I was musing today about Iowa’s misfortune of having to play at Ohio State again in 2024—marking the second consecutive matchup in Columbus. Curious whether this reflected a broader scheduling imbalance, I turned to MCubed to examine whether the Big Ten has historically operated as a home-and-home conference. The answer, it turns out, is no.
Iowa has faced Michigan 61 times, with 35 games played in Ann Arbor and only 26 in Iowa City.
Against Ohio State, the disparity is even greater: 67 total matchups, with 41 in Columbus and just 26 In Iowa City.
Iowa's only other Big Ten opponent with a home-away gap exceeding four games is Northwestern. Iowa has hosted Northwestern 46 times, while traveling to Evanston or Chicago 40 times.
When the College Football Data Warehouse website was up, I recall Iowa played Chicago about 4x more in Chicago than in Iowa City.
I am curious if Michigan and Ohio State have similar home and away scheduling advantages with other Big Ten schools, too.