ANN ARBOR, Mich. — The Big Ten Conference pushed back Tuesday on a claim by a University of Michigan regent that Commissioner Tony Petitti threatened to punish the school if it refuses to support a plan that would clear the way for $2.4 billion in private investment in the league.
Mark Bernstein, chairman of the Michigan board of regents, told The Associated Press this week that Petitti had attempted to ''strong-arm'' Michigan in a move he said "calls into question his continued leadership of the Big Ten Conference."
''The Big Ten conference commissioner has threatened the University of Michigan with penalties if we do not approve this deal,'' said Bernstein, declining to provide specifics. "Nobody pushes around the University of Michigan — ever.''
The Big Ten disputed the allegation that any school is being forced to back the plan since discussions began last year.
''After receiving interest from third party investors, we formed a working group chaired by then-President (Santa J.) Ono of the University of Michigan to explore and evaluate all options on behalf of our members and the more than 12,000 student athletes in the Big Ten," said Maryland President Darryll Pines, chair of the Big Ten Council of Presidents and Chancellors. "Since we first met in 2024, this has been a collaborative, fair and thorough process that included the University of Michigan. Any other characterization of the work of the COPC and the conference office is inaccurate.
''At Michigan's direction,'' he added, "the conference continues to work with a consultant retained by Michigan to evaluate the transaction.''
Like all major conference, the Big Ten league has been exploring new revenue streams to help its 18 member schools pay the bills in the new era of college athletics. Every school that opted into the House settment can share up to $20.5 million this academic year alone with its athletes, a number set to rise in the years ahead. Some dramatic changes have already taken place on some campuses.
Private equity stakes have been a controversial subject for schools and conferences, with critics saying it would put profit concerns into the mix along with concerns about who is in control. The Big Ten Council of Presidents and Chancellors opened discussions in July with UC Investments, which handles the University of California's public pension, on the potential to set up a commercial entity, Big Ten Enterprises, to generate money for all 18 schools through 2046.