“Those are discussions for down the road.’’

Projections from public-record searches indicate the new Big Ten television agreement will boost the league’s annual payout to members by the early 2020s to at least $50 million per school per year.

Mark Rudner, the Big Ten’s senior associate commissioner for television administration, said Wednesday night the idea of any financial compensation from the league “is something we haven’t talked about, or even thought of that.’’

“We’ve tried to minimize (any disruption),’’ Rudner said by phone from Chicago. “We’re not going to Thursdays. We’re not going to Wednesdays. And no team is going to have more than one home game every year.’’

Tenopir said he appreciated Delany calling to let the executive directors know before the policy change became public, but that didn’t make the news more palatable.

“I’m not jumping up and down for joy,’’ Tenopir said.

But he’s also not looking to pick a fight with the Big Ten or Nebraska officials on the Lincoln campus, as Tenopir said he relayed by phone Wednesday to Husker Athletic Director Shawn Eichorst.