Big Ten commissioner Delany set to retire

NCAAF

Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany, who has led the league since 1989, will step down from his position after his current contract expires in June 2020.

Delany, 70, had said in 2016 that he intended to step down in 2020 and likely would not be negotiating the league’s next media rights agreement, which expires in 2023. The Big Ten’s council of presidents and chancellors, led by Northwestern president Morton Schapiro, will lead the search for Delany’s replacement with assistance from Korn Ferry executive search.

Delany is only the fifth commissioner to lead the Big Ten, which was founded in 1896.

“It’s been an amazing opportunity to serve and lead these preeminent institutions, presidents, administrators, coaches and students,” Delany said in a news release. “It is incredibly fulfilling to support the hundreds of thousands of young men and women who have been afforded an opportunity to obtain best-in-class educations as a result of the invaluable, one-of-a-kind lessons learned through the unique combination of athletic and classroom competition.”

Delany, the longest-serving commissioner of a major college sports conference, is regarded as one of the most influential figures in college sports history. The Big Ten expanded from 10 members to 14, adding Penn State and then Nebraska, followed by Maryland and Rutgers. Delany spearheaded the Big Ten Network, launched in 2007 as the first network affiliated with a major college conference. The Big Ten in 2004 became the first conference to introduce instant replay in football.

Delany also helped bring in record revenues for league members.

A former basketball player at North Carolina under Hall of Fame coach Dean Smith, Delany earned his law degree and worked as counsel for the North Carolina Senate Judiciary Committee and North Carolina Justice Department before joining the NCAA’s enforcement division in 1975.

He served as commissioner of the Ohio Valley Conference from 1979 until 1989, when he joined the Big Ten.

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