USC's move to the Big Ten was spearheaded by President Carol Folt to bring more opportunities for the entire university and a dramatically increased profile on the national stage. (Illustration/Eleanor Shakespeare)

USC’s move to the Big Ten was spearheaded by President Carol Folt to bring more opportunities for the entire university and a dramatically increased profile on the national stage. (Illustration/Eleanor Shakespeare)

Athletics

USC takes its place in the Big Ten, a move years in the making

The university joins the oldest and one of the most successful conferences, bringing big benefits on and off the playing field.

August 02, 2024 By David Medzerian

Two years after USC stunned the collegiate athletics world by announcing it would join the Big Ten Conference, the university on Friday formally became part of that venerable sports league. The new-look Big Ten has been more than 100 years in the making, with a reach that now extends from coast to coast and into much more than just athletics, including academics, research and more.

USC Big Ten logo
Learn more about the Trojans’ new conference on USC Athletics’ Big Ten website.

“This is the dawn of a new era for USC Athletics,” USC President Carol Folt said. “At this critical moment when there are seismic changes coming across the athletics landscape, it was fortuitous that we made this commitment two years ago. We are prepared, and we are ready. We are well-positioned to compete with the best student-athletes far into the future.”

The move was spearheaded by Folt to bring more opportunities for the entire university and a dramatically increased profile on the national stage. USC’s student-athletes will see additional resources and nationwide exposure, often during choice times on the East Coast. Faculty and staff will benefit from participation in the Big Ten Academic Alliance, which facilitates the sharing of resources, infrastructure and expertise among members. USC students will have the opportunity to access library holdings, take certain classes and even study or work in laboratories of member universities.

ACADEMIC EXCELLENCE — TO THE POWER OF TEN
How joining the Big Ten Academic Alliance — now with 18 members — will elevate Trojans’ experiences, from the lab and the classroom to the halls of administration.

The conference change also dovetails with Folt’s athletics “moonshot,” which seeks to create a world-class athletics department and provide USC’s student-athletes with every possible resource for success on and off the field. Components include construction of Rawlinson Stadium, a new home for USC women’s soccer and lacrosse; rebuilding and reimagining Dedeaux Field, USC baseball’s home; and development of expanded and improved football training facilities, including a new conditioning center and additional practice field.

Folt — an environmental scientist whose priorities for USC also include sustainability, affordability and access, transforming health affairs and a universitywide focus on the future of computing and technology — has been a strong supporter of athletics throughout her career. She came to USC five years ago after serving as chancellor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, the traditional basketball powerhouse.

Map: Big Ten schools, coast to coast

The 2022 announcement of USC’s move to the Big Ten, along with UCLA, is widely credited as having prompted a sea change in the college sports landscape. While Texas and Oklahoma had previously announced they would join the Southeastern Conference and leave their Big 12 home, those moves were regional in scope. The Los Angeles schools’ announcement created the first truly national conference — a storied organization whose members have prioritized academic excellence along with athletic competition from the beginning.

History of the Big Ten

The Big Ten — the oldest and arguably one of the two most successful athletic conferences in the country — traces its history to an 1895 meeting of representatives from the University of Chicago, University of Illinois, University of Michigan, University of Minnesota, Northwestern University, Purdue University and University of Wisconsin to organize and develop principles for regulating intercollegiate athletics.

A year later, the schools finalized their plans and established the conference’s fundamentals — a collection of top institutions where the pursuit of academic excellence prevailed as the definitive goal. In 1905, it incorporated as the Intercollegiate Conference Athletic Association. By 1917, the conference had grown to its namesake 10 members and was first referred to as the “Big Ten” (though it wouldn’t be incorporated as such until 1987).

The roster was largely unchanged for decades. With the addition of Penn State in 1990, the conference outgrew — but retained — its “Big Ten” name; the conference nudged its way west in 2011 with the addition of Nebraska, and expanded eastward in 2014 with Maryland and Rutgers.

The biggest change, though, was yet to come.

Meanwhile, out west

As the Big Ten was being conceived, USC was an ambitious but young institution — barely 15 years old at the time, a fledgling anchor of a dusty western boom town. As Los Angeles grew, so did the university and, from its Pacific outpost, it soon was a force to be reckoned with.

USC women’s basketball vs. Ohio State
JuJu Watkins leaves Ohio State in her wake in No. 21 USC’s 83-74 win over the No. 7 Buckeyes in Las Vegas on Nov. 6, 2023. (USC Photo/John McGillen)

In 1922, the university signed on as a member of the Pacific Coast Conference — ultimately the Pac-12. By 1926, an annual football game against Notre Dame was established — now one of college sports’ fiercest rivalries. Just two years later, the Trojans claimed their first national football championship.

Over the years, USC men’s and women’s teams would win more than their share of national championships (136 so far) and Pac-12 titles. But as the collegiate athletics landscape evolved and conferences — and potential audiences — grew beyond their own backyards, change was inevitable.

A Big future

In some ways, it may seem destined that USC and the Big Ten would come together. Like USC, the Big Ten schools — including new members UCLA, Oregon and Washington — are recognized research leaders as well as fierce competitors, forward-thinking institutions with deep roots. They’ll prove worthy competitors on the athletic field — and talented partners in the classroom and research lab.

Many of USC’s new conference opponents in the Big Ten aren’t new to the Trojans. Crosstown rival UCLA, Oregon and Washington are especially familiar faces. And in Rose Bowl games, which traditionally hosted the Pac-12 and Big Ten champs, USC has faced nine different Big Ten teams — 10 if you include new Big Ten member Washington, which USC played in the 1944 Rose Bowl amid World War II travel restrictions.

“Being a member of the Big Ten,” USC athletic director Jennifer Cohen said, “will enable us to further invest in the student-athlete experience by providing us with additional resources; to create exciting new rivalries with like-minded institutions; to celebrate and share our storied traditions with Trojans across the country and with new generations of fans; and to provide our student-athletes and university with unprecedented national exposure and opportunities.”

The Big Ten Network is recognizing the conference’s new members with a full day of programming.

Beyond athletics, the conference provides myriad opportunities for collaboration at all levels. Most prominent among them is the Big Ten Academic Alliance, which facilitates the sharing of academic courses, resources, infrastructure and expertise among members. Reciprocal borrowing privileges will allow USC students to access the library holdings of any Big Ten university as well as the University of Chicago, a Big Ten Academic Alliance affiliate.

As Folt said: “The Big Ten Academic Alliance opens doors for our faculty to find new ways to collaborate and for our university to share information, leverage best practices and solve even bigger global challenges.”

The alliance also sponsors peer groups at all levels, providing academic leaders and support staff across institutions a forum to swap knowledge, work on shared initiatives and gather both virtually and in person. Those peer groups often give rise to join ventures such as the Big Ten Cancer Research Consortium and the Big Ten Neurosurgery Consortium.

“It’s important to note that the Big Ten is not just an athletic conference,” said Ishwar K. Puri, USC’s senior vice president of research and innovation. “It’s also a meeting of like-minded educational institutions with the objective of furthering academics and research.”

The schools also have something else in common with USC: a dedication to their neighbors.

“The universities are good members of their communities,” Puri said. “They contribute to the economic strength of their communities; they contribute to innovation in their communities.”

Big opportunities, big challenges

The Trojans’ first competitions in the Big Ten come next month: women’s soccer matches at Washington on Sept. 13 and at Purdue on Sept. 19, and then, on Sept. 21, the big game in “the Big House” — USC football’s Big Ten opener against reigning national champ Michigan in Ann Arbor.

“Our move to the Big Ten positions USC for long-term success and stability amidst the rapidly changing sports media and collegiate athletic landscapes,” Folt wrote in her letter sharing the Big Ten news with the Trojan Family in June 2022. “Equally important, we are joining a conference that shares our values of academic excellence, athletic competitiveness and diversity and inclusion across all sports. …

“We hope you are as excited as we are about what’s to come.”


USC’s Rachel B. Levin contributed to this report, which was supplemented with material from the Big Ten.

Illustration photo credits: USC Women’s Tennis, Men’s and Women’s Basketball, Track and Field, Men’s and Women’s Golf Photos by John McGillen; Women’s Soccer Photo by Katie Chin; Spirit Leader and Youth Triumphant Fountain Photos by Chris Shinn; Student Life Photos by Gus Ruelas; Joe and Josie Bruin Photo Courtesy of UCLA, Penn State Student Photo Courtesy of Penn State University; Nebraska Commencement Photo Courtesy of University of Nebraska, Ohio State Drum Major Photo Courtesy of Ohio State University