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History of the Big Ten Network

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Big Ten Network: A napkin and an idea that persevered, prospered and thrives today
by Scott Dochterman, The Athletic

On a sandy-white beach with nothing but a panoramic view of the aqua-blue seawater, Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany, his wife, Kitty, and Fox Sports senior vice president Larry Jones saddled up next to one another staring at the breathtaking scenery.

It was an Orange Bowl function at the Ritz-Carlton in Naples, Fla., and Fox had acquired the rights to air that game for the upcoming season. Kitty had fallen asleep, while Delany and Jones — two New Jersey natives -- began a conversation about a shared enterprise.

“What do you think about the idea of a network?” Delany asked Jones.

“I really like that idea,” Jones responded. “We can bring distribution and finance.”

“I can bring a grant of rights, and we both market,” Delany said.

Using a blanket to shield their notes from the sand, Delany and Jones mapped out the foundation for the Big Ten Network on hotel napkins. The co-owned enterprise between the Big Ten (then 51 percent) and Fox (then 49 percent) debuted Aug. 30, 2007, from brand-new studios in downtown Chicago. It’s easy to forget 15 years later that the network that changed college sports was anything but preordained.

It was radical and risky; it threatened the status quo and challenged the Worldwide Leader in Sports. It required absolute buy-in from the Big Ten's 11 institutions and steadfast discipline during a yearlong distribution conflict with the nation's largest cable operators.

Yet it persevered. It prospered. It thrives today. It spawned similar league networks for the ACC, SEC and Pac-12. And the network that launched in 2007 remains as viable as ever. Here is the first part of a three-story series on BTN's humble beginnings.

A breaking point
BTN's origins coincide with the dot.com industry flourishing in the mid-1990s. Delany received interest from fledgling companies about new platforms having an impact on sports television. When the bubble burst, the ideas were put on hold until Delany thought about the next phase in 2004.

The Big Ten totaled about 9 percent of ESPN's college sports inventory, Delany's research showed, and he wanted to commence early but "fruitful" negotiations with ESPN's leadership. A meeting was set up with Delany accompanied by Illinois athletics director Ron Guenther, Big Ten attorney Jonathan Barrett and Penn State president Graham Spanier opposite ESPN's hierarchy of George Bodenheimer, John Wildhack, John Skipper and others.

After multiple meetings, including one infamous encounter with executive vice president of programming Mark Shapiro, Delany felt the organizations were at an impasse. The only alteration in ESPN's position toward the Big Ten was to use the consumer price index, which ended the negotiations. Delany said it "was an insult."

"We weren't willing to really engage seriously from that kind of position," said Delany, the Big Ten commissioner from 1989 to 2020. "So, they suggested, 'Well, you better think carefully about this because maybe it won't be here. And then we said, 'Well if it's not here, it's not here. Let's move on. And so that was the precipitating moment.'"

"While we hadn't thought about networks, we had thought about the possibility of exploring it. Had ESPN come in with a really significant offer -- I don't know what that would have been -- but something you could negotiate from, I'm sure we would have pursued that at that time. Because they were the worldwide leader and have a lot of different platforms."

Shapiro told Delany forming a new network "would be a roll of the dice." Delany responded, "Consider them rolled."

Delany took the news to the Big Ten's presidents and chancellors and said it was time to seriously explore an independent network. Some campus leaders weren't interested in getting involved in the television business. Others liked the idea of using a proposed network as negotiating leverage.

"I said, 'No, this is not really leverage,'" Delany said. "It can be played as leverage, but I want us to seriously explore the possibility of establishing a network with a strategic partner. I think if somebody could do it, I think we could. But I'm not doing it because I want to do it. I want to do it because you want to do it."

Other concerns bubbled up. Distribution costs associated with syndication had cut several men's basketball games from television to where it was untenable in some areas.

"In Indiana and Purdue, they were furious," said Mark Rudner, the Big Ten's former senior associate commissioner who handled scheduling and television administration. "It used to be that those games were carried locally in Indianapolis and syndicated throughout the state. But there were fewer games because it just was costing too much to produce these games, and the revenue associated with televising them wasn't equal to that. It was chaos."

Delany saw there were multiple ways to start a network. The New York Yankees launched YES in 2002, and the NFL debuted its league-owned channel in 2003. Cable companies like Comcast had successful arrangements in Chicago with pro teams other than the Bears. League- and team-owned channels struggled with distribution. Joint partnerships with cable companies intrigued Delany though a network-owned channel was less desirable.

Comcast and Time Warner engaged Delany in negotiations, but the revenue potential didn't meet his projections.

"I was bullish, not overly optimistic," Delany said. "ESPN's position was, to quote Mark Shapiro, 'There was no more beachfront property available; that ship had sailed.' I didn't believe that. I also didn't believe we had the expertise or the capital to assure us financially, nor did we have the leverage in distribution. I thought what we had was population, the brand, the content. We didn't have an offer from somebody who would wholly own it; nor did we want to be wholly owned. We wanted to be the Big Ten Network. So that was sort of the default situation."

At that time, FOX was barely a decade into changing sports in its own way. In 1994, it uprooted the NFL universe by outbidding CBS for NFL rights. It later acquired Major League Baseball and signed a deal to televise all Bowl Championship Series games (except the Rose Bowl) from 2006 through 2010. Its college football presence was awkward with its NFL talent trying to evaluate major bowl games, but it was willing to take another step forward.

In early 2006, Delany and Jones met for a round of golf at the Ritz-Carlton in Naples. They instantly hit it off. Both were "reformed and recovering lawyers," Delany said. The next day, they met for lunch, then joined one another on the beach.

"We did have a napkin," Delany said. "And we did map out in general, on that napkin, how the programming might look in a football season, in the spring Olympic season and in a basketball season. We were going from maybe a couple hundred games under the ESPN/CBS umbrella to the potential of a network that would be operating 24/7/365."

"How we could do this, and how we could get us the FOX distribution arm?" Jones said. "The most important thing in trying to start a network is distribution and how the economics could work. We kind of shook hands and said, 'Let's see if we can start this.'"

In the months that followed, Delany, Rudner, Jones, FOX Sports president Bob Thompson and others hammered out the details. FOX accommodated every Big Ten demand. The presidents were against alcohol and gambling advertising; FOX agreed. Big Ten officials wanted an equal number of televised women's and men's sports. That was no problem. The league owned 51 percent of the equity, and FOX assumed the financial losses that were assured in the beginning.

Delany sought out John Fahey of National Geographic, which partnered with FOX on a channel. The branding was for National Geographic, not FOX. That was the same conclusion Delany and FOX representatives had for the Big Ten Network.

"The whole idea was about the Big Ten brand, not the FOX brand, and that was from day one," Jones said. "That was always the case."

ESPN officials came back to Delany late in the process to persuade him to drop the network plans and renegotiate the syndicated rights. He declined. They resumed talks about primary events with up to 41 football games airing on ABC, ESPN and ESPN2 and 60 men's basketball games on the ESPN family of networks each year.

On June 21, 2006, Delany and Big Ten officials announced a 10-year media-rights agreement with ABC/ESPN and the creation of the Big Ten Network in August 2007.

Building the Brand

Mark Silverman built the type of resume that made him an attractive candidate for high-level television administration jobs. After receiving an economics degree from UCLA, Silverman added master's degree from Michigan. Silverman held business and executive positions at ABC and The Walt Disney Co.

He was two years into his run as the senior vice president and general manager for ABC Cable Networks Group when David Rone, a friend from Disney who had moved to FOX, approached him about BTN. Silverman met with Thompson, who ran FOX's regional sports networks.

"I was skeptical," Silverman said, "and I was surprised when they told me that it was going to be 40 football games and 100 basketball games and at least a couple of games from every school. I said, 'We're putting Michigan and Ohio State games on this network?' Like at least two if not more. I'm like, 'Wow, you know what? I think this thing is going to work.'"

With his initial apprehension dissipated, Silverman flew from Los Angeles to Chicago and met with Delany. Silverman grew up outside New York City, and their backgrounds meshed.

"I'd seen him on TV. I thought he was like an intimidating guy," Silverman said. "But then we talked, he's just so smart, but I loved how aggressive he was. And he definitely looked a couple steps ahead of everybody else."

"He's just a delightful, smart, creative guy," Delany said. "It doesn't take long in an interview or checking with people to understand that."

Silverman, who then was 41, accepted the role as Big Ten Network president in December 2006. A month later, Silverman hired TV veteran Leon Schweir as executive producer. In March 2007, Ohio State communications executive Elizabeth Conlisk came aboard as vice president of communications. That trio formed BTN's administrative backbone.

Employee No. 5 was Michael Calderon, a West Lafayette, Indiana native whose family was close with longtime Purdue men's basketball coach Gene Keady. Calderon worked in Chicago for nine years with Sporting News Radio, then left to join a private equity firm. He missed his time with sports and saw the network as a second chance. After Silverman was hired, Calderon was brought aboard as director of new media.

"I was 100 percent confident it was going to be successful, which I was probably an extreme minority at that time," said Calderon, now BTN's senior vice president for programming and digital media. "But I knew I wanted to work there and be a part of it."

As the seats were filling on the BTN bus, one chair remained vacant, and it was perhaps the most important. The network needed a public face.

Northwestern graduate and Chicago native Dave Revsine was in his 10th year as an ESPN jack-of-all-trades. He was a "SportsCenter" host, conducted play-by-play duties for college basketball and hosted studio shows ranging from the World Cup to "College GameNight" to ESPN Radio's "College GameDay."

"I had a pretty good decade-plus there and had a contract coming up," Revsine said. "They kind of made me a really good offer in terms of the years to stay. But I just felt like financially, it wasn't quite where I wanted it to be. I just felt like I at least needed to see what else was out there. Our oldest was going into kindergarten. I felt like if there was a time to move, that this was the time before she began school. So I kind of let it be known that I was available, and the Big Ten Network very quickly approached me."

Revsine scheduled an interview with Schweir but had no intention of taking the job.

"My sole purpose of coming to Chicago was to get a job offer that I could then dangle in front of ESPN and use that to leverage my position there," Revsine said. "We were really happy there and liked living there and had no intentions of leaving."

That changed in one meeting. Schweir pitched the network as a destination for Big Ten sports. He told Revsine he was their guy, and they weren't interested in anyone else. He would be the face of the network with play-by-play duties on basketball and studio host duties for football and on signature shows.

"Where in the hell did this come from?" Revsine asked himself in the interview. "You're kind of just blown away by the whole thing and really enthused. I would say in 10 minutes of this meeting, I went from thinking I could get an offer out of these guys to, 'Wow, this would be a really cool job. I think I'd really like this.' And oh, by the way, I'm from Chicago. And oh, by the way, I went to a Big Ten school, and I love college sports. And it just feels like a perfect fit for me."

The network had temporary offices on Michigan Avenue as its headquarters was under construction. Revsine had a flight back to Bristol a few hours later. He walked a few blocks to Water Tower Place, went into the women's shoe section of a department store to remain inconspicuous and called his wife, Michele.

"I said to her, 'I know this sounds weird, but I actually think this would be a really great job. And I think I want it depending on what the offer is,'" Revsine said. "And I'll never forget this response. She said to me, 'That was not the plan.'"

Schweir and Revsine scheduled another meeting to talk with Silverman and Delany. Revsine had reservations about the network's commitment to journalism, which was important to him.

"(Delany) said to me, 'If people are going elsewhere for their Big Ten news, then we have failed,'" Revsine said. "If there was a bad story in the Big Ten, how would we cover it? 'We're going to cover it because that's your job.'"

Delany's response and Silverman's vision sold Revsine. To both Delany and Silverman, Revsine fit very criterion for what they wanted in a lead anchor.

“When I’m thinking for our voice, it’s smart, Midwest, knows the Big Ten, credible, has a gravitas as a reporter, and he checked every box that I was looking for,” Silverman said. “The beauty of it was he wasn’t a big person yet on ESPN.”

“What do you want the Big Ten Network to be?’” Delany said. “(Silverman) gave me the greatest answer and used one word. He said it’s smart. I said, I couldn’t agree more. Not bells and whistles, not yelling, screaming, just smart. Because I think that’s what the Big Ten is. Great universities, great research, great commitment to the public, and Revsine personified that.”

Revsine let his family know he was in Chicago but said he was covering an “Outside the Lines” feature for ESPN and planned to stay through the weekend. His father had dealt with leukemia for 14 years but had grown more ill. The day after Revsine’s interview, his father developed a fever and was taken to Northwestern hospital. Three days later, Revsine received a job offer. He returned to Chicago, told his mother and wanted to tell his father, who was in a sedated state.


“It was like a bad soap opera; my dad is sitting there dying,” Revsine said. “I told him, and unfortunately, he died four or five days later.”

On May 30, 2007 -- three months before the launch -- BTN announced Revsine as its lead studio host. In the weeks that followed, the network surrounded him with talent who became synonymous with its coverage. Studio analysts Gerry DiNardo and Howard Griffith signed on, as did anchors Rick Pizzo and Mike Hall. All four remain with BTN 15 years later.

Distribution Nightmare

With the HD studio under construction and the major talent hired, distribution remained the biggest hurdle. FOX's partial ownership of DirecTV guaranteed BTN early access. Some small cable companies also signed on to BTN that summer. But from Independence Day through the launch, the questions piled about which cable companies would carry BTN.

“I asked Jim and Mark every conceivable question other than are we going to be on the air?” Revsine said. “It’s funny, the distribution issue kind of became a public issue maybe a week or so after I agreed to the job. So there really had been no coverage of it at all, that I was aware of. Then all of the sudden, it just exploded.”


“Was I frustrated and concerned? I was,” Delany said. “But I’m the one that brought it to their attention. And therefore, it was my responsibility to get into the foxhole and fight through those things.”

Delany and Silverman crisscrossed the Midwest, meeting with editorial boards trying to stoke publicity and put pressure on cable operators who had little interest in negotiating. The sticking point was obvious: BTN officials wanted the network to appear on expanded basic cable, which would amount to $1.10 per customer. Cable officials wanted to place it on a sports tier at $0.10 per subscriber. It resulted in an impasse.

“I had to play off of Jim,” Silverman said. “I’m always thinking you don’t want to be too aggressive. Jim sometimes would go very aggressive, and I tried to be softer.”


“(Silverman) didn’t fatigue. He had a lot of energy,” Delany said. “I was working as hard as I could. We had people running the Big Ten … and Mark was running a network as well as running a campaign. That was a political campaign.”

Each school's athletics director and coaches had to write letters and drum up support for the network through media or meetings with elected representatives at the state and federal levels.

“I’m a football coach,” said Barry Alvarez, Wisconsin’s football coach from 1990 to 2005 and athletics director from 2005 to 2021. “I really didn’t understand TV that much. But Jim explained why BTN being put on basic cable was so important.”


“I remember the Fox guys would tell us, ‘Listen, this is what happens when you try to launch new cable channels. This is the process,’” Rudner said. “It really wasn’t that unusual. ‘Just trust us, it’ll work out.’”

By August, Silverman and Delany tried desperately to get the region's major cable companies - Comcast, Time Warner, Charter and Mediacom -- to negotiate, but they all held firm. In late August, the network was set to debut, and none of them had signed on. Even attempts at congressional mediation fell through.

Concurrent with the lobbying efforts, Big Ten and BTN staff juggled major tasks entering the fall s the network forged ahead for its ceremonial kickoff planned for Thursday, August 30, 2007.

"That time is such a blur," Calderon said. “Our focus was on, ‘Let’s just get the nuts and bolts correct, and let’s launch a high-quality network in all HD.’ At the time, no network was all HD.”

“There were some late nights working well past midnight, trying to figure out well, ‘How many volleyball matches should there be? How do you program the Olympic sports?’” Rudner said. “Track and field is pretty historic in the conference, and yet, how do you show it? How do you promote it? You didn’t have anything to model it after.”


“I remember (former Chicago Tribune writer) Teddy Greenstein asking me what my first words were going to be. And my response was, ‘I don’t even know if I’m getting the first words,’” Revsine said. “We hadn’t really planned that out at that point. We got off the call, and Mark (Silverman) looked at me. He’s like, ‘You’re going to have the first word.’”

As Revsine prepared for the first sentence on a new network, he called the league office to run down the Big Ten's number of teams and sports. He rarely uses a teleprompter but fed his notes through one to ensure every word came out perfectly.

At 7 p.m. ET on August 30, Revsine sat in front of the camera and read these words: "Eleven schools, 252 varsity teams and one great network to carry all of it. Welcome to the Big Ten Network, your ultimate source for Big Ten sports."

There were watch parties on each of the Big Ten's 11 campuses. It was a special moment for the leadership.

“I’ll never forget flipping the switch,” Silverman said. “We were at this Japanese restaurant in our building in Chicago, and we created this switch with a bowling ball and a lever that I think Francois (McGillicuddy, current BTN president) still has in his office. Bob Thompson and Jim Delany, and I hold back the lever, and Dave Revsine went online.”

The night went off swimmingly. The following day, Ohio State beat West Virginia 1-0 in men's soccer in the first live event aired on BTN. Dish Network soon signed on, and the network picked up 30 million subscribers in its first 30 days, which became a major talking point.

“It was great, but we owned a piece of DirecTV at the time,” Silverman said. “We played that up, but in reality, it was sort of a shrug.”


Fox’s financial backing ensured BTN could keep afloat before it secured full distribution.


“The finances were good; the distribution was not great,” Delany said. “But we hung in there together until those were achieved. And to be honest with you, I think a lot of people, a lot of consultants, a lot of others didn’t think that this was going to happen. I wasn’t overly optimistic that it would. But I couldn’t see why we wouldn’t try to do this especially when we had a partner like Fox willing to get into the foxhole with us.”

Pressure mounted from all directions, especially during basketball season. BTN aired more than half of the league's men's basketball games, which formerly aired on local channels through syndication. Fans lashed out at school officials, Big Ten officials, cable operators and TV executives. It came to a head on Feb. 25, 2008 when Michigan State men's coach Tom Izzo said, "I think (BTN) has been a PR nightmare. And, I think it has hurt all of us."

“There was a lot of pressure on Jim,” Rudner said. “There was a lot of pressure on our athletic directors, and it was the ADs really who took the bullets from their fan base. And they stood tall, and they kept with the program. It was Izzo in the first year who said something to the effect of BTN is a disaster. And that was hard. That was a tough moment.”

Traditional basketball areas were the most inflamed. The previous season, every Cockeye men's basketball game was televised. In 2007-08, BTN aired 25 of Cockeye's 32 games. Likewise, Indiana had every men's basketball game available through syndication.

“All those local affiliates are upset so they are piling on,” Silverman said. “They’d broadcast the news, and it’s a slanted view because, ‘We used to bring you these games. Now they’re on Big Ten Network. They took them away from us, and you can’t get it.’


“These elderly women come up to our table. ‘Excuse us. Are you guys with the Big Ten Network?’ We said, ‘Yeah.’ ‘You guys should all be ashamed of yourselves.’ These 80-year-old women were like, ‘We used to watch IU hoops and you took it away from us.’ That was what we had to deal with that first year.”


The clouds parted by early summer. Comcast became the first major cable company to sign on June 19. Silverman said he let out a giant exhale and thought the rest would join the fray in short order. But it took nearly two more months of negotiation.

Finally, on Aug. 22, Mediacom agreed to terms. Charter did five days later. BTN and Time Warner reached an agreement that week, but it was not yet signed. With the season kicking off on Aug. 30 and Time Warner airing throughout southern Ohio, the race was on to televise the Buckeyes' home opener with Youngstown State. The negotiation lasted until minutes before kickoff, and BTN still didn't have a signed agreement.

"It's the Ohio State game, Season 2 for BTN, 2008. But we've agreed," Silverman said. "Honestly, I don't trust them after what we've been dealing with. But we've been working all night; we just agreed. They're supposed to be sending us a faxed copy. I haven't gotten it yet. I know (Ohio State is) kicking off in a half-hour, and I'm like, 'Let's just give them the benefit.'"

BTN flipped the switch that day and the network was distributed fully within the league's eight-state footprint.

“I always thought it would happen. I just thought it would not take a full year,” Silverman said. “I think it was by far the most difficult time in my career, but then afterwards, it’s the greatest accomplishment. They kind of go together.”

Historic Debut
No story documenting the Big Ten's first season could leave out its first weekend of football action. On Sept. 1, 2007, four games appeared at noon ET on BTN and its overflow channels. The primary game involved No. 5 Michigan and two-time defending FCS champion Appalachian State in Ann Arbor. The Wolverines were the highest-ranked Big Ten squad.

“We used our pick selections to heavy-up early in the season to get the big guys,” Silverman said. “What typically Fox and ESPN do is you want to save your good picks for later in the year. You don’t identify the games, but you save them for November. We didn’t do that because we wanted to get out of the cage with the big brands.”


Airing four games at once created logistical challenges for network officials, but the presentation appeared first class. The lead crew in Ann Arbor included longtime Major League Baseball announcer Thom Brennaman, analyst Charles Davis and production assistant-turned-sideline reporter Charissa Thompson. Brennaman and Davis famously called the Boise State-Oklahoma shocker in the Fiesta Bowl eight months earlier.


“You get lucky with a game,” Silverman said. “But then, Charles Davis is the No. 2 announcer for CBS and NFL. Charissa Thompson is a major star. She’s doing Amazon. She’s doing Fox. Brennaman did big-time Fox games for years. We’re a fledgling network to kind of pull that together. A great announcer team to cover a great game that no one expected to unfold.”


At halftime, the Wolverines trailed 28-17, and Michigan coach Lloyd Carr skipped a halftime interview with Thompson. As the game unfolded, other networks called and asked to take the live feed, which BTN officials refused.

“I think as we kind of got deep into the third quarter, you got this sense of, ‘Man, this isn’t looking good.’ These guys are hanging with them, and it is not unreasonable to think that Michigan could lose this game,’” Revsine said. “From my vantage point, I saw it as a disaster. I mean, it was the worst possible thing that could happen.”


With 15 seconds left and Appalachian State leading by two points, Michigan quarterback Chad Henne connected with Mario Manningham on a 46-yard pass to put the ball on the Appalachian State 20-yard line. Michigan called timeout with six seconds left to set up a 37-yard field-goal attempt.


Instead of Michigan pulling out an ugly victory, it turned into an instant classic. Brennaman’s call sealed its status: “Good snap. Good hold. And the kick is blocked! Appalachian State has stunned the college football world. One of the greatest upsets in sports history!”

“This isn’t really happening, is it? This is like a fairy tale,” Rudner said. “The first game on BTN involving the winningest program in history playing App State. We were watching the game, and when the kid lined up to kick the field goal, and it got blocked, it was like, ‘Oh, my God.’”

ESPN asked BTN officials to exceed the allotted replay time. Silverman agreed as long as the BTN logo aired with the highlights. The studio talent, Silverman, Schweir and others went to dinner at midnight afterward.
Though the result was embarrassing, it was positive for the network. Within a week, Dish Network signed on to BTN.

“Part of the narrative of Comcast and some of these other companies was there are not going to be big games there,” Revsine said. “Nothing important is going to happen on the Big Ten Network. And so why do you want this network that’s going to give you second-tier games? Then in the very first window of the very first day, you end up with one of the most significant upsets in the history of college football.”
 
Nebraska mention......


During Big Ten Network's 15 years, college football has "continued to evolve"
by Scott Dochterman, The Athletic

When the Big Ten Network launched on Aug. 30, 2007, the college football universe consisted of six mostly equal major conferences working together in a patchwork of truces.

The leagues linked arms under the Bowl Championship Series banner in 1998 but had different philosophies regarding postseason football. The Big Ten long advocated for maintaining the bowl system while others preferred a full-scale playoff. Many of those differences continue today.

Other than a dalliance with -- and rejection from -- Notre Dame in 1999, the Big Ten hadn't seriously contemplated expansion since adding Penn State for the 1993 football season. Since Penn State's acceptance in 1989, a Big East football conference was formed, Florida State joined the ACC and the SEC added Arkansas and South Carolina. The Big 12 became a merger of the Big Eight and four Southwest Conference schools, which killed off the Texas-based league. Then in 2004-05, the ACC wrestled Miami, Virginia Tech, and Boston College from the Big East.

The Big Ten's uneasy status as an 11-team conference prevented it from staging a lucrative championship game, unlike its peer leagues, but the Big Ten's location, history and prominence gave it status to rank alongside the SEC as first among equals. After its launch in 2007, the Big Ten Network provided the revenue to pique other schools' maximum interest, should the league opt to expand.

With BTN's full distribution in Big Ten country and digital growth from its BTN2GO app and pay-per-view BTN Plus subscription site for non-televised sports, conference revenue soared. Through BTN guarantees, the 11 schools' conference payouts grew from $10.7 million during the 2007 fiscal year to $18.45 million in 2008.

"We were 11 for 20 years. It was fine," said former Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany, who led the league from 1989-2020. "And then we did this (BTN), but we weren't thinking about this and expansion; I can tell you that we're just trying to get this done. Then the landscape continued to evolve."

The Big Ten resisted urges to expand until a Council of Presidents/Chancellors meeting on Dec. 6, 2009. After discussing population trends, Delany convinced the league hierarchy to seriously examine expansion.

"Many of the conferences went from a single region to a double region or triple region," Delany said. "We're in an area, eight states that had almost 60 million Americans. But as other people got larger, and as growth was occurring in the Sun Belt, you don't have to be a demographer to understand that what once was an advantage was no longer the great advantage that we had.

"So, after watching it play out and seeing the Big 12 under some pressure and the Big East under some pressure and the ACC getting larger, the SEC had gotten larger in the early '90s, we looked at it and said, 'Maybe it's time to grow one member, that's all.' There are other ideas, but we weren't thinking about that."

The pluses were many. The Big Ten could stage a football championship game, which at that time was allowed only for conferences with at least 12 members in a multi-division structure. Additionally, BTN could expand its reach and acquire subscribers in a new market.

On Dec. 15, 2009, the Big Ten crafted a news release that it would review prospective schools for expansion in an 18- to 24-month process. Ultimately, that release altered the course of college football history. Since that day, 23 schools either have accepted invitations from current Power 5 conferences or have switched leagues.

"While it was in our head about the network, because you always have brands or markets," Delany said, "in a perfect world, you have brands and markets. We had gone with Penn State 20 years earlier. I was thinking that the network was the network and we were successful. I was thinking about cohesion, brand cohesion, (and the) strength of football."

Delany investigated schools all across the country that fit Big Ten requirements. Membership in the prestigious AAU research consortium was borderline mandatory. Officials carefully evaluated location and football pedigree. Despite the desire to grow BTN through market acquisition, Delany and the league presidents opted for brand recognition without demographics. In 2011, the Big Ten added Nebraska, one of college football's most successful programs with five national championships from 1970 to 1997.

"When I thought about Nebraska, they were an AAU member," Delany said. "They're a historic program. Nebraska-Wisconsin, Nebraska-Ohio State, Nebraska-Cockeye, Nebraska-Minnesota, Nebraska-anybody, I thought that those games popped. Not necessarily from a cable perspective, but from a national perspective. While there wasn't a big market, there was a huge brand and I thought it fit really nicely. And we were pretty much finished in my mind.

"There's only half a million cable homes in Nebraska, maybe there's a few more but not many. But I also felt we had just got through a bruising fight four years before. Did we need another fight now?"

As a 12-team league, the Big Ten revised its annual schedule, which pushed the final weekend of games past Thanksgiving. Divisions were set and unveiled on BTN. The league sold its championship game outside its primary rights package for $28 million to FOX, which then owned 49 percent of BTN. Now, FOX owns 61 percent.

Nebraska's departure from the Big 12 triggered an expansion tsunami that touched every major conference. The Pac-10 sought six Big 12 members, and Colorado (plus Mountain West member Utah) accepted the invitation. The following year, Oklahoma and Texas A&M flirted with the newly christened Pac-12 and the SEC. While Oklahoma stayed put, the Aggies and Missouri joined the SEC. The Big East imploded with Syracuse and Pittsburgh leaving for the ACC and West Virginia bolting for the Big 12. TCU, which initially agreed to join the Big East before the departures, instead opted for the Big 12.

As realignment swirled beyond the Big Ten, Delany and Pac-12 counterpart Larry Scott announced a series of collaborations in December 2011, including oen football game per team beginning in 2017. But with the Big Ten playing eight league games each year and the Pac-12 nine, plus USC and Stanford each scheduling playing Notre Dame annually, the numbers didn't match up for Scott.

Seven months later, the Pac-12, which debuted its own network on Aug. 15, 2012, voided the deal. That led to the Big Ten altering its expansion stance.

"Larry backed away," Delany said. “I said, ‘Hey, it’s really not great. Not great at all.’ But they couldn’t pull it off. So, we just said, ‘Hey, as long as you take the responsibility, we’re fine.’ But I couldn’t believe we got so far with it. We were going to joint-promote both networks. We were going to do academic stuff. We were going to expand without expanding. So we went into repose, and we were hoping to stay at 12, but the puzzle continued to unfold. Pieces started moving.”

The most significant moves impacting the Big Ten's future took place in 2012. Notre Dame moved its non-football sports to the ACC and agreed to play five football games every year against ACC schools. The ACC had reached out to Penn State and other Big Ten schools. The Big East Conference folded, leaving an opening for the Big Ten to penetrate the world's richest corridor and help its network gain a foothold.

The Big Ten targeted two schools for another round of expansion: Maryland and Rutgers, who both joined in 2014. Both were flagship state institutions that bridged the land gap between Washington, D.C. and New York City. Maryland was an ACC charter member, but its athletics department faced significant financial problems. Rutgers is the nation's eighth-oldest university but became public only in 1956.

Maryland was a basketball power with modest football accomplishments. Rutgers largely was nondescript athletically but represented a region capable of growth. To Delany, both have "representative brands, Maryland probably stronger than Rutgers."

"I thought that would be great for Penn State," Delany said. "We could solidify the East Coast; it'd be good for cable. They were both AAU. They were both in contiguous states. They had historic relations with Penn State. We had many, many, many Big Ten alums living in that corridor, maybe as many as 600,000 and they had another half a million.

"When I looked at it, I thought maybe the markets were stronger than the brands, but the brands and the markets together were valuable. We added 3 percent to our geography and 18 percent to our demographics. Two AAU institutions. I thought it was perfect, even though there was a lot of pushback from our Midwestern fans, and that's always the case. They weren't happy with me."

For BTN, it was a chance to enter Philadelphia, New Jersey, Washington, D.C., Baltimore and New York City. Then-BTN president Mark Silverman called the expansion "a different kind of reasoning."

“Usually, you expand to bring in a premier program athletically,” said Silverman, who ran BTN from its launch in 2007 through 2018. “Nebraska was more of a brand play than a population cable-homes play.

“Rutgers and Maryland, I think the three or four objectives there were to spread the Big Ten into a new area that would help with recruiting and help with being a dominant college conference in a very populous part of the country. It was to get BTN subscribers, and it was to shore up the Eastern flank because it had followed the ACC adding Pitt and Syracuse. There was a little concern of Penn State being out there on its own and giving Penn State some home partners in its general area.”

Unlike when BTN debuted in 2007, neither the league nor BTN faced issues from cable companies about distribution.

“I would say Nebraska, Rutgers and Maryland, all for one reason or another at the time, fit what was happening internally with the Big Ten based on AAU and having our demographic advantage modified by other changes in another conferences,” Delany said. “And the network added value because I think we immediately got distribution in D.C. and New Jersey because I think those cable companies understood we would fight for it if we had to.”

After a modest pause in expansion, the sport has shifted significantly in the past 13 months. Last year, Oklahoma and Texas accepted invitations to join the SEC by 2025. On June 30, the Big Ten welcomed USC and UCLA as new members beginning in 2024. Daily speculation is that other Pac-12 schools could join the southern California schools in the Big Ten or that ACC schools are trying to break their grant of rights agreements, which is in place through 2036. Even more discussion centers on Notre Dame and whether it will remain independent in football or join the Big Ten, to which it first applied in 1899.

With BTN debuting in 2006 and followed by the Pac-12 Network (2012), the SEC Network (2014), and the ACC Network (2019), conference-affiliated networks and soaring first-tier rights fees ignited realignment. But league-owned networks' impact now in expansion is negligible, compared to overall media-rights fees. The Big Ten just agreed to a seven-year deal with FOX, CBS and NBC worth around $1.2 billion annually. Its deals with FOX and ESPN in 2017 were worth about $440 million each year.

"The network was more of a factor for Maryland and Rutgers than it was for Nebraska or frankly USC and UCLA," said Silverman, now president of FOX Sports. "It was a time when the cable universe was still growing. Now it's not."

"Television has taken on more of a preeminent role in terms of how conferences are put together and how conferences are viewed," said Dave Revsine, BTN's studio host since 2007. "BTN is a part of that for sure. But I think it's all of the media rights; you almost have to go back to the Supreme Court case (in 1984), and this notion that, 'Hey, we can have more games on television.' I think that was what started all of this. So yeah, I think the Big Ten Network played a role in that, and certainly, I think in expansion to the East Coast."
 

Big Ten Network: A napkin and an idea that persevered, prospered and thrives today
by Scott Dochterman, The Athletic

On a sandy-white beach with nothing but a panoramic view of the aqua-blue seawater, Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany, his wife, Kitty, and Fox Sports senior vice president Larry Jones saddled up next to one another staring at the breathtaking scenery.

It was an Orange Bowl function at the Ritz-Carlton in Naples, Fla., and Fox had acquired the rights to air that game for the upcoming season. Kitty had fallen asleep, while Delany and Jones — two New Jersey natives -- began a conversation about a shared enterprise.

“What do you think about the idea of a network?” Delany asked Jones.

“I really like that idea,” Jones responded. “We can bring distribution and finance.”

“I can bring a grant of rights, and we both market,” Delany said.

Using a blanket to shield their notes from the sand, Delany and Jones mapped out the foundation for the Big Ten Network on hotel napkins. The co-owned enterprise between the Big Ten (then 51 percent) and Fox (then 49 percent) debuted Aug. 30, 2007, from brand-new studios in downtown Chicago. It’s easy to forget 15 years later that the network that changed college sports was anything but preordained.

It was radical and risky; it threatened the status quo and challenged the Worldwide Leader in Sports. It required absolute buy-in from the Big Ten's 11 institutions and steadfast discipline during a yearlong distribution conflict with the nation's largest cable operators.

Yet it persevered. It prospered. It thrives today. It spawned similar league networks for the ACC, SEC and Pac-12. And the network that launched in 2007 remains as viable as ever. Here is the first part of a three-story series on BTN's humble beginnings.

A breaking point
BTN's origins coincide with the dot.com industry flourishing in the mid-1990s. Delany received interest from fledgling companies about new platforms having an impact on sports television. When the bubble burst, the ideas were put on hold until Delany thought about the next phase in 2004.

The Big Ten totaled about 9 percent of ESPN's college sports inventory, Delany's research showed, and he wanted to commence early but "fruitful" negotiations with ESPN's leadership. A meeting was set up with Delany accompanied by Illinois athletics director Ron Guenther, Big Ten attorney Jonathan Barrett and Penn State president Graham Spanier opposite ESPN's hierarchy of George Bodenheimer, John Wildhack, John Skipper and others.

After multiple meetings, including one infamous encounter with executive vice president of programming Mark Shapiro, Delany felt the organizations were at an impasse. The only alteration in ESPN's position toward the Big Ten was to use the consumer price index, which ended the negotiations. Delany said it "was an insult."

"We weren't willing to really engage seriously from that kind of position," said Delany, the Big Ten commissioner from 1989 to 2020. "So, they suggested, 'Well, you better think carefully about this because maybe it won't be here. And then we said, 'Well if it's not here, it's not here. Let's move on. And so that was the precipitating moment.'"

"While we hadn't thought about networks, we had thought about the possibility of exploring it. Had ESPN come in with a really significant offer -- I don't know what that would have been -- but something you could negotiate from, I'm sure we would have pursued that at that time. Because they were the worldwide leader and have a lot of different platforms."

Shapiro told Delany forming a new network "would be a roll of the dice." Delany responded, "Consider them rolled."

Delany took the news to the Big Ten's presidents and chancellors and said it was time to seriously explore an independent network. Some campus leaders weren't interested in getting involved in the television business. Others liked the idea of using a proposed network as negotiating leverage.

"I said, 'No, this is not really leverage,'" Delany said. "It can be played as leverage, but I want us to seriously explore the possibility of establishing a network with a strategic partner. I think if somebody could do it, I think we could. But I'm not doing it because I want to do it. I want to do it because you want to do it."

Other concerns bubbled up. Distribution costs associated with syndication had cut several men's basketball games from television to where it was untenable in some areas.

"In Indiana and Purdue, they were furious," said Mark Rudner, the Big Ten's former senior associate commissioner who handled scheduling and television administration. "It used to be that those games were carried locally in Indianapolis and syndicated throughout the state. But there were fewer games because it just was costing too much to produce these games, and the revenue associated with televising them wasn't equal to that. It was chaos."

Delany saw there were multiple ways to start a network. The New York Yankees launched YES in 2002, and the NFL debuted its league-owned channel in 2003. Cable companies like Comcast had successful arrangements in Chicago with pro teams other than the Bears. League- and team-owned channels struggled with distribution. Joint partnerships with cable companies intrigued Delany though a network-owned channel was less desirable.

Comcast and Time Warner engaged Delany in negotiations, but the revenue potential didn't meet his projections.

"I was bullish, not overly optimistic," Delany said. "ESPN's position was, to quote Mark Shapiro, 'There was no more beachfront property available; that ship had sailed.' I didn't believe that. I also didn't believe we had the expertise or the capital to assure us financially, nor did we have the leverage in distribution. I thought what we had was population, the brand, the content. We didn't have an offer from somebody who would wholly own it; nor did we want to be wholly owned. We wanted to be the Big Ten Network. So that was sort of the default situation."

At that time, FOX was barely a decade into changing sports in its own way. In 1994, it uprooted the NFL universe by outbidding CBS for NFL rights. It later acquired Major League Baseball and signed a deal to televise all Bowl Championship Series games (except the Rose Bowl) from 2006 through 2010. Its college football presence was awkward with its NFL talent trying to evaluate major bowl games, but it was willing to take another step forward.

In early 2006, Delany and Jones met for a round of golf at the Ritz-Carlton in Naples. They instantly hit it off. Both were "reformed and recovering lawyers," Delany said. The next day, they met for lunch, then joined one another on the beach.

"We did have a napkin," Delany said. "And we did map out in general, on that napkin, how the programming might look in a football season, in the spring Olympic season and in a basketball season. We were going from maybe a couple hundred games under the ESPN/CBS umbrella to the potential of a network that would be operating 24/7/365."

"How we could do this, and how we could get us the FOX distribution arm?" Jones said. "The most important thing in trying to start a network is distribution and how the economics could work. We kind of shook hands and said, 'Let's see if we can start this.'"

In the months that followed, Delany, Rudner, Jones, FOX Sports president Bob Thompson and others hammered out the details. FOX accommodated every Big Ten demand. The presidents were against alcohol and gambling advertising; FOX agreed. Big Ten officials wanted an equal number of televised women's and men's sports. That was no problem. The league owned 51 percent of the equity, and FOX assumed the financial losses that were assured in the beginning.

Delany sought out John Fahey of National Geographic, which partnered with FOX on a channel. The branding was for National Geographic, not FOX. That was the same conclusion Delany and FOX representatives had for the Big Ten Network.

"The whole idea was about the Big Ten brand, not the FOX brand, and that was from day one," Jones said. "That was always the case."

ESPN officials came back to Delany late in the process to persuade him to drop the network plans and renegotiate the syndicated rights. He declined. They resumed talks about primary events with up to 41 football games airing on ABC, ESPN and ESPN2 and 60 men's basketball games on the ESPN family of networks each year.

On June 21, 2006, Delany and Big Ten officials announced a 10-year media-rights agreement with ABC/ESPN and the creation of the Big Ten Network in August 2007.

Building the Brand

Mark Silverman built the type of resume that made him an attractive candidate for high-level television administration jobs. After receiving an economics degree from UCLA, Silverman added master's degree from Michigan. Silverman held business and executive positions at ABC and The Walt Disney Co.

He was two years into his run as the senior vice president and general manager for ABC Cable Networks Group when David Rone, a friend from Disney who had moved to FOX, approached him about BTN. Silverman met with Thompson, who ran FOX's regional sports networks.

"I was skeptical," Silverman said, "and I was surprised when they told me that it was going to be 40 football games and 100 basketball games and at least a couple of games from every school. I said, 'We're putting Michigan and Ohio State games on this network?' Like at least two if not more. I'm like, 'Wow, you know what? I think this thing is going to work.'"

With his initial apprehension dissipated, Silverman flew from Los Angeles to Chicago and met with Delany. Silverman grew up outside New York City, and their backgrounds meshed.

"I'd seen him on TV. I thought he was like an intimidating guy," Silverman said. "But then we talked, he's just so smart, but I loved how aggressive he was. And he definitely looked a couple steps ahead of everybody else."

"He's just a delightful, smart, creative guy," Delany said. "It doesn't take long in an interview or checking with people to understand that."

Silverman, who then was 41, accepted the role as Big Ten Network president in December 2006. A month later, Silverman hired TV veteran Leon Schweir as executive producer. In March 2007, Ohio State communications executive Elizabeth Conlisk came aboard as vice president of communications. That trio formed BTN's administrative backbone.

Employee No. 5 was Michael Calderon, a West Lafayette, Indiana native whose family was close with longtime Purdue men's basketball coach Gene Keady. Calderon worked in Chicago for nine years with Sporting News Radio, then left to join a private equity firm. He missed his time with sports and saw the network as a second chance. After Silverman was hired, Calderon was brought aboard as director of new media.

"I was 100 percent confident it was going to be successful, which I was probably an extreme minority at that time," said Calderon, now BTN's senior vice president for programming and digital media. "But I knew I wanted to work there and be a part of it."

As the seats were filling on the BTN bus, one chair remained vacant, and it was perhaps the most important. The network needed a public face.

Northwestern graduate and Chicago native Dave Revsine was in his 10th year as an ESPN jack-of-all-trades. He was a "SportsCenter" host, conducted play-by-play duties for college basketball and hosted studio shows ranging from the World Cup to "College GameNight" to ESPN Radio's "College GameDay."

"I had a pretty good decade-plus there and had a contract coming up," Revsine said. "They kind of made me a really good offer in terms of the years to stay. But I just felt like financially, it wasn't quite where I wanted it to be. I just felt like I at least needed to see what else was out there. Our oldest was going into kindergarten. I felt like if there was a time to move, that this was the time before she began school. So I kind of let it be known that I was available, and the Big Ten Network very quickly approached me."

Revsine scheduled an interview with Schweir but had no intention of taking the job.

"My sole purpose of coming to Chicago was to get a job offer that I could then dangle in front of ESPN and use that to leverage my position there," Revsine said. "We were really happy there and liked living there and had no intentions of leaving."

That changed in one meeting. Schweir pitched the network as a destination for Big Ten sports. He told Revsine he was their guy, and they weren't interested in anyone else. He would be the face of the network with play-by-play duties on basketball and studio host duties for football and on signature shows.

"Where in the hell did this come from?" Revsine asked himself in the interview. "You're kind of just blown away by the whole thing and really enthused. I would say in 10 minutes of this meeting, I went from thinking I could get an offer out of these guys to, 'Wow, this would be a really cool job. I think I'd really like this.' And oh, by the way, I'm from Chicago. And oh, by the way, I went to a Big Ten school, and I love college sports. And it just feels like a perfect fit for me."

The network had temporary offices on Michigan Avenue as its headquarters was under construction. Revsine had a flight back to Bristol a few hours later. He walked a few blocks to Water Tower Place, went into the women's shoe section of a department store to remain inconspicuous and called his wife, Michele.

"I said to her, 'I know this sounds weird, but I actually think this would be a really great job. And I think I want it depending on what the offer is,'" Revsine said. "And I'll never forget this response. She said to me, 'That was not the plan.'"

Schweir and Revsine scheduled another meeting to talk with Silverman and Delany. Revsine had reservations about the network's commitment to journalism, which was important to him.

"(Delany) said to me, 'If people are going elsewhere for their Big Ten news, then we have failed,'" Revsine said. "If there was a bad story in the Big Ten, how would we cover it? 'We're going to cover it because that's your job.'"

Delany's response and Silverman's vision sold Revsine. To both Delany and Silverman, Revsine fit very criterion for what they wanted in a lead anchor.

“When I’m thinking for our voice, it’s smart, Midwest, knows the Big Ten, credible, has a gravitas as a reporter, and he checked every box that I was looking for,” Silverman said. “The beauty of it was he wasn’t a big person yet on ESPN.”

“What do you want the Big Ten Network to be?’” Delany said. “(Silverman) gave me the greatest answer and used one word. He said it’s smart. I said, I couldn’t agree more. Not bells and whistles, not yelling, screaming, just smart. Because I think that’s what the Big Ten is. Great universities, great research, great commitment to the public, and Revsine personified that.”

Revsine let his family know he was in Chicago but said he was covering an “Outside the Lines” feature for ESPN and planned to stay through the weekend. His father had dealt with leukemia for 14 years but had grown more ill. The day after Revsine’s interview, his father developed a fever and was taken to Northwestern hospital. Three days later, Revsine received a job offer. He returned to Chicago, told his mother and wanted to tell his father, who was in a sedated state.


“It was like a bad soap opera; my dad is sitting there dying,” Revsine said. “I told him, and unfortunately, he died four or five days later.”

On May 30, 2007 -- three months before the launch -- BTN announced Revsine as its lead studio host. In the weeks that followed, the network surrounded him with talent who became synonymous with its coverage. Studio analysts Gerry DiNardo and Howard Griffith signed on, as did anchors Rick Pizzo and Mike Hall. All four remain with BTN 15 years later.

Distribution Nightmare

With the HD studio under construction and the major talent hired, distribution remained the biggest hurdle. FOX's partial ownership of DirecTV guaranteed BTN early access. Some small cable companies also signed on to BTN that summer. But from Independence Day through the launch, the questions piled about which cable companies would carry BTN.

“I asked Jim and Mark every conceivable question other than are we going to be on the air?” Revsine said. “It’s funny, the distribution issue kind of became a public issue maybe a week or so after I agreed to the job. So there really had been no coverage of it at all, that I was aware of. Then all of the sudden, it just exploded.”


“Was I frustrated and concerned? I was,” Delany said. “But I’m the one that brought it to their attention. And therefore, it was my responsibility to get into the foxhole and fight through those things.”

Delany and Silverman crisscrossed the Midwest, meeting with editorial boards trying to stoke publicity and put pressure on cable operators who had little interest in negotiating. The sticking point was obvious: BTN officials wanted the network to appear on expanded basic cable, which would amount to $1.10 per customer. Cable officials wanted to place it on a sports tier at $0.10 per subscriber. It resulted in an impasse.

“I had to play off of Jim,” Silverman said. “I’m always thinking you don’t want to be too aggressive. Jim sometimes would go very aggressive, and I tried to be softer.”


“(Silverman) didn’t fatigue. He had a lot of energy,” Delany said. “I was working as hard as I could. We had people running the Big Ten … and Mark was running a network as well as running a campaign. That was a political campaign.”

Each school's athletics director and coaches had to write letters and drum up support for the network through media or meetings with elected representatives at the state and federal levels.

“I’m a football coach,” said Barry Alvarez, Wisconsin’s football coach from 1990 to 2005 and athletics director from 2005 to 2021. “I really didn’t understand TV that much. But Jim explained why BTN being put on basic cable was so important.”


“I remember the Fox guys would tell us, ‘Listen, this is what happens when you try to launch new cable channels. This is the process,’” Rudner said. “It really wasn’t that unusual. ‘Just trust us, it’ll work out.’”

By August, Silverman and Delany tried desperately to get the region's major cable companies - Comcast, Time Warner, Charter and Mediacom -- to negotiate, but they all held firm. In late August, the network was set to debut, and none of them had signed on. Even attempts at congressional mediation fell through.

Concurrent with the lobbying efforts, Big Ten and BTN staff juggled major tasks entering the fall s the network forged ahead for its ceremonial kickoff planned for Thursday, August 30, 2007.

"That time is such a blur," Calderon said. “Our focus was on, ‘Let’s just get the nuts and bolts correct, and let’s launch a high-quality network in all HD.’ At the time, no network was all HD.”

“There were some late nights working well past midnight, trying to figure out well, ‘How many volleyball matches should there be? How do you program the Olympic sports?’” Rudner said. “Track and field is pretty historic in the conference, and yet, how do you show it? How do you promote it? You didn’t have anything to model it after.”


“I remember (former Chicago Tribune writer) Teddy Greenstein asking me what my first words were going to be. And my response was, ‘I don’t even know if I’m getting the first words,’” Revsine said. “We hadn’t really planned that out at that point. We got off the call, and Mark (Silverman) looked at me. He’s like, ‘You’re going to have the first word.’”

As Revsine prepared for the first sentence on a new network, he called the league office to run down the Big Ten's number of teams and sports. He rarely uses a teleprompter but fed his notes through one to ensure every word came out perfectly.

At 7 p.m. ET on August 30, Revsine sat in front of the camera and read these words: "Eleven schools, 252 varsity teams and one great network to carry all of it. Welcome to the Big Ten Network, your ultimate source for Big Ten sports."

There were watch parties on each of the Big Ten's 11 campuses. It was a special moment for the leadership.

“I’ll never forget flipping the switch,” Silverman said. “We were at this Japanese restaurant in our building in Chicago, and we created this switch with a bowling ball and a lever that I think Francois (McGillicuddy, current BTN president) still has in his office. Bob Thompson and Jim Delany, and I hold back the lever, and Dave Revsine went online.”

The night went off swimmingly. The following day, Ohio State beat West Virginia 1-0 in men's soccer in the first live event aired on BTN. Dish Network soon signed on, and the network picked up 30 million subscribers in its first 30 days, which became a major talking point.

“It was great, but we owned a piece of DirecTV at the time,” Silverman said. “We played that up, but in reality, it was sort of a shrug.”


Fox’s financial backing ensured BTN could keep afloat before it secured full distribution.


“The finances were good; the distribution was not great,” Delany said. “But we hung in there together until those were achieved. And to be honest with you, I think a lot of people, a lot of consultants, a lot of others didn’t think that this was going to happen. I wasn’t overly optimistic that it would. But I couldn’t see why we wouldn’t try to do this especially when we had a partner like Fox willing to get into the foxhole with us.”

Pressure mounted from all directions, especially during basketball season. BTN aired more than half of the league's men's basketball games, which formerly aired on local channels through syndication. Fans lashed out at school officials, Big Ten officials, cable operators and TV executives. It came to a head on Feb. 25, 2008 when Michigan State men's coach Tom Izzo said, "I think (BTN) has been a PR nightmare. And, I think it has hurt all of us."

“There was a lot of pressure on Jim,” Rudner said. “There was a lot of pressure on our athletic directors, and it was the ADs really who took the bullets from their fan base. And they stood tall, and they kept with the program. It was Izzo in the first year who said something to the effect of BTN is a disaster. And that was hard. That was a tough moment.”

Traditional basketball areas were the most inflamed. The previous season, every Cockeyes men's basketball game was televised. In 2007-08, BTN aired 25 of Cockeyes's 32 games. Likewise, Indiana had every men's basketball game available through syndication.

“All those local affiliates are upset so they are piling on,” Silverman said. “They’d broadcast the news, and it’s a slanted view because, ‘We used to bring you these games. Now they’re on Big Ten Network. They took them away from us, and you can’t get it.’


“These elderly women come up to our table. ‘Excuse us. Are you guys with the Big Ten Network?’ We said, ‘Yeah.’ ‘You guys should all be ashamed of yourselves.’ These 80-year-old women were like, ‘We used to watch IU hoops and you took it away from us.’ That was what we had to deal with that first year.”


The clouds parted by early summer. Comcast became the first major cable company to sign on June 19. Silverman said he let out a giant exhale and thought the rest would join the fray in short order. But it took nearly two more months of negotiation.

Finally, on Aug. 22, Mediacom agreed to terms. Charter did five days later. BTN and Time Warner reached an agreement that week, but it was not yet signed. With the season kicking off on Aug. 30 and Time Warner airing throughout southern Ohio, the race was on to televise the Cuckeyes' home opener with Youngstown State. The negotiation lasted until minutes before kickoff, and BTN still didn't have a signed agreement.

"It's the Ohio State game, Season 2 for BTN, 2008. But we've agreed," Silverman said. "Honestly, I don't trust them after what we've been dealing with. But we've been working all night; we just agreed. They're supposed to be sending us a faxed copy. I haven't gotten it yet. I know (Ohio State is) kicking off in a half-hour, and I'm like, 'Let's just give them the benefit.'"

BTN flipped the switch that day and the network was distributed fully within the league's eight-state footprint.

“I always thought it would happen. I just thought it would not take a full year,” Silverman said. “I think it was by far the most difficult time in my career, but then afterwards, it’s the greatest accomplishment. They kind of go together.”

Historic Debut
No story documenting the Big Ten's first season could leave out its first weekend of football action. On Sept. 1, 2007, four games appeared at noon ET on BTN and its overflow channels. The primary game involved No. 5 Michigan and two-time defending FCS champion Appalachian State in Ann Arbor. The Wolverines were the highest-ranked Big Ten squad.

“We used our pick selections to heavy-up early in the season to get the big guys,” Silverman said. “What typically Fox and ESPN do is you want to save your good picks for later in the year. You don’t identify the games, but you save them for November. We didn’t do that because we wanted to get out of the cage with the big brands.”


Airing four games at once created logistical challenges for network officials, but the presentation appeared first class. The lead crew in Ann Arbor included longtime Major League Baseball announcer Thom Brennaman, analyst Charles Davis and production assistant-turned-sideline reporter Charissa Thompson. Brennaman and Davis famously called the Boise State-Oklahoma shocker in the Fiesta Bowl eight months earlier.


“You get lucky with a game,” Silverman said. “But then, Charles Davis is the No. 2 announcer for CBS and NFL. Charissa Thompson is a major star. She’s doing Amazon. She’s doing Fox. Brennaman did big-time Fox games for years. We’re a fledgling network to kind of pull that together. A great announcer team to cover a great game that no one expected to unfold.”


At halftime, the Wolverines trailed 28-17, and Michigan coach Lloyd Carr skipped a halftime interview with Thompson. As the game unfolded, other networks called and asked to take the live feed, which BTN officials refused.

“I think as we kind of got deep into the third quarter, you got this sense of, ‘Man, this isn’t looking good.’ These guys are hanging with them, and it is not unreasonable to think that Michigan could lose this game,’” Revsine said. “From my vantage point, I saw it as a disaster. I mean, it was the worst possible thing that could happen.”


With 15 seconds left and Appalachian State leading by two points, Michigan quarterback Chad Henne connected with Mario Manningham on a 46-yard pass to put the ball on the Appalachian State 20-yard line. Michigan called timeout with six seconds left to set up a 37-yard field-goal attempt.


Instead of Michigan pulling out an ugly victory, it turned into an instant classic. Brennaman’s call sealed its status: “Good snap. Good hold. And the kick is blocked! Appalachian State has stunned the college football world. One of the greatest upsets in sports history!”

“This isn’t really happening, is it? This is like a fairy tale,” Rudner said. “The first game on BTN involving the winningest program in history playing App State. We were watching the game, and when the kid lined up to kick the field goal, and it got blocked, it was like, ‘Oh, my God.’”

ESPN asked BTN officials to exceed the allotted replay time. Silverman agreed as long as the BTN logo aired with the highlights. The studio talent, Silverman, Schweir and others went to dinner at midnight afterward.
Though the result was embarrassing, it was positive for the network. Within a week, Dish Network signed on to BTN.

“Part of the narrative of Comcast and some of these other companies was there are not going to be big games there,” Revsine said. “Nothing important is going to happen on the Big Ten Network. And so why do you want this network that’s going to give you second-tier games? Then in the very first window of the very first day, you end up with one of the most significant upsets in the history of college football.”

Great morning read 🙂
 

On the Big Ten Network's legacy: "We busted open a new frontier"
by Scott Dochterman, The Athletic

Long before the Big Ten Network became an entity capable of establishing a legacy, Big Ten members' willingness to surrender locally earned television revenue a generation earlier allowed a league-owned media operation to become a possibility. But that doesn't mean it was easy.

Before 1984, the NCAA controlled, sold and distributed all television rights. Schools, conferences, and even ABC, which held exclusive broadcast rights for college football's regular season from 1965 to 1981, had little or no say about which games aired. A marquee matchup might not hit the airwaves, while the NCAA assigned ABC a game featuring two lower-level teams from a mid-major conference.

The system was designed to prevent competitive imbalance and keep attendance from falling. By 1979, several leagues and independent programs were frustrated enough to join the College Football Association, which wanted to negotiate better television contracts on behalf of its members. The NCAA disagreed and threatened to sanction schools should they compete in the CFA-arranged deal. Oklahoma and Georgia filed suit against the NCAA, and in 1984, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 7-2 in favor of the CFA and member schools that the NCAA was restraining trade.

In 1985, schools and conferences were free to negotiate their own deals with the CFA or autonomously. The Big Ten, which initially supported the NCAA's position, first opted for a joint arrangement with the Pac-10 to sell their tier-one rights to CBS for the 1985-86 season. Two years later, the leagues agreed to a four-year deal with ABC.

The Big Ten's schools kept their syndicated second-tier rights and often found themselves competing with one another over start times. ESPN founder Bill Rasmussen, who by then had left that company, owned Rasmussen Communications Management (RCM) and operated what was called the Big Ten football network. He arranged the league's football and men's basketball schedules but also worked for individual schools in side arrangements.

"Rasmussen held the broadcast rights of certain institutions, the more profitable ones," said Mark Rudner, a 40-year Big Ten employee who began in 1979 and retired as the senior associate commissioner for television administration. "But he also had the conference rights, and he was doing the schedule. So, he would do the schedule and save some of the better inventory for the individual packages that they didn't have to share with the rest of the conference."

Some Big Ten schools generated more income from Rasmussen's deal than they did through the conference. During the 1987-88 year, Cockeye earned $1.3 million in syndicated television rights and $1 million from the Big Ten. With Big Ten schools in larger markets competing with pro sports teams for eyeballs and ticket sales, Cockeye benefitted from sold-out home events and a robust statewide television market. In 1988, RCM/Raycom agreed to pay Cockeye a national-record $6.5 million minimum over five years to syndicate second-tier games and coaches shows throughout the state.

The Big Ten, however, was unhappy with the arrangement. Cockeye, Illinois, Indiana and Purdue thrived while some schools didn't get paid. Every Cockeye and Indiana men's basketball game aired throughout those states. The Michigan schools struggled to appear on Detroit television.

"The '80s in television where chaos," Rudner said. "By the late '80s, our presidents had enough of all these problems and broken promises from TV companies."

In 1988, in what Jim Delany called "radical," the 10 league presidents voted to give then-Big Ten commissioner Wayne Duke and the conference staff a grant of rights to negotiate all of their television deals collectively. Upon expiration, every local agreement for football and men's basketball was transferred to the league office. Cockeye's local rights were the last to expire in 1993.

"We had always had revenue sharing," said Delany, who became Big Ten commissioner in 1989 through 2020. "But that was the beginning of an understanding that aggregating rights could be very valuable in this space. All 10 schools competing against each other in the marketplace really made no sense.

"After deregulation, say '85 to '90, we ended up with like three lawsuits, people who were involved with the wrong people. They wouldn't pay. We weren't getting the distribution. People were fighting with each other internally. So, we resolved those lawsuits, and we executed a new set of agreements with a variety of partners."

Delany began as Big Ten commissioner on July 1, 1989. As longtime athletics directors like Michigan's Don Canham and Cockeye's Bump Elliott retired, the league turned to new voices like Bob Bowlsby (Cockeye), Ron Guenther (Illinois) , Pat Richter (Wisconsin) and Andy Geiger (Ohio State). The Big Ten coalesced under Delany's leadership and built a stronger base with the grant of rights.

"We became more cohesive actually through the assignment of rights because people could see -- and this was even before the Big Ten Network -- that it was a brilliant move by the presidents in 1988," Delany said. "I don't think anybody was looking over their shoulder but people get surprised in this business. I think Ohio State -- the ones that have the most equity, the most followership -- have been terrific. And we didn't have what I would describe as problems in that area."

Penn State accepted a Big Ten invitation on Dec. 10, 1989, to officially join the league once its rights expired under the CFA. That took place in 1993. In 1995, Delany concluded a media rights agreement with ABC/ESPN and a side arrangement with CBS for men's basketball through the 2005-06 season for about $70 million per year. It provided solid revenue and great exposure on two major networks plus extended regional cable syndication. By the early 2000s, Delany wondered what was next. After the next round of agreements, he ushered in BTN in 2007.

Fifteen years later, BTN's impact remains profound. From igniting conference expansion to launching hundreds of media-related careers through its Student U program to televising hundreds of women's sporting events each year, BTN has changed the complexion of college sports.

“It was brilliant that Jim had had the vision to do that, and it was successful immediately,” said Barry Alvarez, Wisconsin’s football coach from 1990-2005 and athletics director from 2005-2021. “The fact that our sports and the Big Ten were featured every day nationally and it’s not just football and basketball, it’s all sports. It’s good for your fans, it’s good for our league, it’s great for recruiting, it’s tremendous and it’s very lucrative.”

“I don’t know if BTN is the most significant thing I’ve seen in my time at the Big Ten,” Rudner said, “but it’s right up there.”

Five years after BTN's debut, Pac-12 commissioner Larry Scott started his league's network, followed by the SEC Network in 2014 and the ACC Network in 2019. ESPN operates the SEC and ACC networks, while the Pac-12 owns its channel. BTN is the only one with split ownership between a league and a television company.

Co-ownership remains the preferred model for Delany. That wasn't the case for the Pac-12, which has struggled with distribution from the outset.

"ESPN capitulated first in the SEC, and they did a rev share where they owned everything. Then they did it with the ACC," Delany said. "Larry tried to do it on his own, which obviously was a strategic error. But at the time, he had just done a very big deal with FOX and ESPN. So maybe he felt he had some takeoff space to do that. But it turned out not to be the case. If we don't do it, I'm not sure it ever gets done. But having done it, I think everybody made hay, in one form or another."

"If you look at all your conference networks, ESPN backed the SEC. ESPN backed the ACC. The Pac-12 had no backing," said Larry Jones, FOX Sports senior vice president. "We told them that's a mistake, that you can't go out on your own because you don't have the distribution clout. And that's not exactly been a success."

BTN's model of merging network interests with conference values has allowed it to operate semi-autonomously. It remains a stand-alone brand without any FOX markers. That was critical in the beginning and remains imperative today.

"It was very important to me and to Jim that this was the Big Ten Network," said former BTN president Mark Silverman, who now is the president of FOX Sports. "Today you see 'SEC Network by ESPN.' It's both. You still don't see that (with BTN), and there's a reason. This is the Big Ten Network. FOX may run it, but we're not trying to muddy the waters."

For athletes and coaches of non-revenue sports, BTN has helped boost awareness. Outside of local affiliates, only 40 combined women's basketball and volleyball matches aired on television the year before BTN. No other Olympic sports saw coverage until the postseason. In its first year, BTN aired 255 women's basketball, women's volleyball and Olympic sport competitions.

BTN's Student U programming allows on-campus broadcasting majors to call sporting events that air on the network or its streaming platform. Taylor Rooks (Turner Sports) and Chris Vosters (Chicago Blackhawks) got their start on Student U. Hundreds of former students who participated in Student U, either as on-air talent or in production, have worked as professionals for BTN or other television networks.
BTN also runs a camp each summer for top Student U performers.

“One of the points that our presidents made during the creation of the network was this is going to be a laboratory for some of our communications students,” Rudner said. “Just like the athletes have the opportunity to showcase their talents on BTN, we want our communication students to have the same opportunity. It drove our coaches crazy. I can’t tell you how many times I would have a coach call me and say we’d rather not have television coverage than have unprofessional students calling our games. And I would say to them, ‘Well, it’s a good thing you’re not making these decisions.'”

Media personalities Charissa Thompson, Melanie Collins and Anthony Herron got their starts on the BTN sidelines, while the network became a launching pad for former Big Ten athletes Lisa Byington, Jimmy Jackson, Robbie Hummel, Stephen Bardo and Jess Settles as analysts and play-by-play broadcasters.

“There’s a lot of talent out there, and not everybody needs to go through the same steps,” Delany said. “When you’re in a startup, you can afford to give people opportunities. You can experiment, you can coach them up. It was a series of new jobs and opportunities for a lot of people.”

The success stories are part of BTN’s heritage. So are its metrics. During football season, BTN ranks second to ESPN in cable viewers-per-game average. In men’s basketball, it fluctuates between second and third with ESPN2 behind ESPN.

The juxtaposition of televising the historic but barely seen Michigan-Appalachian State game on its first weekend to last year's Black Friday contest between Nebraska and Cockeye setting a network record with 1.94 million viewers shows its viability. BTN's legacy is that it survived and thrived.

“The Big Ten Network changed college sports television, period, end of sentence,” said Dave Revsine, BTN’s lead studio host since 2007. “It’s funny because when Jim was negotiating that deal with Mark Shapiro, who of course, was one of my bosses at ESPN, we had these buttons that we walked around that said, ‘Bristol is Big Ten Country.’

“I often think about that day. We’ve got to wear this button around because the commissioner of the Big Ten is here and those series of days probably changed my life and then changed more broadly college sports television. If ESPN gives them a better offer, Jim doesn’t say, ‘I’m going to start my own network,’ and if he doesn’t say, ‘I’m going to start my own network,’ the SEC doesn’t do it, and the ACC doesn’t do it and the Pac-12 doesn’t do it. And college sports television looks very different.”

The revenue also looks much different. When the Big Ten announced on Aug. 18 a series of seven-year agreements placing games on FOX, CBS and NBC and rights fees exceeding $8 billion, those figures don't include BTN. Should BTN penetrate southern California, a sizable portion of each school's revenue will come from the network, even after selling 10 percent equity to FOX during the pandemic. It's a long way from people mocking Delany, as Cockeye football coach Kirk Ferentz recalled.

"To me, it's historic," said Ferentz, the only football coach remaining on a Big Ten sideline after the league announced BTN's formation June 21, 2006. "Everybody laughed at the commissioner, commissioner Delany. They laughed at him and scoffed and were skeptical. But then three years later, everybody was trying to be us. It's just the vision that he had."

“It was a ton of fun,” said Silverman, who led BTN from its launch through 2018. “It was really hard. But it’s just one of those crazy things you look back on. It’s just bonkers. God, I can’t believe we pulled it off. We actually made it happen.”

Delany played basketball at North Carolina for Dean Smith and served as a team captain as a senior in 1970. Smith told Delany and his teammates, "When you're successful, there's always a lot of credit to share." From the Big Ten leadership's 1988 monumental decision to pool television revenues to the mid-2000s hierarchy who backed his recommendation to start a network, Delany credits the president sand athletics directors for supporting his vision, buying in and working together to achieve success.

"It's been something that a lot of people can be really proud of," he said. "We busted open a new frontier."
 
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