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Quarterbacks, newcomers among storylines to watch as Big Ten Media Days arrives








Nebraska head coach Matt Rhule speaks during Big Ten Conference media days last July Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis.




In the relay race of power conference football media days, the Big Ten is running the anchor leg. There’s still plenty to discuss.

The location is the same for the fourth July in a row — Indianapolis’ Lucas Oil Stadium, home of the league title game in December. The setup is new, extended from two days to three to accommodate four new members that balloon the conference to 18 teams. Talks begin Tuesday morning and wrap Thursday afternoon, five weekends before Big Ten schools open their seasons from coast to coast.

The Big 12, SEC and ACC have had their summer moments in the spotlight.

Next up is the Big Ten, whose storylines are as fresh and numerous as ever. Among the most interesting to follow:

National topics

League administrators and coaches have plenty to weigh in on amid a college athletics landscape that’s anything but status quo. No more talk of division titles — the new standard is qualifying for the expanded 12-team College Football Playoff, which likely happens for anyone who finishes in the top three or four of the stretched-out Big Ten standings.

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Familiar subjects like the transfer portal and name, image, likeness will still come up, but probably not as much as what lies ahead. Does the Big Ten have an appetite for further expansion, especially amid ongoing ACC court battles? Revenue sharing between schools and players is looming. So are roster limits, with a potential number between 100 and 110 players according to reports.

Expect some chatter on nationwide travel too — UCLA, for example, will navigate more than 22,000 miles during the regular season. Plus feedback from players and coaches on EA Sports’ “College Football 25” video game.

Middle-of-the-pack Nebraska

Set the odds for which schools will make a headlines splash in Indy, and the Huskers would be longshots. They don’t have a new head coach or flashy player representatives. Media members project them to finish eighth, which would be a marked improvement for the program but still a ways off from national relevance.

Even nuts-and-bolts roster talk will be mostly absent of new developments after coach Matt Rhule made himself available to reporters multiple times since the spring game, most recently in late June.

One topic he’ll address is the resignation of defensive backs coach and longtime aide Evan Cooper on July 5 and subsequent hire of former Buffalo Bills assistant John Butler.

Another is quarterbacks — the name of former five-star prospect and freshman Dylan Raiola will come up often. How did Raiola’s summer of training go? What roles could 2023 starter Heinrich Haarberg fill? What about the addition of reigning NAIA Player of the Year Jalyn Gramstad?

Bold statements from the Huskers are likely to be few. Substance and confidence — including from player reps in center Ben Scott, defensive lineman Ty Robinson and defensive back Isaac Gifford — much more often. Fun fact: NU is the only Big Ten school bringing a lineman from both sides of the ball.

Pac-12 arrivals

Instead of West Division chatter, try West Coast. Even before they officially join the Big Ten on Aug. 2, newcomers Oregon, Washington, USC and UCLA will draw plenty of attention. The Ducks, already, are essentially co-favorites with Ohio State to win the league and coach Dan Lanning immediately becomes one of the conference’s best program leaders.

What tone USC coach Lincoln Riley takes will be fascinating for a man viewed by many as leaving Oklahoma a few years ago to avoid playing in the SEC. He pooh-poohed the difference between the Pac-12 and Big Ten last spring — will he double down on a national stage?

Meanwhile, former Arizona coach Jedd Fisch takes over at national runner-up Washington that brings back just one returning starter and is a total wildcard.

UCLA pivoted from Chip Kelly — who left to be Ohio State’s offensive coordinator — to DeShaun Foster, a former Bruin great making his debut as a head coach.

The Big Two

The Big Ten has long been the domain of Ohio State and Michigan — and so has Media Days. Take your pick over who should be the A1 focus this year.

The Buckeyes are on the short list of national title contenders with a stacked roster who also happen to have missed the league championship game for three straight seasons.

The Wolverines are three-time defending Big Ten winners but move on from head coach and big personality Jim Harbaugh along with most of their offensive production.

Is OSU’s Ryan Day — 56-8 as head coach in Columbus — on the hot seat after losing three straight games to “that team up north”?

Is Michigan — with a defense that may again be the Big Ten’s best — in rebuild mode?

Expect players and coaches to have strong opinions about the two programs that have won each of the last seven league crowns.

Surprise first impressions

Coaching introductions will go beyond the four former Pac-12 schools. And the Big Ten might be adding some dynamic personalities for the long haul.

Start with Indiana coach Curt Cignetti, the former James Madison leader who takes over a team that has only once won more than six games in a campaign since 2007. He won the offseason with brash statements — “I win; Google me,” he said when asked how he sells his vision to future Hoosiers. This will be the biggest spotlight yet for the former head man at Indiana University of Pennsylvania (NCAA Division II) and Elon (FCS) who coached at the FBS level the last two years after JMU made the transition from FCS.

Michigan State’s Jonathan Smith is another new face after he left his alma mater at Oregon State. Smith too will say what he means — “I’m not very patient,” he said in April when discussing a Sparty rebuild. Northwestern’s David Braun technically falls into the category too after the Wildcats removed his interim tag following an 8-5 showing.

Of course, Big Ten veterans like Kirk Ferentz (Iowa), P.J. Fleck (Minnesota) and Bret Bielema are also no strangers to colorfully sharing their opinions with cameras on.

Quarterbacks

Only five of 18 teams are bringing their quarterbacks to Indianapolis and each should be in demand.

Attending QBs are Hudson Card (Purdue), Miller Moss (USC), Ethan Garbers (UCLA), Dillon Gabriel (Oregon) and Max Brosmer (Minnesota). Only Card — who started a year ago after transferring from Texas — has any Big Ten experience. Gabriel is the favorite for league Offensive Player of the Year after coming from Oklahoma. Garbers and Moss are former top prospects getting their first full-time shots. Brosmer comes from FCS-level New Hampshire for his sixth college season.

Other absent quarterbacks will be popular topics, too.

Penn State’s Drew Allar, who threw 25 touchdown passes against two picks last year. Transfer Will Howard at Ohio State. What Michigan does, likely looking to redshirt sophomore and dynamic athlete Alex Orji. The return to health of Iowa’s Cade McNamara. Nebraska’s Raiola, too.

EA Sports new “College Football 25” has real players on real teams in an unreal video game experience. (Scripps News)







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