ND steals Rick Reilly's girlfriend, he's mad

PANDFAN

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he's on espn radio right now...he is being played mike's response...can't wait to hear his

he is trying to prove he is right and then espn mark s. and forget the other guy taking over cowherd today said its just like tebow...he doesn't bring the attention the media does...and then rick tried to defend and the host cut him off and ended it...they weren't buying his stupid argument either...
 
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DomeX2 eNVy

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I heard this clown on the radio an hour ago, and it is laughable he has a job as a reporter - he is just an uneducated opinion guy. First it was hilarious because he tried to make a funny, but it was so lame the two hosts were silent. RR had total dead air while he waited for a laugh and accolades.

As many of you pointed out, every BCS conference team has guaranteed money, not just ND. You think a reporter would know this. But my favorite part was when he was pounding his point about how ND is the only Independent and should be forced by the NCAA to join a conference. The third time he said this he included the military academies to the independent group, but didn't say they should have to join a conference. Then he reiterated that ND was the only school allowed to do this.

I think any real reporter would take two seconds to look up, or would already know that BYU is an Independent in football. And ESPN promotes this guy. All he wants is twitter followers and clicks.
 

Irish Fam

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Love Mike Golic for his response. And I am really glad that his response is just as popular as Reilly's piece.
 

gkIrish

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rtrn2glory

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yea...pretty shatty rebuttal...hope his high school debate coach was listening!!
 

Irish#1

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Rick Reilly forgets:
1. Any other school would take the NBC contract if offered.
2. ND did not hold a gun to NBC's head and force them to sign the contract.
3. ND did not force the NCAA or school presidents to allow them to be part of the BCS or now playoff program. They were asked to be a part of it and we know why.
4. Unlike other big time programs, ND does not load up their schedule with cupcakes to get to 10+ wins every year.
5. ND attempted to join the Big 10 years ago but was rebuked.
6. That every major conference would welcome ND with open arms.

I could go on and on, but we already know this stuff.

I doubt Rick Reilly used to love Notre Dame. He was probably mad at his dad for making him watch the replays while he really wanted to play with his sisters dolls.
 

GoldenIsThyFame

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Mark Schlabach's response
College football -- Notre Dame Fighting Irish still resonate around the world - ESPN
Notre Dame hasn't won a national championship since 1988.

Heck, the Fighting Irish haven't won a BCS-level bowl game since they defeated Florida 39-28 in the 1992 Sugar Bowl, which was played about four months before current quarterback Tommy Rees was born.

In fact, Notre Dame has won only two bowl games since 1994: the 2008 Hawaii Bowl and 2010 Sun Bowl.

But, with apologies to my esteemed colleague Rick Reilly, the Fighting Irish are still relevant in college football.


When Notre Dame opens the season against Navy in Dublin, Ireland, it's expected to be the biggest single-day sporting event in that country's history. More than 35,000 tickets have been sold for the game in the U.S., and Sept. 1 is expected to be the busiest day in the history of Dublin's airport. ESPN will broadcast the game to more than 20 million households in Europe alone.

The not-so-Fighting Irish might not be the heavyweights they once were, but plenty of people still care passionately about them.

College football fans either love the Fighting Irish or hate them, as there's very little middle ground when it comes to Notre Dame football.

"I'd look at it as the most loyal fan base in the country because we haven't won," Notre Dame coach Brian Kelly said. "Football is really, really important here."

As Kelly prepares to begin his third season as Notre Dame's coach, he's trying to accomplish something his three predecessors (Bob Davie, Tyrone Willingham and Charlie Weis) couldn't do: guide his team to at least eight victories in three consecutive seasons. Somehow, the Irish haven't accomplished that modest feat in 18 seasons, when current ESPN analyst Lou Holtz was nearing the end of his tenure as Notre Dame's coach.

Knute Rockne and Frank Leahy just rolled over in their graves.

"Stability and consistency," Kelly said. "We're in the stability and consistency market. When you get that, then you can talk about the next level."

While the Fighting Irish have barely been a blip on the BCS radar, they're still one of the most coveted franchises in American sports. If Notre Dame athletics director Jack Swarbrick ever picks up the telephone to tell conference commissioners the Irish are finally giving up their independence and NBC television contract, he'd have the pick of the litter. There's a reason Swarbrick still had a seat at the table when college football's powerbrokers decided the future of the sport's postseason this summer.

Why? Despite their mediocrity, the Irish are still a ratings and attendance bonanza.

When a 6-6 Notre Dame team defeated a 7-6 Hawaii squad in the 2008 Hawaii Bowl, which ended the Fighting Irish's NCAA-record, nine-game losing streak in bowl games, nearly three million U.S. households watched the game on Christmas Eve. When the Irish lost to Florida State 18-14 in the Champs Sports Bowl last season, TV ratings for that postseason game jumped 64 percent from the year before.

While the Irish might not be very good, college football fans still enjoy watching them, win or lose.

And Notre Dame is still an attractive ticket from coast to coast -- and even internationally. More than 70,000 fans watched the Irish defeat Maryland 45-21 at FedEx Field in Landover, Md., last season -- and most of them weren't there to watch the woebegone Terrapins. In 2010, more than 54,000 fans saw the Irish beat Army 27-3 in the first college football game played at new Yankee Stadium in New York.

Along with playing Navy in Ireland in this season's opener, the Irish will renew their rivalry with Miami at Chicago's Soldier Field on Oct. 6. Next season, the Irish will play Arizona State at Dallas Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas, and then they'll face Syracuse at New Meadowlands Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J., in 2014 and 2016.

Swarbrick has even approached Stanford officials about moving their game to China next season.

At least Notre Dame quarterback Andrew Hendrix still believes he's playing the most coveted position in all of sports. Hendrix is one of four players battling for the starting job, along with Rees (who is suspended for the opener following his offseason arrest), redshirt freshman Everett Golson and freshman Gunner Kiel.


"It's the highest-profile position in sports, quarterback at Notre Dame," Hendrix said. "It doesn't get any better than that. Kids dream about it, you dream about it, obviously it means a whole lot because this university means a lot to a lot of people. So the position of quarterback at Notre Dame is a little bit more special than it would be at someplace else."

Quarterbacks at Alabama, LSU, Oregon and USC might beg to differ.

Until the Fighting Irish start winning again, they're nothing more than a box-office draw. Their lucrative TV contract with NBC doesn't mean as much anymore because seemingly every team plays on TV every week. And not every blue-chip recruit in the country wants to spend four years surviving cold, Midwest winters (see sophomore defensive lineman Aaron Lynch, who transferred to South Florida this summer).

"I think that they need to understand what distinguishes Notre Dame from other institutions -- we don't hide from that," Irish defensive coordinator Bob Diaco said. "There's going to be snow on the ground, it's going to be cold. It's not about trying to trick recruits and bring them up here on a sunny day in September. Life's not going to be like that -- then we have the player and he's disenchanted because he doesn't want to trek through 10 inches of snow. It doesn't make any sense."

Without more victories, and it won't be easy this season against a schedule that includes road games at Michigan State, Oklahoma and USC and home games against Michigan and Stanford, about the only thing that distinguishes the Irish from everyone else in college football is their tradition and history.

"Nobody wants to hear about program building," Kelly said. "They want to hear about this team. It's the first time I can say it's my team. It's taking the face of my personality. These guys are fighters and they'll battle. They have to against the schedule."

Win or lose, much of America will still be watching.
 
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Yes

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This is somewhat off-topic, but one thing I don't understand is the yearly condemning of Notre Dame being ranked too high in the pre-season polls. I mean, the last five years we've been ranked:

2012: 24th (In coaches poll)
2011: 16th
2010: Unranked
2009: 23rd
2008: Unranked
2007: Unranked
 

irishfanjho15

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This is somewhat off-topic, but one thing I don't understand is the yearly condemning of Notre Dame being ranked too high in the pre-season polls. I mean, the last five years we've been ranked:

2012: 24th (In coaches poll)
2011: 16th
2010: Unranked
2009: 23rd
2008: Unranked
2007: Unranked

And if we win our first two games that season we definitely deserve the preseason 2011 ranking.
 
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PraetorianND

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A friend of mine who is a UM fan posted a link to the Reilly article on my FB wall. Below is my response. Thoughts?




There are so many things that are just stupid about this article....

1) He mentions losing to USC, ND beat USC every single year from 1983-1995 (except for one tie). Now USC is beating ND college football is cyclical and our reign was actually longer and better than USCs.
2) He mentions relegation, which in the EPL only happens to the bottom 3 teams. ND has posted a winning record almost every year for the past 125 years, hardly one of the worst three teams in college football, or even the bottom 50% for that matter. The argument is stupid.
3) "ND isn't a factor this season and hasn't been a factor in the last 20 seasons." ND won 10 games in 2006, 2002, 1992, and 1991, and 11 games in 1993. Oh and they won 12 games 1988 and 1989. Not terrible...
4) Too noble for a conference? This is clearly a subjective comment as there is no evidence of Notre Dame's "nobility," or anything else for that matter. It's tradition and ND likes being independent because it gives them flexibility to determine their own schedule. The irony is, with conference realignment the way it is, I'm sure almost every big program wishes they were independent too. it's just smart and good business. With the massive exodus of people and jobs from the midwest it is smart to have a fan base and opponents outside of a dying region.
5) Notre Dame doesn't "get" it's own TV deal, NBC pays them for it because a lot of people watch their games. If ND is so irrelevant then why is it still a profitable deal for NBC to buy the right to their games?
6) BCS tie-in. I saw a lot of non AQ teams going to BCS games in the BCS era, ND only went to two. This is a stupid argument because ND has not had any benefit from being considered an AQ. If anything I'm looking at Michigan State who has been getting the backseat to Michigan over the past few years when MSU is the better team.
7) ND is consistently overrated. That's not the fault of ND though, but it's definitely true.
8) ND = Rice? Then don't tune into ND v USC, ND v Michigan, ND v MSU, ND v Miami, ND v OU this year. Oh and maybe you shouldn't watch ND v Navy in Ireland which is an awesome idea and something teams in conferences simply cannot do as easily. What a great opportunity for the fans, players, and the local country to be able to be a part of that. Oh, ND is playing Stanford in China next year. Cool.
9) The argument he makes about how it's unfair that ND has it's own TV deal fails to recognize that BYU has it's own TV deal. The idea of schools having their own TV stations and deals is actually relatively new and Oregon and TCU haven't been good enough for long enough to gather a national following to make a TV deal even plausible or necessary. By the way ND's TV deal earns them LESS money than every other AQ conference member schools earns from their conference TV deals so it's really not that big of an issue. In fact, he should applaud ND for not being greedy enough to join a conference for the extra money rather than chastise them for doing what they believe in. Hypocrite.
10) Tulsa loss.... I don't really want to mention App State but I guess I will. Or maybe we should mention EVERY SINGLE major program's worst loss in the past decade. Oh wait, Tulsa won 10 games that year and ND turned around knocked off #14 Utah (who beat Bama the year before) and beat USC at home and beat Miami. See above USC argument.
11) The Irish haven't finished in the top 5 of any poll in the last 5 years... Wow, you just made the point that ND is relevant. Theoretically, only 25 schools would be able to finish in the top 5 in the past 5 years, because there are a lot of repeats I bet that number goes down to something like 15 teams or fewer. So the fact that ND had a top 5 finish in the last 6 years makes them relevant in my book.
12) Lastly, ND does not get any special treatment, if they did they would have played in more than 3 BCS games. I mean, ND hasn't been given anything at all except a high preseason ranking which means nothing and should be eliminated anyway.

People who gripe about ND getting special treatment are one of the reasons why ND is still relevant, articles like this keep them in the spotlight.

I think it's funny that Reilly talks opens with a discussion of how his dad flunked out of ND and then closes with how ND flunked and has to go back a grade because Reilly failed to write a piece that makes any REAL sense. The entire article is biased and terribly written. I understand that it is an opinion piece but it is laughably devoid of facts and is essentially just a three page gripe. If he doesn't like ND or thinks that they are not relevant he should simply stop writing about them.
 

gkIrish

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Notre Dame ranks No. 1 in merchandise sales - chicagotribune.com

By Fred Mitchell, Tribune reporter
8:51 a.m. CDT, September 25, 2012

Notre Dame’s success on the football field this season is translating into dramatic increases in merchandise sales.

According to Fanatics.com, an online retailer of officially licensed sports merchandise, Notre Dame experienced a 20 percent increase in merchandise sales for the week of Sept 17-23, compared to the previous week.

The Fighting Irish, 4-0 and ranked 10thin the nation in the Associated Press poll, now lead the country in merchandise sales among top colleges for the week. Notre Dame is followed by Alabama, Oregon, Florida State and Ohio State in that category.

Compared to September of 2011, Notre Dame is seeing a 54 percent increase in merchandise sales for the month on Fanatics.com.

fmitchell@tribune.com
 

BleedBlueGold

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bandwagon.png



"I've been a Notre Dame fan all along."
 

Rhode Irish

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Deadspin is not too fond of ND for some reason (the reason is that they tend to be reflexively anti-establishment), but they dislike Rick Reilly at least as much as we do. And that they hate Rick Reilly isn't why they're awesome, but it is an example of why they're awesome. If we can't count deadspin as an ally, at least we have some common enemies.

BTW, Tiger was unreal today. Steve Stricker should be sent home tonight and they should bring in Hunter Mahan tomorrow. Its a joke Stricker is on the team, nevermind weighing Tiger down like a lead anchor. What would have Stricker shot today in medal play? 80? If the U.S. somehow blows this lead tomorrow Davis Love should be fired and made to walk back to Texas from Chicago.
 

IrishLax

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Deadspin is not too fond of ND for some reason (the reason is that they tend to be reflexively anti-establishment), but they dislike Rick Reilly at least as much as we do. And that they hate Rick Reilly isn't why they're awesome, but it is an example of why they're awesome. If we can't count deadspin as an ally, at least we have some common enemies.

BTW, Tiger was unreal today. Steve Stricker should be sent home tonight and they should bring in Hunter Mahan tomorrow. Its a joke Stricker is on the team, nevermind weighing Tiger down like a lead anchor. What would have Stricker shot today in medal play? 80? If the U.S. somehow blows this lead tomorrow Davis Love should be fired and made to walk back to Texas from Chicago.

There are two main reasons. First, because the writers/editors simply don't like ND for some reason or another... I guess it's not much different than me disliking Ohio State even though I have no reason... all in all I think you're right that it has a lot to do with "anti-establishment" shtick that is a prevailing theme on the site.

Second, it's because that entire group of blogs has a "progressive" slant (which annoys me) and they aren't fans of the Catholic/conservative aspect that is (unfairly or not) associated with ND.
 
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