USA Today: Big Ten football rankings: Where all 18 teams sit after spring practice

Bigred2467

All-Conference
Jul 4, 2025
1,179
1,702
113
Another ranking after spring practice. This one is depressing.

1. Ohio State (12-2)

The most loaded offense in the country has the potential to be among the most potent in school history. This will be the last run for superstar receiver Jeremiah Smith and potentially third-year quarterback Julian Sayin, the preseason favorite for the Heisman Trophy.

2. Oregon (13-2)

The Ducks will hand new defensive coordinator Chris Hampton some major depth from front to back, with an experienced defensive front setting the pace for a unit that has a new leader in the secondary in former Minnesota safety Koi Perich.

3. Indiana (16-0)

Curt Cignetti has been able to maintain a high degree of staff continuity despite the Hoosiers’ rapid rise. He lost just one member of last year’s staff in co-offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach Chandler Whitmer, who departed for the NFL. Whitmer is replaced by former UCLA assistant Tino Sunseri, who worked for Cignetti previously at James Madison (2021-23) and Indiana (2024).

4. USC (9-4)

This could be a breakout year for the Trojans and coach Lincoln Riley. One reason for optimism is the likely impact of the nation’s top recruiting class, which should produce immediate help at receiver and tight end.

5. Michigan (9-4)

The Kyle Whittingham era kicks off with Michigan hovering around the top of the Big Ten thanks to holdovers such as quarterback Bryce Underwood. He could flourish in a friendly scheme that yielded impressive results under Utah quarterbacks such as Cam Rising and Devon Dampier.

6. Penn State (7-6)

The schedule is easy enough to put Penn State’s floor at eight wins in Matt Campbell’s debut. The Nittany Lions miss Ohio State, Oregon, Indiana and Iowa while drawing the Trojans at home.

7. Iowa (9-4)

Look out for Iowa if the offense can maintain last year’s production behind a new starting quarterback. Led by coordinator Tim Lester, the Hawkeyes averaged 29.3 points per game and topped at least 37 points four times in Big Ten play.

8. Washington (9-4)

Washington will need to hit the ground running to factor into the College Football Playoff mix. The Huskies close with a November slate of Penn State at home, Michigan State on the road, Indiana back at home and rival Oregon on the road.

9. Minnesota (8-5)

Minnesota hopes three transfers will help beef up a thin receiver group and goose sophomore quarterback Drake Lindsey’s development. The Gophers added Zion Steptoe (Tulsa), Noah Jennings (Cincinnati) and Perry Thompson (Auburn).

10. Illinois (9-4)

This is a younger team facing a tougher schedule behind a new quarterback in former East Carolina starter Katin Houser. Illinois has a higher floor than Nebraska but could take a slight step back to seven wins before rebounding in 2027.

11. UCLA (3-9)

UCLA will be better, sure, but don’t expect an Indiana-like leap under former James Madison coach Bob Chesney. The Bruins are experienced and have a strong starter under center in Nico Iamaleava.

12. Nebraska (7-6)

The Cornhuskers’ outlook runs the gamut from four to maybe nine wins. There’s reason to like how the offense will look with a more mobile passer in former UNLV quarterback Anthony Colandrea and a vastly improved front, but the season will come down to how Nebraska defends the run under new coordinator Rob Aurich.

13. Maryland (4-8)

And speaking of experience: Maryland brings back a boatload after another trying season. The returnees are headlined by the sophomore trio of quarterback Mailk Washington and defensive linemen Sidney Stewart and Zahir Mathis. While there isn’t a playoff berth in the Terrapins’ future, this could be one of the surprise teams in the Big Ten.

14. Wisconsin (4-8)

This sluggish rebuild continues with slightly more optimism than a year ago as coach Luke Fickell faces pressure to win now. The offense is in better shape thanks to the addition of Old Dominion quarterback transfer Colton Joseph, who brings intense athleticism to the position but must button up his accuracy in the intermediate game to get the most out of the Badgers’ scheme.

15. Northwestern (7-6)

There’s been a major offensive overhaul with the addition of Chip Kelly as coordinator and Michigan State transfer Aiden Chiles at quarterback. Where the Wildcats could see immediate improvement is in the red zone. Last year’s team ranked 129th nationally in scoring touchdowns on just 45.8% of its red-zone trips.

16. Michigan State (4-8)

Pat Fitzgerald brings a steady hand and some much-needed energy to a program that remained stuck in neutral under former coach Jonathan Smith. The key to 2026 will be an offensive line that has been rebuilt around North Dakota State transfer Trent Fraley, the reigning Rimington Award winner as the top center in the Championship Subdivision.

17. Rutgers (5-7)

A distinct lack of depth minimizes Rutgers’ room for error and could really cost this team in the second half of the regular season. If they stay healthy, however, the Scarlet Knights could be dangerous offensively thanks to pieces such as running back Antwan Raymond and wide receiver KJ Duff. The defense is another story, even if the hire of former South Dakota coach Travis Johansen as coordinator should eventually pay dividends.

18. Purdue (2-10)

Purdue has the right coach in Barry Odom but will need at least another year to develop the personnel needed to rise out of the basement of the Big Ten. After failing to post a league win in each of the past two years, the Boilermakers will benefit from a home slate of Minnesota, Washington, Maryland and Wisconsin.

Big Ten football rankings: Where all 18 teams sit after spring practice

 
  • Like
Reactions: TrueBigRedFan

Redscarlet

Heisman
Jun 17, 2001
33,194
11,264
113
The Bison will give us fits. I can't believe they are returning 8 of their 9 top OL, and we did not pull any of these guys in the portal. We must not have enough NIL money....

As for the ranking, seems about right for middling Matt.
The Bison are North Dakota State.
North Dakota is the fighting hawks. Use to be the fighting Sioux.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Wasker73 and WHCSC

Pennsyhuskers

All-Conference
Jun 3, 2022
632
1,908
93
So now we are supposed to be afraid that we might lose to North Dakota? And Matt Rhule wonders why fans are nervous about our schedule? It is just so incredibly sad for this old Husker fan to see how far our once mighty program has fallen. We are afraid of North Dakota? That is all the commentary needed.

This is the least excited I have ever been for the new season.
 

Redscarlet

Heisman
Jun 17, 2001
33,194
11,264
113
So now we are supposed to be afraid that we might lose to North Dakota? And Matt Rhule wonders why fans are nervous about our schedule? It is just so incredibly sad for this old Husker fan to see how far our once mighty program has fallen. We are afraid of North Dakota? That is all the commentary needed.

This is the least excited I have ever been for the new season.
Who’s afraid ? The dip$&it that doesn’t know the difference between North Dakota and ND State?
 
  • Haha
  • Like
Reactions: Vanhusker and WHCSC

nu2u

All-Conference
Aug 10, 2006
10,263
2,348
113
North Dakota will have one of the better OL in college football. All vets and a couple 320lb hippos. Huskers run D will be tested.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Wasker73

TrueBigRedFan

All-American
Jun 29, 2004
12,558
5,153
113
Another ranking after spring practice. This one is depressing.

1. Ohio State (12-2)

The most loaded offense in the country has the potential to be among the most potent in school history. This will be the last run for superstar receiver Jeremiah Smith and potentially third-year quarterback Julian Sayin, the preseason favorite for the Heisman Trophy.

2. Oregon (13-2)

The Ducks will hand new defensive coordinator Chris Hampton some major depth from front to back, with an experienced defensive front setting the pace for a unit that has a new leader in the secondary in former Minnesota safety Koi Perich.

3. Indiana (16-0)

Curt Cignetti has been able to maintain a high degree of staff continuity despite the Hoosiers’ rapid rise. He lost just one member of last year’s staff in co-offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach Chandler Whitmer, who departed for the NFL. Whitmer is replaced by former UCLA assistant Tino Sunseri, who worked for Cignetti previously at James Madison (2021-23) and Indiana (2024).

4. USC (9-4)

This could be a breakout year for the Trojans and coach Lincoln Riley. One reason for optimism is the likely impact of the nation’s top recruiting class, which should produce immediate help at receiver and tight end.

5. Michigan (9-4)

The Kyle Whittingham era kicks off with Michigan hovering around the top of the Big Ten thanks to holdovers such as quarterback Bryce Underwood. He could flourish in a friendly scheme that yielded impressive results under Utah quarterbacks such as Cam Rising and Devon Dampier.

6. Penn State (7-6)

The schedule is easy enough to put Penn State’s floor at eight wins in Matt Campbell’s debut. The Nittany Lions miss Ohio State, Oregon, Indiana and Iowa while drawing the Trojans at home.

7. Iowa (9-4)

Look out for Iowa if the offense can maintain last year’s production behind a new starting quarterback. Led by coordinator Tim Lester, the Hawkeyes averaged 29.3 points per game and topped at least 37 points four times in Big Ten play.

8. Washington (9-4)

Washington will need to hit the ground running to factor into the College Football Playoff mix. The Huskies close with a November slate of Penn State at home, Michigan State on the road, Indiana back at home and rival Oregon on the road.

9. Minnesota (8-5)

Minnesota hopes three transfers will help beef up a thin receiver group and goose sophomore quarterback Drake Lindsey’s development. The Gophers added Zion Steptoe (Tulsa), Noah Jennings (Cincinnati) and Perry Thompson (Auburn).

10. Illinois (9-4)

This is a younger team facing a tougher schedule behind a new quarterback in former East Carolina starter Katin Houser. Illinois has a higher floor than Nebraska but could take a slight step back to seven wins before rebounding in 2027.

11. UCLA (3-9)

UCLA will be better, sure, but don’t expect an Indiana-like leap under former James Madison coach Bob Chesney. The Bruins are experienced and have a strong starter under center in Nico Iamaleava.

12. Nebraska (7-6)

The Cornhuskers’ outlook runs the gamut from four to maybe nine wins. There’s reason to like how the offense will look with a more mobile passer in former UNLV quarterback Anthony Colandrea and a vastly improved front, but the season will come down to how Nebraska defends the run under new coordinator Rob Aurich.

13. Maryland (4-8)

And speaking of experience: Maryland brings back a boatload after another trying season. The returnees are headlined by the sophomore trio of quarterback Mailk Washington and defensive linemen Sidney Stewart and Zahir Mathis. While there isn’t a playoff berth in the Terrapins’ future, this could be one of the surprise teams in the Big Ten.

14. Wisconsin (4-8)

This sluggish rebuild continues with slightly more optimism than a year ago as coach Luke Fickell faces pressure to win now. The offense is in better shape thanks to the addition of Old Dominion quarterback transfer Colton Joseph, who brings intense athleticism to the position but must button up his accuracy in the intermediate game to get the most out of the Badgers’ scheme.

15. Northwestern (7-6)

There’s been a major offensive overhaul with the addition of Chip Kelly as coordinator and Michigan State transfer Aiden Chiles at quarterback. Where the Wildcats could see immediate improvement is in the red zone. Last year’s team ranked 129th nationally in scoring touchdowns on just 45.8% of its red-zone trips.

16. Michigan State (4-8)

Pat Fitzgerald brings a steady hand and some much-needed energy to a program that remained stuck in neutral under former coach Jonathan Smith. The key to 2026 will be an offensive line that has been rebuilt around North Dakota State transfer Trent Fraley, the reigning Rimington Award winner as the top center in the Championship Subdivision.

17. Rutgers (5-7)

A distinct lack of depth minimizes Rutgers’ room for error and could really cost this team in the second half of the regular season. If they stay healthy, however, the Scarlet Knights could be dangerous offensively thanks to pieces such as running back Antwan Raymond and wide receiver KJ Duff. The defense is another story, even if the hire of former South Dakota coach Travis Johansen as coordinator should eventually pay dividends.

18. Purdue (2-10)

Purdue has the right coach in Barry Odom but will need at least another year to develop the personnel needed to rise out of the basement of the Big Ten. After failing to post a league win in each of the past two years, the Boilermakers will benefit from a home slate of Minnesota, Washington, Maryland and Wisconsin.

Big Ten football rankings: Where all 18 teams sit after spring practice

I think this very accurate. I see the team exactly that way.

And to reach 7 wins with this Schedule versus last year’s, means we have a much better Team this year than last.
 

huskernation77

Heisman
Jan 10, 2007
160,181
27,181
113
So now we are supposed to be afraid that we might lose to North Dakota? And Matt Rhule wonders why fans are nervous about our schedule? It is just so incredibly sad for this old Husker fan to see how far our once mighty program has fallen. We are afraid of North Dakota? That is all the commentary needed.

This is the least excited I have ever been for the new season.
We need to get Matt out of here because nothing's going to happen with him as coach. He's proven that already. Last year was supposed to be the year and we tanked. And it's because we lack good coaching.

12th in the BIG 😂
 

Wasker73

Senior
Sep 2, 2025
502
497
63
Another ranking after spring practice. This one is depressing.

1. Ohio State (12-2)

The most loaded offense in the country has the potential to be among the most potent in school history. This will be the last run for superstar receiver Jeremiah Smith and potentially third-year quarterback Julian Sayin, the preseason favorite for the Heisman Trophy.

2. Oregon (13-2)

The Ducks will hand new defensive coordinator Chris Hampton some major depth from front to back, with an experienced defensive front setting the pace for a unit that has a new leader in the secondary in former Minnesota safety Koi Perich.

3. Indiana (16-0)

Curt Cignetti has been able to maintain a high degree of staff continuity despite the Hoosiers’ rapid rise. He lost just one member of last year’s staff in co-offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach Chandler Whitmer, who departed for the NFL. Whitmer is replaced by former UCLA assistant Tino Sunseri, who worked for Cignetti previously at James Madison (2021-23) and Indiana (2024).

4. USC (9-4)

This could be a breakout year for the Trojans and coach Lincoln Riley. One reason for optimism is the likely impact of the nation’s top recruiting class, which should produce immediate help at receiver and tight end.

5. Michigan (9-4)

The Kyle Whittingham era kicks off with Michigan hovering around the top of the Big Ten thanks to holdovers such as quarterback Bryce Underwood. He could flourish in a friendly scheme that yielded impressive results under Utah quarterbacks such as Cam Rising and Devon Dampier.

6. Penn State (7-6)

The schedule is easy enough to put Penn State’s floor at eight wins in Matt Campbell’s debut. The Nittany Lions miss Ohio State, Oregon, Indiana and Iowa while drawing the Trojans at home.

7. Iowa (9-4)

Look out for Iowa if the offense can maintain last year’s production behind a new starting quarterback. Led by coordinator Tim Lester, the Hawkeyes averaged 29.3 points per game and topped at least 37 points four times in Big Ten play.

8. Washington (9-4)

Washington will need to hit the ground running to factor into the College Football Playoff mix. The Huskies close with a November slate of Penn State at home, Michigan State on the road, Indiana back at home and rival Oregon on the road.

9. Minnesota (8-5)

Minnesota hopes three transfers will help beef up a thin receiver group and goose sophomore quarterback Drake Lindsey’s development. The Gophers added Zion Steptoe (Tulsa), Noah Jennings (Cincinnati) and Perry Thompson (Auburn).

10. Illinois (9-4)

This is a younger team facing a tougher schedule behind a new quarterback in former East Carolina starter Katin Houser. Illinois has a higher floor than Nebraska but could take a slight step back to seven wins before rebounding in 2027.

11. UCLA (3-9)

UCLA will be better, sure, but don’t expect an Indiana-like leap under former James Madison coach Bob Chesney. The Bruins are experienced and have a strong starter under center in Nico Iamaleava.

12. Nebraska (7-6)

The Cornhuskers’ outlook runs the gamut from four to maybe nine wins. There’s reason to like how the offense will look with a more mobile passer in former UNLV quarterback Anthony Colandrea and a vastly improved front, but the season will come down to how Nebraska defends the run under new coordinator Rob Aurich.

13. Maryland (4-8)

And speaking of experience: Maryland brings back a boatload after another trying season. The returnees are headlined by the sophomore trio of quarterback Mailk Washington and defensive linemen Sidney Stewart and Zahir Mathis. While there isn’t a playoff berth in the Terrapins’ future, this could be one of the surprise teams in the Big Ten.

14. Wisconsin (4-8)

This sluggish rebuild continues with slightly more optimism than a year ago as coach Luke Fickell faces pressure to win now. The offense is in better shape thanks to the addition of Old Dominion quarterback transfer Colton Joseph, who brings intense athleticism to the position but must button up his accuracy in the intermediate game to get the most out of the Badgers’ scheme.

15. Northwestern (7-6)

There’s been a major offensive overhaul with the addition of Chip Kelly as coordinator and Michigan State transfer Aiden Chiles at quarterback. Where the Wildcats could see immediate improvement is in the red zone. Last year’s team ranked 129th nationally in scoring touchdowns on just 45.8% of its red-zone trips.

16. Michigan State (4-8)

Pat Fitzgerald brings a steady hand and some much-needed energy to a program that remained stuck in neutral under former coach Jonathan Smith. The key to 2026 will be an offensive line that has been rebuilt around North Dakota State transfer Trent Fraley, the reigning Rimington Award winner as the top center in the Championship Subdivision.

17. Rutgers (5-7)

A distinct lack of depth minimizes Rutgers’ room for error and could really cost this team in the second half of the regular season. If they stay healthy, however, the Scarlet Knights could be dangerous offensively thanks to pieces such as running back Antwan Raymond and wide receiver KJ Duff. The defense is another story, even if the hire of former South Dakota coach Travis Johansen as coordinator should eventually pay dividends.

18. Purdue (2-10)

Purdue has the right coach in Barry Odom but will need at least another year to develop the personnel needed to rise out of the basement of the Big Ten. After failing to post a league win in each of the past two years, the Boilermakers will benefit from a home slate of Minnesota, Washington, Maryland and Wisconsin.

Big Ten football rankings: Where all 18 teams sit after spring practice

Is the O line really vastly improved? Geep must be a far superior coach than what Uncle Donnie was doing. correct me if I am wrong but isn't the O-line made up of the same players the Husker's had the last couple of years.