The central lesson taught by Mike Bohn of USC and Kevin Warren at the Big Ten

Bohn and Warren participated in moving USC to the Big Ten. Neither man will be around for the actual start of this new era.

In many ways, the common thread between former USC athletic director Mike Bohn and former Big Ten Commissioner Kevin Warren is that they both started something but didn’t finish it.

Both men participated in hammering out the deal which sent USC and UCLA from the Pac-12 to the Big Ten Conference last year, but neither man will be around for the actual beginning of that new era in college sports, a new era for both USC and the Big Ten.

There’s a lesson here.

To be very clear, the ways in which Kevin Warren neglected his job with the Big Ten Conference aren’t nearly as severe or as troubling as what Mike Bohn is alleged to have done at USC. An increasing collection of reporting from multiple news outlets continues to add detail to a picture in which Mike Bohn treated a lot of people poorly within the USC and Cincinnati athletic departments. That’s extremely bad. Kevin Warren has not been reported to have done anything close to that.

However, Bohn and Warren can still be connected in that they were both very sloppy on the job and did not earn the full respect of the people they worked for. Warren, as Pete Thamel of ESPN has reported in recent days, did not finalize television contracts and did not communicate specific details to member athletic departments, which has caused a mad scramble throughout the conference’s schools. Budgetary projections have to be revised. Allocations of resources have to be re-examined. Kevin Warren no longer works for the Big Ten, but he has made life more difficult for a lot of people who work at Big Ten schools.

What we have here with Mike Bohn and Kevin Warren — even though the severity of their actions exists on different levels — is a clear-enough reality in which both men knew they had registered fundamental achievements. Bohn hired Lincoln Riley, which he and everyone else in college sports knew was a game-changer for USC football and USC athletics. The move to the Big Ten was similar. Kevin Warren knew that landing USC as a new Big Ten member, and then arranging the framework (though not finalizing all the details) for massively lucrative TV deals, would print money for Big Ten schools.

The ways in which Bohn and Warren neglected their respective jobs were different. Again, Bohn behaved very poorly, whereas Warren did not — they’re in two very different moral universes in that regard. However, in one specific way, the two men are fundamentally the same: They surely thought or realized that they were making a lot of money for themselves and for their respective institutions. They knew they had increased the value of the places they worked for.

They neglected various other aspects of their jobs: Bohn not treating people well and not showing up for meetings, Warren not communicating to Big Ten athletic departments and not finalizing TV contracts. They both got sloppy. They both coasted to a degree. They both are somewhere else now. Bohn is disgraced. Warren, though not disgraced, is now working with the Chicago Bears and doesn’t have to deal with the Big Ten anymore, leaving others to clean up his mess.

There’s a very clear lesson here: Just because someone makes a lot of money for himself and/or others, that doesn’t mean one can or should coast on the job and get sloppy. It’s not a reason to neglect parts of one’s job description. Yes, the checks are going to cash. USC will get paid for joining the Big Ten. Kevin Warren and Big Ten schools will get paid for these TV deals Warren set in motion (but which current commissioner Tony Petitti has to finalize).

Yes, Bohn made money for USC and Warren made money for the Big Ten. We can acknowledge that. It doesn’t mean what either man did afterward was okay or acceptable.

Making money doesn’t mean moral, ethical, or professional failures are somehow made acceptable. That’s the lesson taught by Mike Bohn and (to a lesser but still real degree) Kevin Warren.

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Big Ten member schools don’t seem prepared for the arrival of USC

#B1G schools are expressing disappointment and, in some cases, shock that November night football is coming. Why?

One of the weirder stories in college sports in this month of May is the report from ESPN’s Pete Thamel about the dysfunction in Big Ten offices and the confusion that dysfunction has created in Big Ten athletic departments. The dysfunction itself isn’t especially weird — there’s plenty of that to go around in college sports — but what stands out is how surprised some Big Ten athletic departments seemed to be in the face of the realization that yes, a lot more Big Ten football games would be played at night in November with USC and UCLA aboard.

True, it has been a point of great importance for Big Ten schools to not deal with night kickoffs in November, when the weather is colder and fans would like to be home from their Saturday game day. For USC fans who aren’t fully familiar with Big Ten culture, the Big Ten likes and values playing its late-season games in the daytime, when the weather is more manageable and fans don’t have to wait all day for kickoff. Let’s put it this way: Big Ten fans embrace early football games a lot more than SEC fans do. It’s a mixture of weather and culture.

However, as much as Big Ten schools might cherish daytime November football, they all had to realize that with two West Coast schools joining the conference, there would be a lot more night football in the Big Ten with USC and UCLA in the fold. They surely had to know this, right?

Apparently, they thought nothing would change, per Pete Thamel of ESPN:

“Within the industry, though, there was an expectation that, considering the scope of the deal, all schools would play in prime time.

“‘The fault here is with the administrators on campus,’ said another industry source. ‘How did the presidents, chancellors and athletic directors not know this? The universities all signed off on the deal.'”

USC and UCLA increased the value of Big Ten football. The arrival of these new schools boosted the size of the TV contracts. Of course NBC Sports was not going to settle for a minimal night-game package which ceased to exist in mid-November, when late-season matchups draw even more eyeballs (in many cases) than September night games.

Big Ten schools were caught off guard, but they shouldn’t have been.

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Confusion dominates Big Ten athletic departments in football scheduling debacle

USC is joining a conference which did not operate well under previous leadership. New #B1G leaders are in crisis management mode.

Earlier this week, you might have noticed the stories coming from the Big Ten, in which the conference’s previous commissioner, Kevin Warren, did not fully finalize a series of lucrative television contracts. The report from ESPN’s Pete Thamel documented the unfinished aspects of the contracts, which are leading to the Big Ten having to pay back Fox and re-negotiate with NBC. Big Ten athletic departments, though poised to gain tens of millions of dollars from the deal once everything is squared away, are running up against the short-term frustration of watching money get squandered, thereby resulting in a budget projection shortfall compared to what was initially promised.

That’s bad.

What adds to the frustration of Big Ten athletic departments is that Kevin Warren didn’t make the situation abundantly clear, as Thamel reported:

“Athletic departments and coaches around the Big Ten say they were surprised November night games would be part of the deal. They weren’t asked for permission to play them prior to the deal or informed of the change ahead of the deal, according to sources. At the same time, NBC wasn’t aware until well after the initial contract was signed this summer that these big-brand schools had historic tolerances that were part of the prior television arrangements and would resist being available.

“‘NBC was surprised, and I was surprised,’ said Michigan athletic director Warde Manuel. ‘We had not discussed, and I had not discussed with anyone in the league to change the tolerances we had agreed upon years ago.'”

New Big Ten Commissioner Tony Petitti is trying to secure these TV contracts after Kevin Warren dashed off to join the Chicago Bears instead of sticking around to shepherd USC into the Big Ten. It is quite a turn of events.

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Big Ten is dealing with a mess its former commissioner left behind

A commissioner bungled a TV deal … but it’s not Larry Scott. Fortunately for #USC, the Trojans won’t have to deal with Kevin Warren.

Here is a story of a conference commissioner being sloppy and ineffective, and it does not involve Larry Scott. It turns out that when former Big Ten Commissioner Kevin Warren arranged the TV deals for the new era of the conference, with USC and UCLA as incoming members, that “arrangement” was very loose and not tied down with specifics.

Pete Thamel of ESPN came out earlier this week with a report on just how dysfunctional Warren’s handling of TV contracts was.

Here’s a small snippet from Thamel’s story, which illustrates a portion of the fallout from this mess the Big Ten and new commissioner Tony Petitti are scrambling to contain:

“They are going to have to pay back nearly $40 million to Fox because, according to sources, Warren delivered NBC the Big Ten football title game in 2026 without the full authority to do so. This all has unfolded under the complicated backdrop of the Big Ten conference not actually controlling the rights to the inventory of this latest deal — the Big Ten Network does, which is majority owned by Fox. (More on that below.)”

Basically, unfinished TV contracts and unclarified terms which some Big Ten schools are unhappy with are leading to a nasty combination: On one hand, the Big Ten is having to pay back some of its TV partners. On the other hand, the full value of previously negotiated — but uncompleted — TV deals might not be realized. Big Ten schools and athletic departments are confronting the reality that previous budgetary projections exceed actual incoming revenue.

Yes, the Big Ten is still going to make a ton of money for its member schools, but no one likes, wants or needs to receive a set of projections and then realize the actual numbers will be several millions of dollars short, quite possibly tens of millions short.

This is Kevin Warren’s mess. Larry Scott can relate. Tony Petitti is playing the role of George Kliavkoff, trying to clean up what his predecessor left behind.

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Ohio State has a sizeable lead in the Director’s Cup standings nationally, where are the rest of the Big Ten programs?

A look at how Ohio State is doing and where the rest of the Big Ten is in the Director’s Cup Standings. #GoBucks

If you haven’t followed along all of these years, there’s a little friendly competition between college athletic programs known as the “Director’s Cup. It all started in 1993 and the premise is that an athletic program that does the best across some of the most popular sports wins the cup. The scoring system is somewhat complicated, and we won’t get too deep into it here, but you can read all about it if you so desire.

Basically, by winning the Director’s Cup, you can claim to have the best athletic program for a calendar year. Ohio State has never won it, but has come close many times and is routinely inside the top ten in the overall standings.

However, this year, the Buckeye athletic program is looking to make history and is currently in first place by a wide margin after all the winter sports have been scored. It’s not a done deal that OSU will finish in the No. 1 spot because it’ll have competition from Texas and almost perennial winner Stanford, but there’s a good chance that Ohio State can take home the prize for the first time ever. Currently, the standings of the top five look like this:

  1. Ohio State – 858.00
  2. Texas – 758.75
  3. Stanford – 754.50
  4. North Carolina – 686.50
  5. Alabama – 634.25

The winner will almost assuredly come between the top three, but it’ll really depend on some likely unexpected results to sort it all out. We’ll keep in touch with it all and keep you posted.

However, in the meantime, we thought we’d take a look at where all the Big Ten athletic programs stack up when it comes to total domination across all sports. Obviously, Ohio State is No. 1 in the conference based on this, but where do the other teams fall? Here’s a look at where each team is ranked by conference and where they are based on the national ranking as well. We go from worst to first.

Big Ten officially announces hiring of new commissioner

The Big Ten officially has its new commissioner.

The Big Ten finally has its new commissioner.

After Kevin Warren moved on to become the President of the Chicago Bears, we’re fairly certain there was a lot going on behind the scenes, but the search for someone to replace Warren lasted a little longer than I think any of us anticipated. Especially seeing how Warren was there for less time than a U.S. presidential term lasts.

Regardless, the guy now in charge of charting the course in this brave, new world of college athletics is none other than the formerly reported move that was all but assured, Tony Petitti.

Petitti becomes the seventh Big Ten commissioner and will officially begin his post on May 15. He is a seasoned veteran of the sports, business, and media, having formerly served as deputy commissioner and chief operating officer of Major League Baseball and president and chief executive officer of MLB Network.

“At this important and transformational time in collegiate athletics, it is truly my great honor to be chosen by the Council of Presidents and Chancellors as the commissioner of the Big Ten Conference,” Petitti said in a statement from the conference. “I am energized to work alongside the best athletics directors, coaches, conference staff and board in the country as – together – we continue to elevate the academic and athletic experiences and resources for our 14, soon-to-be 16, world-class universities with nearly 10,000 incredible student-athletes. Thank you to the extraordinary people and places that have led me to this next challenge in my career. I am ready to get to work for the Big Ten Conference community.”

The search for the new commissioner was led by the Big Ten Council of Presidents and Chancellors’ Executive Search Committee. Members of that committee included University of Maryland President Darryll J. Pines as chair alongside University of Minnesota President Joan Gabel, The Ohio State University President Kristina M. Johnson, and Chair of the Council of Presidents and Chancellors and University of Illinois Chancellor Robert Jones.

“I would like to thank all the candidates who spent time with us during the commissioner search process as each illustrated outstanding leadership qualities and a breadth of experience,” President Pines said in a statement. “The Big Ten Conference is in an extraordinary position of strength. Tony’s capabilities to navigate the complexities of changing marketplace environments, history as a collaborative leader, and passion for academics and collegiate athletics made him the right leader, at the right time, for the Big Ten Conference.”

Petitti will no doubt have his work cut out for him. He’ll be coming alongside to usher in USC and UCLA into a 16-team conference and working to navigate one of the most well-known brands in college athletics through Name, Image and Likeness, playoff expansion, and more.

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Big Ten officially hires Tony Petitti to be conference’s next commissioner

Tony Petitti was named the next Big Ten Conference commissioner.

The Big Ten Conference’s search for its seventh commissioner is over. On Wednesday, the conference announced that Tony Petitti will be the conference’s next commissioner, replacing Kevin Warren who is leaving the conference to become the president of the Chicago Bears.

Petitti’s tenure will begin on May 15, one day following the final day for Kevin Warren.

The Big Ten’s search committee for their next commissioner was led by a team of four presidents and chancellors including the University of Maryland President Darryll J. Pines, who was the committee chair as well as the University of Minnesota President Joan Gabel, The Ohio State University President Kristina M. Johnson, and Chair of the Council of Presidents and Chancellors and University of Illinois Chancellor Robert Jones. The Big Ten was also assisted by TurnkeyZRG in their search.

Petitti comes to the Big Ten after serving as deputy commissioner and chief operating officer of Major League Baseball under MLB commissioner Rob Manfred.

He also has an extensive background in television and entertainment in general. During his time with Major League Baseball, he was also the president and CEO of MLB Network. Outside of that, he also worked with ABC and CBS in their sports television departments. He also for a short while was the president of sports and entertainment at the successful video game company, Activision Blizzard.

“At this important and transformational time in collegiate athletics, it is truly my great honor to be chosen by the Council of Presidents and Chancellors as the commissioner of the Big Ten Conference,” Petitti said in the Big Ten’s press release. “I am energized to work alongside the best athletics directors, coaches, conference staff and board in the country as – together – we continue to elevate the academic and athletic experiences and resources for our 14, soon-to-be 16, world-class universities with nearly 10,000 incredible student-athletes. Thank you to the extraordinary people and places that have led me to this next challenge in my career. I am ready to get to work for the Big Ten Conference community.”

Petitti comes to Big Ten at an interesting time for the conference. In Kevin Warren’s short tenure, he both negotiated the conference’s new lucrative television deal while also adding UCLA and USC to the Big Ten. Both schools are set to enter the conference in July next year. In the short term, the biggest issues on the table for Petitti will be the ongoing issues surrounding NIL as well as any potential further expansion possibilities.

The Big Ten’s new television rights deal that kicks in on July 1 of this year will run through the end of the 2029-2030 collegiate athletic year.

The deeply unsatisfying part of USC’s move to the Big Ten becomes clearer

This isn’t a complaint that #USC is going to the #B1G. Fans WANT to leave the #Pac12. This is about something different.

This is not a complaint about USC moving to the Big Ten. Let’s be clear about that. Trojan fans have had it with the Pac-12, and rightly so. They have had to put up with a lot of problems, comical errors, and a general lack of professionalism from the conference in terms of football officiating, football scheduling, and many other realms.

There is, however, something deeply unsatisfying about USC moving to the Big Ten. It’s not so much the move itself, but the reality that the man who chiefly orchestrated it won’t oversee its actual implementation and won’t have to deal with the fallout.

Kevin Warren engineered the USC move to the Big Ten as the commissioner of the conference. However, Warren is already off to another job, working with the Chicago Bears and laying the groundwork for a new (presumably domed) stadium to be built for the NFL team, which clearly wants out of Soldier Field.

While Warren works on a stadium deal with the Bears — something he did in a previous job with the Minnesota Vikings — the Big Ten is already scrambling to adjust to USC’s move to the Big Ten.

Ohio State bailed out of a home-and-home football series with Washington in 2024 and 2025. The Huskies wanted to beef up their schedule. Now, they will pay a price for USC moving to the Big Ten and causing Ohio State to have concerns about too much travel within a given football season.

The man who set these forces in motion is no longer working in the Big Ten. He isn’t even working in college sports.

The “every man for himself” dynamic we see in college sports continues to remain firmly in evidence. It would be one thing if these movements really seemed like full communal agreements, but it seems clear that Ohio State is not happy with any of this. The Buckeyes and Kevin Warren did not get along very well when Warren was Big Ten commish. OSU’s decision to cancel the home-and-home with Washington feels almost like a protest of sorts.

This doesn’t make USC’s move worse, or somehow less acceptable. The Trojans needed the money and were not being served well by the Pac-12. However, it at least would have been nice if the man who made this huge deal was around to supervise the transition and live with the consequences of his actions.

Instead, Kevin Warren doesn’t have to face any of these aftershocks in the Big Ten. He parachuted in, closed the sale, and then got out of Dodge just as quickly as he arrived.

That’s not right … but it’s entirely the reality of college sports these days.

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Kevin Warren, who engineered USC-UCLA move, leaves his post as Big Ten Commissioner

Kevin Warren brought USC and UCLA to the #B1G, but he won’t be commish when USC joins the conference in 2024. @TheBearsWire has more on this story.

Kevin Warren was able to pull off the deal which brought USC and UCLA to the Big Ten Conference, but he won’t be the commissioner of the Big Ten when the Trojans and Bruins settle into their new home in 2024.

Bears Wire and the rest of the football world learned that the Chicago Bears have brought aboard Warren as their new president. Warren previously served as an executive with the Minnesota Vikings. He then took over from Jim Delany as the commissioner of the Big Ten.

Warren’s tenure as Big Ten commish was fascinating for many different reasons. His handling of the pandemic in 2020 was met with fierce criticism. The Pac-12 and former commissioner Larry Scott followed the Big Ten’s lead in cancelling their 2020 football season before reversing course. This is why the Big Ten and Pac-12 both had 2020 football seasons which were shorter than their counterparts in the SEC, Big 12, and ACC. Warren did not emerge as a strong figure after that 2020 season. Yet, if he wasn’t a strong figure then, his lack of strength and leverage didn’t last very long.

Warren and Pac-12 Commissioner George Kliavkoff joined the ACC in forming a so-called alliance which had the stated intent of creating alignment in scheduling and other matters, but that alliance was blown up on June 30, 2022, when Warren shocked the college sports world by successfully bringing USC and UCLA to the Big Ten.

Warren leaves the Big Ten before its 2024 scheduling format will be announced for football and men’s basketball. It is an obvious point of interest to see how USC football and basketball is scheduled within the Big Ten’s new 16-team structure, though we know that the Big Ten won’t use the divisional structure it has used the past decade.

Follow our various Big Ten College Wire sites for more on Big Ten football and basketball scheduling.

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NBC to team Noah Eagle, Todd Blackledge on Big Ten broadcasts

NBC has set up its BIg Ten broadcast team

Some college football news on the announcer carousel.

The New York Post reported Friday that NBC has plucked Todd Blackledge from ESPN and will team the former Penn State quarterback with Noah Eagle on its Big Ten broadcasts.

Per The Post:

For Blackledge, 61, this will be his third network after runs at CBS and ESPN. He is expected to call the national championship on ESPN Radio Monday, which will be his final assignment with the network. He is considered ESPN’s No. 2 college football game analyst behind Kirk Herbstreit.

Eagle, the son of famed play-by-player, Ian, continues a meteoric rise. Besides being the radio voice of the Clippers, he gained national attention by calling the Nickelodeon NFL games with Nate Burleson. He also was a play-by-player on regular season NFL games for Fox Sports and NFL Network this season. With Fox Sports, he was a weekly play-by-player on its college football coverage.