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What’s so big about the Big 10?

By Liz Funk

Remember the guy in your high school who consistently scored the winning point in every game—and every sport? When he graduated and went to a “Big 10” school, did you assume that “Big 10” meant “heaven”?

For sports lovers, Big 10 schools are heaven. As are Big 12 schools, and schools in the Atlantic Coast Conference.

Athletic conferences are regional associations of intercollegiate athletics for student teams. In addition to providing opposing teams to play, athletic conferences also provide scholarship money to student athletes and put emphasis on the pairing of academics and athletics.

The Big 10, the association for schools in the upper Midwest (think Illinois, Michigan, Ohio, Iowa, Minnesota) is in itself a bit of an irony; it’s made up of 11 schools, which is why the “Big Ten” icon has an “11” carved into the “T.”

The Big 12 is home to—you guessed it—12 schools, such as Missouri, Texas, Kansas, Nebraska and Colorado. The Atlantic Coast Conference hosts schools on the East Coast including Virginia, Duke, NC State and Wake Forest.

So, what it’s like to attend one of these schools? According to students and administrators, although there are a lot of sporting events going on, it’s not all fun and games.

Admissions
Let’s face it: Virtually every NBA, NFL and bocce ball aficionado from Maine to Montana wants to go to a school that participates in a large athletic conference. 

Hence, competition for a ticket in—namely, an admissions ticket—is tough.  It’s absolutely possible—but you will need to earn it.

A 1998 Texas state law guarantees admission to all Texas public school students ranked in the top 10 percent of their classes.

Augustine Garza, the deputy director of freshman admissions at the University of Texas, says, “only 4,500 students were admitted who weren’t top 10 Texans. That group of 4,500 students is made up of non-Texas residents, international students and Texan students not in the top 10 percent.” 

Even students in this pool must be strong “academically, boast a sparkling resume and put together some nice writing samples.”

Academics
The competition doesn’t end once you’re admitted to a big athletic-conference school.

Patrick Keenan-Devlin, the just-graduated student body president at Northwestern University (a member of the Big 10) passionately vouches for the academic merits of Northwestern. Despite the rousing social life inherent in being a Big 10, he says Northwestern students still regard academics as a high priority. 

“We’re a Big 10 that behaves like an Ivy League,” explains Keenan-Devlin.

Garza also emphasizes Texas’s various academic attractions, including extensive research opportunities for undergraduates. 

“Would I say our athletic offerings are a pull for prospective students? Absolutely,” he says. “But so are our academics.”

School spirit/ rivalries
If a Big 10/Big 12/AAC school was accused of not having school spirit, its students wouldn’t be too hurt; they’d know their accuser was gravely wrong.

If there is any league of schools known for possessing school spirit, it’s the schools in prominent athletic conferences.  Not only are these campuses draped in their school colors, but rivalries with other schools in their conference run deep.

Writes Will Blythe, author of To Hate Like This Is to Be Happy Forever: A Thoroughly Obsessive, Intermittently Uplifting, and Occasionally Unbiased Account of the Duke-North Carolina Basketball Rivalry (HarperCollins, 2006), “It is a basketball rivalry that simply has no equal. Duke vs. North Carolina is… the democrats vs. the republicans, the Yankees vs. the Confederates, capitalism vs. communism.” 

Expect such rivalry to exist at other schools, too—generally all in good fun.

Social life
With the exception of the University of Miami, Boston College and Georgia Tech, the schools that belong to the biggest athletic conferences tend to be set in suburban and rural areas (unless you consider Duke’s Durham to be a thriving metropolis). 

This generally means that students stick around campus for student activities, parties, and of course, sporting events.

Each school also has its own traditions for their spectator sports. “We are the nerds of the Big 10,” says Northwestern’s Keenan-Devlin. “We see Ohio State as our rival, but if you asked them, I doubt they’d feel the same way.” 

Keenan-Devlin explains an unusual school spirit habit: “At sporting events, we shake our keys at the other team and chant, ‘You will be our valet.’ 

We like to make use of the fact that we’re the only private school in the Big 10.”

The final draw of going to a school so involved in its athletics is the campus community that accompanies. Students find the atmosphere to be welcoming and student-oriented—and alumni tend to reach out to current students and other graduates to network, reminisce on the good old days at school, or celebrate their favorite sport season.

19 comments (Add your own)

1. steve wrote:
Northwestern is not an Ivy league school and the Big 10 is not filled with party schools. Go to Florida or Texas and you will see how college towns party. The Big 10 plays it's football games at 11am in cold weather and the kids who attend Indiana, Minnesota and Northwestern don't even go to the games.

November 27, 2007 @ 5:30 PM

2. james wrote:
Steve,

You are joking. Go to a game at Ohio State or Wisco and see how the Big 10 gets down. We in the Big 10 can party as hard as anybody in the south.

November 27, 2007 @ 5:33 PM

3. kelly wrote:
Why doesn't the Big 10 change its name to Big 11?

November 27, 2007 @ 5:34 PM

4. Jane Adams wrote:
I am planning to sign with Iowa and it is a great school with great academics and athletics. If you have not been there before you should come check it out.

November 27, 2007 @ 5:35 PM

5. Leo Z wrote:
Did anybody see what Florida did to Ohio State in football and basketball twice. The Big 10 is slow and not very good. Enough about them being a great conference.

November 27, 2007 @ 5:37 PM

6. Phil H. wrote:
kelly- how about the "little 11?: Since none of those "powerhouses" can climb above West Virginia?
:)

November 27, 2007 @ 5:37 PM

7. Kevin L. wrote:
I agree with Leo Z. It was clear in last years National Championship Game that Ohio State does not have the foot speed to compete with the upper echelon teams in the SEC. Florida's lineman are faster than Ohio State's backfield. Well maybe thats an exxageration, but Florida rocked their world on the biggest stage simply because they were quicker.

November 29, 2007 @ 10:39 AM

8. Spencer wrote:
I don't really know if "team speed" is the reason that OSU lost to Florida. Big Ten schools just don't know how to defend the spread offense, as we saw in the NC game.

Oh, and I wouldn't really consider the Big Ten a group of "party schools," with maybe Wisconsin and Ohio State as some exceptions. The Big Ten can't hold a candle to the SEC in terms of partying.

November 29, 2007 @ 11:39 AM

9. Lou wrote:
The Big Ten is consistently the most overrated conference in all of college sports.

November 29, 2007 @ 11:41 AM

10. wrote:
Erroneous, Lou, erroneous. The Big Ten is one of the most storied conferences in college sports. OSU, Michigan, Penn State, etc. have some of the greatest history of athletic excellence and student spirit.

November 29, 2007 @ 11:52 AM

11. drew z wrote:
The big 10 has the best fans and the most passion in the country. People need to watch a game in 10 degree weather to appreciate the love.

November 29, 2007 @ 3:35 PM

12. Hank G wrote:
The Big 10 is a joke. The SEC has better athletes and coaches.

November 30, 2007 @ 12:39 PM

13. matt l wrote:
Ohio State wants zero part of LSU. The good news for Ohio State is that they don't play Florida and they have zero pressure to win since they won't be favored.

December 3, 2007 @ 5:28 PM

14. drew t wrote:
How bad is the big 10 in basketball this year? It is crazy.
The Wildcats recently lost at home to Brown. Michigan recently was blown out at Harvard. Iowa lost to Louisiana-Monroe in the first round of its Hawkeye Challenge -- its second loss in 26 years of the tournament. Ohio State has scored in the 40s twice in a pair of losses. Penn State finished eighth in the Old Spice Classic in Orlando.

December 4, 2007 @ 12:52 PM

15. jimmy d wrote:
LSU is going to kill Ohio State. To much speed again for the Big 10. How many times do we have to see this happen?

December 5, 2007 @ 11:15 AM

16. Coach Steve wrote:
The Big 10 is the most storied conference in the NCAA. One of my players was looking at a number of schools in the SEC, but he ultimately decided on a Big 10 school because it had much more to offer.

December 11, 2007 @ 11:54 AM

17. Brian H wrote:
Sure, some of the other schools may have the better athletes in their conferences. But lets look at the academic standards between some of the schools compared to the Big Ten. You will find higher GPA's and higher graduation rates in the Big 10 compared to some of the other schools in other conferences. Being the best team in the nation does not guarantee the athletes future. Face it...after college, where do some of these athletes wind up if they can't make the pro's or they wind up injured? To much focus in college nowdays focuses on the moment instead of ahead to the future. Thats the difference between the Big 10 and most of the other conferences. Horizon Conference is another great example of putting education up there at the top. They may not be powerhouse teams...but they sure know how to play the game and prep their athletes for the future.

December 28, 2007 @ 6:41 AM

18. Mike wrote:
I would choose most of the Big Ten schools over SEC ones because you'll get a much better education there. I don't know if many athletes are concerned with that though.

February 6, 2008 @ 12:38 PM

19. lauren wrote:
this shows just how important academics is too

February 20, 2008 @ 1:44 PM

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