INDIANAPOLIS — David Braun sat behind a table on a short podium on the Lucas Oil Stadium turf as roughly 50 media members gathered in front of him.
Three weeks ago, he was the defensive coordinator at Northwestern, hired in January after a successful run at North Dakota State. On Wednesday afternoon at Big Ten media days, Braun faced questions stemming from hazing allegations in the Wildcats program that prompted the firing of coach Pat Fitzgerald and the promotion of Braun to interim head coach.
"I have been out of my comfort zone at times, many times, and that's where a lot of growth has come," Braun said. "I've never been this far outside my comfort zone before."
Wednesday's questions to coaches and players often focused on the topics in college football under the most scrutiny — hazing, especially. Tony Petitti, in just his 87th day on his new job as Big Ten commissioner, addressed concerns about Northwestern and the 13 other schools in his conference.
Petitti said the conference would let the Northwestern investigations play out before the league would act. He also said that the league could look at schools' practices, "to make sure that's what happening on campus meets the standards we expect, to provide a safe and healthy environment for student-athletes."
These are topics that will come up again on Thursday when Minnesota's representatives at Media Days face their own questions about player treatment. The media outlet Front Office Sports published a report Wednesday critical of coach P.J. Fleck's program. Unnamed former players spoke of Fleck creating a "cult"-like environment within the program with non-compliers subjected to punishment workouts and inequitable drug testing procedures.
Gophers athletic director Mark Coyle praised Fleck's program in a rebuttal statement Wednesday, saying in part, "I always encourage all of our student-athletes, including every member of our football team, to reach out to me directly if they encounter any issues. To date, I have not heard from a single football student-athlete about the allegations raised."
Gophers senior safety Tyler Nubin, one of three players who will represent the Gophers on Thursday, tweeted that the report was a "hit piece." He added, "I've never seen anything except great people and great coaches who care about the PLAYERS."