DEFENDING NATIONAL CHAMP MICHIGAN, OHIO STATE DOMINATE BIG TEN’S TOP PRESEASON POSITION HONORS

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Players from defending national champion Michigan and Ohio State claimed seven of the Big Ten’s 12 positional honors on Tuesday.

They were selected by a media panel on the first of three conference media days in Indianapolis.

The Buckeyes had four selections — safety Caleb Downs, receiver Emeka Egbuka, running back TreVeyon Henderson and defensive end JT Tuimoloau. The Wolverines selections consisted of defensive tackle Mason Graham, defensive back Will Johnson and tight end Colston Loveland.

Dillon Gabriel, who left Oklahoma for Oregon, was named the league’s top quarterback. Iowa linebacker Jay Higgins, Penn State defensive end Abdul Carter and Rutgers running back Kyle Monangai rounded out the selections.

Home Field

In this era of conference realignment and constant change in college football, Big Ten Commissioner Tony Petitti announced the Big Ten championship will remain at Lucas Oil Stadium through at least 2028.

Indianapolis’ downtown venue has hosted every conference title game since the inaugural one played in 2011.

Expansion from 14 to 18 teams led to the elimination of the league’s two-division format this season. Instead, the teams with the two best conference records will square off Dec. 7 in Indianapolis.

ROSEMONT, Ill. – The Big Ten Conference announced its 2024 football preseason honors on Tuesday ahead of the start of Big Ten Football Media Days at Lucas Oil Stadium. A media panel selected the 12-member preseason list.

2024 Big Ten Preseason Honors

LB Jay Higgins, IOWA

DT Mason Graham, MICH

DB Will Johnson, MICH

TE Colston Loveland, MICH

QB Dillon Gabriel, ORE

WR Tez Johnson, ORE

SAF Caleb Downs, OSU

WR Emeka Egbuka, OSU

RB TreVeyon Henderson, OSU 

DE JT Tuimoloau, OSU

DE Abdul Carter, PSU

RB Kyle Monangai, RU

BIG 10 FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE: https://assets.contentstack.io/v3/assets/bltca750cef518bc6e4/bltae17393b9e5c97f4/669ecc6f1e4e7e6a28b6be6f/2024_FB_Media_Guide_7-22.pdf

BIG TEN COMMISSIONER COMFORTABLE WITH 18 TEAMS FOR NOW

Reserving the option to change his mind, Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti is not seeking to add to his 18-team conference.

Petitti said at Big Ten Media Days in Indianapolis on Tuesday that he remains “focused on the 18 for now,” echoing the sentiment shared by SEC commissioner Greg Sankey about his conference earlier this month.

“I think we’re really comfortable with where we are. We’ve got to get this conference right, and that’s where our focus is,” Petitti said.

Four teams are making their Big Ten debut this season following a mass exodus from the Pac-12 that began with USC and UCLA and multiplied to include Oregon and Washington.

Because the integration of West Coast teams complicated scheduling across sports, Petitti said he’s not focused on any other prospective members, including any programs that might have interest in jumping from the Atlantic Coast Conference and taking the Big Ten to the Big Twenty.

A key point from an educational and health perspective for the Big Ten was finding ways to restrict travel, particularly back-to-back road games. The conference focused on blocking cross-country travel in consecutive weeks in its first year of scheduling matchups such as Maryland and at Oregon (Nov. 9), which is about 2,820 miles by car or a long flight.

“I really believe scheduling is something that has to be constantly evaluated by sport,” Petitti said. “And I anticipate that we’ll get a lot more right in these next couple of years, the way we’ve formatted and scheduled. But it’s our job to listen to student-athletes, to listen to coaches, to make sure that we’re adjusting and making the change we need.”

Not every team can avoid the long travel legs, and the disparity between the most miles to travel this college football season and least is vast in the Big Ten.

UCLA’s schedule results in more miles of travel — 22,000 — than any other Big Ten football team. The four West Coast teams each will travel more than 12,500 miles.

Indiana will host UCLA and travel a league-low 4,900 miles this season. Purdue is 17th in planned travel miles at about 5,100 and Michigan is at 5,200.