On October 16, 2009 Illinois, Indiana, Michigan State,[2]Michigan, and Minnesota celebrated Midnight Madness, and several other schools celebrated it in the subsequent days.[3] Michigan State, Purdue and Michigan were ranked in the top 25 by all preseason polls. The entire 2008–09 All-Big Ten Conference first-team returned: Manny HarrisMICH; Kalin LucasMSU; Evan TurnerOSU; Talor BattlePSU; and JaJuan JohnsonPUR.[4] The 24-member Big Ten media panel selected Lucas as the preseason conference player of the year, and he was joined on the first team preseason All-Big Ten team by Harris, Turner, Battle and Robbie HummelPUR.[5] The same media panel selected Michigan State as the preseason conference favorite followed by Purdue and Ohio State.[5]
Various publications released their preseason predictions for conference standings and All-Big Ten teams.
On August 19, 2009, the Wooden Award preseason watch list included eight Big Ten players. The watch list was composed of 50 players who were not transfers, freshmen or medical redshirts. The list will be reduced to a 30-player mid-season watch list in December and a final national ballot of about 20 players in March.[20] On October 29, the Naismith College Player of the Year watch list of 50 players was announced. In late February, a shorter list of the Top 30 was compiled in preparation for a March vote to narrow the list to the four finalists.[21]
National Player of the Year Evan Turner of Ohio State set new Big Ten records for number of career and single season Player of the Week awards during the 2009–10 Big Ten Conference men's basketball season.
November
The season opened with the Big Ten Conference holding the leadership with six teams ranked among the preseason top 25 in both the AP Poll and the Coaches' Poll, setting a new conference record for the most teams ranked to open a season. The season also opened with the entire 2008–09 first team All-Big Ten players returning.[39] Both Manny Harris (November 14) and Evan Turner (November 9) recorded triple doubles in the opening week of the season marking the first times a Big Ten player has accomplished the feat since January 13, 2001.[22] Six of the eleven conference teams started at least one freshman.[40] The following week, three schools (Michigan State, Illinois and Iowa) participated in ESPN's Tuesday, November 17 24-hour hoops marathon across its family of networks (ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU & ESPN360).[40] Michigan State's Magic Johnson and Jud Heathcote were inducted into the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame on November 22.[41] With his 341st victory, Tom Izzo became Michigan State's all-time leader in basketball coaching victories.[42] Turner became the second player in conference history to be named conference player of the week three weeks in a row.[42] On November 28, both Ohio State and Michigan State scored 100 points,[43][44] marking the first time two conference teams have done so since December 22, 1997.[45]
December
For the second time in the season, two teams scored 100 points on the same night on December 5.[46][47] For the first time in eleven attempts, the Big Ten won the ACC – Big Ten Challenge.[45] In his 275th game, Bo Ryan reached the 200-win milestone with Wisconsin Badgers men's basketball. In the same week, Tom Crean raised his record to 200-–125.[48] The Big Ten entered intraconference play tied with the Big East Conference by having five ranked teams. Northwestern entered conference play on its longest winning streak in 16 years (9), and Purdue reached the 11–0 mark for the second time and had a perfect record at the end of December for the first time since the 1936–37 season.[49]
January
Purdue ran its record to 14–0 to start the season, which tied the Glenn Robinson-led 1993–94 Purdue Boilermakers for the best start in school history.[50] Four Big Ten athletes (Talor Battle, Harris, Trevon Hughes and Lucas) were named as finalists for the 2010 Bob Cousy Award to lead all conferences. Harris, Lucas, Robbie Hummel and Turner were also selected Midseason Top 30 finalists for the 2010 John Wooden Award.[51] On January 12, Hummel and Turner became only the third pair of opposing Big Ten players to post 30 points against each other in one night.[52][53] Michigan State established a new school record by winning its first eight conference games and extended the streak to nine by the end of the month.[54][55]
February
On February 8 Turner recorded his fifth Conference Player of the Week award and eighth of his career surpassing the former conference record held by Glenn Robinson and Jim Jackson, who each had seven career and tied Robinson's single-season record with five.[34] Two weeks later he set the single-season record with his sixth recognition when he averaged 24.5 points, 8.5 rebounds and 5.5 assists against two ranked opponents (No. 4 Purdue and at No. 11 Michigan State).[36] Three Big Ten players made the February Top 30 midseason Naismith College Player of the Year watch list: Hummel, Lucas and Turner.[56][57] Hummel and Turner were selected among the 16 finalists for the 2010 Oscar Robertson Trophy.[58]
March
Turner was selected as one of six finalists for the Bob Cousy Award.[59] Lucas, Hummel and Turner were included on the final 26-man ballot for the Wooden Award.[60][61]
The Big Ten led the nation in average attendance with 12,591. Other top-5 conferences were SEC (11,770), Big 12 (11,214), Big East (11,014) and ACC (10,713). 334 Division I schools competed in basketball and the Big Ten had several of the top schools in attendances: Wisconsin (6th, 17,230), Indiana (11th 15,296), Illinois (12th, 14,870), Michigan State (13th, 15,759), Ohio State (16th, 14,181) and Purdue (20th 13,681).[62]
During the season, seven of the Big Ten teams received enough votes to be ranked and an eight team received voted during several weekly polls. Michigan State and Purdue were ranked during every weekly poll during the season.[63]
Legend
Improvement in ranking
Drop in ranking
Not ranked previous week
RV
Received votes but were not ranked in Top 25 of poll
The 2009–10 season marked the third consecutive year that every Big Ten men's basketball conference regular-season and tournament game was nationally televised. In excess of 100 games appeared nationally on CBS, ESPN, ESPN2 or the Big Ten Network every Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Saturday and Sunday during conference play beginning on December 29. All ten games of the March 11 – 14, 2010 Big Ten Conference men's basketball tournament were nationally televised.[4]
With an eighteen-game in-conference schedule, each team met eight teams twice (home and away) and the two other teams only once. The following were the one-time meetings for this season.[66]
Team
One-game Opponent(H)
One-game Opponent(A)
ILLINOIS
Minnesota
at Michigan
INDIANA
Michigan State
at Penn State
IOWA
Penn State
at Wisconsin
MICHIGAN
Illinois
at Purdue
MICHIGAN STATE
Ohio State
at Indiana
MINNESOTA
Wisconsin
at Illinois
NORTHWESTERN
Purdue
at Ohio State
OHIO STATE
Northwestern
at Michigan State
PENN STATE
Indiana
at Iowa
PURDUE
Michigan
at Northwestern
WISCONSIN
Iowa
at Minnesota
Conference honors
Two sets of conference award winners were recognized by the Big Ten - one selected by league coaches and one selected by the media.[67]
The Big Ten Conference had 33 men's basketball letterwinners who were in at least their second academic year at their institution and who maintained a cumulative grade point average (GPA) of 3.0 or higher during the winter semester to earn Big Ten Academic All-Conference honors.[68][69] Purdue's Mark Wohlford who was a senior economics major had a perfect Winter GPA.[68] These student-athletes were eligible to be named Distinguished Scholar Awardees if they maintained a 3.7 GPA for the entire academic year.[68]
The National Association of Basketball Coaches announced their Division I All-District teams on March 16, recognizing the nation's best men's collegiate basketball student-athletes. Selected and voted on by member coaches of the NABC, 240 student-athletes, from 24 districts were chosen. The selection on this list were then eligible for the State Farm Coaches' Division I All-America teams announced at the 2009 NABC Convention in Detroit. The following list represented the Big Ten players chosen to the list.[76] (All Big Ten schools are within District 7 for the 2009–10 season.[77])
On March 9, the U.S. Basketball Writers Association released its 2009–10 Men's All-District Teams, based on voting from its national membership. There were nine regions from coast to coast, and a player and coach of the year were selected in each. The following lists all the Big Ten representatives selected within their respective regions.[78]
On February 4, 2010, the College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA) and ESPN the Magazine selected their Academic All-Americans from throughout college basketball. CoSIDA has selected Academic All American teams since 1952. To be nominated, a student-athlete must be a starter or important reserve with at least a 3.30 cumulative grade point average (on a 4.0 scale) at his/her current institution. Nominated athletes must have participated in at least 50 percent of the team's games at the position listed on the nomination form (where applicable). No student-athlete is eligible until he has completed one full calendar year at his current institution and has reached sophomore athletic eligibility. In the cases of transfers, graduate students and two-year college graduates, the student-athlete must have completed one full calendar year at the nominating institution to be eligible. Nominees in graduate school must have a cumulative GPA of 3.30 or better both as an undergrad and in grad school.[79][80] Michigan's Zack Novak was a District 4 first-team 2009 Academic All-District Men's Basketball Team selection and Purdue's E'Twaun Moore was a District 5 selection, making them 2 of the 40 finalists for the 15-man Academic All-American team.[81] On February 22, Moore was selected as a second-team Academic All-American.[82]
Big Ten Distinguished Scholar Award
Purdue's senior economics major Mark Wohlford was the conference's only men's basketball distinguished scholar by achieving the minimum grade-point average (GPA) of 3.7 or higher.[83][84]
Evan Turner of the champion Buckeyes was named Tournament Most Outstanding Player. He was joined on the All-Tournament team by Ohio State teammates William Buford and David Lighty, former high school teammate Demetri McCamey of Illinois and Devoe Joseph of Minnesota.[90] Turner led Ohio State with late game heroics in the first two games and a championship game record total number of points in the finals.[91]
In the NCAA tournament, the Big Ten Conference earned 5 invitations.[92] These teams combined for 9 wins, and three teams reached the sweet sixteen round and Michigan State reached the final four.[93]
The Big Ten earned two postseason National Invitation Tournament invitations. Its teams combined for 2 wins and 2 losses, with Illinois earning both wins.[94]
Turner was the only Big Ten player selected in the 2010 Draft.[95] The following All-Big Ten performers were listed as seniors: Trévon Hughes, Jason Bohannon, and DeShawn Sims. The following were All-Big Ten underclassmen, who declared early with the intent to hire agents:[96][97]Evan Turner and Manny Harris. Neither withdrew his name from the draft-eligible list before the May 8 deadline.[98] The following were All-Big Ten underclassmen who entered their name in the draft but who did not hire agents and opted to return to college:[98]Talor Battle, Mike Davis, JaJuan Johnson, Demetri McCamey, and E'Twaun Moore.
^Willhite, Lindsey. Big Ten: It Was So Fun Everybody Came Back. D.M.D. Publications, Inc. p. 100. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
^Ebling, Jack. Big Ten: After falling short last season, look for another strong March from league. Sporting News College Basketball. p. 56. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
^various. Big Ten Conference. p. 150. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
^Fox, David. Big Ten Conference. p. 86. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)