From 1973 to 1974, Delany was employed as counsel to the
North Carolina Senate Judiciary Committee. From there, he was hired to the position of staff attorney for the North Carolina Justice Department. In 1975 he moved on to a position in the
National Collegiate Athletic Association, working as an enforcement representative. He remained in this position for four years before moving on to the
Ohio Valley Conference as its commissioner. He remained commissioner of that conference until 1989 when he was appointed commissioner of the
Big Ten Conference. Memberships and other positions held include a member of the Collegiate Commissioners Association (CCA), a member of the College Basketball Partnership, vice president of
USA Basketball Executive Committee and a member of the board of directors of the University of North Carolina General Alumni Association. On March 4, 2019, Delaney announced he was retiring. He officially stepped down on January 1, 2020.
Accomplishments as Big Ten Conference commissioner During his tenure as commissioner of the Big Ten Conference, Delany has overseen: • The creation of the
Big Ten Network • The expansion of the conference to 11 schools with the addition of
Penn State University in 1990, and
its further expansion to 14 schools with the additions of the
University of Nebraska in 2011 and the
University of Maryland and
Rutgers University in 2014. • Guaranteed participation for Big Ten schools in seven different
bowl games • Development and implementation of the first college football
instant replay system • An increase in average Big Ten football game attendance from 58,000 per game to 72,000 per game by 2005 • Negotiations with
CBS to achieve a US$6 billion 11-year contract for
men's basketball NCAA tournament games
Influence Due to his position, Delany had a significant amount of influence with regard to the
Bowl Championship Series. Twenty-five percent of all U.S. households are in the geographic region covered by the Big Ten Conference. This has had major implications on his influence over college football. Delany opposed the idea of a college football playoff system, arguing that a playoff would diminish the value of regular season games. ==Personal life==