It’s official: The Oregon Ducks are now members of the Big Ten Conference, effective July 1, 2025—one year earlier than originally planned. The early move was finalized after the Pac-12 formally dissolved amid ongoing realignment, and Big Ten officials expedited Oregon’s entry alongside longtime rival Washington.
This marks a historic shift for one of the West Coast’s most successful programs and a dramatic transformation of the Big Ten’s geography, schedule, and identity.
Why the Early Jump?
Oregon, Washington, USC, and UCLA were all slated to join the Big Ten by 2026, but accelerated timelines and mounting financial pressures—particularly following the collapse of the Pac-12 media rights deal—pushed all four programs to enter for the 2025 football season.
Sources say the Big Ten was eager to lock in its new West Coast members ahead of its new $8 billion media rights deal taking full effect in the 2025–26 cycle. The agreement includes expanded coverage on Fox, NBC, and CBS, and the addition of Oregon brings one of college football’s most marketable brands into the fold.
> “The Big Ten is now coast-to-coast. This is more than expansion—it’s a new national identity,” said Big Ten Commissioner Tony Petitti.
Oregon’s New Conference Schedule: No More Cakewalks
Oregon’s 2025 schedule is already generating buzz—and some concern among Ducks fans. Early reports suggest matchups against:
Ohio State (road)
Michigan (home)
Penn State (neutral site)
Iowa, Wisconsin, and Nebraska
The Ducks will keep the Civil War rivalry with Oregon State as a non-conference matchup, though its long-term future remains uncertain.
With increased travel demands and colder late-season games, questions loom about how Oregon’s fast-paced, finesse style will translate against the physical Big Ten brand of football.
> “This isn’t the Pac-12 anymore,” said ESPN analyst Kirk Herbstreit. “Oregon has the athletes—but now they have to win in November in Iowa, not just in sunny L.A.”
Impact on Recruiting and Exposure
Despite the challenges, the move is expected to boost Oregon’s recruiting footprint, especially in the Midwest and Southeast.
The Ducks’ top-rated 2025 class includes prospects from:
Ohio
Georgia
Florida
And, notably, Illinois—where Oregon flipped a four-star WR committed to Michigan State.
The Big Ten’s massive media reach—stretching from Rutgers to Eugene—gives Oregon players and coaches unprecedented visibility, helping them remain competitive in the NIL era.
What This Means for the Rest of College Football
Oregon’s move is another domino in the ongoing collapse of traditional conference structures. The Big Ten and SEC now stand as the sport’s two “superconferences”, with the ACC and Big 12 scrambling to maintain relevance.
The move also reignites debate around:
Travel fatigue and academic impact for student-athletes
The death of regional rivalries
The growing power imbalance between the Big Ten/SEC and the rest of the FBS
Still, for Oregon, the benefits appear to outweigh the risks.