2  
No. 16 Illinois   6 3     10 3  
Iowa   6 3     8 5  
Michigan   5 4     8 5  
Minnesota   5 4     8 5  
USC   4 5     7 6  
Rutgers   4 5     7 6  
Washington   4 5     6 7  
Nebraska   3 6     7 6  
Michigan State   3 6     5 7  
UCLA   3 6     5 7  
Wisconsin   3 6     5 7  
Northwestern   2 7     4 8  
Maryland   1 8     4 8  
Purdue   0 9     1 11  
Championship: Oregon 45, Penn State 37
  • # – College Football Playoff champion
  • ^ – College Football Playoff participant
  • $ – Conference champion
  • y – Championship game participant
Rankings from AP Poll

The 2024 Big Ten Conference football season is the 129th season of college football play for the Big Ten Conference and part of the 2024 NCAA Division I FBS football season. This is the Big Ten's first season with 18 teams with the additions of UCLA, USC, Oregon, and Washington, and its first season since 2010 with a non-divisional scheduling format.

Previous season

[edit]

Michigan won the East Division championship, with the Wolverines making their third consecutive appearance in the Big Ten Championship Game. In the West Division, Iowa won the division title and made their third championship game appearance. In that championship game, Michigan defeated Iowa 26–0 to win the Big Ten championship. With that win, the Wolverines landed a spot in the 2023–24 College Football Playoff as the No. 1 seed and ultimately won the national championship. The Wolverines defeated Alabama in the Rose Bowl in the semifinals of the playoffs and then defeated Washington in the CFP National Championship Game.

Besides Michigan, eight other Big Ten football teams qualified for bowl games: Iowa, Maryland, Minnesota, Northwestern, Ohio State, Penn State, Rutgers, and Wisconsin. The Big Ten overall went 6–4 in postseason games in the 2023 season.

Coaching changes

[edit]

The Big Ten saw six head coaching changes for the 2024 season.

On July 10, 2023, Northwestern announced it was parting ways with head coach Pat Fitzgerald after allegations surrounding hazing within the Wildcat football program.[1] On July 14, 2023, Northwestern named defensive coordinator David Braun the interim coach for the 2023 season, and named him the permanent head coach on November 15, 2023.[2]

On September 10, 2023, Michigan State coach Mel Tucker was suspended as part of an investigation into a sexual harassment claim. Secondary coach Harlon Barnett served as interim coach while the case was being sorted out during the 2023 season.[3] Tucker was officially fired on September 27. On November 25, 2023, Michigan State hired Oregon State head coach Jonathan Smith as its next head coach.[4]

On November 26, 2023, Indiana fired Tom Allen after the Hoosiers completed a third consecutive losing season.[5] Indiana hired Curt Cignetti as its new head coach, having previously served as head coach at James Madison.[6]

In January 2024, Kalen DeBoer left Washington to replace the retiring Nick Saban at Alabama, and was replaced by Jedd Fisch, previously head coach at Arizona.

On January 24, 2024, Jim Harbaugh left the Michigan Wolverines to return to the NFL with the Los Angeles Chargers.[7] Two days later, Michigan elevated its offensive coordinator Sherrone Moore, who had served as acting head coach for four games in 2023 from which Harbaugh had been suspended, as Harbaugh's successor.[8]

On February 9, 2024, Chip Kelly announced his resignation as head coach at UCLA to become the offensive coordinator at Ohio State.[9] On February 12, UCLA announced the hiring of DeShaun Foster as its next head coach.[10]

Preseason

[edit]

Recruiting classes

[edit]
Rankings
Team Rivals[11] Scout & 24/7[12] On3 Recruits[13] Signees
Illinois 14 15 15 20
Indiana 16 16 16 17
Iowa 10 9 8 21
Maryland 9 12 13 24
Michigan 3 4 4 26
Michigan State 13 13 12 21
Minnesota 12 10 10 21
Nebraska 5 6 7 33
Northwestern 17 17 18 17
Ohio State 1 2 2 22
Oregon 2 1 1 27
Penn State 4 3 3 26
Purdue 8 8 9 27
Rutgers 11 11 11 25
UCLA 18 18 17 10
USC 6 5 5 22
Washington 15 14 14 18
Wisconsin 7 7 6 22

Big Ten Media Days

[edit]

Preseason Media Poll

[edit]

The annual Cleveland.com Preseason Big Ten Media Poll.[14]

Predicted finish Team Points (1st place votes)
1 Ohio State 480 (21)
2 Oregon 448 (6)
3 Penn State 418
4 Michigan 411
5 Iowa 363
6 USC 346
7 Wisconsin 313
8 Nebraska 293
9 Rutgers 249
10 Washington 236
11 Maryland 185
12 Minnesota 183
13 Illinois 145
14 Northwestern 138
15 UCLA 124
16 Michigan State 119
17 Indiana 76
18 Purdue 65
Media poll (Big Ten Championship)
Rank Team Votes
1 Ohio State over Oregon 24
2 Oregon over Ohio State 6
3 Ohio State over Penn State 2
4 Ohio State over Michigan 1
Predicted Big Ten Champion
Rank Team Votes
1 Ohio State 27
2 Oregon 6

Preseason Player of the Year

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Below are the results of the annual Preseason Big Ten Player of the Year awards conducted by Cleveland.com.[15][16]

Preseason Offensive Player of the Year
Rank Player Position Team Points (1st place votes)
1 Dillon Gabriel QB Oregon 83 (24)
2 Quinshon Judkins RB Ohio State 39 (4)
3 Emeka Egbuka WR Ohio State 27 (5)
T4 Will Howard QB Ohio State 10 (2)
T4 Kyle Monangai RB Rutgers 10 (1)
T4 TreVeyon Henderson RB Ohio State 10 (1)
Others Zachariah Branch WR USC N/A
Others Miller Moss QB USC N/A
Others Tez Johnson WR Oregon N/A
Others Darius Taylor RB Minnesota N/A
Others Nick Singleton RB Penn State N/A
Others Drew Allar QB Penn State N/A
Others Kaytron Allen RB Penn State N/A
Others Dylan Raiola QB Nebraska N/A
Others Colston Loveland TE Michigan N/A
Preseason Defensive Player of the Year
Rank Player Position Team Points (1st place votes)
1 Will Johnson CB Michigan 47 (9)
2 Caleb Downs S Ohio State 30 (4)
3T Mason Graham DT Michigan 25 (7)
3T JT Tuimoloau DE Ohio State 25 (5)
3T Jay Higgins LB Iowa 25 (3)
6 Abdul Carter DE Penn State 17 (2)
Others Jack Sawyer DE Ohio State N/A
Others Sebastian Castro CB Iowa N/A
Others Hunter Wohler S Wisconsin N/A
Others Denzel Burke CB Ohio State N/A
Others Jeffrey Bassa LB Oregon N/A
Others Bear Alexander DT USC N/A
Others Dillon Thieneman S Purdue N/A

Rankings

[edit]
  Pre Wk
1
Wk
2
Wk
3
Wk
4
Wk
5
Wk
6
Wk
7
Wk
8
Wk
9
Wk
10
Wk
11
Wk
12
Wk
13
Wk
14
Final
Illinois AP RV 24 19 24 23 22 20 24 22 21 21 16
C RV RV 21 25 23 21 21 RV 25 21 21 16
CFP Not released 25 23 21 20
Indiana AP RV RV 23 18 16 13 8 5 5 10 9 9 10
C RV RV RV 24 20 18 13 10 6 5 10 9 9 10
CFP Not released 8 5 5 10 9 8
Iowa AP 25 21 RV RV RV RV RV RV RV
C 25 21 RV RV RV RV RV RV RV RV RV
CFP Not released
Maryland AP
C RV RV
CFP Not released
Michigan AP 9 10 17 18 12 10 24 24 RV RV
C 8 (1) 9 16 17 12 10 21 22 RV RV
CFP Not released
Michigan State AP
C RV RV
CFP Not released
Minnesota AP
C RV
CFP Not released
Nebraska AP RV RV 23 22 RV RV RV RV RV
C RV RV 24 22 RV RV RV 25 RV
CFP Not released
Northwestern AP
C
CFP Not released
Ohio State AP 2 (15) 2 (5) 3 (5) 3 (5) 3 (5) 3 (4) 2 (9) 4 4 3 2 2 2 7 6 1 (56)
C 2 (7) 2 (3) 2 (3) 3 (3) 3 (2) 3 (7) 2 (11) 5 4 3 2 2 2 8 7 1 (53)
CFP Not released 2 2 2 2 6 6
Oregon AP 3 (1) 7 9 9 8 6 3 2 (6) 1 (59) 1 (62) 1 (62) 1 (62) 1 (61) 1 (62) 1 (62) 3
C 3 6 6 6 7 6 3 2 (2) 1 (51) 1 (53) 1 (55) 1 (55) 1 (55) 1 (53) 1 (54) 4
CFP Not released 1 1 1 1 1 1
Penn State AP 8 8 8 10 9 7 4 3 3 6 4 4 4 3 5 5
C 9 8 7 8 8 7 5 3 3 7 5 4 4 3 5 5
CFP Not released 6 4 4 4 3 4
Purdue AP
C
CFP Not released
Rutgers AP RV
C RV RV
CFP Not released
UCLA AP
C
CFP Not released
USC AP 23 13 11 11 12 11 RV
C 23 14 11 12 16 15 RV
CFP Not released
Washington AP RV RV RV RV RV
C RV 25 22 RV RV RV
CFP Not released
Wisconsin AP RV RV RV
C RV RV RV RV
CFP Not released
Legend
    Improvement in ranking
  Drop in ranking
  Not ranked previous week
  No change in ranking from previous week
RV Received votes but were not ranked in Top 25 of poll
т Tied with team above or below also with this symbol

Schedule

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Index to colors and formatting
Big Ten member won
Big Ten member lost
Big Ten teams in bold

Regular season schedule

[edit]

Week 1

[edit]
Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance Ref.
August 29 6:00 PM Howard Rutgers SHI StadiumPiscataway, NJ BTN W 44–7   47,803
August 29 9:00 PM North Carolina Minnesota Huntington Bank StadiumMinneapolis, MN FOX L 17–19   50,805
August 29 9:00 PM Eastern Illinois Illinois Memorial StadiumChampaign, IL BTN W 45–0   43,849
August 30 7:00 PM Florida Atlantic Michigan State Spartan StadiumEast Lansing, MI BTN W 16–10   70,271
August 30 9:00 PM Western Michigan Wisconsin Camp Randall StadiumMadison, WI FS1 W 28–14   75,158
August 31 12:00 PM No. 8 Penn State West Virginia Milan Puskar StadiumMorgantown, WV FOX W PSU 34–12   62,084
August 31 12:00 PM UConn Maryland SECU StadiumCollege Park, MD FS1 W 50–7   35,421
August 31 12:00 PM Indiana State Purdue Ross-Ade StadiumWest Lafayette, IN BTN W 49–0   59,488
August 31 12:00 PM No. 19 (FCS) Illinois State No. 25 Iowa Kinnick StadiumIowa City, IA BTN W 40–0   69,250
August 31 3:30 PM UTEP Nebraska Memorial StadiumLincoln, NE FOX W 40–7   86,072
August 31 3:30 PM Akron No. 2 Ohio State Ohio StadiumColumbus, OH CBS W 52–6   102,011
August 31 3:30 PM FIU Indiana Memorial StadiumBloomington, IN BTN W 31–7   44,150
August 31 3:30 PM Miami (OH) Northwestern Martin StadiumEvanston, IL BTN W 13–6   12,023
August 31 7:30 PM Fresno State No. 9 Michigan Michigan StadiumAnn Arbor, MI NBC W 30–10   110,665
August 31 7:30 PM No. 7 (FCS) Idaho No. 3 Oregon Autzen StadiumEugene, OR BTN W 24–14   57,435
August 31 7:30 PM UCLA Hawaii Ching ComplexHonolulu, HI CBS W 16–13   15,194
August 31 11:00 PM No. 22 (FCS) Weber State Washington Husky StadiumSeattle, WA BTN W 35–3   66,984
September 1 7:30 PM No. 13 LSU No. 23 USC Allegiant StadiumLas Vegas, NV (Vegas Kickoff Classic) ABC W 27–20   63,969
#Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Eastern Time.

Week 2

[edit]
Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance Ref.
September 6 7:00 PM Western Illinois Indiana Memorial Stadium • Bloomington, IN BTN W 77–3   39,082
September 6 9:00 PM Duke Northwestern Martin Stadium • Evanston, IL FS1 L 20–26 2OT  11,062
September 7 12:00 PM No. 3 Texas No. 10 Michigan Michigan Stadium • Ann Arbor, MI (Big Noon Kickoff) FOX L 12–31   111,170
September 7 12:00 PM Rhode Island Minnesota Huntington Bank Stadium • Minneapolis, MN Peacock W 48–0   41,006
September 7 12:00 PM Bowling Green No. 8 Penn State Beaver StadiumUniversity Park, PA BTN W PSU 34–27   103,861
September 7 12:00 PM Akron Rutgers SHI Stadium • Piscataway, NJ BTN W 49–17   41,021
September 7 3:30 PM Iowa State No. 21 Iowa Kinnick Stadium • Iowa City, IA (Cy-Hawk Trophy) CBS L 19–20   69,250
September 7 3:30 PM No. 6 (FCS) South Dakota Wisconsin Camp Randall Stadium • Madison, WI FS1 W 27–13   76,069
September 7 3:30 PM Michigan State Maryland SECU Stadium • College Park, MD BTN  MSU 27–24   34,819
September 7 3:30 PM Eastern Michigan Washington Husky Stadium • Seattle, WA BTN W 30–9   64,222
September 7 7:00 PM No. 19 Kansas Illinois Memorial Stadium • Champaign, IL FS1 W 23–17   60,670
September 7 7:30 PM Colorado Nebraska Memorial Stadium • Lincoln, NE NBC W 28–10   86,906
September 7 7:30 PM Western Michigan No. 2 Ohio State Ohio Stadium • Columbus, OH BTN W 56–0   102,665
September 7 10:00 PM Boise State No. 7 Oregon Autzen Stadium • Eugene, OR Peacock W 37–34   58,134
September 7 11:00 PM Utah State No. 13 USC Los Angeles Memorial ColiseumLos Angeles, CA BTN W 48–0   68,110
#Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Eastern Time.
Date Bye Week
September 7 Purdue UCLA

Week 3

[edit]
Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance Ref.
September 14 12:00 PM No. 4 Alabama Wisconsin Camp Randall Stadium • Madison, WI (Big Noon Kickoff) FOX L 10–42   76,323
September 14† 12:00 PM Central Michigan Illinois Memorial Stadium • Champaign, IL Peacock W 30–9   51,498
September 14† 12:00 PM Arkansas State No. 17 Michigan Michigan Stadium • Ann Arbor, MI BTN W 28–18   110,250
September 14 3:30 PM No. 9 Oregon Oregon State Reser StadiumCorvallis, OR (Rivalry) FOX W 49–14   38,419
September 14 3:30 PM No. 18 Notre Dame Purdue Ross-Ade Stadium • West Lafayette, IN CBS L 7–66   61,441
September 14 3:30 PM Washington State Washington Lumen Field • Seattle, WA (Apple Cup) Peacock L 19–24   57,567
September 14 3:30 PM Prairie View A&M Michigan State Spartan Stadium • East Lansing, MI BTN W 40–0   70,066
September 14 3:30 PM Nevada Minnesota Huntington Bank Stadium • Minneapolis, MN BTN W 27–0   44,534
September 14 4:00 PM Troy Iowa Kinnick Stadium • Iowa City, IA FS1 W 38–21   69,250
September 14 7:30 PM Indiana UCLA Rose BowlPasadena, CA NBC  IU 42–13   47,811
September 14 7:30 PM No. 21 (FCS) Northern Iowa No. 23 Nebraska Memorial Stadium • Lincoln, NE BTN W 34–3   86,546
September 14 7:30 PM Eastern Illinois Northwestern Martin Stadium • Evanston, IL BTN W 31–7   10,631
September 14 8:00 PM Maryland Virginia Scott StadiumCharlottesville, VA ACCN W 27–13   41,352
Homecoming. #Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Eastern Time.
Date Bye Week
September 14 #3 Ohio State #8 Penn State Rutgers #11 USC

Week 4

[edit]
Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance Ref.
September 20 8:00 PM No. 24 Illinois No. 22 Nebraska Memorial Stadium • Lincoln, NE FOX  ILL 31–24 OT  86,936
September 21 12:00 PM Marshall No. 3 Ohio State Ohio Stadium • Columbus, OH FOX W 49–14   103,871
September 21 12:00 PM Charlotte Indiana Memorial Stadium • Bloomington, IN BTN W 52–14   43,109
September 21 12:00 PM No. 5 (FCS) Villanova Maryland SECU Stadium • College Park, MD BTN W 38–20   38,006
September 21 3:30 PM No. 11 USC No. 18 Michigan Michigan Stadium • Ann Arbor, MI CBS  MICH 27–24   110,702
September 21 3:30 PM Kent State No. 10 Penn State Beaver Stadium • University Park, PA BTN W PSU 56–0   109,526
September 21 3:30 PM Rutgers Virginia Tech Lane StadiumBlacksburg, VA ACCN W 26–23   65,632
September 21 3:30 PM UCLA No. 16 LSU Tiger StadiumBaton Rouge, LA ABC L 17–34   100,315
September 21 7:00 PM Northwestern Washington Husky Stadium • Seattle, WA FS1  WASH 24–5   69,788
September 21 7:30 PM Iowa Minnesota Huntington Bank Stadium • Minneapolis, MN (Floyd of Rosedale) NBC  IOWA 31–14   52,048
September 21 8:00 PM Michigan State Boston College Alumni StadiumChestnut Hill, MA ACCN L 19–23   44,500
September 21 8:30 PM Purdue Oregon State Reser Stadium • Corvallis, OR The CW L 21–38   34,340
#Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Eastern Time.
Date Bye Week
September 21 #9 Oregon Wisconsin

Week 5

[edit]
Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance Ref.
September 27 8:00 PM Washington Rutgers SHI Stadium • Piscataway, NJ FOX  RUT 21–18   54,079
September 28 12:00 PM Minnesota No. 12 Michigan Michigan Stadium • Ann Arbor, MI FOX  MICH 27–24   110,340
September 28 12:00 PM Maryland Indiana Memorial Stadium • Bloomington, IN BTN  IU 42–28   48,323
September 28† 12:00 PM Nebraska Purdue Ross-Ade Stadium • West Lafayette, IN Peacock  NEB 28–10   61,441
September 28 3:30 PM Wisconsin No. 13 USC L.A. Memorial Coliseum • Los Angeles, CA CBS  USC 38–21   74,118
September 28 7:30 PM No. 3 Ohio State Michigan State Spartan Stadium • East Lansing, MI Peacock  OSU 38–7   71,114
September 28† 7:30 PM No. 19 Illinois No. 9 Penn State Beaver Stadium • University Park, PA NBC  PSU 21–7   109,911
September 28 11:00 PM No. 8 Oregon UCLA Rose Bowl • Pasadena, CA FOX  ORE 34–13   43,051
Homecoming. #Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Eastern Time.
Date Bye Week
September 28 Iowa Northwestern

Week 6

[edit]
Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance Ref.
October 4 9:00 PM Michigan State No. 6 Oregon Autzen Stadium • Eugene, OR FOX  ORE 31–10   59,802
October 5 12:00 PM UCLA No. 7 Penn State Beaver Stadium • University Park, PA FOX  PSU 27–11   110,047
October 5† 12:00 PM Purdue Wisconsin Camp Randall Stadium • Madison, WI BTN  WIS 52–6   76,091
October 5 3:30 PM Iowa No. 3 Ohio State Ohio Stadium • Columbus, OH CBS  OSU 35–7   105,135
October 5 3:30 PM No. 23 Indiana Northwestern Martin Stadium • Evanston, IL BTN  IU 41–24   12,023
October 5 4:00 PM Rutgers Nebraska Memorial Stadium • Lincoln, NE FS1  NEB 14–7   87,464
October 5 7:30 PM No. 10 Michigan Washington Husky Stadium • Seattle, WA NBC  WASH 27–17   72,132
October 5 7:30 PM No. 11 USC Minnesota Huntington Bank Stadium • Minneapolis, MN BTN  MIN 24–17   50,913
Homecoming. #Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Eastern Time.
Date Bye Week
October 5 #24 Illinois Maryland

Week 7

[edit]
Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance Ref.
October 11 8:00 PM Northwestern Maryland SECU Stadium • College Park, MD FS1  NU 37–10   39,371
October 12 12:00 PM Washington Iowa Kinnick Stadium • Iowa City, IA FOX  IOWA 40–16   69,250
October 12 12:00 PM Wisconsin Rutgers SHI Stadium • Piscataway, NJ BTN  WIS 42–7   50,111
October 12 3:30 PM No. 4 Penn State USC L.A. Memorial Coliseum • Los Angeles, CA CBS  PSU 33–30 OT  75,250
October 12 3:30 PM Purdue No. 23 Illinois Memorial Stadium • Champaign, IL FS1  ILL 50–49 OT  55,815
October 12 7:30 PM No. 2 Ohio State No. 3 Oregon Autzen Stadium • Eugene, OR (College GameDay) NBC  ORE 32–31   60,129
October 12 9:00 PM Minnesota UCLA Rose Bowl • Pasadena, CA BTN  MIN 21–17   42,012
#Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Eastern Time.
Date Bye Week
October 12 No. 18 Indiana No. 24 Michigan Michigan State Nebraska

Week 8

[edit]
Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance Ref.
October 18 8:00 PM No. 2 Oregon Purdue Ross-Ade Stadium • West Lafayette, IN FOX  ORE 35–0   57,463
October 19† 12:00 PM Nebraska No. 16 Indiana Memorial Stadium • Bloomington, IN FOX  IU 56–7   53,082
October 19† 12:00 PM UCLA Rutgers SHI Stadium • Piscataway, NJ FS1  UCLA 35–32   53,726
October 19 12:00 PM Wisconsin Northwestern Martin Stadium • Evanston, IL BTN  WIS 23–3   12,023
October 19 3:30 PM No. 24 Michigan No. 22 Illinois Memorial Stadium • Champaign, IL CBS  ILL 21–7   60,670
October 19† 4:00 PM USC Maryland SECU Stadium • College Park, MD FS1  MD 29–28   43,013
October 19† 7:30 PM Iowa Michigan State Spartan Stadium • East Lansing, MI NBC  MSU 32-20   69,682
Homecoming. #Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Eastern Time.
Date Bye Week
October 19 Minnesota No. 4 Ohio State No. 3 Penn State Washington

Week 9

[edit]
Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance Ref.
October 25 11:00 PM Rutgers USC L.A. Memorial Coliseum • Los Angeles, CA FOX  USC 42–20   63,404
October 26† 12:00 PM Nebraska No. 4 Ohio State Ohio Stadium • Columbus, OH FOX  OSU 21–17   104,830
October 26 12:00 PM Washington No. 13 Indiana Memorial Stadium • Bloomington, IN (College GameDay) BTN  IU 31–17   53,082
October 26† 3:30 PM No. 20 Illinois No. 1 Oregon Autzen Stadium • Eugene, OR CBS  ORE 38–9   59,830
October 26† 3:30 PM Maryland Minnesota Huntington Bank Stadium • Minneapolis, MN FS1  MIN 48–23   48,696
October 26† 3:30 PM Northwestern Iowa Kinnick Stadium • Iowa City, IA BTN  IA 40–14   69,250
October 26† 7:30 PM No. 3 Penn State Wisconsin Camp Randall Stadium • Madison, WI NBC  PSU 28–13   76,403
October 26 7:30 PM Michigan State Michigan Michigan Stadium • Ann Arbor, MI (Rivalry) BTN  MICH 24–17   110,849
Homecoming. #Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Eastern Time.
Date Bye Week
October 26 Purdue UCLA

Week 10

[edit]
Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance Ref.
November 2 12:00 PM No. 4 Ohio State No. 3 Penn State Beaver Stadium • University Park, PA (Rivalry/College GameDay) FOX  OSU 20–13   111,030
November 2 12:00 PM Minnesota No. 24 Illinois Memorial Stadium • Champaign, IL FS1  MINN 25–17   58,088
November 2 12:00 PM Northwestern Purdue Ross-Ade Stadium • West Lafayette, IN BTN  NU 26–20OT   61,141
November 2 3:30 PM No. 1 Oregon Michigan Michigan Stadium • Ann Arbor, MI CBS  ORE 38–17   110,576
November 2 3:30 PM No. 13 Indiana Michigan State Spartan Stadium • East Lansing, MI Peacock  IU 47–10   68,423
November 2 3:30 PM UCLA Nebraska Memorial Stadium • Lincoln, NE BTN  UCLA 27–20   87,453
November 2 7:30 PM Wisconsin Iowa Kinnick Stadium • Iowa City, IA NBC  IOWA 42–10   69,250
November 2† 7:30 PM USC Washington Husky Stadium • Seattle, WA BTN  WASH 26–21   71,251
#Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Eastern Time.
Date Bye Week
November 2 Maryland Rutgers

Week 11

[edit]
Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance Ref.
November 8† 9:00 PM Iowa UCLA Rose Bowl • Pasadena, CA FOX  UCLA 20–17   53,467
November 9 12:00 PM Purdue No. 2 Ohio State Ohio Stadium • Columbus, OH FOX  OSU 45-0   103,463
November 9 12:00 PM Minnesota Rutgers SHI Stadium • Piscataway, NJ NBC  RUT 26-19   44,120
November 9 3:30 PM Michigan No. 8 Indiana Memorial Stadium • Bloomington, IN CBS  IU 20-15   53,082
November 9 7:00 PM Maryland No. 1 Oregon Autzen Stadium • Eugene, OR BTN  ORE 39-18   59,245
November 9 8:00 PM Washington No. 4 Penn State Beaver Stadium • University Park, PA Peacock  PSU 35–6   110,233
#Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Eastern Time.
Date Bye Week
November 9 Illinois Michigan State Nebraska Northwestern USC Wisconsin

Week 12

[edit]
Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance Ref.
November 15 9:00 PM UCLA Washington Husky Stadium • Seattle, WA FOX  WASH 31-19   68,811
November 16† 12:00 PM No. 2 Ohio State Northwestern Wrigley FieldChicago, IL BTN  OSU 31-7   38,147
November 16 2:30 PM Michigan State Illinois Memorial Stadium • Champaign, IL FS1  ILL 38-16   52,660
November 16 3:30 PM No. 4 Penn State Purdue Ross-Ade Stadium • West Lafayette, IN CBS  PSU 49–10   58,346
November 16† 4:00 PM Nebraska USC L.A. Memorial Coliseum • Los Angeles, CA FOX  USC 28-20   75,304
November 16 6:00 PM Rutgers Maryland SECU Stadium • College Park, MD FS1  RUT 31-17   31,433
November 16 7:30 PM No. 1 Oregon Wisconsin Camp Randall Stadium • Madison, WI NBC  ORE 16-13   76,298
Homecoming. #Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Eastern Time.
Date Bye Week
November 16 No. 5 Indiana Iowa Michigan Minnesota

Week 13

[edit]
Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance Ref.
November 22 8:00 PM Purdue Michigan State Spartan Stadium • East Lansing, MI FOX  MSU 24–16   57,558
November 23 12:00 PM No. 5 Indiana No. 2 Ohio State Ohio Stadium • Columbus, OH FOX  OSU 38–15   105,751
November 23 12:00 PM No. 24 Illinois Rutgers SHI Stadium • Piscataway, NJ Peacock  ILL 38–31   47,524
November 23 12:00 PM Iowa Maryland SECU Stadium • College Park, MD BTN  IOWA 29–13   30,214
November 23 3:30 PM No. 4 Penn State Minnesota Huntington Bank Stadium • Minneapolis, MN CBS  PSU 26–25   44,266
November 23 3:30 PM Northwestern Michigan Michigan Stadium • Ann Arbor, MI FS1  MICH 50-6   109,830
November 23 3:30 PM Wisconsin Nebraska Memorial Stadium • Lincoln, NE BTN  NEB 44-25   86,923
November 23 10:30 PM USC UCLA Rose Bowl • Pasadena, CA NBC  USC 19-13   59,473
#Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Eastern Time.
Date Bye Week
November 23 No. 1 Oregon Washington

Week 14

[edit]
Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance Ref.
November 29 12:00 PM Minnesota Wisconsin Camp Randall Stadium • Madison, WI (Paul Bunyan's Axe) CBS  MIN 24-7   76,059
November 29 7:30 PM Nebraska Iowa Kinnick Stadium • Iowa City, IA NBC  IA 13-10   69,250
November 30 12:00 PM Michigan No. 3 Ohio State Ohio Stadium • Columbus, OH (The Game/Big Noon Kickoff) FOX  MICH 13-10   106,005
November 30 12:00 PM No. 23 Illinois Northwestern Wrigley Field • Chicago, IL (Land of Lincoln Trophy) BTN  NU 38-28   26,378
November 30 3:30 PM Notre Dame USC L.A. Memorial Coliseum • Los Angeles, CA (Battle for the Jeweled Shillelagh) CBS  ND 49-35   73,241
November 30 3:30 PM Rutgers Michigan State Spartan Stadium • East Lansing, MI FS1  RUT 41-14   50,038
November 30 3:30 PM Maryland No. 4 Penn State Beaver Stadium • University Park, PA BTN  PSU 44–7   104,044
November 30 3:30 PM Fresno State UCLA Rose Bowl • Pasadena, CA BTN  UCLA 20-13   35,018
November 30 7:00 PM Purdue No. 10 Indiana Memorial Stadium • Bloomington, IN (Old Oaken Bucket) FS1  IU 66-0   53,082
November 30 7:30 PM Washington No. 1 Oregon Autzen Stadium • Eugene, OR (rivalry) NBC  ORE 49-21   59,603
#Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Eastern Time.

Big Ten Championship Game

[edit]
Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance Ref.
December 7 8:00 PM No. 3 Penn State No. 1 Oregon Lucas Oil StadiumIndianapolis, IN (Big Ten Championship Game) CBS  ORE 45–37   67,649
#Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Eastern Time.

Postseason

[edit]

Bowl games

[edit]

For the 2020–2025 bowl cycle, The Big Ten will have annually eight appearances in the following bowls: Rose Bowl (unless they are selected for playoffs filled by a Pac-12 team if champion is in the playoffs), Citrus Bowl, Guaranteed Rate Bowl, Las Vegas Bowl, Music City Bowl, Pinstripe Bowl, Quick Lane Bowl, and Outback Bowl. The Big Ten teams will go to a New Year's Six bowl if a team finishes higher than the champions of Power Five conferences in the final College Football Playoff rankings. The Big Ten champion is also eligible for the College Football Playoff if it is among the top four teams in the final CFP ranking.

Legend
  Big Ten win
  Big Ten loss
Bowl game Date Site Television Time (EST) Big Ten team Opponent Score Attendance Ref.
Rate Bowl December 26, 2024 Chase FieldPhoenix, AZ ESPN 5:30 p.m. Rutgers Kansas State L 41–44 21,659 [1]
Las Vegas Bowl December 27, 2024 Allegiant StadiumParadise, NV ESPN 10:30 p.m. USC Texas A&M W 35-31 70,000 [2]
Pinstripe Bowl December 28, 2024 Yankee StadiumThe Bronx, NY ABC 12:00 p.m. Nebraska Boston College W 20-15 30,062 [3]
Music City Bowl December 30, 2024 Nissan StadiumNashville, TN ESPN 2:30 p.m. Iowa No. 19 Missouri L 24-27 43,375 [4]
ReliaQuest Bowl December 31, 2024 Raymond James StadiumTampa, FL ESPN 12:00 p.m. Michigan No. 11 Alabama W 19-13 51,439 [5]
Sun Bowl December 31, 2024 Sun BowlEl Paso, TX CBS 2:00 p.m. Washington Louisville L 34-35 40,826 [6]
Citrus Bowl December 31, 2024 Camping World StadiumOrlando, FL ABC 3:00 p.m. No. 20 Illinois No. 15 South Carolina W 21-17 47,129 [7]
Duke's Mayo Bowl January 3, 2025 Bank of America StadiumCharlotte, NC ESPN 7:30 p.m. Minnesota Virginia Tech W 24-10 31,927 [8]
College Football Playoff bowl games
College Football Playoff (First Round) December 20, 2024 Notre Dame StadiumNotre Dame, IN ABC/ESPN 8:00 p.m. No. 8 Indiana No. 5 Notre Dame L 17–27 77,622 [9]
College Football Playoff (First Round) December 21, 2024 Beaver StadiumUniversity Park, PA TNT/Max 12:00 p.m. No. 4 Penn State No. 10 SMU W PSU 38–10 106,013
College Football Playoff (First Round) December 21, 2024 Ohio StadiumColumbus, OH ABC/ESPN 8:00 p.m. No. 6 Ohio State No. 7 Tennessee W 42–17 102,819 [10]
Fiesta Bowl (Quarterfinal) December 31, 2024 State Farm StadiumGlendale, AZ ESPN 7:30 p.m. No. 4 Penn State No. 9 Boise State W PSU 31–14 63,854  
Rose Bowl (Quarterfinal) January 1, 2025 Rose BowlPasadena, CA ESPN 5:00 p.m. No. 1 Oregon No. 6 Ohio State OSU 41-21 90,732 [11]
Orange Bowl (Semifinal) January 9, 2025 Hard Rock StadiumMiami Gardens, FL ESPN 7:30 p.m. No. 4 Penn State No. 5 Notre Dame L 27–24 66,881  
Cotton Bowl (Semifinal) January 10, 2025 AT&T StadiumArlington, TX ESPN 7:30 p.m. No. 6 Ohio State No. 3 Texas W 28-14 74,527 [12]
CFP National Championship Game January 20, 2025 Mercedes-Benz StadiumAtlanta, GA ESPN 7:30 p.m. No. 6 Ohio State No. 5 Notre Dame W 34–23 77,660  

For the 2020–2025 bowl cycle, the Big Ten is scheduled to annually have eight appearances in the following bowls: Rose Bowl (unless they are selected for playoffs filled by a Pac-12 team if champion is in the playoffs), Citrus Bowl, Rate Bowl (formerly the Guaranteed Rate Bowl), Las Vegas Bowl, Music City Bowl, Pinstripe Bowl, GameAbove Sports Bowl (formerly the Quick Lane Bowl), and ReliaQuest Bowl (formerly the Outback Bowl). The Big Ten teams will go to a New Year's Six bowl if a team finishes higher than the champions of Power Four conferences in the final College Football Playoff rankings. The Big Ten champion is also eligible for the College Football Playoff if it is among the qualifying teams in the final CFP ranking.

Big Ten records vs other conferences

[edit]

2024–2025 records against non-conference foes

Awards and honors

[edit]

Player of the Week Honors

[edit]
Week Offensive Defensive Special Teams Freshman
Player Position Team Player Position Team Player Position Team Player Position Team
Week 1 (September 2) [17] Miller Moss QB USC Kevin Winston Jr. S PSU Mateen Bhagani K UCLA Dylan Raiola QB NEB
Dominic Zvada K MICH
Week 2 (September 9)[18] Kyle Monangai RB RUT Xavier Scott DB ILL Tez Johnson WR ORE Nick Marsh WR MSU
Week 3 (September 16)[19] Kurtis Rourke QB IU Dante Trader Jr. DB MD Atticus Sappington K ORE Kerry Brown DB MIN
Week 4 (September 23)[20] Kaleb Johnson RB IA Josaiah Stewart DE MICH Tommy Doman P MICH Khmori House LB WAS
Luke Altmyer QB ILL
Week 5 (September 30)[21] Kalel Mullings RB MICH Abdul Carter DE/LB PSU Dominic Zvada (2) K MICH Jeremiah Smith WR OSU
Tez Johnson WR ORE
Week 6 (October 7)[22] Kurtis Rourke (2) QB IU Jordan Burch DE ORE Brian Buschini P NEB Trech Kekahuna WR WIS
Emeka Egbuka WR OSU
Week 7 (October 14)[23] Dillon Gabriel QB ORE Aaron Graves DL IA Luke Akers K/P NW Ryan Barker K PSU
Tyler Warren TE PSU Koi Perich DB MIN
Week 8 (October 21)[24] Ethan Garbers QB UCLA Gabe Jacas LB ILL Jonathan Kim K/P MSU Nick Marsh (2) WR MSU
Week 9 (October 28)[25] Max Brosmer QB MIN D'Angelo Ponds DB IU Kaden Wetjen PR IA Koi Perich DB MIN
Week 10 (November 4)[26] Kaleb Johnson (2) RB IA Carson Bruener LB WAS Dragan Kesich K MIN Kwazi Gilmer WR UCLA
Week 11 (November 11)[27] Will Howard QB OSU Carson Schwesinger LB UCLA Dominic Zvada (3) K MICH Jeremiah Smith (2) WR OSU
Week 12 (November 18)[28] Tyler Warren (2) TE PSU Matayo Uiagalelei OLB ORE Atticus Sappington (2) K ORE Demond Williams Jr. QB WAS
Russell Davis II DL WAS
Week 13 (November 25)[29] Pat Bryant WR ILL Cody Simon LB OSU Drew Stevens K IA Jacory Barney Jr. WR NEB
Will Howard (2) QB OSU
Week 14 (December 2)[30] Aidan Laughery RB ILL Jailin Walker LB IU Drew Stevens (2) K IA Antwan Raymond RB RUT
Kurtis Rourke (3) QB IU Dominic Zvada (4) K MICH

Big Ten individual awards

[edit]

The following individuals won the conference's annual player and coach awards:

Award Player School
Most Valuable Player Dillon Gabriel Oregon
Graham–George Offensive Player of the Year Dillon Gabriel Oregon
Griese–Brees Quarterback of the Year Dillon Gabriel Oregon
Richter–Howard Receiver of the Year Jeremiah Smith Ohio State
Ameche–Dayne Running Back of the Year Kaleb Johnson Iowa
Kwalick–Clark Tight End of the Year Tyler Warren Penn State
Rimington–Pace Offensive Lineman of the Year Aireontae Ersery Minnesota
Nagurski–Woodson Defensive Player of the Year Abdul Carter Penn State
Smith–Brown Defensive Lineman of the Year Abdul Carter Penn State
Butkus–Fitzgerald Linebacker of the Year Jay Higgins Iowa
Tatum–Woodson Defensive Back of the Year Caleb Downs Ohio State
Thompson–Randle El Freshman of the Year Jeremiah Smith Ohio State
Bakken–Andersen Kicker of the Year Dominic Zvada Michigan
Eddleman–Fields Punter of the Year Eddie Czaplicki USC
Rodgers–Dwight Return Specialist of the Year Kaden Wetjen Iowa
Hayes–Schembechler Coach of the Year Curt Cignetti Indiana
Dave McClain Coach of the Year Curt Cignetti Indiana
Dungy–Thompson Humanitarian Award Madieu Williams Maryland
Ford–Kinnick Leadership Award Russell Wilson Wisconsin

All-Conference Teams

[edit]

2024 Big Ten All-Conference Teams and Awards

Coaches Honorable Mention: ILLINOIS: Luke Altmyer, Hank Beatty, TeRah Edwards, Josh Gesky, Lane Hansen, Josh Kreutz, David Olano, Melvin Priestly, Dylan Rosiek; INDIANA: James Carpenter, Justice Ellison, Zach Horton, Mike Katic, Mark Langston, Carter Smith, Jailin Walker, CJ West; IOWA: Yahya Black, Luke Elkin, Aaron Graves, Ethan Hurkett, Nick Jackson, Quinn Schulte, Beau Stephens, Mason Richman; MARYLAND: Bryce McFerson, Dante Trader Jr.; MICHIGAN: Zeke Berry, Donovan Edwards, Giovanni El-Hadi, Ernest Hausmann, Myles Hinton, Will Johnson, Derrick Moore, Semaj Morgan, Kalel Mullings, Josh Priebe; MICHIGAN STATE: Charles Brantley, Luke Newman, Jordan Turner; MINNESOTA: Tyler Cooper, Daniel Jackson, Jah Joyner, Koi Perich, Ethan Robinson, Anthony Smith, Alan Soukup, Danny Striggow, Darius Taylor; NEBRASKA: Bryce Benhart, Brian Buschini, John Bullock, Malcolm Hartzog Jr., Nash Hutmacher; NORTHWESTERN: Joe Himon, Aidan Hubbard, Xander Mueller, Anto Saka, Josh Thompson, Caleb Tiernan, Damon Walters; OHIO STATE: Denzel Burke, John Ferlmann, Josh Fryar, Ty Hamilton, Davison Igbinosun, Tegra Tshabola, Josh Simmons; Oregon: Jeff Bassa, Jamaree Caldwell, Traeshon Holden, Thsheem Johnson, Iapani Laloulu, Jabbar Muhammad, Nikko Reed, Atticus Sappington, Evan Stewart, Teitum Tuioti; PENN STATE: Drew Allar, Ryan Barker, Anthony Donkoh, Zane Durant, Tyler Duzansky, Tony Rojas, Drew Shelton, Nicholas Singleton, Sal Wormley; PURDUE: Keelan Crimmins, Gus Hartwig, Will Heldt, Kydran Jenkins, Nick Levy, Marcus Mbow, Dillon Thieneman; RUTGERS: Kwabena Asamoah, Dariel Djabome, Kyonte Hamilton, Robert Longerbeam, Austin Riggs, Ian Strong; UCLA: Kaylin Moore, Jay Toia; USC: Makai Lemon, Easton Mascarenas-Arnold, Lake McRee, Gavin Meyer, Elijah Paige, Kamari Ramsey; WASHINGTON: Denzel Boston, Jonah Coleman, Thaddeus Dixon, Keleki Latu, Alphonzo Tuputala, Sebastian Valdez; WISCONSIN: Atticus Bertrams, Ricardo Hallman, Jack Nelson, Tawee Walker, Hunter Wohler.

Media Honorable Mention: ILLINOIS: Luke Altmyer, Matthew Bailey, J.C. Davis, Lane Hansen, Josh Kreutz, Dylan Rosiek; INDIANA: Shawn Asbury II, James Carpenter, Lanell Carr Jr., Justice Ellison, Zach Horton, Mark Langston, Myles Price, Nicolas Radicic, Carter Smith, Jailin Walker, CJ West; IOWA: Yahya Black, Deontae Craig, Aaron Graves, Ethan Hurkett, Nick Jackson, Quinn Schulte, Beau Stephens, Luke Lachey, Mason Richman; MARYLAND: Ruben Hyppolite II, Bryce McFerson, Glendon Miller, Dante Trader Jr.; MICHIGAN : Giovanni El-Hadi, Ernest Hausmann, Myles Hinton, William Wagner; MICHIGAN STATE: Khris Bogle, Charles Brantley, Luke Newman, Jordan Turner; MINNESOTA: Maverick Baranowski, Quinn Carroll, Tyler Cooper, Mark Crawford, Daniel Jackson, Jah Joyner, Dragan Kesich, Jalen Logan-Redding, Ethan Robinson, Anthony Smith, Alan Soukup, Danny Striggow, Darius Taylor, Justin Walley; NEBRASKA: John Bullock, Brian Buschini, Malcolm Hartzog Jr., Nash Hutmacher, Ben Scott, DeShon Singleton; NORTHWESTERN: AJ Henning, Aidan Hubbard, Theran Johnson, Xander Mueller, Josh Thompson, Caleb Tiernan, Devin Turner, Mac Uihlein; OHIO STATE: John Ferlmann, Josh Fryar, Ty Hamilton, Jordan Hancock, Davison Igbinosun, Quinshon Judkins, Jack Sawyer, Drew Shelton, Sonny Styles, Tyliek Williams; Oregon: Jeff Bassa, Jamaree Caldwell, Marcus Harper II, Ross James, Brandon Johnson, Tez Johnson, Tysheem Johnson, Iapani Laloulu, Nikko Reed, Teitum Tuioti; PENN STATE: Drew Allar, Kaytron Allen, Ryan Barker, Nick Dawkins, Dani Dennis-Sutton, Anthony Donkoh, Zane Durant, DVon J-Thomas, Jalen Kimber, Drew Shelton, Nicholas Singleton, Harrison Wallace III, Zakee Wheatley; PURDUE: Cole Brevard, Keelan Crimmins, Gus Hartwig, Max Klare, Dillon Thieneman; RUTGERS: Kwabena Asamoah, Kyonte Hamilton, Aaron Lewis, Robert Longerbeam, Shaquan Loyal, Tyreem Powell, Austin Riggs, Gus Zilinskas; UCLA: Kain Medrano, Kaylin Moore, Jay Toia; USC: Mason Cobb, Makai Lemon, Easton Mascarenas-Arnold, Jonah Monheim, Hank Pepper, Kamari Ramsey, Jaylin Smith; WASHINGTON: Denzel Boston; WISCONSIN: Atticus Bertrams, Ricardo Hallman, Joe Huber, Jack Nelson, Tawee Walker, Hunter Wohler.

Home attendance

[edit]
Team Stadium Capacity Game 1 Game 2 Game 3 Game 4 Game 5 Game 6 Game 7 Game 8 Total Average % of capacity
Illinois Memorial Stadium 60,670 43,849 60,670† 51,498 55,815 60,670 58,088 52,660 383,250 54,750 90.2%
Indiana Memorial Stadium 52,626 44,150 39,082 48,323 53,082† 53,082 53,082 53,082 343,883 49,126 93.35%
Iowa Kinnick Stadium 69,250 69,250† 69,250 69,250 69,250 69,250 69,250 69,250 484,750 69,250 100.0%
Maryland SECU Stadium 51,802 35,421 34,819 39,371 39,371 43,013† 31,433 30,214 253,642 36,235 69.9%
Michigan Michigan Stadium 107,601 110,665 111,170† 110,250 110,340 110,849 110,576 109,830 773,680 110,526 102.7%
Michigan State Spartan Stadium 75,005 70,271 70,066 71,114 69,682 68,423 57,558 50,038 457,152 65,307 87.07%
Minnesota Huntington Bank Stadium 50,805 50,805 41,006 44,534 52,048 50,913 48,696 44,266 332,268 47,467 93.4%
Nebraska Memorial Stadium 85,458 86,072 86,906 86,546 87,464 87,453 86,923 521,364 86,894 101.7%
Northwestern Northwestern Medicine Field at Martin Stadium[a] 12,000[31] 12,023 11,062 10,631 12,023 12,023 38,147 [b] 26,378 [b] 122,287 17,470 n/a
Ohio State Ohio Stadium 102,780 102,011 102,665 105,135 104,830 103,463 105,751 106,005 102,819 832,679 104,085 101.3%
Oregon Autzen Stadium 54,000 57,435 58,134 59,802 60,129† 59,830 59,245 59,603 414,178 59,168 109.6%
Penn State Beaver Stadium 106,572 [32] 103,861 109,526 109,911 110,047 111,030† 110,233 104,044 106,013 864,665 108,379 101.7%
Purdue Ross–Ade Stadium 61,441 59,488 61,441† 61,441 57,463 61,141 58,346 359,320 59,887 97.5%
Rutgers SHI Stadium 52,454 47,803 41,021 54,079 50,111 53,726 44,120 47,524 338,384 48,341 92.2%
UCLA Rose Bowl 80,816 47,811† 43,051 42,012 53,467 59,473 35,018 280,832 46,805 57.92%
USC Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum 77,500 68,110 74,118 72,250 63,404 75,304 73,241 426,427 71,071 91.7%
Washington Husky Stadium 70,138 66,984 64,222 72,132 71,251 68,811 343,400 68,680 97.9%
Wisconsin Camp Randall Stadium 76,057[33] 75,158 76,069 76,323† 76,091 76,403 76,298 76,059 532,401 76,057 100.0%
Conference 72,646[c] 7,855,730 65,464 94.45%[d]

Bold – At or Exceed capacity
†Season High

  1. ^ Temporary stadium to be used during the construction of the new Ryan Field, set to open in 2026.
  2. ^ a b Game to be played at Wrigley Field. Its listed capacity for baseball is 41,649, but does not reflect changes for football.
  3. ^ Nortwestern's attendance figures are accounted for in totals and averages, however, considering the season was played in temporary venues in 2024, capacity figures are ignored.
  4. ^ Nortwestern's attendance figures are accounted for in totals and averages, however, considering the season was played in temporary venues in 2024, capacity figures are ignored.

2025 NFL draft

[edit]
Team Round 1 Round 2 Round 3 Round 4 Round 5 Round 6 Round 7 Total
Illinois 1 1
Indiana 1 1 2
Iowa 1 1 3 5
Maryland 1 1 2 2 6
Michigan 3 1 1 2 7
Michigan State 1 1
Minnesota 1 1 1 3
Nebraska 1 1 2
Northwestern
Ohio State 4 3 3 3 1 14
Oregon 2 1 3 2 1 1 10
Penn State 2 1 2 5
Purdue 1 1
Rutgers 1 2 3
UCLA 2 1 2 5
USC 1 1 1 3
Washington 1 1
Wisconsin 2 2

The following list includes all Big Ten players who were drafted in the 2025 NFL draft

* compensatory selection
× 2020 Resolution JC-2A[broken anchor] selection
Rnd. Pick No. NFL team Player Pos. College Conf. Notes
1 3 New York Giants Abdul Carter  DE Penn State Big Ten
1 5 Cleveland Browns Mason Graham  DT Michigan Big Ten
from Jacksonville[R1 - 1]
1 10 Chicago Bears Colston Loveland  TE Michigan Big Ten
1 13 Miami Dolphins Kenneth Grant  DT Michigan Big Ten
1 14 Indianapolis Colts Tyler Warren  TE Penn State Big Ten
1 19 Tampa Bay Buccaneers Emeka Egbuka  WR Ohio State Big Ten
1 21 Pittsburgh Steelers Derrick Harmon  DT Oregon Big Ten
1 24 Minnesota Vikings Donovan Jackson  G Ohio State Big Ten
1 28 Detroit Lions Tyleik Williams  DT Ohio State Big Ten
1 29 Washington Commanders Josh Conerly Jr.  OT Oregon Big Ten
1 32 Kansas City Chiefs Josh Simmons  OT Ohio State Big Ten
from Philadelphia[R1 - 2]
2 33 Cleveland Browns Carson Schwesinger  LB UCLA Big Ten
2 36 Cleveland Browns Quinshon Judkins  RB Ohio State Big Ten
from Jacksonville[R2 - 1]
2 38 New England Patriots TreVeyon Henderson  RB Ohio State Big Ten
2 45 Indianapolis Colts JT Tuimoloau  DE Ohio State Big Ten
2 46 Los Angeles Rams Terrance Ferguson  TE Oregon Big Ten
from Atlanta [R2 - 2]
2 47 Arizona Cardinals Will Johnson  CB Michigan Big Ten
2 48 Houston Texans Aireontae Ersery  OT Minnesota Big Ten
from Miami via Las Vegas
2 52 Tennessee Titans Oluwafemi Oladejo  DE UCLA Big Ten
from Pittsburgh via Seattle[R2 - 3]
3 74 Denver Broncos Pat Bryant  WR Illinois Big Ten
from Carolina
3 78 Arizona Cardinals Jordan Burch  DE Oregon Big Ten
3 80 Indianapolis Colts Justin Walley  CB Minnesota Big Ten
3 82 Tennessee Titans Kevin Winston Jr.  S Penn State Big Ten
from Seattle
3 83 Pittsburgh Steelers Kaleb Johnson  RB Iowa Big Ten
3 86 Los Angeles Chargers Jamaree Caldwell  DT Oregon Big Ten
3 90 Los Angeles Rams Josaiah Stewart  DE Michigan Big Ten
3 94 Cleveland Browns Dillon Gabriel  QB Oregon Big Ten
from Buffalo[R3 - 1]
3* 97 Houston Texans Jaylin Smith  CB USC Big Ten
from Minnesota
102 Minnesota Vikings Tai Felton  WR Maryland Big Ten
2020 Resolution JC-2A[broken anchor] selection,[a] from Detroit via Jacksonville and Houston
4 111 Philadelphia Eagles Ty Robinson  DT Nebraska Big Ten
from Carolina via Denver
4 113 San Francisco 49ers CJ West  DT Indiana Big Ten
4 115 Arizona Cardinals Cody Simon  LB Ohio State Big Ten
4 116 Houston Texans Woody Marks  RB USC Big Ten
from Miami
4 122 Carolina Panthers Lathan Ransom  S Ohio State Big Ten
from Denver
4 123 Pittsburgh Steelers Jack Sawyer  DE Ohio State Big Ten
4 132 Chicago Bears Ruben Hyppolite II  LB Maryland Big Ten
from Buffalo
5 143 Miami Dolphins Jordan Phillips  DT Maryland Big Ten
from Las Vegas
5 147 San Francisco 49ers Jordan James  RB Oregon Big Ten
from New Orleans via Washington[R5 - 1]
5 148 Los Angeles Rams Ty Hamilton  DL Ohio State Big Ten
from Chicago
5 154 New York Giants Marcus Mbow  G Purdue Big Ten
from Seattle[R5 - 2]
5 155 Miami Dolphins Dante Trader  S Maryland Big Ten
from Denver[R5 - 3]
5 156 Kansas City Chiefs Jeffrey Bassa  LB Oregon Big Ten
from Pittsburgh
5 164 Pittsburgh Steelers Yahya Black  DT Iowa Big Ten
from Detroit via Cleveland and Philadelphia[R5 - 4]
5* 170 Buffalo Bills Jordan Hancock  CB Ohio State Big Ten
from Dallas[R5 - 5]
5* 174 Arizona Cardinals Denzel Burke  CB Ohio State Big Ten
from Dallas
6 185 Pittsburgh Steelers Will Howard  QB Ohio State Big Ten
from Chicago via Seattle[R6 - 1]
6 187 Houston Texans Jaylen Reed  S Penn State Big Ten
from San Francisco via Minnesota[R6 - 2]
6 188 Tennessee Titans Kalel Mullings  RB Michigan Big Ten
from Dallas[R6 - 3]
6 191 Philadelphia Eagles Myles Hinton  OT Michigan Big Ten
from Arizona via Denver[R6 - 4]
6 195 Chicago Bears Luke Newman  G Michigan State Big Ten
from Los Angeles via Pittsburgh[R6 - 5]
6 201 Minnesota Vikings Kobe King  LB Penn State Big Ten
6 204 Dallas Cowboys Ajani Cornelius  OT Oregon Big Ten
from Detroit via Cleveland and Buffalo[R6 - 6]
6 205 Washington Commanders Kain Medrano  LB UCLA Big Ten
6* 212 Baltimore Ravens Robert Longerbeam  CB Rutgers Big Ten
7 217 Dallas Cowboys Jay Toia  DT UCLA Big Ten
from Tennessee via New England[R7 - 1]
7 218 Atlanta Falcons Jack Nelson  OT Wisconsin Big Ten
from Cleveland via LA Chargers[R7 - 2]
7 219 New York Giants Thomas Fidone  TE Nebraska Big Ten
7 221 Jacksonville Jaguars Jonah Monheim  C USC Big Ten
7 222 Las Vegas Raiders Cody Lindenberg  LB Minnesota Big Ten
7 224 Houston Texans Kyonte Hamilton  DT Rutgers Big Ten
from Chicago[R7 - 3]
7 226 Pittsburgh Steelers Carson Bruener  LB Washington Big Ten
from Carolina[R7 - 4]
7 227 San Francisco 49ers Kurtis Rourke  QB Indiana Big Ten
7 232 Indianapolis Colts Hunter Wohler  S Wisconsin Big Ten
7 233 Chicago Bears Kyle Monangai  RB Rutgers Big Ten
from Cincinnati[R7 - 5]
7 234 Seattle Seahawks Mason Richman  OT Iowa Big Ten
7 235 Tampa Bay Buccaneers Tez Johnson  WR Oregon Big Ten
7 240 Buffalo Bills Kaden Prather  WR Maryland Big Ten
from Minnesota via Cleveland and Chicago[R7 - 6]
7 247 Dallas Cowboys Tommy Akingbesote  DT Maryland Big Ten
from Kansas City via Carolina[R7 - 7]
7 248 New Orleans Saints Moliki Matavao  TE UCLA Big Ten
from Philadelphia via Washington[R7 - 8]
7* 249 San Francisco 49ers Connor Colby  G Iowa Big Ten
7* 255 Houston Texans Luke Lachey  TE Iowa Big Ten
from Cleveland[R7 - 9]

Trades In the explanations below, (PD) indicates trades completed prior to the start of the draft (i.e. Pre-Draft), while (D) denotes trades that took place during the 2022 draft.

  1. ^ No. 2: Cleveland → Jacksonville (D). Cleveland traded first-, fourth- and sixth-round selections (2nd, 104th and 200th overall) to Jacksonville in exchange for first-, second-, fourth-round selections (5th, 36th, and 126th overall) and a first-round selection in the 2026 NFL draft.[Trade 1]
  2. ^ No. 31: Kansas City → Philadelphia (D). Kansas City traded a first-round selection (31st overall) to Philadelphia in exchange for first- and fifth-round selections (32nd and 164th overall).[Trade 2]
  1. ^ No. 36: Jacksonville → Cleveland (D). See Round 1: Cleveland → Jacksonville.[Trade 1]
  2. ^ No. 26: LA Rams → Atlanta (D). LA Rams traded first- and third-round selection (26th and 101st overall) to Atlanta in exchange for second- and seventh-round selections (46th and 242th overall) and a first-round selection in the 2026 NFL draft.[Trade 3]
  3. ^ No. 52: Pittsburgh → Seattle (PD). Pittsburgh traded second- and seventh-round selections (52nd and 223rd overall) to Seattle in exchange for a sixth-round selection (185th overall) and WR DK Metcalf.[Trade 4]
  1. ^ No. 94: Buffalo → Cleveland (PD). Buffalo traded a third-round selection (94th overall) and a 2026 seventh-round selection to Cleveland in exchange for a sixth-round selection (204th overall) and WR Amari Cooper.[Trade 5]
  1. ^ No. 93: Washington → New Orleans (PD). Washington traded third-, fourth- and sixth-round selections (93rd, 131st and 184th overall) to New Orleans in exchange for a fifth-round selection (147th overall) and CB Marshon Lattimore.[Trade 6]
  2. ^ No. 154: Seattle → NY Giants (PD). Seattle traded a fifth-round selection (154th overall) and a 2024 second-round selection to NY Giants in exchange for DL Leonard Williams.[Trade 7]
  3. ^ No. 155: Denver → Miami (PD). Denver traded a fifth-round selection (155th overall) and LB Bradley Chubb to Miami in exchange for a 2023 first-round selection, a 2024 fourth-round selection and RB Chase Edmonds.[Trade 8]
  4. ^ No. 164: Detroit → Cleveland → Philadelphia → Kansas City. Multiple trades:
            Detroit → Cleveland (PD). Detroit traded a fifth-round selection (164th overall) and a 2026 sixth-round selection to Cleveland in exchange for a 2026 seventh-round selection and DE Za'Darius Smith.[Trade 9]
            Cleveland → Philadelphia (PD). Cleveland traded a fifth-round selection (164th overall) and QB Dorian Thompson-Robinson to Philadelphia in exchange for QB Kenny Pickett.[Trade 10]
            Philadelphia → Kansas City (D). See Round 1: Kansas City → Philadelphia.[Trade 2]
  5. ^ No. 170: Dallas → Buffalo (PD). Dallas traded a fifth-round selection (170th overall) and a 2026 seventh-round selection to Buffalo in exchange for a sixth-round selection (204th overall) and CB Kaiir Elam.[Trade 11]
  1. ^ No. 185: Chicago → Seattle → Pittsburgh. Multiple trades:
           Chicago → Seattle (PD). Chicago traded a sixth-round selection (185th overall) to Seattle in exchange for LB Darrell Taylor.[Trade 12]
           Seattle → Pittsburgh (PD). See Round 2: Pittsburgh → Seattle.[Trade 4]
  2. ^ No. 187: San Francisco → Minnesota (PD). See Round 5: Minnesota → San Francisco.
  3. ^ No. 188: Dallas → Tennessee (PD). Dallas traded a sixth-round selection (188th overall) to Tennessee in exchange for a seventh-round selection (239th overall) and RB Kenneth Murray.[Trade 13]
  4. ^ No. 191: Arizona → Denver (PD). Arizona traded a sixth-round selection (191st overall) to Denver in exchange for LB Baron Browning.[Trade 14]
  5. ^ No. 162: LA Rams → Pittsburgh → NY Jets. Multiple trades:
           LA Rams → Pittsburgh (PD). LA Rams traded a fifth-round selection (162nd overall) and a 2024 fourth-round selection to Pittsburgh in exchange for a sixth-round selection (195th overall), a 2024 fifth-round selection and G Kevin Dotson.[Trade 15]
            Pittsburgh → NY Jets (PD). Pittsburgh traded a fifth-round selection (162nd overall) to NY Jets in exchange for WR Mike Williams.[Trade 16]
  6. ^ No. 171: Dallas → New England (PD). Dallas traded a fifth-round selection (171st overall) to New England in exchange for a seventh-round selection (217th overall) and QB Joe Milton.[Trade 17]
  1. ^ No. 217: Tennessee → New England → Dallas (PD). Multiple trades:
           Tennessee → New England (PD). Tennessee traded a seventh-round selection (217th overall) to New England in exchange for K Nick Folk.[Trade 18]
           New England → Dallas (PD). See Round 5: Dallas → New England.[Trade 17]
  2. ^ No. 218: Cleveland → LA Chargers → Atlanta. Multiple trades:
           Cleveland → LA Chargers (PD). Cleveland traded a seventh-round selection (218th overall) to the LA Chargers in exchange for K Dustin Hopkins.[Trade 19]
           LA Chargers → Atlanta (PD). LA Chargers traded a conditional seventh-round selection (218th overall) to Atlanta in exchange for QB Taylor Heinicke.[Trade 20]
  3. ^ No. 192: Miami → Chicago → Cleveland. Multiple trades:
           Miami → Chicago (PD). Miami traded a sixth-round selection (192nd overall) to Chicago in exchange for a seventh-round selection (224th overall) and WR Chase Claypool.[Trade 21]
           Chicago → Cleveland (PD). Chicago traded a sixth-round selection (192nd overall) to Cleveland in exchange for a seventh-round selection (240th overall) and DT Chris Williams.[Trade 22]
  4. ^ No. 226: Carolina → Kansas City (PD). Carolina traded a conditional seventh-round selection (226th overall) to Kansas City in exchange for a conditional seventh-round selection (247th overall) and WR Ihmir Smith-Marsette.[Trade 23]
  5. ^ No. 233: Cincinnati → Chicago (PD). Cincinnati traded a seventh-round selection (233rd overall) to Chicago in exchange for RB Khalil Herbert.[Trade 24]
  6. ^ No. 139: Cleveland → Minnesota (PD). Cleveland traded a fifth-round selection (139th overall) and a 2024 fifth-round selection to Minnesota in exchange for sixth and seventh-round selections (200th and 240th overall), and DE Za'Darius Smith.[Trade 25]
  7. ^ No. 114: Dallas → Carolina (PD). Dallas traded a fourth-round selection (114th overall) to Carolina in exchange for a seventh-round selection (247th overall) and WR Jonathan Mingo.[Trade 26]
  8. ^ No. 79: Miami → Philadelphia → Washington. Multiple trades:
           Miami → Philadelphia (PD). Miami traded a third-round selection (79th overall) to Philadelphia in exchange for a 2024 fourth-round selection (120th overall).[Trade 27]
           Philadelphia → Washington (PD). Philadelphia traded a conditional third-round selection (79th overall) and two seventh-round selections (236th and 248th overall) to Washington in exchange for a fifth-round selection (165th overall) and WR Jahan Dotson. The condition – that Washington would receive the higher of Miami or Philadelphia's third-round selection in 2025 – was converted on December 8, 2024, when the Eagles clinched a playoff spot, ensuring the Dolphins' pick was higher than the Eagles' own.[Trade 28]
           Washington → Houston (PD). Washington traded third- and seventh-round selections (79th and 236th overall), and 2026 second- and fourth-round selections to Houston in exchange for a fourth-round selection (128th overall) and T Laremy Tunsil.[Trade 29]
  9. ^ No. 56: Minnesota → Houston → Buffalo. Multiple trades:
           Minnesota → Houston (PD). Minnesota traded a second-round selection (56th overall), and 2024 second- and sixth-round selections to Houston in exchange for 2024 first- and seventh-round selections.[Trade 30]
           Houston → Buffalo (PD). Houston traded a second-round selection (56th overall) to Buffalo in exchange for a fifth-round selection (166th overall), a 2024 sixth-round selection and WR Stefon Diggs.[Trade 31]
  1. ^ a b Patra, Kevin (April 24, 2025). "2025 NFL Draft: Jaguars select Colorado two-way star Travis Hunter after trading up to No. 2 pick". NFL.com. Retrieved April 25, 2025.
  2. ^ a b "Eagles select LB Jihaad Campbell with the No. 31 pick in the 2025 NFL Draft". philadelphiaeagles.com. April 24, 2025. Retrieved April 25, 2025.
  3. ^ McFadden, Will (April 24, 2025). "Falcons select James Pearce Jr. with No. 26 pick in 2025 NFL Draft". atlantafalcons.com. Retrieved April 25, 2025.
  4. ^ a b Varley, Teresa (March 13, 2025). "Steelers acquire Metcalf in trade with Seahawks". Steelers.com. Pittsburgh Steelers. Retrieved March 14, 2025.
  5. ^ "Browns trade Amari Cooper to Bills". ClevelandBrowns.com. October 15, 2024. Retrieved October 15, 2024.
  6. ^ Selby, Zach (November 5, 2024). "Commanders acquire CB Marshon Lattimore via trade with Saints". Commanders.com. Retrieved November 5, 2024.
  7. ^ Henderson, Brady (October 30, 2023). "Sources: Giants trade DL Leonard Williams to Seahawks". ESPN.com. Retrieved October 30, 2023.
  8. ^ "Miami Dolphins make trade with Denver". Miami Dolphins. November 1, 2022. Retrieved November 1, 2022.
  9. ^ "Lions agree to terms with Cleveland Browns to acquire DL Za'Darius Smith via trade". detroitlions.com. November 5, 2024. Retrieved November 5, 2024.
  10. ^ "Eagles agree to acquire Dorian Thompson-Robinson from Browns in exchange for Kenny Pickett". philadelphiaeagles.com. March 12, 2025. Retrieved March 15, 2025.
  11. ^ White, Alec (March 12, 2025). "Buffalo Bills agree to terms to trade CB Kaiir Elam to Cowboys in exchange for fifth and seventh-round draft picks". buffalobills.com. Retrieved March 15, 2025.
  12. ^ Boyle, John (August 23, 2024). "Seahawks Trade Outside Linebacker Darrell Taylor To Bears". Seahawks.com. Retrieved August 23, 2024.
  13. ^ Wyatt, Jim (March 13, 2025). "Titans Trade LB Kenneth Murray to Cowboys as Teams Swap Picks in the 2025 NFL Draft". tennesseetitans.com. Tennessee Titans. Retrieved March 14, 2025.
  14. ^ Urban, Darren (November 4, 2024). "Cardinals Deal For Outside Linebacker Baron Browning". Arizona Cardinals. Retrieved November 4, 2024.
  15. ^ Varley, Teresa (August 27, 2023). "Steelers trade Dotson to Rams". Pittsburgh Steelers. Retrieved December 31, 2023.
  16. ^ Varley, Teresa (November 5, 2024). "Steelers acquire Williams in trade". Steelers.com. Retrieved November 5, 2024.
  17. ^ a b Yarrish, Tommy (April 3, 2025). "Cowboys complete trade for Patriots QB Joe Milton III". dallascowboys.com. Retrieved April 3, 2025.
  18. ^ Wyatt, Jim (August 29, 2023). "Titans Trade for Former Patriots Kicker Nick Folk". tennesseetitans.com. Retrieved August 15, 2024.
  19. ^ "Browns agree to trade with Chargers to acquire K Dustin Hopkins, make other roster moves". clevelandbrowns.com. August 28, 2023. Retrieved August 15, 2024.
  20. ^ McElhaney, Tori (August 28, 2024). "Falcons trade quarterback Taylor Heinicke to Chargers". atlantafalcons.com. Retrieved February 17, 2025.
  21. ^ Hajduk, Gabby (March 13, 2024). "Roster Move: Bears trade Chase Claypool to Dolphins". chicagobears.com. Retrieved October 6, 2023.
  22. ^ Mayer, Larry (August 24, 2024). "Roster Move: Bears acquire DT Chris Williams in trade with Browns". ChicagoBears.com.
  23. ^ Gantt, Darin (August 29, 2023). "Wide receiver acquired in trade with Chiefs". panthers.com. Retrieved August 14, 2024.
  24. ^ Hajduk, Gabby (November 5, 2024). "Roster Move: Bears trade Khalil Herbert to Bengals". ChicagoBears.com. Retrieved November 5, 2024.
  25. ^ Poisal, Anthony (May 16, 2023). "Browns acquire Pro Bowl DE Za'Darius Smith in trade with Vikings". Cleveland Browns. Retrieved September 12, 2023.
  26. ^ Hill, Kassidy (November 5, 2024). "Panthers trade Jonathan Mingo to Dallas". panthers.com. Retrieved November 5, 2024.
  27. ^ Patra, Kevin (April 27, 2024). "Dolphins trade up to select Tennessee's Jaylen Wright, add to RB room in Round 4 of 2024 NFL Draft". NFL.com. Retrieved April 28, 2024.
  28. ^ Spadaro, Dave (August 22, 2024). "Eagles acquire WR Jahan Dotson in a trade with the Commanders". philadelphiaeagles.com. Retrieved August 22, 2024.
  29. ^ Shook, Nick (March 10, 2025). "Texans trading LT Laremy Tunsil to Commanders for draft picks". NFL.com. NFL Enterprises. Retrieved March 13, 2025.
  30. ^ Seifert, Kevin (March 15, 2024). "Vikings acquire second 1st-round pick in trade with Texans". MSN.com. Retrieved March 15, 2024.
  31. ^ White, Alec (April 3, 2024). "Bills and Texans agree to terms on trade to send WR Stefon Diggs to Houston". buffalobills.com. Retrieved April 3, 2024.

Head coaches

[edit]

Current as of January 20, 2025

Team Head coach Years at school Overall record Record at school B1G record
Illinois Bret Bielema[b] 4 125–80 (.610) 28–22 (.560) 55–37 (.598)
Indiana Curt Cignetti 1 130–37 (.778) 11–2 (.846) 8–1 (.889)
Iowa Kirk Ferentz 26 216–145 (.598) 204–124 (.622) 128–88 (.593)
Iowa Seth Wallace (interim)[c] 1 1–0 (1.000) 1–0 (1.000) 0–0 (–)
Maryland Mike Locksley[d] 6 35–67 (.343) 33–41 (.446) 16–40 (.286)
Michigan Sherrone Moore 1 9–5 (.643) 9–5 (.643) 5–4 (.556)
Michigan State Jonathan Smith 1 39–42 (.481) 5–7 (.417) 3–6 (.333)
Minnesota P. J. Fleck 8 88–61 (.591) 58–39 (.598) 34–36 (.486)
Nebraska Matt Rhule 2 59–56 (.513) 12–13 (.480) 6–12 (.333)
Northwestern David Braun[e][f] 2 12–13 (.480) 12–13 (.480) 7–11 (.389)
Ohio State Ryan Day[g] 6 70–10 (.875) 70–10 (.875) 46–5 (.902)
Oregon Dan Lanning 3 35–6 (.854) 35–6 (.854) 10–0 (1.000)
Penn State James Franklin 11 125–57 (.687) 101–42 (.706) 64–33 (.660)
Purdue Ryan Walters 2 5–19 (.208) 5–19 (.208) 3–15 (.167)
Rutgers Greg Schiano[h] 16 94–101 (.482) 94–101 (.482) 13–32 (.289)
UCLA DeShaun Foster 1 5–7 (.417) 5–7 (.417) 3–6 (.333)
USC Lincoln Riley 3 81–24 (.771) 26–14 (.650) 4–5 (.444)
Washington Jedd Fisch 1 23–29 (.442) 6–7 (.462) 4–5 (.444)
Wisconsin Luke Fickell[i] 2 76–38 (.667) 13–13 (.500) 11–15 (.423)
  1. ^ Detroit received a third-round selection (102nd overall) after NY Jets hired former Lions defensive coordinator Aaron Glenn as head coach.[34]
  2. ^ Bret Bielema coached in the Big Ten from 2006 through 2012 at Wisconsin, going 37–19 in Big Ten play and winning three Big Ten championships.
  3. ^ Seth Wallace served as interim head coach for the 2024 season opener against Illinois State as head coach Kirk Ferentz served a one-game suspension.[35]
  4. ^ Mike Locksley served as interim head coach at Maryland in 2015 and coached for six games, going 1–5.[36]
  5. ^ Pat Fitzgerald was relieved as head coach on July 10, 2023, after allegations of hazing within the Wildcat football program surfaced.[37]
  6. ^ David Braun was named interim head coach on July 14, 2023.[38]
  7. ^ Ryan Day served as interim head coach at Ohio State for the first three games of the 2018 season while Urban Meyer served a three-game suspension and went 3–0.[39]
  8. ^ Greg Schiano served as head coach at Rutgers from 2001 through 2011 then left for the NFL. Following the conclusion of the 2019 season, Schiano returned to Rutgers for his second stint as head coach. The Scarlet Knights competed in the Big East Conference in his previous stay at the school.
  9. ^ Luke Fickell served as interim head coach at Ohio State in 2011, going 6-7 overall and 3-5 in the Big Ten. Fickell took over as coach of Wisconsin for the 2022 Guaranteed Rate Bowl

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Thamel, Pete (July 10, 2023). "Northwestern fires football coach Pat Fitzgerald". ESPN. Retrieved January 12, 2023.
  2. ^ Northwestern DC David Braun to be interim coach
  3. ^ Mel Tucker suspended amid investigation into sexual harassment of rape survivor
  4. ^ Jonathan Smith Named Michigan State University Head Football Coach
  5. ^ Indiana coach Tom Allen fired, owed $20.8M buyout
  6. ^ Cignetti Named 30th Head Football Coach at Indiana University
  7. ^ Jim Harbaugh accepts head coaching job with Chargers
  8. ^ Michigan tabs Sherrone Moore to replace Harbaugh as head coach.
  9. ^ Ohio State hires UCLA's Chip Kelly to replace Bill O'Brien as OC
  10. ^ UCLA names former Bruins RB DeShaun Foster new coach.
  11. ^ "2024 All Teams Football Recruiting Team Rankings". Rivals.com. April 10, 2024. Retrieved May 28, 2024.
  12. ^ "2024 Recruit Football Team Rankings". 247Sports.com. April 9, 2024. Retrieved May 28, 2024.
  13. ^ "2024 Industry Football Team Recruiting Rankings". On3.com. April 9, 2024. Retrieved May 28, 2024.
  14. ^ "Ohio State picked as runaway 2024 Big Ten favorite in 14th annual cleveland.com Preseason Big Ten Football Poll". July 22, 2024.
  15. ^ "Ohio State picked as runaway 2024 Big Ten favorite in 14th annual cleveland.com Preseason Big Ten Football Poll". Cleveland.com. July 22, 2024.
  16. ^ "Big Ten preseason poll puts Nebraska in middle of the pack, mentions Dylan Raiola". Omaha.com. July 22, 2024.
  17. ^ "USC, Penn State, UCLA, Michigan and Nebraska Earn Weekly Football Honors". BigTen.org. Big Ten Conference. September 2, 2024. Retrieved September 2, 2024.
  18. ^ "Rutgers, Illinois, Oregon, and Michigan State Earn Weekly Football Honors". BigTen.org. Big Ten Conference. September 9, 2024. Retrieved September 9, 2024.
  19. ^ "Indiana, Maryland, Oregon, and Minnesota Earn Weekly Football Honors". BigTen.org. Big Ten Conference. September 16, 2024. Retrieved September 16, 2024.
  20. ^ "Iowa, Illinois, Michigan and Washington Earn Weekly Football Honors". BigTen.org. Big Ten Conference. September 23, 2024. Retrieved September 23, 2024.
  21. ^ "Michigan, Oregon, Penn State and Ohio State Earn Weekly Football Honors". BigTen.org. Big Ten Conference. September 30, 2024. Retrieved September 30, 2024.
  22. ^ "Indiana, Nebraska, Ohio State, Oregon and Wisconsin Earn Weekly Football Honors". BigTen.org. Big Ten Conference. October 7, 2024. Retrieved October 7, 2024.
  23. ^ "Iowa, Minnesota, Northwestern, Oregon and Penn State Earn Weekly Football Honors". BigTen.org. Big Ten Conference. October 14, 2024. Retrieved October 14, 2024.
  24. ^ "Illinois, Michigan State and UCLA Earn Weekly Football Honors". BigTen.org. Big Ten Conference. October 21, 2024. Retrieved October 21, 2024.
  25. ^ "Indiana, Iowa and Minnesota Earn Weekly Football Honors". BigTen.org. Big Ten Conference. October 28, 2024. Retrieved October 28, 2024.
  26. ^ "Iowa, Minnesota, UCLA and Washington Earn Weekly Football Honors". BigTen.org. Big Ten Conference. November 4, 2024. Retrieved November 4, 2024.
  27. ^ "Michigan, Ohio State and UCLA Earn Weekly Football Honors". BigTen.org. Big Ten Conference. November 11, 2024. Retrieved November 11, 2024.
  28. ^ "Oregon, Penn State and Washington Earn Weekly Football Honors". BigTen.org. Big Ten Conference. November 18, 2024. Retrieved November 18, 2024.
  29. ^ "Illinois, Iowa, Nebraska and Ohio State Earn Weekly Football Honors". BigTen.org. Big Ten Conference. November 25, 2024. Retrieved November 25, 2024.
  30. ^ "Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan and Rutgers Earn Weekly Football Honors". BigTen.org. Big Ten Conference. December 2, 2024. Retrieved December 2, 2024.
  31. ^ McKessy, Jack (August 28, 2024). "How Northwestern turned lacrosse field into unique 12,000-seat, lakeside football stadium". USA Today. Retrieved September 3, 2024.
  32. ^ "Facilities". Archived from the original on November 26, 2011. Retrieved January 14, 2016.
  33. ^ "Camp Randall Stadium" (PDF). Wisconsin Football: 2024 Fact Book. Wisconsin Badgers. August 19, 2024. p. 245. Retrieved September 8, 2024.
  34. ^ Williams, Charean (January 22, 2025). "Lions will receive a third-round pick in the next two drafts for losing Aaron Glenn". NBCSports. Retrieved January 22, 2025.
  35. ^ Schultz, Brad (August 22, 2024). "Iowa football's Kirk Ferentz addresses his one-game suspension amid NCAA Level II recruiting violation". The Daily Iowan.
  36. ^ "OC Mike Locksley named interim head coach at Maryland". RSN. October 11, 2015.
  37. ^ "Northwestern fires football coach Pat Fitzgerald'". ESPN. July 10, 2023.
  38. ^ Thamel, Pete (July 14, 2023). "Northwestern DC David Braun to be interim coach'". ESPN.
  39. ^ Allen, Paul Myerberg and Kevin (August 22, 2018). "Ohio State suspends football coach Urban Meyer three games: 'I want to apologize'". USA TODAY.