The ACC won 8 games, while the Big 10 only won 3. The ACC leads the all-time series 9-0.
Here's every game's results:
North Carolina 66 Ohio State 55
Indiana 83 Georgia Tech 79
Michigan State 81 NC State 58
Duke 82 Wisconsin 58
Florida State 75 Minnesota 61
Clemson 61 Purdue 58
Maryland 69 Illinois 61
Wake Forest 56 Iowa 47
Virginia 94 Northwestern 52
Virginia Tech 66 Penn State 61
Boston College 77 Michigan 64
Big Ten Network was created in 2007.
Ivy League followed by Big Ten
The Big Ten(11) has more NC's than the ACC * It depends on who you ask, but a rough idea would be this: counting the AP from 1936 to present, the UPI from 1950 to 1995, and CNN/USA TODAY/ESPN from 1996 to present: Big8/12 - 14, SEC - 14, Big10 - 13, Pac10 - 9, and ACC - 5. This answer is close, but not guaranteed.....just a quick count for a rough idea of conference strengths.
Princeton claims 28 national championships since 1869, the first season of college football. However, since 1936 (when the AP Poll began), both Alabama and Notre Dame are tied with 8 consensus titles.
The ACC does not officially recognize a"regular" season champion but many coaches and fans do. The list: 2002- Maryland 2003- Wake Forest 2004- Duke 2005- UNC 2006- Duke 2007- UNC, Virginia 2008- UNC 2009- UNC 2010- Duke, Maryland 2011- UNC
The "past 15 years" would not include the current year (2013). For the 15 yearsof 1998-2012, the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) had 12 Final Four teams, as did the Big Ten-- except that NCAA infractions forced Ohio State to vacate its 1999 appearance, which would make the Big Ten's count 11. The Big East had ten teams during this timeframe.Over the "last 15 years," which is what you might mean, the Big Ten has had 13 teams (including the vacated Ohio State appearance); the Big East 12; and the ACC 11. The "last 15 years" would be 1999-2013, but your use of "past" is the more correct term of art. By definition, the "last 15 years" would suggest that the event had come to an end and that here would be no more,which is not expected to be the case.
The big ten are the ten runners up! the one left is the champion but not considered a "big ten"
you need to lok it up you need to lok it up
Thats a tricky question to answer as conferences have changed alot over the years. The Pac-10 hands down. UCLA alone holds 11 titles.....more than any other conference combined. Schools hold the championships, not conferences. So when a school switches conferences, or if a conference dissolves altogether....well, lets just say, its a moot question. Example....Miami holds their football championships....some as independant, some as a member of the Big East. Now that they are in the ACC....their next title will be there. A more correct question would be....which conference has the most schools with the most championships? Current schools in the Pac-10 combine to hold 15 NCAA titles in basketball. Pac-10 (15)SEC - (10)Big Ten - (10)Big East - (10)ACC - (10)Big 12 - (4)
Southeastern Conference For more specific numbers & information see: http://www.secsports.com/index.php?s=&url_channel_id=2&url_article_id=6307&change_well_id=2
big ten
When it comes to college sports there are six major conferences. The six conferences are the big east, ACC, SEC, Big 12, Big 10 and the Pac 10. The big east has teams like Connecticut, West Virginia, Syraucse, Cincinnati, Villanova. The Atlantic Coast Conference(ACC) has teams like Duke, North Carolina, Virginia, Wake Forest. The Big 12 has teams like Kansas, Oklahoma, Colorado, Oklahoma State. The Big Ten has teams like Purdue, Iowa, Penn State, Indiana, Illinois. Lastly, the Pac Ten has teams like UCLA, USC, Washington, Washington St. There are the six major conferences, but when it comes to the March Madness in college basketball watch out for the mid major conferences (OVC, MVC,Ivy league, etc)