The Big Ten has opted not to do anything in the aftermath of Saturdayβs fight between rivals Michigan and Michigan State Saturday night at the Big House that saw the Wolverines walk away with a 24-17 win.
In a released statement, the Conference concluded that the video evidence of the altercation was inconclusive due to members of both teams obstructing the view of the incident.
The actual fight itself broke out when Michiganβs Colston Loveland got into it with Michigan Stateβs Anthony Jones resulting in both teams rushing the field.
Neither school escalated the situation further, unlike a couple of years ago during the fight in the Michigan Stadium tunnel. In that case, former head coach Jim Harbaugh indicated that he βexpectedβ criminal charges to be filed against the Michigan State players. This time, Wolverines head coach Sherrone Moore stated that any actions would be handled internally, while Spartans head coach Jonathan Smith mentioned that his school would wait for the Big Ten to investigate the incident.
βI havenβt thoroughly looked at every angle and all that,β Smith said on Monday. βIt was a lot of bodies out there. We had a staff member that was in the fray of it and a player in the fray of it, and thatβs what weβre hoping theyβre looking into.β
Meanwhile, MSU AD Alan Haller told reporters that he wanted the Big Ten to hold Michigan to βthe same standard that everyoneβs held to,β but stopped short of saying that criminal charges should be filed.