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What Schools are in the Big Ten? Complete Conference Guide

The Big Ten Conference isn’t just about sports—it’s a mix of history, academics, and tradition that dates back to 1896. People recognize Big Ten schools for their academic excellence, competitive sports teams, and passionate communities.    So, who’s in the conference in 2025? With all the changes in college athletics, it’s easy to lose track. […]

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The Big Ten Conference isn’t just about sports—it’s a mix of history, academics, and tradition that dates back to 1896. People recognize Big Ten schools for their academic excellence, competitive sports teams, and passionate communities.   

So, who’s in the conference in 2025? With all the changes in college athletics, it’s easy to lose track. Here’s your up-to-date guide to all 18 schools and what makes each one unique. 

The University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign is a global leader in research, especially in engineering and computer science. In 2024, the Illini won the Big Ten Men’s Basketball Tournament and reached the Elite Eight in the NCAA Tournament.  

  • Famous Athletes: Red Grange (NFL pioneer), Dick Butkus (NFL Hall of Famer), Deron Williams (NBA All-Star). 

Indiana’s world-famous Jacobs School of Music and men’s basketball program are just a couple reasons it stands out. In 2024, the Hoosiers football team had a historic 10-0 start under new head coach Curt Cignetti.   

  • Unique Major: Game Design & Development, combining art, storytelling, and tech.   

The University of Iowa is known for its strong healthcare and creative writing programs. On the court, Caitlin Clark’s record-breaking basketball career left a lasting legacy, with her jersey retired in 2025.   

  • Famous Athletes: Caitlin Clark (NCAA all-time scoring leader, 2024 WNBA Rookie of the Year), Nile Kinnick (Heisman Trophy winner, stadium namesake). 

Maryland is known for its journalism, engineering, and business programs. The student-athletes also excel in their academics, setting a record-high Academic Progress Rate in 2023–24.   

  • Notable Alumni: Kevin Plank (Under Armour founder), Sergey Brin (Google co-founder), Carly Fiorina (first female Fortune 20 CEO). 

  • Biggest Rival: In general, it’s Penn State. In lacrosse, Maryland battles with Johns Hopkins each year for a crab-shaped rivalry trophy.

  • Fun Fact: Students believe that rubbing the Testudo mascot statue brings good luck. On the flip side, the “Point of Failure” spot on campus is where they avoid stepping if they want to graduate on time.   

The University of Michigan is strong in both academics and sports, and it is often ranked one of the best public universities in the country. In 2024, Michigan took home the College Football Playoff Championship.   

  • Academic Spotlight: Business, engineering, and nursing programs consistently rank in the top 15 nationally. 

  • Unique Major: Interdisciplinary Program in the Environment, combining science, policy, and sustainability.  

  • Notable Alumni: Larry Page (Google co-founder), Madonna (iconic performer), James Earl Jones (actor, the voice of Darth Vader). 

  • Famous Athletes: Tom Brady (7-time Super Bowl champ), Desmond Howard (Heisman Trophy winner), Carol Hutchins (winningest NCAA softball coach). 

Michigan State University is known for its strong programs in education and veterinary medicine. It also shines in sports, with the men’s hockey team winning back-to-back Big Ten titles in 2024 and 2025.   

  • Unique Major: Sustainable Parks, Recreation, and Tourism, focused on managing outdoor spaces.   

  • Notable Alumni: James Caan (The Godfather actor), Sam Raimi (director of Spider-Man), Gretchen Whitmer (Governor of Michigan). 

  • Famous Athletes: Magic Johnson (NBA legend), Draymond Green (NBA), Savatheda Fynes (Olympic gold medalist). 

  • Iconic Eatery: Conrad’s Grill, known for late-night “Spartan Wraps” stuffed with tots, cheese, chicken, and all kinds of comfort food combinations. 

Located in the Twin Cities, the University of Minnesota excels in health sciences and business. The Golden Gophers are consistently top performers in hockey and wrestling. 

  • Coolest Major: Biomedical Engineering with a Biomedical Imaging Emphasis, combining anatomy, 3D modeling, and communication.   

  • Notable Alumni: Hubert Humphrey (former U.S. Vice President), Jessica Lange (actress who won two Oscars, three Emmys, and a Tony). 

As Nebraska’s flagship land-grant university, the home of the Big Red stands out for its strengths in agricultural sciences and education. On the field, the baseball team won the 2025 Big Ten Tournament as the No. 8 seed to defend their 2024 title. 

  • Unique Program: Nebraska Translator and Interpreter Corps, which seeks to eliminate language barriers and create strong, dynamic connections between the different communities in Nebraska. 

  • Notable Alumni: Warren Buffett (CEO of Berkshire Hathaway), Johnny Carson (The Tonight Show legend), Willa Cather (Pulitzer Prize-winning author). 

  • Star Athletes: Jordan Burroughs (Olympic gold medalist in wrestling), Jordan Larson (Olympic gold medalist, volleyball). 

  • Iconic Eatery: Yia Yia’s Pizza, a downtown Lincoln staple with unique pizza flavors, loaded baked potatoes, and loaded cheese bread. 

  • Hidden Gem: The Speech & Debate Team, the oldest student group on campus, took home national titles in 2022 and 2023.   

Located just north of Chicago, Northwestern combines elite academics with Big Ten athletics. Boasting a 98% graduation success rate—the highest in FBS programs—the Wildcats are also getting a brand-new, state-of-the-art stadium in 2026. 

  • Notable Alumni: Stephen Colbert (comedian and TV host), George R.R. Martin (Game of Thrones author), Kathryn Hahn (comedian, actress). 

Ohio State blends top-tier academics with powerhouse athletics. The Buckeyes claimed their ninth football championship in January 2025 alongside 12 national titles during the 2023–24 season.  

  • Notable Alumni: R.L. Stine (Goosebumps author), George Steinbrenner (legendary Yankees owner), Patricia Heaton (Everybody Loves Raymond). 

  • Famous Athletes: Eddie George (Heisman winner), Jack Nicklaus (golf legend), Katie Smith (WNBA Hall of Famer). 

  • Iconic Eatery: Buckeye Donuts, a 24/7 spot with fresh donuts, all-day breakfast, and gyros.  

A leader in environmental science, education, and law, the University of Oregon officially joined the Big Ten in 2024. The Ducks hit the ground running, winning eight conference titles in their first year—more than any other Big Ten school.   

  • Coolest Major: Sports Product Design, blending engineering, creativity, and sustainability in the sports industry.   

  • Famous Athletes: Sabrina Ionescu (Olympic gold medalist, WNBA star), Ashton Eaton (Olympic decathlon champion). 

  • Iconic Eatery: Duck’s House, a popular game day spot with a UO-themed menu, including the “Oregon Waffle.” 

Located in University Park, Penn State excels in engineering and business. With one of the largest alumni networks worldwide, the Nittany Lions are also a force athletically, especially in football and wrestling.  

  • Academic Spotlight: Smeal College of Business, renowned for its supply chain, operations, and management programs.   

  • Unique Major: Turfgrass Science—training experts who manage fields for stadiums, golf courses, and more.   

  • Notable Alumni: Keegan-Michael Key (comedian), Jonathan Frakes (Star Trek), Lara Spencer (Good Morning America). 

  • Star Athletes: Saquon Barkley (NFL star), David Taylor (Olympic wrestling champ), Ali Krieger (FIFA World Cup winner). 

Purdue is a leader in engineering, aerospace, and agriculture with an impressive reputation in both academics and athletics. Its engineering programs and men’s basketball team consistently grab national attention.  

  • Academic Highlight: College of Engineering, especially strong in aerospace, mechanical, and civil engineering.   

  • Notable Alumni: Neil Armstrong (first person on the moon), Gus Grissom (NASA astronaut), Janice Voss (astronaut). 

  • Star Athletes: Drew Brees (NFL MVP), Glenn Robinson (NBA star), Stephanie White (WNBA star and coach). 

  • Iconic Eatery: Triple XXX Family Restaurant, Indiana’s oldest drive-in diner, known for root beer and burgers.   

  • Fun Fact: Purdue’s official mascot, the Boilermaker Special, is an actual train that drives around campus and is a regular at games.   

One of the oldest colleges in the U.S., Rutgers is the main research university in New Jersey. The university is well-known for its strong programs in health, environmental, social, and behavioral sciences. 

  • Unique Major: Packaging Engineering, a rare program blending engineering, materials science, and design for sustainability.   

The University of California Los Angeles is a top public research university with standout programs in life sciences, education, and fine arts. A bright spot in both academics and athletics, the Bruins captured their first Big Ten Women’s Basketball Tournament Championship in 2025.   

  • Strongest Major: Design Media Arts, which combines design, art, and technology for creativity in the digital age. 

  • Famous Alumni: John Williams (composer, Star Wars), Ben Stiller (comedian/actor), Marilyn Monroe (iconic actress, singer, model). 

  • Famous Athletes: Jackie Robinson (baseball icon), Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (NBA legend), Dot Richardson (Olympic gold medalist, collegiate softball coach). 

  • Iconic Eatery: Lamonica’s NY Pizza, the late-night, Westwood institution known for its Brooklyn-made pies. 

The University of Southern California is a private research powerhouse, well-known for its cinematic arts, engineering, and business programs. The Trojans secured the Big Ten Women’s Outdoor Track & Field Championship in 2025. 

  • Unique Major: Narrative Studies, preparing students for storytelling in novels, films, theatre, and more. 

  • Famous Alumni: George Lucas (Star Wars creator), Will Ferrell (actor, comedian), Shonda Rhimes (producer and screenwriter). 

  • Famous Athletes: Allyson Felix (most decorated track athlete in history), Reggie Bush (Heisman winner, NFL star). 

The University of Washington is a leading public research school and excels in areas like computer science, nursing, and engineering. In their debut Big Ten season, UW made a big impression, grabbing multiple NCAA individual national titles.  

  • Unique Major: Aquatic & Fishery Sciences, which (pun intended) dives into aquatic organisms, freshwater and marine environments, and aquatic sustainability. 

As Wisconsin’s flagship university, UW–Madison is a leader in computer science, economics, and food science. Its student section is known for the “Jump Around” tradition, when everyone jumps to the song at the end of the third quarter. 

  • Unique Program: The Fermented Foods & Beverages certificate, which teaches students how to create products like beer, cheese, kimchi, and kombucha.   

  • Famous Alumni: Dick Cheney (former U.S. Vice President), Charles Lindbergh (aviation pioneer), Lorraine Hansberry (first African American author to have a play on Broadway). 

  • Notable Graduated Athletes: Russell Wilson (NFL quarterback), J.J. Watt (NFL defensive superstar), Rose Lavelle (FIFA World Cup Champion, Olympic medalist). 

The Big Ten is a powerhouse of academics, athletics, and tradition. With legendary rivalries, incredible schools, and vibrant campus cultures, it’s where competition meets community. Whether it’s a packed stadium on game day or a classroom full of bright ideas, the Big Ten continues to inspire and connect a thriving community.   

That’s the full list of Big Ten schools!   

Did we miss anything? What topic should we cover next? Tell us!

@BigTen on X, Instagram, TikTok, and Facebook

 



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Big 12 Media Days Preview: Big 12 Makes Case For Most Loaded QB Class In Country Stream of NCAA Football

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How NIL and transfer portal have changed the way college basketball coaches lead

Editor’s Note: This story is a part of Peak, The Athletic’s desk covering leadership, personal development and success through the lens of sports. Follow Peak here. Midway through his junior season, Richie Saunders, a 6-foot-5 small forward at BYU, received an unexpected piece of advice from his head coach. Saunders was in the midst of a breakout season, […]

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Editor’s Note: This story is a part of Peak, The Athletic’s desk covering leadership, personal development and success through the lens of sports. Follow Peak here.

Midway through his junior season, Richie Saunders, a 6-foot-5 small forward at BYU, received an unexpected piece of advice from his head coach. Saunders was in the midst of a breakout season, which meant that endorsement offers were starting to surface. However, he worried about distractions, so he wanted to wait until the offseason.

That is, until Kevin Young, BYU’s first-year head coach, told him the financial component was worth prioritizing now.

“He’s kind of helped me see, for example, being a professional basketball player, you have to have these kinds of conversations during the season,” Saunders said in March, during the Cougars’ run to the Sweet 16. “And it can’t detract from your focus, but you need to have them.”

Until recently, a college basketball coach encouraging a player to pursue endorsements during the season would have been unimaginable. However, that was before the era of name, image and likeness (NIL) and the transfer portal.

The birth of paid players and de facto free agency has reshaped college sports in almost every way. It’s also challenged the traditional leadership archetype of a college basketball coach.

Once upon a time, the leadership style of a college coach was simple: intense, demanding, rigid, focused on detail and motivating with more stick than carrot. However, as the college game has become more professionalized, the result is a coaching model that is a little younger, a little more flexible and a little more in line with their NBA brethren.

The evolution has left coaches grappling with a big question: As college basketball players gain more money, more agency and more power, what is the best way to lead them?


In the early 2000s, Daniel Goleman, an American psychologist and science journalist, conceived a framework for leadership, identifying six leadership styles commonly found in the business world. They were, in order: coercive, authoritative, affiliative, democratic, pacesetting and coaching.

Each style included a detailed description, but Goleman offered a useful shorthand.

  1. Coercive leaders demand immediate compliance.
  2. Authoritative leaders mobilize people toward a vision.
  3. Affiliative leaders create emotional bonds and harmony.
  4. Democratic leaders build consensus through participation.
  5. Pacesetting leaders expect excellence and self-direction.
  6. Coaching leaders develop people for the future.

Through research and experience, Goleman maintained that the best leaders toggled between styles, utilizing each one at the appropriate moment, like different clubs in a golf bag.

The classic archetype of a college coach has often leaned on two styles, blending what Goleman called “coaching” leadership with “coercive” leadership. Perhaps most visible in coaches like Bobby Knight, Tom Izzo or Mike Krzyzewski, these styles emphasized discipline, rigid demands and high standards to prepare players for the next level.

However, that style, former college coach and NBA coach Lon Kruger said, is harder to employ in the pros, where players are grown men with lavish salaries and stars often possess more power than the coach. As a result, NBA coaches have usually prioritized other leadership styles, leaning more on Goleman’s “authoritative”, “affiliative” and “democratic” leadership styles.

“With NBA guys,” Kruger said, “it’s more of a communication thing than a challenging or demanding type of thing.”

When Brad Stevens transitioned from head coach at Butler University to the Boston Celtics in 2013, he found that the most difficult challenge in the NBA was creating a sense of purpose in a group amid the anticipation of roster turnover. If a player wasn’t sure if he would be back the following season, he was less likely to buy in.

The cyclical nature of college basketball has consistently led to roster turnover. However, the recent addition of unlimited free transfers has created a system with more turnover and more uncertainty than almost any level of professional basketball.

“I get a kick out of people when they say, ‘Man, you’ve got like pro rules,’ ” Izzo said in March. “I always say, ‘Which ones are those? We don’t have free agency. We don’t have a salary cap. We’ve got beyond pro rules.’ ”

Over the years, Izzo is among those coaches who have softened his most grueling methods. In his earliest days at Michigan State, he borrowed football pads from Nick Saban and put their players through the famous “War Drill,” a full-contact rebounding exercise. He eventually stopped using the pads, though not because he worried about his players.

“The lawyers would sue me,” Izzo said. “So I don’t do that anymore.”

Izzo, though, still feels like that drill is essential. When he studies other successful coaches, he sees similar values. Players need to be disciplined, tough, accountable and connected. The difference in the era of NIL may lie in the ways coaches communicate their standards and values to players.

“We go too far to the right or too far to the left when we’re making adjustments,” Izzo said. “And that’s why I vowed that I’m going to do what I believe in.”

Michigan State, which advanced to the Elite Eight last season before losing to Auburn, has retained much of Izzo’s foundational program culture. However, the portal, coaches say, has put more pressure on coaches to create bonds and connections before each season.

“You feel like you can skip steps when you really can’t,” Duke coach Jon Scheyer said. “You have to start from ground zero every summer.”

For years, Scheyer says, the Duke program ran on the idea of empowering players to lead, passing down the culture to the next generation.

“Players teaching players,” Scheyer said.

That changed, in part, with the emergence of one-and-done freshmen, which led to increased roster turnover. And it changed even more as the portal wreaked havoc on continuity. So last offseason, the Duke staff embarked on an unofficial summer class: Duke Basketball 101.

“We went back to the basics this (last) summer of just how to build this team from the ground up, build the connectivity, teach the standards, hold them accountable to what the standards are,” Scheyer said. “And that’s something I know we’re going to have to do each year going forward.”


Duke coach Jon Scheyer knew he was only going to have Cooper Flagg for one season. (Jared C. Tilton / Getty Images)

When Alex Jensen became the head coach of Utah in early March, he surveyed the landscape of college basketball: player movement, money, negotiations for what amounted to year-long deals.

For Jensen, previously an assistant with the Dallas Mavericks, the system resembled one of his former stops: head coach in the NBA’s G League.

“The college game, I think it’s becoming more and more professional,” Jensen told reporters at his opening news conference. However, Jenson said he thinks most players are still the same.

“They want to know if you care and two, if you know what you’re talking about,” Jensen said.

Jensen, who played at Utah, was the latest NBA assistant to land a Power Four college job (Florida State also hired Luke Loucks, a former Sacramento Kings assistant). The coaches were comfortable with the transactional nature of professional basketball.

In some cases, Jensen says, “it makes it simpler if that makes any sense.”

“That chaos has been my reality,” Loucks said in March. “My reality as a professional coach and a professional player in Europe is constant roster turnover, constant ego management. One player is on a $300 million contract, and the other one is on minimum wage. Minimum wage in the NBA is like $1.2 million, but … there’s egos involved.”

What Loucks learned during his years as an NBA assistant was not that coaches should lower their standards or be overly deferential to players. It was that trust and respect were paramount in building relationships. To lead players at the professional level meant understanding who they were and what motivated them.

“You never want to be friends with your players,” Loucks said. “But you need them to trust you. Or all of your words and all of your teaching, all of your coaching is in one ear and out the other. And it has to be authentic. If you don’t build authentic relationships, you have no chance.”

The trend has not been limited to head coaches.

In May, Kansas hired former NBA head coach Jacque Vaughn — a program legend — to fill an assistant coaching opening, while Duke hired Evan Bradds, a 31-year-old assistant with the Utah Jazz. In announcing the hire, Duke touted Bradds’ “player development and NBA coaching experience.”

Meanwhile, Kansas coach Bill Self said that Vaughn “brings immediate credibility to guys that want to be pros out there.”

When Kruger coached in the NBA, he often heard the phrase “players’ coach.” Its definition was always elusive, depending on the source. Still, he came to this conclusion: A player’s coach was a good communicator, honest and empathetic, who always provided a clear path forward.

“My style was not to yell and scream,” Kruger said. “Which I think certainly doesn’t work in the NBA. You have to communicate on a more peer basis rather than saying, ‘I’m the coach and you’re the player and disregard everything else.’ ”

College coaches may soon resemble their NBA counterparts, Kruger says, but the secrets of leading basketball players remain the same, no matter the level: You need to be able to adjust. You need to embody different styles. You need to build relationships.

In other words, you need to be an effective and consistent leader.

(Illustration: John Bradford / The Athletic; Andrew Wevers, Alex Slitz / Getty Images)



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First recruiting splash of college football’s revenue-sharing era felt a lot like the NFL

A new yet strangely familiar disturbance took place in college football last weekend. Texas Tech celebrated Independence Day with one of the biggest recruiting wins in program history. Five-star offensive tackle Felix Ojo — No. 1 recruit in the state of Texas and top-10 national prospect in the 2026 class — committed to the Red […]

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A new yet strangely familiar disturbance took place in college football last weekend.

Texas Tech celebrated Independence Day with one of the biggest recruiting wins in program history. Five-star offensive tackle Felix Ojo — No. 1 recruit in the state of Texas and top-10 national prospect in the 2026 class — committed to the Red Raiders. Ojo chose Tech over Texas, Ohio State and just about every other power conference school, a coup for the program.

Just as startling was the financial news that soon followed. As college sports embark on a new revenue-sharing voyage under the House settlement, it was reported that Ojo would be going to Tech on a three-year, $5.1 million revenue-share agreement, setting the market just days after the new system went into effect July 1. Or maybe it’s three years, $2.3 million. Depending on the source.

Either way, the dollar figure itself isn’t a new thing. Since name, image and likeness compensation was introduced in 2021, money has become an increasingly standard part of the recruiting conversation. And within the rules. But this situation was different. The timing of Ojo’s decision makes him the highest-profile recruiting commitment of the rev-share era, when the dollar figure attached to him will be coming fully and directly from the university as part of a capped annual revenue-sharing pool.

Within this fledgling framework of college sports, the money is now more relevant than ever. As conflicting reports on Ojo’s revenue-share agreement trickled in over the weekend, distracting fans from their star-spangled revelry, social media buzzed with folks marveling at the price tag while also debating whether it’s a wise investment.

This is new territory for college football. But it feels a lot like the NFL.

A blue-chip five-star such as Ojo is a boon for any college program, but especially Texas Tech, which beat out the in-state Longhorns and a slew of elite programs. Tech emerged as a legit recruiting force in recent years thanks to its oil-dipped resources, led by billionaire boosters Cody Campbell and John Sellers. The alums and self-made oil magnates led the charge on funding Tech’s big-money NIL efforts, but the House settlement and revenue-sharing system alter that calculus.

The settlement aims to rein in an unregulated NIL landscape and put some guardrails in place with direct revenue sharing capped at $20.5 million per school in Year 1 and roughly 75 percent of that going to football at most power conference programs. Jury’s still out on whether it works as intended, but Ojo’s commitment — and contract — is an early indication the Red Raiders will remain a force to be reckoned with.

And yet, the bigger-picture takeaway from a blockbuster recruiting weekend was how college football is speeding faster and faster toward an inevitably NFL-ized future.

ESPN first reported the $5.1 million deal via Ojo’s agent, Derrick Shelby of Prestige Management. Shelby confirmed those details to The Athletic on Saturday, and that the entirety of the deal would be from Tech’s direct revenue share. However, multiple Texas Tech sources rebutted the specifics, telling The Athletic the agreement is for $2.3 million, with a verbal agreement that the total value could be renegotiated into the $5 million range depending on future circumstances.

A lack of clarity on contract details isn’t uncommon. NIL deals were not required to be made public under the old way, and there was plenty of incentive for agents to inflate the dollars on behalf of their athletes and for booster-led NIL collectives to keep their budgets confidential. (And for the schools to feign ignorance.) It’s long been similar in the NFL with free agency and re-signings. Agents leak the highest feasible dollar figure to media insiders; fans celebrate, opposing fans chirp back that the player is overpaid, and the salary-cap wonks implore those on both sides to “wait until we find out about the guarantees.” There’s no requirement for NFL contracts to be made public either, but eventually, the details usually come to light, offering a fair amount of transparency to the process.

That hasn’t been the case in college football. To this point. With no “salary” cap — no NIL guardrails at all, really — there was little impetus for transparency. Most insight was either dodgy or surprisingly voluntary, such as Ohio State athletic director Ross Bjork’s publicly stating that the Buckeyes, who went on to win the national title, had a $20 million roster in 2024. A willingness and ability to shell out NIL dollars gave a sense of which schools were contenders, but so much of it was (and still is) half-truths and whispers. And like the good ole days of the bag man, it was largely unregulated.

Now the stakes have changed. There’s a revenue-share cap and reporting requirements, with a new enforcement arm in place to oversee it. It’s not entirely clear how the various details and clauses of these rev share agreements will hold up if challenged in court (along with other aspects of the settlement), but the universities seem to be taking them seriously until convinced otherwise.

The public still won’t be afforded that transparency — the revenue-share agreements will be kept behind the curtain — but how schools and their individual programs build out and balance rosters within the cap will be crucial to success. Much like it is in the NFL.

Yes, there will still be over-the-cap NIL deals for the elite programs, and maybe even some loopholes. But cap management and roster building are the next frontier. Which teams are most efficient with their rev-share money? Who has to overpay for big names and premium positions? How will position, recruiting rank and experience shape the compensation ranges? Who tries the “Moneyball” route? Who tries to develop and retain a young roster? Who opts for signing the established, veteran mercenaries out of the transfer portal?

Who will be the Philadelphia Eagles, and who will be the Cleveland Browns?

This is not exactly music to the ears of college football fans. Many dread the sport’s becoming a Diet NFL. And it’s not simply about the money; most operating in good faith believe, or at least concede, that college athletes should get paid. It’s more about how the money has gradually stripped the sport of its tradition and regionality — of its soul — realigning the college football map into bloated power conferences and super conferences. The House settlement only perpetuates that shift into a smaller-tent professional model.

You could feel it Friday in the wake of Ojo’s commitment. Texas Tech celebrated accordingly, and rightfully so. But even beating out Texas was a little less sweet with the Longhorns no longer a conference foe, and so much of the broader coverage was about a multiyear contract, disputed dollars and guarantees and cap considerations — all for a soon-to-be high school senior. It was a Saturday-afternoon moment dressed up in Sunday-morning discourse.

How this rev-share era unfolds is still to be determined, but it won’t slow college football’s inescapable drift. Fans can rage against it, but the fact the NFL is America’s most popular and lucrative sport won’t help in that fight.

The truth is, college football has been on this NFL trajectory for a while. Last weekend’s biggest recruiting headline was just a brand-new reminder.

(Photo of Texas Tech coach Joey McGuire: John E. Moore III / Getty Images)



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U.S. Soccer's Reform Plan Brings 5 Reasons to Believe

Today’s guest columnist is Ryan Swanson, professor in the Honors College at the University of New Mexico. His newest book, A Beautiful Shame: One Team’s Fight for Survival in a New Era of College Sports, is a season inside with a legendary college soccer program facing elimination. Hold my beer. So said U.S. Soccer during the […]

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U.S. Soccer's Reform Plan Brings 5 Reasons to Believe

Today’s guest columnist is Ryan Swanson, professor in the Honors College at the University of New Mexico. His newest book, A Beautiful Shame: One Team’s Fight for Survival in a New Era of College Sports, is a season inside with a legendary college soccer program facing elimination.

Hold my beer.

So said U.S. Soccer during the run up to the 2025 CONCACAF Gold Cup tournament. On June 10, the United States Soccer Federation put out a spicy, if brief, press release on the future of college soccer. At the top, right under the U.S. Soccer shield, was this synopsis of the release: “Expert Members to Craft Innovative Solutions.” Well, OK then.

Maybe this meant the fine folks of the USSF were finally bending to University of Maryland Coach Sasho Cirovski’s decades-long crusade to modernize the college game? Regardless, the release went on to announce a newly formed “NextGen College Soccer Committee (NSC).” This group would, the release explained, research and craft a white paper “outlining recommendations to position both men’s and women’s college soccer to thrive in the rapidly evolving soccer ecosystem.” 

That wasn’t all. U.S. Soccer CEO JT Batson, as Sportico reported, took the matter even further in a follow-up interview, suggesting that the NCS’s work might not only fix college soccer but also provide a new template for all of college sports. 

The deadline to complete this paradigm shifting work? Two months. So yeah. This was U.S. soccer playing the role of the otherwise preoccupied boss who realizes he needs to get involved an intraoffice argument. Ah crap, hold my beer…

As someone who spent a season on the inside with a NCAA Division I men’s soccer program, I’ve got some thoughts. Of course, I could just throw stones at the USSF’s glass house. I can certainly think of several pointed questions: Isn’t the women’s game in such an immeasurably stronger starting place that it should be a separate discussion? Is this plan really supposed to work for NAIA, DIII, DII and DI schools? Does the USSF have authority here, given its general disregard for the college game for the better part of three decades? But, strangely, I find myself in a place of optimism. I find myself noting several distinct advantages enjoyed by this reform effort, at this juncture. Especially when it comes to the men’s college game.           

Advantage No. 1: Money and Movement. Although college athletics is the wild west right now, we know that athlete movement and athlete compensation are going to be big issues moving forward. The House settlement has now been approved. Virtually all restrictions on an athlete transferring from one college to another have been struck down. So, the NCS starts with the knowledge that the best college athletes will expect to be paid (either directly or through NIL) and that many athletes will move institutions during their playing careers. Now, figuring out what to do about these realities is tricky. It would certainly take me more than two months to come up with a plan. But this is the landscape. 

Advantage No. 2: Scholarships. The college soccer scholarship barrier has been shattered. Prior to the House settlement, men’s DI soccer programs had 9.9 scholarships to award annually. Now there is, technically at least, the possibility of 28 player rosters, with all players on full athletic scholarships.  Conceivably, the 203 NCAA DI men’s soccer programs in the United States could collectively offer 3700 more scholarships in 2025 than they could in 2024. This won’t be cheap, of course. The value of these additional scholarships is more than $50 million. Still, a watershed moment has arrived. And if U.S. Soccer wants the, say, 14-year-old soccer phenom who just so happens to also have a great jump to pick soccer, the allure of a college scholarship cannot be overstated. 

Advantage No. 3: Omaha and Oklahoma City. If the NCS wants to create a truly impactful season-ending championship, it doesn’t have to completely reinvent the wheel. Just look at college baseball’s world series (held annually in Omaha) and college softball’s championship (Oklahoma City) as examples. Each of these finals draws hundreds of thousands of fans. Both have rising TV ratings. Both are vibrant, celebratory events worthy of the athletes and coaches involved. Surely college soccer deserves the same.  Perhaps the NCAA’s chosen venue for its College Cup, WakeMed Soccer Park in Cary, N.C., is college soccer’s Omaha. But probably not if the event continues to be held in December.

Advantage No. 4: The NCAA has never been weaker. I needn’t say much more here. Again, the House settlement. And, I mean, poor Charlie Baker. He’s busy trying to, as The Athletic reported on June 10, prepare for the “return of the bag man.”  He’s also confronting, among other paradigm rattlers, the reality that JUCO athletics no longer count on the college sports eligibility clock. Suffice it to say, never has the time been better for U.S. Soccer to augment or question or supplant the NCAA’s leadership over college soccer. 

Advantage No. 5: College soccer is worth saving. As I spent a season alongside Jeremy Fishbein and his imperiled New Mexico Lobos program, I witnessed college soccer’s position as a linchpin between the youth game and professional soccer. College soccer creates vibrant spaces (especially in NCAA soccer hotbeds like UCSB, Creighton, and Maryland) for top U.S. players to compete alongside players from around the globe. It allows late-blooming players to pursue both their sport and a college degree.  In terms of USMNT development, we know it matters. After all, five players with college soccer experience started on Sunday night in the Gold Cup final versus Mexico. While the U.S. lost 2-1, the team overperformed and its gritty performance inspired optimism moving forward.      

Men’s college soccer has long existed as a low-investment, low-expectations undertaking. Given the new college sports landscape, that seems likely to change. But toward which end? 

Perhaps the investment and expectations will rise sharply. Perhaps, college soccer will be positioned alongside the U.S.’s massive youth soccer system in order to create USMNT rosters that are truly competitive on the global scene. Or, conversely, it’s possible that the investments and expectations will erode to the point where something roughly equivalent to today’s DIII model becomes the norm throughout men’s college soccer. We’ll see.                               

Here’s hoping U.S. Soccer didn’t unhand that beer for no reason.  

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College Sports

Head Athletic Trainer in Milwaukee, WI for Alverno College

Details Posted: 07-Jul-25 Location: Milwaukee, Wisconsin Type: Full-time Categories: Sports Medicine Sports Medicine – Athletic Training Sector: Collegiate Sports Alverno College is seeking dynamic leader to serve as the head athletic trainer. The head athletic trainer is a full-time position responsible for overseeing the prevention, evaluation, treatment, and rehabilitation of injuries and related illnesses for […]

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Details

Posted: 07-Jul-25

Location: Milwaukee, Wisconsin

Type: Full-time

Categories:

Sports Medicine

Sports Medicine – Athletic Training

Sector:

Collegiate Sports

Alverno College is seeking dynamic leader to serve as the head athletic trainer. The head athletic trainer is a full-time position responsible for overseeing the prevention, evaluation, treatment, and rehabilitation of injuries and related illnesses for all student-athletes on 7 intercollegiate athletic teams. AC is a growing, competitive athletic program and is a member of NCAA DIII, the NACC.

Principal Responsibilities include but not limited to

  1. Provide and manage athletic training services for the Alverno College Department of Athletics, including scheduling and coordinating sports medicine staff coverage for all team-related events, sports medicine budget oversight, emergency care, patient education, and all administrative duties as Head Athletic Trainer.
  2. Schedule coverage for practices, home contests, and selected away contests, ensuring adequate medical support for student-athletes at all times.
  3. Supervise and manage all athletic training staff, including any contracted or outside athletic training personnel.
  4. Approve the strength and conditioning plan for intercollegiate athletics in collaboration with the strength and conditioning department, focusing on the development and implementation of flexibility, strength, and conditioning programs, and proper exercise techniques.
  5. Educate coaches and student-athletes on student-athlete health and well-being, including injury prevention, concussion protocols, nutrition, hydration, and the philosophy of athletic training services.
  6. Oversee the compilation, organization, input, and maintenance of all medical records for College student-athletes, and ensure the security of student-athlete insurance policies and medical records in adherence to College, HIPAA, and FERPA guidelines.
  7. Arrange and maintain working relationships with appropriate medical personnel, including local physicians, specialists, and team medical consultants, for the evaluation, treatment, and care of injured student-athletes.
  8. Serve as the primary liaison to all medical consultants, specialists, medical service providers, and the Alverno College Wellness Center.
  9. Coordinate and schedule medical referrals and mental health evaluations for student-athletes, determining return-to-play status in collaboration with medical professionals.
  10. Coordinate and facilitate any Department of Athletics drug testing programs in accordance with College, conference, and NCAA policies.
  11. Serve as the designated NCAA Health Care Administrator for the College.
  12. Oversee the organization and administration of the College’s Exposure Control Plan for Bloodborne Pathogens in compliance with OSHA medical safeguard regulations.
  13. Update and maintain the Emergency Action Plan for the Department of Athletics on an annual basis.
  14. Ensure full compliance with NCAA, conference, Title IX, Department of Athletics, and Alverno College rules and regulations related to athletic training, student-athlete health care, and sports medicine services.
  15. Oversee inventory management and tracking of all sports medicine equipment and supplies.
  16. Develop plans for program enhancement and professional development for the sports medicine team.
  17. Maintain the athletic trainer’s yearly calendar of coverage and ensure appropriate staffing levels.
  18. Participate in department meetings, committees, and official College functions, as appropriate.
  19. Support and model Alverno College’s commitment to a balanced and healthy lifestyle, including the Seven Dimensions of Wellness: Career, Emotional, Environmental, Intellectual, Physical, Social, and Spiritual.
  20. Perform other tasks as necessary to support the mission of the College.

 

Qualifications

  1. Bachelor’s degree with significant experience organizing and supervising an Athletic Training program
  2. Preferred Master’s
  3. National Athletic Trainers’ Association (NATA) certification
  4. Licensed and/or eligible for licensure in the state of Wisconsin
  5. Requires current certification in CPR / First Aid or the willingness and ability to become certified
  6. Knowledge of NCAA and NACC regulations
  7. Knowledge of the skills, techniques, and rules of athletic training
  8. Ability to work in a team setting and work effectively with a variety of audiences and departments.
  9. Ability to balance student needs and take on an institutional perspective
  10. Requires the ability to work with and maintain confidential information
  11. Requires strong communication skills including the ability to communicate and respond to both internal and external customers professionally and in a timely manner. Must have the ability to read, interpret, write and complete documents. 
  12. Requires strong problem-solving skills including the ability to calmly respond to emergency situations
  13. Requires the ability to work in a variety of weather conditions for extended period of times.
  14. Must be flexible with scheduling and be willing and able to work evenings and weekends
  15. Requires current Wisconsin driver’s license, meeting the requirements of Alverno for driving an Alverno vehicle.
  16. Must be able to freely move throughout the facility. Requires the ability to frequently stoop, bend, sit and stand.  Must have the ability to occasionally lift and/or move up to 50 pounds. Requires good manual dexterity. 

 

Working Conditions

  • General office environment
  • Athletic Training Room Facility
  • Courtside during indoor events
  • Sidelines during outdoor events

In accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), Alverno College will provide reasonable accommodations to qualified individuals with disabilities. If you require accommodations during the application or interview process, please contact HR@alverno.edu.

 Alverno College is an Equal Opportunity Employer and committed to workplace diversity

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About Alverno College

Based in Milwaukee, Wis., Alverno College is a four-year independent, Catholic, liberal arts college for women. Founded in 1887 by the School Sisters of St. Francis, Alverno promotes the academic, personal, and professional development of its students in a collaborative and inclusive environment. Certificate programs, digital badges, degree completion programs and graduate programs are open to all genders. A leader in higher education innovation, Alverno has earned international accolades for its highly effective ability-based, assessment-as-learning approach to education, which emphasizes hands-on experience and develops in-demand skills. The College is a Minority-Serving Institution and is Wisconsin’s first designated Hispanic-Serving Institution. The College ranks among the top schools in the Midwest for its commitment to undergraduate teaching and innovation by U.S. News & World Report.


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Report: Gavin McKenna, hockey’s top prospect, to play at Penn State

Gavin McKenna, the surefire No. 1 pick in next June’s NHL Draft, will play college hockey for Penn State next season, according to reports. McKenna, who had 41 goals and 129 points in 56 games as a 17-year-old with Medicine Hat of the Western Hockey League last season, reportedly was down to a final two […]

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Gavin McKenna, the surefire No. 1 pick in next June’s NHL Draft, will play college hockey for Penn State next season, according to reports.

McKenna, who had 41 goals and 129 points in 56 games as a 17-year-old with Medicine Hat of the Western Hockey League last season, reportedly was down to a final two of Penn State and Michigan State. He had a record 54-game scoring streak near the end of last season and was the third-youngest player ever named player of the year in Canadian major junior hockey, trailing only Sidney Crosby and John Tavares.

The news was first reported by Elite Prospects, citing multiple anonymous sources, and was confirmed by the Centre Daily Times.

McKenna is the highest-profile recruit to ever choose Penn State, a program on the rise. The Nittany Lions went 22-14-4 last season and reached the Frozen Four for the first time in school history. The team ended the season ranked No. 5 in the country.

McKenna’s recruiting class will also include a first-rounder from this year’s NHL Draft: 6-foot-4 defenseman Jackson Smith, who went 14th overall to Columbus.

Last November, the NCAA changed its rules to allow Canadian major junior players to be eligible to compete in college hockey.



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