2013 Big Ten Conference football season

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2013 Big Ten Conference football season
LeagueNCAA Division I FBS (Football Bowl Subdivision)
SportFootball
DurationAugust 30, 2013
through January 2014
Number of teams12
TV partner(s)ABC, ESPN2, ESPN Inc., Big Ten Network, FOX (championship game)
2014 NFL Draft
Top draft pickTaylor Lewan (Michigan)
Picked byTennessee Titans, 11th overall
Regular Season
Season MVPBraxton Miller
Top scorerBraxton Miller
Leaders Division championsOhio State
Legends Division championsMichigan State
Championship Game
ChampionsMichigan State
  Runners-upOhio State
Finals MVPConnor Cook
Football seasons
← 2012
2014 →
2013 Big Ten Conference football standings
Conf Overall
Team   W   L     W   L  
Legends Division
No. 3 Michigan State x$   8 0     13 1  
Iowa   5 3     8 5  
Nebraska   5 3     9 4  
Minnesota   4 4     8 5  
Michigan   3 5     7 6  
Northwestern   1 7     5 7  
Leaders Division
No. 12 Ohio State x%   8 0     12 2  
No. 22 Wisconsin   6 2     9 4  
Penn State*   4 4     7 5  
Indiana   3 5     5 7  
Illinois   1 7     4 8  
Purdue   0 8     1 11  
Championship: Michigan State 34, Ohio State 24
  • $ – BCS representative as conference champion
  • % – BCS at-large representative
  • x – Division champion/co-champions
  • Penn State ineligible for conference championship game and post-season bowl games due to NCAA sanctions
Rankings from AP Poll
Michigan State defeated Stanford in the Rose Bowl Game on January 1, 2014

The 2013 Big Ten Conference football season was the 118th season for the Big Ten. The conference began its season on Thursday, August 29, as Minnesota and Indiana began their 2013 season of NCAA Division I FBS (Football Bowl Subdivision) competition. Michigan State began their season the following day, and the rest of the conference began their season on September 1.

This was the league's final season as a 12-team conference before Maryland and Rutgers join the Big Ten Conference for the 2014 season. It was also the final season with the "Leaders" and "Legends" divisions; when Maryland and Rutgers join, the conference will reorganize its divisions on a pure geographic basis. The six schools in the Central Time Zone will be joined by Purdue in the new West Division, with the other schools making up the East Division. Under the new setup, the only protected cross-division rivalry game will be Indiana–Purdue.[1]

Michigan State upset undefeated Ohio State to win the Big Ten Championship Game. The B1G put seven teams into bowl games, including two into the BCS with Michigan State going to the Rose Bowl and Ohio State to the Orange Bowl. The B1G went 2-5 in bowl games with the only wins coming from Michigan State in the Rose Bowl and Nebraska in the Gator Bowl.

Rankings[edit]

  Pre Wk
2
Wk
3
Wk
4
Wk
5
Wk
6
Wk
7
Wk
8
Wk
9
Wk
10
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11
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12
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13
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14
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15
Wk
16
Final
Illinois AP RV
C RV
Harris Not released
BCS Not released
Indiana AP
C
Harris Not released
BCS Not released
Iowa AP RV RV RV
C RV RV RV RV
Harris Not released RV RV
BCS Not released
Michigan AP 17 17 11 15 18 19 18 RV 24 23 RV
C 17 17 12 14 18 17 16 24 23 21 RV
Harris Not released 24 22 21 RV RV RV
BCS Not released 22 21
Michigan State AP RV RV RV RV RV RV RV RV RV 24 18 14 13 11 10 4 3
C RV RV RV 24 RV RV RV RV RV 24 19 16 13 11 9 4 3
Harris Not released RV RV 23 18 15 13 11 10 4
BCS Not released 22 17 16 13 11 10 4
Minnesota AP RV RV RV RV RV RV RV
C RV RV RV 25 23 RV RV RV
Harris Not released RV RV RV 25 RV RV RV
BCS Not released 25
Nebraska AP 18 22 23 RV RV RV RV RV 25 RV RV RV RV RV
C 18 19 15 RV RV 25 24 21 21 RV RV RV RV RV 25
Harris Not released 23 23 RV RV RV RV RV
BCS Not released 24
Northwestern AP 22 19 17 18 17 16 19 RV
C 22 20 16 16 16 15 18 RV
Harris Not released RV
BCS Not released
Ohio State AP 2 3 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 4 3 2 7 12
C 2 2 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 4 4 3 3 3 2 6 10
Harris Not released 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 2 7
BCS Not released 4 4 4 3 3 3 2 7
Penn State AP RV RV RV
C Ineligible for ranking
Harris Not released Ineligible for ranking
BCS Not released Ineligible for ranking
Purdue AP
C
Harris Not released
BCS Not released
Wisconsin AP 23 21 20 24 23 RV RV 25 22 22 21 17 16 14 21 19 22
C 23 21 18 RV 24 RV RV RV 24 23 22 20 17 14 21 19 21
Harris Not released RV 24 24 22 21 19 15 21 19
BCS Not released 24 24 22 19 15 21 19
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

Spring games[edit]

April 6

  • Nebraska

April 12

  • Illinois

April 13

April 20

  • Michigan State
  • Penn State
  • Wisconsin

April 27

  • Iowa
  • Minnesota
  • Wisconsin

Schedule[edit]

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

All times Eastern time.

† denotes Homecoming game

Week 1[edit]

Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
August 29 7:00 PM Indiana State Indiana Memorial StadiumBloomington, IN BTN W 73–35   40,278
August 29 7:00 PM UNLV Minnesota TCF Bank StadiumMinneapolis, MN BTN W 51–23   44,217
August 30 8:00 PM Western Michigan Michigan State Spartan StadiumEast Lansing, MI BTN W 26–13   71,214
August 31 12:00 PM Southern Illinois Illinois Memorial StadiumChampaign, IL BTN W 42–34   42,175
August 31 12:00 PM Buffalo No. 2 Ohio State Ohio StadiumColumbus, OH ESPN2 W 40–20   103,980
August 31 12:00 PM Purdue Cincinnati Nippert StadiumCincinnati, OH ESPNU L 42–7   36,007
August 31 12:00 PM Massachusetts No. 23 Wisconsin Camp Randall StadiumMadison, WI BTN W 45–0   76,306
August 31 3:30 PM Northern Illinois Iowa Kinnick StadiumIowa City, IA BTN L 30–27   67,402
August 31 3:30 PM Central Michigan No. 17 Michigan Michigan StadiumAnn Arbor, MI BTN W 59–9   112,618
August 31 3:30 PM Penn State Syracuse MetLife StadiumEast Rutherford, NJ ABC / ESPN2 W 23–17   61,202
August 31 8:00 PM Wyoming No. 18 Nebraska Memorial StadiumLincoln, NE BTN W 37–34   91,185
August 31 10:30 PM No. 22 Northwestern California California Memorial StadiumBerkeley, CA ESPN2 W 44–30   58,816
#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
September 7 12:00 PM Cincinnati Illinois Memorial StadiumChampaign, IL ESPN2 W 45–17   43,031
September 7 12:00 PM Missouri State Iowa Kinnick StadiumIowa City, IA BTN W 28–14   64,201
September 7 12:00 PM South Florida Michigan State Spartan StadiumEast Lansing, MI ESPNU W 21–6   70,401
September 7 12:00 PM Eastern Michigan Penn State Beaver StadiumUniversity Park, PA BTN W 45–7   92,863
September 7 12:00 PM Indiana State Purdue Ross–Ade StadiumWest Lafayette, IN BTN W 20–14   50,165
September 7 12:00 PM Tennessee Tech No. 21 Wisconsin Camp Randall StadiumMadison, WI BTN W 48–0   77,785
September 7 3:30 PM San Diego State No. 3 Ohio State Ohio StadiumColumbus, OH ABC / ESPN2 W 42–7   104,984
September 7 6:00 PM Navy Indiana Memorial StadiumBloomington, IN BTN L 35–41   47,013
September 7 6:00 PM Southern Mississippi No. 22 Nebraska Memorial StadiumLincoln, NE BTN W 56–13   90,466
September 7 6:00 PM Syracuse No. 19 Northwestern Ryan FieldEvanston, IL BTN W 48–27   38,033
September 7 8:00 PM No. 14 Notre Dame No. 17 Michigan Michigan StadiumAnn Arbor, MI ESPN W 41–30   115,109
September 7 8:00 PM Minnesota New Mexico State Aggie Memorial StadiumLas Cruces, NM BTN2GO W 44–21   16,418
#Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Eastern Time.

Week 3[edit]

Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
September 14 12:00 PM Bowling Green Indiana Memorial StadiumBloomington, IN ESPNU W 42–10   41,869
September 14 12:00 PM Akron No. 11 Michigan Michigan StadiumAnn Arbor, MI BTN W 28–24   107,120
September 14 12:00 PM Western Illinois Minnesota TCF Bank StadiumMinneapolis, MN BTN W 29–12   42,127
September 14 12:00 PM No. 16 UCLA No. 23 Nebraska Memorial StadiumLincoln, NE ABC L 41–21   91,471
September 14 2:00 PM Youngstown State Michigan State Spartan StadiumEast Lansing, MI BTN W 55–17   71,626
September 14 6:00 PM No. 19 Washington Illinois Soldier FieldChicago, IL BTN L 34–24   47,312
September 14 6:00 PM Iowa Iowa State Jack Trice StadiumAmes, IA (Iowa Corn Cy-Hawk Series) FS1 W 27–21   56,800
September 14 6:00 PM Central Florida Penn State Beaver StadiumUniversity Park, PA BTN L 34–31   92,855
September 14 7:00 PM No. 4 Ohio State California California Memorial StadiumBerkeley, CA FOX W 52–34   62,467
September 14 8:00 PM No. 21 Notre Dame Purdue Ross–Ade StadiumWest Lafayette, IN (Shillelagh Trophy) ABC L 31–24   61,127
September 14 9:00 PM Western Michigan No. 17 Northwestern Ryan FieldEvanston, IL BTN W 38–17   33,128
September 14 10:30 PM No. 20 Wisconsin Arizona State Sun Devil StadiumTempe, AZ ESPN L 32–30   66,155
#Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Eastern Time.

Week 4[edit]

Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
September 21 12:00 PM Western Michigan Iowa Kinnick StadiumIowa City, IA BTN W 59–3   66,886
September 21 12:00 PM San Jose State Minnesota TCF Bank StadiumMinneapolis, MN ESPN2 W 43–24   45,647
September 21 12:00 PM Florida A&M No. 4 Ohio State Ohio StadiumColumbus, OH BTN W 76–0   103,595
September 21 3:30 PM Michigan State No. 22 Notre Dame Notre Dame StadiumNotre Dame, IN (Megaphone Trophy) NBC L 13–17   80,795
September 21 3:30 PM South Dakota State Nebraska Memorial StadiumLincoln, NE BTN W 59–20   90,614
September 21 3:30 PM Maine No. 18 Northwestern Ryan FieldEvanston, IL BTN W 35–21   32,726
September 21 3:30 PM Kent State Penn State Beaver StadiumUniversity Park, PA BTN W 34–0   92,371
September 21 3:30 PM Purdue No. 24 Wisconsin Camp Randall StadiumMadison, WI ABC / ESPN2  WIS 41–10   80,772
September 21 8:00 PM Missouri Indiana Memorial StadiumBloomington, IN BTN L 28–45   49,149
September 21 8:00 PM No. 15 Michigan Connecticut Rentschler FieldEast Hartford, CT ABC W 24–21   42,704
#Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Eastern Time.
Date Bye Week
September 21 Illinois

Week 5[edit]

Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
September 28† 12:00 PM Northern Illinois Purdue Ross–Ade StadiumWest Lafayette, IN ESPN2 L 55–24   54,258
September 28 12:00 PM Miami (OH) Illinois Memorial StadiumChampaign, IL BTN W 50–14   46,890
September 28† 3:30 PM Iowa Minnesota TCF Bank StadiumMinneapolis, MN (Floyd of Rosedale) ABC / ESPN2  IOWA 23–7   51,382
September 28 8:00 PM No. 23 Wisconsin No. 4 Ohio State Ohio StadiumColumbus, OH ABC  OSU 31–24   105,826
#Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Eastern Time.
Date Bye Week
September 28 Indiana #18 Michigan Michigan State Nebraska #17 Northwestern Penn State

Week 6[edit]

Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
October 5 12:00 PM Penn State Indiana Memorial StadiumBloomington, IN BTN  IND 44–24   42,125
October 5† 12:00 PM Illinois Nebraska Memorial StadiumLincoln, NE ESPNU  NEB 39–19   90,458
October 5† 12:00 PM Michigan State Iowa Kinnick StadiumIowa City, IA ESPN2  MSU 26–14   69,025
October 5† 3:30 PM Minnesota No. 19 Michigan Michigan StadiumAnn Arbor, MI (Little Brown Jug) ABC / ESPN2  MICH 42–13   111,079
October 5† 8:00 PM No. 4 Ohio State No. 16 Northwestern Ryan FieldEvanston, IL ABC  OSU 40–30   47,330
#Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Eastern Time.
Date Bye Week
October 5 Purdue Wisconsin

Week 7[edit]

Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
October 12† 12:00 PM Indiana Michigan State Spartan StadiumEast Lansing, MI (Old Brass Spittoon) ESPN2  MSU 42–28   73,815
October 12 12:00 PM Nebraska Purdue Ross–Ade StadiumWest Lafayette, IN BTN  NEB 44–7   47,203
October 12† 3:30 PM No. 19 Northwestern Wisconsin Camp Randall StadiumMadison, WI ABC / ESPN2  WIS 35–6   81,411
October 12† 5:00 PM No. 18 Michigan Penn State Beaver StadiumUniversity Park, PA ESPN  PSU 43–40 4OT  107,884
#Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Eastern Time.
Date Bye Week
October 12 Illinois Iowa Minnesota #4 Ohio State

Week 8[edit]

Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
October 19 12:00 PM Purdue Michigan State Spartan StadiumEast Lansing, MI BTN  MSU 14–0   71,514
October 19 12:00 PM Minnesota Northwestern Ryan FieldEvanston, IL ESPN2  MIN 20–17   36,587
October 19 3:30 PM Indiana Michigan Michigan StadiumAnn Arbor, MI BTN  MICH 63–47   109,503
October 19† 3:30 PM Iowa No. 4 Ohio State Ohio StadiumColumbus, OH ABC  OSU 34–24   105,264
October 19 8:00 PM No. 25 Wisconsin Illinois Memorial StadiumChampaign, IL BTN  WIS 56–32   47,362
#Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Eastern Time.
Date Bye Week
October 19 Nebraska Penn State

Week 9[edit]

Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
October 26 12:00 PM Northwestern Iowa Kinnick StadiumIowa City, IA BTN  IOWA 17–10 OT  66,838
October 26 12:00 PM No. 25 Nebraska Minnesota TCF Bank StadiumMinneapolis, MN ESPN  MIN 34–20   49,995
October 26† 3:30 PM Michigan State Illinois Memorial StadiumChampaign, IL ABC / ESPN2  MSU 42–3   45,895
October 26 8:00 PM Penn State No. 4 Ohio State Ohio StadiumColumbus, OH ABC  OSU 63–14   105,889
#Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Eastern Time.
Date Bye Week
October 26 Indiana #24 Michigan Purdue #22 Wisconsin

Week 10[edit]

Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
November 2 12:00 PM No. 4 Ohio State Purdue Ross–Ade StadiumWest Lafayette, IN BTN  OSU 56–0   51,423
November 2 12:00 PM No. 22 Wisconsin Iowa Kinnick StadiumIowa City, IA (Heartland Trophy) ABC / ESPN2  WIS 28–9   69,812
November 2 12:00 PM Illinois Penn State Beaver StadiumUniversity Park, PA ESPN  PSU 24–17 OT  95,131
November 2† 3:30 PM Minnesota Indiana Memorial StadiumBloomington, IN BTN  MIN 42–39   44,625
November 2 3:30 PM No. 23 Michigan No. 24 Michigan State Spartan StadiumEast Lansing, MI (Paul Bunyan Trophy) ABC  MSU 29–6   76,306
November 2 3:30 PM Northwestern Nebraska Memorial StadiumLincoln, NE BTN  NEB 27–24   91,140
#Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Eastern Time.

Week 11[edit]

Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
November 9 12:00 PM Iowa Purdue Ross–Ade StadiumWest Lafayette, IN BTN  IOWA 38–14   41,038
November 9 12:00 PM Penn State Minnesota TCF Bank StadiumMinneapolis, MN (Governor's Victory Bell) ESPN2  MIN 24–10   48,123
November 9 3:30 PM Illinois Indiana Memorial StadiumBloomington, IN BTN  IND 52–35   44,882
November 9 3:30 PM Nebraska Michigan Michigan StadiumAnn Arbor, MI ABC  NEB 17–13   112,204
November 9 3:30 PM Brigham Young No. 21 Wisconsin Camp Randall StadiumMadison, WI ESPN W 27–17   80,191
#Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Eastern Time.
Date Bye Week
November 9 #18 Michigan State Northwestern #4 Ohio State

Week 12[edit]

Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
November 16 12:00 PM No. 3 Ohio State Illinois Memorial StadiumChampaign, IL (Illibuck) ESPN  OSU 60–35   44,095
November 16 12:00 PM Purdue Penn State Beaver StadiumUniversity Park, PA BTN  PSU 45–21   96,491
November 16 12:00 PM Indiana No. 17 Wisconsin Camp Randall StadiumMadison, WI ESPN2  WIS 51–3   77,849
November 16 3:30 PM Michigan Northwestern Ryan FieldEvanston, IL BTN  MICH 27–19 3OT  47,330
November 16 3:30 PM No. 14 Michigan State Nebraska Memorial StadiumLincoln, NE ABC / ESPN2  MSU 41–28   90,872
#Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Eastern Time.
Date Bye Week
November 16 Iowa Minnesota

Week 13[edit]

Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
November 23 12:00 PM Illinois Purdue Ross–Ade StadiumWest Lafayette, IN (Purdue Cannon) BTN  ILL 20–16   37,459
November 23 12:00 PM Michigan Iowa Kinnick StadiumIowa City, IA BTN  IOWA 24–21   65,708
November 23 12:00 PM No. 13 Michigan State Northwestern Ryan FieldEvanston, IL ESPN  MSU 30–6   40,013
November 23 3:30 PM No. 16 Wisconsin Minnesota TCF Bank StadiumMinneapolis, MN (Paul Bunyan's Axe) ESPN  WIS 20–7   53,090
November 23 3:30 PM Indiana No. 4 Ohio State Ohio StadiumColumbus, OH ABC / ESPN2  OSU 42–14   104,990
November 23 3:30 PM Nebraska Penn State Beaver StadiumUniversity Park, PA BTN  NEB 23–20 OT  98,517
#Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Eastern Time.

Week 14[edit]

Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
November 29 12:00 PM Iowa Nebraska Memorial StadiumLincoln, NE (Heroes Game) ABC  IOWA 38–17   91,260
November 30 12:00 PM No. 3 Ohio State Michigan Michigan StadiumAnn Arbor, MI (The Game) ABC  OSU 42–41   113,511
November 30 12:00 PM Minnesota No. 11 Michigan State Spartan StadiumEast Lansing, MI BTN  MSU 14–3   71,418
November 30 3:30 PM Northwestern Illinois Memorial StadiumChampaign, IL (Land of Lincoln Trophy) BTN  NW 37–34   37,058
November 30 3:30 PM Purdue Indiana Memorial StadiumBloomington, IN (Old Oaken Bucket) BTN  IND 56–36   44,882
November 30 3:30 PM Penn State No. 14 Wisconsin Camp Randall StadiumMadison, WI ESPN  PSU 31–24   78,064
#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
December 7 8:00 PM No. 2 Ohio State No. 10 Michigan State Lucas Oil StadiumIndianapolis, IN (2013 Big Ten Championship) FOX  MSU 34–24   66,002
#Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Eastern Time.

Bowl games[edit]

The Big Ten did not have enough teams available to fill the Heart of Dallas Bowl and Little Caesars Pizza Bowl due to landing two teams in the BCS and also a lack of bowl eligible teams.

Bowl Game Date Site Television Time (EST) Opponent Visiting Team Home Team Score Attendance
Texas Bowl December 27 Reliant StadiumHouston, TX ESPN 6:00 PM ACC Syracuse Minnesota L 21–17 32,327
Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl December 28 Sun Devil StadiumTempe, AZ ESPN 10:15 PM Big 12 Michigan Kansas State L 31–14 53,284
Gator Bowl January 1 EverBank FieldJacksonville, FL ESPN2 12:00 PM SEC Nebraska #23 Georgia W 24–19 60,712
Outback Bowl January 1 Raymond James StadiumTampa, FL ESPN 1:00 PM SEC Iowa #14 LSU L 21–14 51,296
Capital One Bowl January 1 Citrus BowlOrlando, FL ABC 1:00 PM SEC #19 Wisconsin #8 South Carolina L 34–24 56,629
Rose Bowl January 1 Rose BowlPasadena, CA ESPN 5:00 PM Pac-12 #5 Stanford #4 Michigan State W 24–20 95,173
Orange Bowl January 3 Sun Life StadiumMiami Gardens, FL ESPN 8:30 PM ACC #12 Clemson #7 Ohio State L 40–35 72,080

Records against FBS conferences[edit]

2013 records against FBS conferences:

Through January 3, 2014

Conference Record
ACC 2–2
American 3–2
Big 12 1–1
C-USA 1–0
Independents 3–3
MAC 11–2
Mountain West 4–0
Pac-12 3–3
SEC 1-3
Sun Belt 0–0
Total 29–16

Players of the Week[edit]

Week Offensive Defensive Special Teams Freshman
Player Position Team Player Position Team Player Position Team Player Position Team
Week 1 Nathan Scheelhaase QB ILL Collin Ellis LB NW Sam Ficken PK PSU Christian Hackenberg QB PSU
Week 2 Jeremy Gallon WR MICH Shilique Calhoun DE MSU Marcus Jones PR/KR MINN Corey Clement RB WIS
Akeem Hunt KR PUR
Week 3 Kenny Guiton QB OSU Ryan Shazier LB OSU Justin DuVernois P ILL Christian Hackenberg QB PSU
Week 4 Kenny Guiton QB OSU B.J. Lowery DB IOWA Kevonte Martin-Manley PR IOWA Mitch Leidner QB MIN
Melvin Gordon RB WIS
Week 5 Braxton Miller QB OSU James Morris LB IOWA Cameron Johnston P OSU Aaron Bailey QB ILL
Week 6 Ameer Abdullah RB NEB Darqueze Dennard CB MSU Bradley Roby CB OSU Joey Bosa DE OSU
Carlos Hyde RB OSU
Week 7 Jeremy Langford RB MSU C.J. Olaniyan DE PSU Mike Sadler P MSU Christian Hackenberg QB PSU
Week 8 Jeremy Gallon WR MICH Max Bullough LB MSU Mitch Ewald PK IND Desmond King DB IOWA
Week 9 Braxton Miller QB OSU James Morris LB IOWA Chris Hawthorne PK MIN Dontre Wilson RB OSU
Week 10 Philip Nelson QB MIN Denicos Allen LB MSU Peter Mortell P MIN Jordan Westerkamp WR NEB
Bill Belton RB PSU
Week 11 Tevin Coleman RB IND Randy Gregory DE NEB Peter Mortell P MIN Tommy Armstrong Jr. QB NEB
Chris Borland LB WIS
Week 12 Carlos Hyde RB OSU Ryan Shazier LB OSU Brendan Gibbons PK MICH Corey Clement RB WIS
Week 13 Steve Hull WR ILL Ryan Shazier LB OSU Pat Smith PK NEB Ralphael Green III DT IND
Christian Hackenberg QB PSU
Week 14 Tre Roberson QB IND Christian Kirksey LB IOWA Jeff Budzien PK NW Christian Hackenberg QB PSU

Players of the Year[edit]

Award Player School
Graham-George Offensive Player of the Year Braxton Miller Ohio State
Nagurski-Woodson Defensive Player of the Year Chris Borland Wisconsin
Thompson-Randle El Freshman of the Year Christian Hackenberg Penn State
Griese-Brees Quarterback of the Year Braxton Miller Ohio State
Richter-Howard Receiver of the Year Allen Robinson Penn State
Ameche-Dayne Running Back of the Year Carlos Hyde Ohio State
Kwalick-Clark Tight End of the Year Devin Funchess Michigan
Rimington-Pace Offensive Lineman of the Year Taylor Lewan Michigan
Smith-Brown Defensive Lineman of the Year Shilique Calhoun Michigan State
Butkus-Fitzgerald Linebacker of the Year Chris Borland Wisconsin
Tatum-Woodson Defensive Back of the Year Darqueze Dennard Michigan State
Bakken-Andersen Kicker of the Year Jeff Budzien Northwestern
Eddleman-Fields Punter of the Year Cody Webster Purdue
Dave McClain/Hayes-Schembechler Coach of the Year Mark Dantonio Michigan State

All-Conference Players[edit]

Coaches All-Conference Selections[2]

HONORABLE MENTION: Illinois: Jonathan Brown, Steve Hull, Nathan Scheelhaase; Indiana: Ted Bolser, Tevin Coleman, Cody Latimer, Jason Spriggs; Iowa: Austin Blythe, Conor Boffeli, Christian Kirksey, B.J. Lowery, Tanner Miller, Louis Trinca-Pasat; Michigan: Jibreel Black, Michael Schofield; Michigan State: Jack Allen, Fou Fonoti, Dan France, Jeremy Langford, Marcus Rush, Trae Waynes; Minnesota: Caleb Bak, Aaron Hill, Peter Mortell, Eric Murray; Nebraska: Jason Ankrah, Kenny Bell, Corey Cooper, Andrew Rodriguez, Jeremiah Sirles; Northwestern: Ibraheim Campbell, Tyler Scott, Brandon Vitabile; Ohio State: C.J. Barnett, Drew Basil, Joey Bosa, Doran Grant, Marcus Hall, Jeff Heuerman, Cameron Johnston, Devin Smith; Penn State: Adrian Amos, Glenn Carson, Christian Hackenberg, Ty Howle, Jordan Lucas, C.J. Olaniyan, Donovan Smith; Purdue: Ricardo Allen; Wisconsin: Beau Allen, Rob Havenstein, Tyler Marz, Pat Muldoon, Jacob Pedersen, Dezmen Southward.

Coaches selected six players as First Team All-Conference defensive backs and two players as First Team punters which resulted in less second team selections

Unanimous selections in ALL CAPS

Media All-Conference Selections

HONORABLE MENTION: Illinois: Houston Bates, Steve Hull; Indiana: Tim Bennett, Ted Bolser, Tevin Coleman, Mitch Ewald, Collin Rahrig, Jason Spriggs; Iowa: Austin Blythe, Conor Boffeli, Carl Davis, Anthony Hitchens, Christian Kirksey, Casey Kreiter, John Lowdermilk, Tanner Miller, Louis Trinca-Pasat; Brett Van Sloten; Michigan: Jibreel Black, Frank Clark, Devin Gardner, Brendan Gibbons, Raymon Taylor; Michigan State: Connor Cook, Fou Fonoti; Dan France, Michael Geiger, Jeremy Langford, Isaiah Lewis, Marcus Rush, Trae Waynes; Minnesota: Caleb Bak, Josh Campion, Zac Epping, Peter Mortell, Eric Murray, Brock Vereen; Nebraska: Jason Ankrah, Kenny Bell, Cole Pensick, Andrew Rodriguez, Jeremiah Sirles, Pat Smith; Northwestern: Chi Chi Ariguzo, Ibraheim Campbell, Damien Proby, Brandoo Vitabile; Ohio State: C.J. Barnett, Drew Basil, Joey Bosa, Corey Brown, Doran Grant, Marcus Hall, Jeff Heuerman, Cameron Johnston; Penn State: Glenn Carson, Sam Ficken, Christian Hackenberg, Ty Howle, Jesse James, Jordan Lucas, C.J. Olaniyan, Donovan Smith; Wisconsin: Beau Allen, Michael Caputo, Tyler Marz, Pat Muldoon, Jacob Pedersen, Sojourn Shelton, Dezmen Southward, Joel Stave.

All-Americans[edit]

There are many outlets that award All-America honors in football. The NCAA uses five official selectors to also determine Consensus and Unanimous All-America honors. The five teams used by the NCAA to compile the consensus team are from the Associated Press, the AFCA, the FWAA, The Sporting News and the Walter Camp Football Foundation. A point system is used to calculate the consensus honors. The point system consists of three points for first team, two points for second team and three points for third team. No honorable mention or fourth team or lower are used in the computation.

The teams are compiled by position and the player accumulating the most points at each position is named a Consensus All-American. If there is a tie at a position in football for first team then the players who are tied shall be named to the team. A player named first-team by all five of the NCAA-recognized selectors is recognized as a Unanimous All-American.[3]

2013 First Team All-Americans

Player School Position Selector
Ryan Shazier Ohio State LB USA Today, Athlon Sports, ESPN, AP, SI, Phil Steele
Darqueze Dennard Michigan State DB USA Today, Athlon Sports, Walter Camp, Sporting News, ESPN, AP, CBS Sports, SI, AFCA, FWAA, Phil Steele
Jeff Budzien Northwestern PK Bleacher Report, Sporting News
Allen Robinson Penn State WR Sporting News, CBS Sports, Phil Steele
Taylor Lewan Michigan OL Sporting News
Jack Mewhort Ohio State OL ESPN
Mike Sadler Michigan State P ESPN, CBS Sports
Chris Borland Wisconsin LB FWAA, Phil Steele

Academic All-Americans[edit]

Once again the Big Ten led all conferences with eight student-athletes being named to the Capital One Academic All-America first or second teams as announced by CoSIDA. The Big Ten has now led all FBS conferences in Academic All-America selections for nine straight seasons, with a total of 72 honorees over that time span.

First Team: Mark Murphy, Indiana; James Morris, Iowa; Max Bullough, Michigan State; Mike Sadler, Michigan State; Spencer Long, Nebraska; John Urschel, Penn State; Second Team: Jake Long, Nebraska; C.J. Zimmerer, Nebraska.[4]

National award winners[edit]

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 42,175 43,031 46,890 47,362 45,895 44,095 37,058 306,506 43,787 72.2%
Indiana Memorial Stadium 52,929 40,278 47,013 41,869 49,149 42,125 44,625 44,882 44,882 354,823 44,353 83.8%
Iowa Kinnick Stadium 70,585 67,402 64,201 66,886 69,025 66,838 69,812 65,708 469,872 67,125 95.1%
Michigan Michigan Stadium 109,901 112,618 115,109 107,120 111,079 109,503 112,204 113,511 781,144 111,592 101.5%
Michigan State Spartan Stadium 75,005 71,214 70,401 71,626 73,815 71,514 76,306 71,418 506,294 72,328 96.4%
Minnesota TCF Bank Stadium 50,805 44,217 42,127 45,647 51,382 49,995 48,123 53,090 334,581 47,797 94.1%
Nebraska Memorial Stadium 87,091 91,185 90,466 91,471 90,614 90,458 91,140 90,872 91,260 727,466 90,933 104.4%
Northwestern Ryan Field 47,130 38,033 33,128 32,726 47,330 36,587 47,330 40,013 275,147 39,307 83.4%
Ohio State Ohio Stadium 102,329 103,980 104,984 103,595 105,826 105,264 105,889 104,990 734,528 104,933 102.5%
Penn State Beaver Stadium 106,572 92,863 92,855 92,371 107,884 95,131 96,491 98,517 676,112 96,587 90.6%
Purdue Ross–Ade Stadium 62,500 50,165 61,127 54,258 47,203 51,423 41,038 37,459 342,673 48,953 78.3%
Wisconsin Camp Randall Stadium 80,321 76,306 77,785 80,772 81,411 80,191 77,849 78,064 552,378 78,911 98.2%
TOTAL 6,061,524 70,483

2014 NFL Draft[edit]

30 Big Ten athletes were drafted in the 2014 NFL Draft.[5]

Team Round 1 Round 2 Round 3 Round 4 Round 5 Round 6 Round 7 Total
Illinois 0
Indiana 1 1 2
Iowa 2 1 3
Michigan 1 1 1 3
Michigan State 1 1
Minnesota 1 1 2
Nebraska 1 1 1 3
Northwestern 0
Ohio State 2 2 1 1 6
Penn State 1 1 1 3
Purdue 2 2
Wisconsin 2 1 1 1 5
Total 4 6 6 4 5 1 4 30
Rnd. Pick No. NFL team Player Pos. College Conf. Notes
1 11 Tennessee Titans Taylor Lewan  OT Michigan Big Ten
1 15 Pittsburgh Steelers Ryan Shazier  LB Ohio State Big Ten
1 24 Cincinnati Bengals Darqueze Dennard  CB Michigan State Big Ten
1 31 Denver Broncos Bradley Roby  CB Ohio State Big Ten
2 37 Atlanta Falcons Ra'Shede Hageman  DT Minnesota Big Ten
2 56 Denver Broncos Cody Latimer  WR Indiana Big Ten
2 57 San Francisco 49ers Carlos Hyde  RB Ohio State Big Ten
2 58 New Orleans Saints Stanley Jean-Baptiste  CB Nebraska Big Ten
2 59 Indianapolis Colts Jack Mewhort  OT Ohio State Big Ten
2 61 Jacksonville Jaguars Allen Robinson  WR Penn State Big Ten
3 65 Houston Texans C. J. Fiedorowicz  TE Iowa Big Ten
3 68 Atlanta Falcons Dezmen Southward  FS Wisconsin Big Ten
3 71 Cleveland Browns Christian Kirksey  OLB Iowa Big Ten
3 77 Chris Borland  ILB Wisconsin Big Ten
3 78 Washington Redskins Spencer Long  OG Nebraska Big Ten
3 95 Denver Broncos Michael Schofield  OT Michigan Big Ten
4 112 Tennessee Titans DaQuan Jones  DT Penn State Big Ten
4 119 Dallas Cowboys Anthony Hitchens  OLB Iowa Big Ten
4 130 New England Patriots James White  RB Wisconsin Big Ten
4 131 Chicago Bears Brock Vereen  FS Minnesota Big Ten
5 147 Atlanta Falcons Ricardo Allen  CB Purdue Big Ten
5 149 Tampa Bay Buccaneers Kevin Pamphile  OT Purdue Big Ten
5 161 Green Bay Packers Corey Linsley  C Ohio State Big Ten
5* 175 Baltimore Ravens John Urschel  OG Penn State Big Ten
5* 176 Green Bay Packers Jared Abbrederis  WR Wisconsin Big Ten
6* 209 New York Jets Quincy Enunwa  WR Nebraska Big Ten
7 217 Washington Redskins Ted Bolser  TE Indiana Big Ten
7 224 Philadelphia Eagles Beau Allen  DT Wisconsin Big Ten
7 241 St. Louis Rams C. B. Bryant  FS Ohio State Big Ten
7 244 New England Patriots Jeremy Gallon  WR Michigan Big Ten

N.B: In the explanations below, (D) denotes trades that took place during the 2014 Draft, while (PD) indicates trades completed pre-draft.

Round two[edit]

  1. ^ No. 56: Kansas City → San Francisco (PD). Kansas City traded a conditional 2014 third-round selection along with a 2013 second-round selection to San Francisco in exchange for quarterback Alex Smith; the 2014 selection was later upgraded to a second-rounder after a condition was met in which Kansas City won a minimum of eight games during the 2013 season.[source 1][source 2]
  2. ^ No. 57: multiple trades:
           No. 57: San Diego → Miami (D). see No. 50: Miami → San Diego.[source 3]
           No. 57: Miami → San Francisco (D). Miami traded this selection to San Francisco in exchange for San Francisco's third- and fifth-round selections (Nos. 70 and 150 overall, respectively).[source 3]
  3. ^ No. 61: San Francisco → Jacksonville (D). San Francisco traded this selection to Jacksonville in exchange for Jacksonville's third- and fifth-round selections (Nos. 70 and 150 overall, respectively).[source 3]

Round three[edit]

  1. ^ No. 77: Tennessee → San Francisco (PD). Tennessee traded this selection, along with its 2013 second- and seventh-round selections to San Francisco in exchange for San Francisco's 2013 second-round selection.[source 4]
  2. ^ No. 78: Dallas → Washington (D). see No. 34: Washington → Dallas.[source 5]

Round four[edit]

  1. ^ No. 131: Denver → Chicago (D). Denver traded their fourth-round selection (No. 131 overall) and their original seventh-round selection (No. 246 overall) to Chicago in exchange for Chicago's fifth-round selection (No. 156 overall) and 2015 fifth-round selection.[source 3]

Round seven[edit]

  1. ^ No. 224: Buffalo Bills → Philadelphia (D). The Buffalo Bills exchanged 7th round picks with Philadelphia as part of a trade for running back Bryce Brown, which also involves a future draft pick being sent to the Eagles (either the 49ers 2015 4th round pick, conditionally acquired by the Bills in exchange for Stevie Johnson, or the Buffalo's 2016 4th round pick, or Buffalo's 2016 3rd round pick).[source 6][source 7]
  2. ^ No. 241: Indianapolis → St. Louis (PD). Indianapolis traded this selection to St. Louis in exchange for cornerback Josh Gordy.[source 8]

Trade references[edit]

  1. ^ "Chiefs to get Alex Smith, cut Cassel". ESPN. February 27, 2013. Archived from the original on March 20, 2014. Retrieved February 27, 2013.
  2. ^ King, Peter (May 6, 2013). "Vikings' strategy one of many that paid off in draft". Monday Morning QB (column). Sports Illustrated. Archived from the original on February 9, 2014. Retrieved May 6, 2013.
  3. ^ a b c d "2014 NFL Draft trade tracker: Details of all the moves". NFL.com. May 9, 2014. Retrieved May 9, 2014.
  4. ^ "Trade Down With Titans Adds To 49ers' Draft-Pick Pool". KPIX-TV. AP. April 26, 2013. Archived from the original on January 11, 2014. Retrieved April 27, 2013.
  5. ^ Wesseling, Chris (May 9, 2014). "Cowboys trade up to pick Demarcus Lawrence at No. 34". NFL.com. Retrieved May 9, 2014.
  6. ^ Wilson, Brad (May 10, 2014). "Philadelphia Eagles trade Bryce Brown to Buffalo in complicated deal". www.lehighvalleylive.com. Lehigh Valley Live. Retrieved May 10, 2014.
  7. ^ Graham, Tim (May 10, 2014). "Bills add backup RB Bryce Brown in trade with Eagles". The Buffalo News. Archived from the original on May 19, 2014. Retrieved May 10, 2014.
  8. ^ Wagoner, Nick (January 11, 2014). "Rams-related playoff notes: Divisional round". ESPN.com. Retrieved February 15, 2014. Indianapolis cornerback Josh Gordy, whom the Rams receive a seventh-round draft choice for this year from a 2012 trade, made a big play to keep the Colts alive and will play the Patriots tonight.

NFL Draft Selections by NCAA Conference[edit]

SEC - 49
ACC - 42
Pac-12 - 34
Big Ten - 30
Big 12 - 17
Mountain West - 16
American - 12
C-USA - 9
Independents - 9
MAC - 8
Sun Belt - 4

Non-FBS Conferences - 26

Head coaches[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ McMurphy, Brett; Rittenberg, Adam (April 19, 2013). "Sources: Big Ten to realign divisions". ESPN.com. Retrieved April 19, 2013.
  2. ^ "All-Big Ten Honors". Archived from the original on December 3, 2013. Retrieved December 3, 2013.
  3. ^ "NCAA Consensus All-America selection". Archived from the original on January 3, 2012. Retrieved December 10, 2011.
  4. ^ "2013 Big Ten Academic All-Americans". Archived from the original on December 12, 2013. Retrieved December 9, 2013.
  5. ^ "2014 Big Ten NFL Draft Central". BigTen.org. CBS Interactive. May 8, 2014. Archived from the original on May 21, 2014. Retrieved May 11, 2014.