It will be interesting to see if any at large Bids for CFP come from outside the SEC or BIG conferences.With an expanded CFP in 2025… teams may beef up their SOS to vie for a non conference champion spot.
FSU, in 2025, opens with Alabama and Texas A&M back to back…also has Miami, Florida, Clemson, VT, NC State, Stanford, Pitt
They will give them preferential treatment so they aren’t pushed to the Big10 or SEC. Neither wants ND to go to the other conference. If they are forced to choose, one conference will have to deal with ND drawing eyes to the other. Keeping status quo is the safest option for both.When college football had the P5 and G5, ND was just one more team on top of 64 or so. If the P2 is 36 programs or so, I don't understand why they would continue to give ND preferential treatment. Who cares if ND is left out when programs like FSU, Clemson, Miami, Va Tech, ASU, Arizona, Utah, Colorado, Okie State, TCU, West Virginia are left out. ND's prestige will certainly drop because the P2 are more national conferences now. And ND doesn't win championships anymore.
Loathe to ask question of someone who thinks winning a championship in 1988 makes them relevant. Hartford once had a Major League Baseball team
ND doesn't want to join a football conference, any conference, ever.I don't understand what's their problem with the B1G? That seems like the perfect spot for them smack dab in the middle of the conference footprint. I mean they're a stone's throw from MSU, Michigan, Purdue, Indiana, Northwestern, Illinois, and even Ohio State. They are in the middle of the country and even with the coast to coast nature of the B1G, travel would be relatively easy for them because they'd never be more than a 3 hour flight from any of the schools. And the B1G pays well. I don't get it.
Father Malloy also said this then:Notre Dame will only join a conference when absolutely, beyond a doubt, necessary.
And it may be coming necessary in a P2 and "others" world...but the Domers will hold out until that becomes a near reality.
Back in 1999:
Notre Dame was offered by the Big Ten and the Irish students and alumni adamantly opposed such a move.
The University of Notre Dame’s Board of Trustees decided Friday the private school will not join the Big Ten, ending months of speculation that Notre Dame could become the conference’s 12th member.
“Notre Dame has a distinct identity that is the product of more than a century-and-a-half of institutional independence,” Malloy said. “As a Catholic university with a national constituency, we believe independence continues to be our best way forward, not just in athletics, but, first and foremost, in fulfillment of our academic aspirations.”
Times do change...we'll see.
ND knows this and has been very adept at this.They will give them preferential treatment so they aren’t pushed to the Big10 or SEC. Neither wants ND to go to the other conference. If they are forced to choose, one conference will have to deal with ND drawing eyes to the other. Keeping status quo is the safest option for both.
No, I don't think that makes ND relevant.Loathe to ask question of someone who thinks winning a championship in 1988 makes them relevant. Hartford once had a Major League Baseball team
Notre Dame is not in the normal world where a $10-20 million jump in media money is enticing them .Notre Dame will only join a conference when absolutely, beyond a doubt, necessary.
And it may be coming necessary in a P2 and "others" world...but the Domers will hold out until that becomes a near reality.
Back in 1999:
Notre Dame was offered by the Big Ten and the Irish students and alumni adamantly opposed such a move.
The University of Notre Dame’s Board of Trustees decided Friday the private school will not join the Big Ten, ending months of speculation that Notre Dame could become the conference’s 12th member.
“Notre Dame has a distinct identity that is the product of more than a century-and-a-half of institutional independence,” Malloy said. “As a Catholic university with a national constituency, we believe independence continues to be our best way forward, not just in athletics, but, first and foremost, in fulfillment of our academic aspirations.”
Times do change...we'll see.
One can argue that ND not having a Conference Championship game to navigate makes the bye less important - the ability to host a home game in $outh Bend is important tho’One thing that may impact the Irish is the new CFP...
The four highest rated conference champs receive a bye and move straight to the quarter finals.
Notre Dame will never have a bye in the playoff.
- The eight teams seeded No. 5-12 will play in a first round with the higher seeds hosting the lower seeds either on campus or at other sites designated by the higher-seeded institution (No. 12 at No. 5, No. 11 at No. 6, No. 10 at No. 7 and No. 9 at No. 8.).
I’m thinking it’s moreso about ease of access/path to CFP as an Independent than a first round bye (Conference Champs). Fair trade off I guess.However..,the loser of the SEC and Big Ten CCG may be seeded above the Irish.
Given the revenue, no I would be disappointed with -0- shipsNo, I don't think that makes ND relevant.
I think that ND is relevant because it has gone 73-17 recently, earned two playoff berths, and has won more games in this decade, during the past ten years and over the past forty years than all but five or six other schools.
I think ND is relevant because it was #3 in total revenues in the country last year as a football independent, according to EADA filings (even before the new NBC deal kicks in another $30-40 million a year).
I think ND is relevant because of its TV viewership numbers and nationwide fanbase.
I think ND is relevant because almost every game is televised by NBC or ABC. It seems like ABC picks up just about every ND away game and puts it on prime time.
Why does ABC do that? Not bad for an "irrelevant" program, no?
I think ND is relevant because if it gave up its independence, each and every conference would accept its application in about forty seconds.
If UConn went 73-17 and obtained two playoff berths, I would consider it a relevant football program, wouldn't you?
Can't like this enough. UConn/CT invested probably close to 150 million to upgrade into the Big East which had a BCS bid. The conference schools implored UConn to upgrade. Schools leave and the Big East decides they're done with FB once the BCS money is not there. No one has dealt with crap sandwich UConn fb was dealt. Feel nothing for anyone else's plight.Call me the contrarian if you will but personally I really couldn't give a damn about ND's chances of landing a good spot (or any spot) in the CFP, nor do I care at all about FSU's perceived injustices from the ACC.
Agree. That's why I have no sympathy for Washington State and Oregon State.Can't like this enough. UConn/CT invested probably close to 150 million to upgrade into the Big East which had a BCS bid. The conference schools implored UConn to upgrade. Schools leave and the Big East decides they're done with FB once the BCS money is not there. No one has dealt with crap sandwich UConn fb was dealt. Feel nothing for anyone else's plight.
ND was third in the country in revenue last year at $224,191,928 (EADA filings) as a football independent and an ACC member in other sports.Notre Dame is not in the normal world where a $10-20 million jump in media money is enticing them .
They have other income sources that well exceed $100,000,000.
Their thinking is a good potion of that revenue is due to their Independence and the mystique it gives them.
Being a 3rd or 4th place team in any conference will hurt their image more than any other team.especially among donors.
In the minds of the people in charge , if conference membership may jeopardize that money , the risk outweigh the benefits , so why fix what isn’t broken.
Independence isn’t about anything other than money
like all decisions in sports.?
Jack Swarbrick was the chairman of the CFP expansion committee who came up with this format.One thing that may impact the Irish is the new CFP...
The four highest rated conference champs receive a bye and move straight to the quarter finals.
Notre Dame will never have a bye in the playoff.
- The eight teams seeded No. 5-12 will play in a first round with the higher seeds hosting the lower seeds either on campus or at other sites designated by the higher-seeded institution (No. 12 at No. 5, No. 11 at No. 6, No. 10 at No. 7 and No. 9 at No. 8.).