Original programs •
Big Ten Tonight – a weekly half-hour show airing on Sundays that is similar to ESPN's
SportsCenter; it offers highlights and discussion of Big Ten sporting events. The program is currently anchored by Dave Revsine, Rick Pizzo, Mike Hall and Lisa Cornwell. Other reporters and analysts appear depending on the sport being discussed. •
Big Ten Football Saturday – a program airing Saturdays (with pre-game, halftime and post-game editions) during the college football season, which features discussions and highlights of the day's games. It is hosted by
Dave Revsine, with analysis provided by
Gerry DiNardo (nicknamed by the hosts as "Coach") and
Howard Griffith. •
Big Ten Tailgate – originally titled
Friday Night Tailgate, it is a Friday night program that takes a lighthearted and irreverent look at campus life surrounding the weekend of a Big Ten football game. It was host was Mike Hall, with correspondents Charissa Thompson and Chicago-area improv actors
Jordan Klepper, Steve Waltien, and Tim Baltz. 90-minute In 2010, the show was cut to 60 minutes and was renamed as
Big Ten Tailgate. •
Big Ten Tip-Off Show – a pre-game show airing during the regular season from November to March discussing the day's basketball games; it is hosted by Dave Revsine, with analysis provided by Gene Keady, Jimmy Jackson, Tim Doyle and Kendall Gill. •
Coaches Q&A – a program featuring excerpts from the week's press conferences around the conference. • ''The Big Ten's Greatest Games'' – a showcase of classic football and basketball games, with editing of some non-essential game action out to fit time constraints. • ''The Big Ten Women's Show'' – an hour-long Monday night program covering women's sports throughout the conference. •
The Big Ten Quad – a weekly sports discussion show with Big Ten legends. •
Big Ten Cookout – a half-hour live cooking/tailgate show on Saturday mornings, taking place at a different university campus within the conference each week; it is hosted by Melanie Collins, alongside chefs Julius Russell and former ''
Hell's Kitchen''
season five contestant Ben Walanka. • ''The Big Ten's Best'' – a weekly countdown show with lists of the top 10 Big Ten teams or players in a certain category, such as "best running backs of the 1990s" or "best quarterbacks of the 1980s"; hosted by Charissa Thompson. • Various coach's shows •
University Showcase – a program block of non-sports campus produced programs; each school has equal time. •
Student U – Game broadcasts produced by university broadcast departments involving students controlling production and play-by-play which are usually seen only on closed-circuit campus cable networks. • "Big Ten Frozen Fridays" – a hockey pregame show on Friday nights, airing before most Big Ten hockey game telecasts, featuring game previews and highlights from around the Big Ten Conference •
Big Ten Football: Breakdown – a weekly series airing on Tuesdays in which Big Ten coaches and players review the previous week's game footage, with network analysts providing a look at the nuances of the game and what affected the teams' success. •
Big Ten Football: Sites & Sounds – a Wednesday night program that includes segments from press conferences, media interviews and the games, as well as other behind-the-scenes footage, hosted from the network's Chicago studios. •
Big Ten Football: Behind the Schemes – airing Thursday nights, it is a breakdown featuring the network's resident head coach analysts, analyzing footage of the previous week's games and putting together game plans for games being held that week. •
Big Ten Football… & Beyond – a Friday night program previewing the weekend's upcoming games with reports from each Big Ten stadium and a look at key national matchups that could impact the conference postseason. •
Big Ten Film Vault – a program, hosted by
Dan Dierdorf, showcasing a vintage Big Ten film from the 1940s to the 1970s. •
Big Ten Icons – a series highlighting a Big Ten athlete from a wide range of sports and history. Notable subjects include
Jesse Owens,
Jack Nicklaus and
Steve Alford. •
The Journey: Big Ten Basketball – a Sunday night documentary-style series following multiple teams each week throughout the conference's 10-week basketball season. •
Big Ten Treasure Hunter – a program starring memorabilia collector John Arcand in which he travels around Big Ten territories and make negotiations with fans to buy Big Ten memorabilia.
Former •
Big Ten Hoops: On Campus – an hour-long Friday night program (hosted by Mike Hall, Jim Jackson, Tiffany Simons and Natalie Kane) featuring visits to different campuses each week to showcase the loyalty and tradition behind Big Ten basketball and its fans. •
This Week in Big Ten Basketball – a Sunday night program providing comprehensive breakdowns of the week's college basketball action involving Big Ten teams; it was hosted by Dave Revsine, Jim Jackson and Dan Dakich.
Sports coverage Football Big Ten Network holds national broadcast rights to all of the conference's home football games and televises approximately 35-40 football games each season. Each team is guaranteed to appear a minimum of two times annually on the network, one of which must be a conference game.
Basketball The network holds national television rights to all men's basketball conference home games; all non-conference and exhibition games are either televised or streamed on bigtennetwork.com. Each of the conference's men's basketball teams appear on the network approximately 10-20 times a season; it carries approximately 60–65 in-conference match-ups, as well as select
tournament contests. Big Ten Network also televises approximately 50-60 regular season women's basketball games annually, along with approximately nine Big Ten Basketball Tournament games. Each Big Ten team appears on the network approximately 8 to 10 times during the season. The network streams dozens of games live on its website, giving Big Ten women's basketball the most exposure of any conference in the country. The network maintains a set on-site during the Big Ten men's and
women's basketball tournaments in
Indianapolis,
Indiana with anchors providing coverage and analysis of each day's game action during the event.
Other sports Big Ten Network televises approximately 25 of the conference's
baseball games each spring, with each team making approximately 5 to 8 appearances annually. In 2009, the network televised the entirety of the
Big Ten baseball tournament. In the 2013–14 season, Big Ten Network expanded its coverage of
college ice hockey due to the Big Ten Conference beginning to officially sponsor the sport, broadcasting 27 games as well as the
Big Ten tournament, and adding associated studio programs. The Big Ten Network televises more than 170 NCAA-sponsored
Olympic events in both men's and women's sports such as hockey, soccer, volleyball, track and field, swimming and diving.
Esports In April 2016, it was announced that BTN and
Riot Games would organize a collegiate
League of Legends event, the
BTN Invitational, between teams representing Michigan State and Ohio State. The
tournament was held at
PAX East in
Boston, alongside the semi-finals and finals of the Riot's college championship. Michael Sherman, head of Riot's collegiate competitions, stated that "there was actually a student group at Penn State that was looking to run a Big Ten tournament, and the Big Ten Network got word of it and through that we actually connected to each other and saw that we had a lot of interest in sort of building an
competition together." In January 2017, BTN and Riot announced that it would hold a season of conference competition between teams representing 12 Big Ten schools, culminating with a championship whose winner would receive an invite to Riot's college championship. The competition was primarily streamed online, but later rounds were televised on BTN. In January 2018, Riot and BTN announced an extension of the partnership through 2019, complete with scholarship funds for teams ($35,000/team yearly) and the addition of Penn State and Nebraska, bringing all full conference members to the partnership.
ESL became a partner with BTN's competition for 2019.
Tournament and championship events The Big Ten Network televises 21 Big Ten Championships and Tournaments, including baseball, men's and women's basketball, men's and women's
cross country,
field hockey, men's and women's
golf, men's and women's
gymnastics,
rowing, men's and women's soccer, men's and women's
swimming and
diving, men's and women's
tennis, men's and women's indoor and outdoor
track and field, and
wrestling. In February 2017, the
NCAA announced that Big Ten Network had acquired rights to the
Women's Frozen Four—the NCAA national championship of Women's ice hockey, beginning in 2017 under a four-year deal. BTN broadcast the finals in 2017, and began airing the semi-finals beginning 2018. ESPN (who televises all other NCAA national championships outside of men's basketball) took over the rights in 2021. ==On-air staff==