2004 Big Ten Conference football season

2004 Big Ten Conference football season
LeagueNCAA Division I-A
Sportfootball
DurationSeptember, 2004
through January, 2005
Teams11
TV partner(s)ABC, ESPN, ESPN2
2005 NFL Draft
Top draft pickBraylon Edwards (Michigan)
Picked byCleveland Browns, first round (3rd overall)
Regular Season
Co-ChampionsMichigan
Iowa
  Runners-upWisconsin
Season MVPBraylon Edwards (Michigan)
2004 Big Ten Conference football standings
Conf. Overall
Team   W   L     W   L  
No. 14 Michigan $+   7 1     9 3  
No. 8 Iowa +   7 1     10 2  
No. 17 Wisconsin   6 2     9 3  
Northwestern   5 3     6 6  
No. 20 Ohio State   4 4     8 4  
Purdue   4 4     7 5  
Michigan State   4 4     5 7  
Minnesota   3 5     7 5  
Penn State   2 6     4 7  
Illinois   1 7     3 8  
Indiana   1 7     3 8  
  • $ – BCS representative as conference champion
  • + – Conference co-champions
Rankings from AP Poll

The 2004 Big Ten Conference football season was the 109th season for the Big Ten Conference. Michigan and Iowa were conference co-champions, with 7-1 conference records.[1]

Rankings

Bowl games

Date Bowl Game Big Ten Team Opp. Team Score
Dec. 29, 2004 Alamo Bowl Ohio State Oklahoma State 33-7
Dec. 31, 2004 Music City Bowl Minnesota Alabama 20-16
Dec. 31, 2004 Sun Bowl Purdue Arizona State 27-23
Jan. 1, 2005 Outback Bowl Wisconsin Georgia 24-21
Jan. 1, 2005 Capital One Bowl Iowa LSU 30-25
Jan. 1, 2005 Rose Bowl Michigan Texas 38-37
Bowl game information from Sports-Reference.com[1]

Big Ten players in the 2005 NFL draft

After the 2004 season, the conference had four players drafted in the first round of the 2005 NFL draft: Braylon Edwards (#3, Michigan), Erasmus James (#15, Wisconsin), Luis Castillo (#27, Northwestern), Marlin Jackson (#28, Michigan).[2] Ohio State kicker Mike Nugent was selected in the second round with the 47th overall pick, the highest that a Big Ten Conference kicker had ever been drafted.[3]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "2004 Big Ten Conference Year Summary". College Football at Sports-Reference.com. Retrieved November 21, 2025.
  2. ^ "2005 NFL Draft Listing". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved November 21, 2025.
  3. ^ Carr, Aaron (April 20, 2017). "The Big Ten's All-NFL Draft Team: The highest pick at every position in conference history". PennLive. Retrieved November 21, 2025.