1994 Big Ten Conference football season

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The 1994 Big Ten Conference football season was the 99th season of college football played by the member schools of the Big Ten Conference and was a part of the 1994 NCAA Division I-A football season.

Teams11
ChampionsPenn State
Quick facts League, Sport ...
1994 Big Ten Conference football season
LeagueNCAA Division I-A
Sportfootball
Teams11
ChampionsPenn State
Football seasons
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More information Conf., Overall ...
1994 Big Ten Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 2 Penn State $8001200
No. 14 Ohio State620940
Wisconsin521831
No. 12 Michigan530840
Illinois440750
Purdue332542
Iowa341551
Indiana350650
Northwestern350461
Minnesota170380
Michigan State0800110
  • $ Conference champion
  • † Michigan State forfeited 5 wins including 4 conference victories, over Wisconsin, Indiana, Northwestern, and Purdue.
Rankings from AP Poll
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Regular season

In their second season as a Big Ten school, Penn State would win the conference title for the first time and represent the league in a Rose Bowl victory over Oregon.[1] The Nittany Lions went 12-0 overall, 8-0 in the conference, and finished the season ranked No. 2.

Ohio State came in second at 6-2 (9-4 overall) and ended the year ranked No. 14. Wisconsin came in third at 5-2-1 (8-3-1 overall).

Michigan finished fourth at 5-3 (8-4 overall) and wound up No. 12 at season's end. Illinois took fifth at 4-4 (7-5 overall).

Purdue's league record was 3-3-2, with two of those ties against Wisconsin and Iowa, who finished at 3-4-1 in Big Ten play.

Indiana and Northwestern both earned 3-5 conference marks while Minnesota went 1-7 (3-8 overall).

Michigan State initially went 4-4 (5-6 overall) and tied for fifth with Illinois, but had to forfeit all of their victories due to a "lack of institutional control", which in turn gave losses-turned-victories to Wisconsin, Indiana, Northwestern, and Purdue.[2][3] MSU Coach George Perles was fired before the season ended, but was allowed to finish the season, and was eventually cleared of any wrongdoing by the NCAA[4]

Bowl games

Five Big Ten teams played in bowl games, going 4-1:

1995 NFL draft


References

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