Come on Ding, this is total athletic revenue from all sports.Thats 2021. We're not top 10 and won't be anytime soon without change.
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College athletics' 25 powerhouses who produced the most revenue for 2022
Two of the nation's top football programs are notable revenue-producers.247sports.com
Even using the revenue in your link we'd be ~$40 million behind the 10th most revenue generating program last year. We're getting dusted, relative to the top programs.
Seems to be the mantra of the day; adapt to the new world order. There is something to be said for forging your own path.
What are the rewards?Seems to be the mantra of the day; adapt to the new world order. There is something to be said for forging your own path. Does it come with challenges? Sure-but also rewards.
What sport do you think is responsible for a very large portion of the athletic revenue?Come on Ding, this is total athletic revenue from all sports.
And you have to be shitting me if you don't think ND football is making more then they were in 2021
I agree those prices aren't bad. I didn't know they were that cheap, I've only been to night games since 2013Tickets on the resale market for non-premier games are like ~$60-80 for an event that happens 6 times a year is pretty good, especially for a product that's been 6th in overall wins the past 10 years (2013-2022).
Not many premier sporting events you can go to for that price. Unless you're advocating for ND to restrict the resale market, reducing the ticket price just transfers the profit to resalers rather than to the university. I'd rather ND get the money than Joe TicketGuy.
There's a difference between forging your own path and refusing to adaptSeems to be the mantra of the day; adapt to the new world order. There is something to be said for forging your own path. Does it come with challenges? Sure-but also rewards.
Don’t forget football and basketball cover the other sports as well, which operate at a deficit. I assume that brings the athletic department closer to breaking even, hence the need to raise funds.
Conference schedules being easier is only relative to what ND feels like scheduling for themselves. There's nothing stopping us from softening our schedule. With the playoffs expanding to 12 teams the emphasis on SoS will be reduced further that it already was.Maybe I’m just the one confused. So clearly in this part of the discussion we’re (for the moment) considering the situation where a loss in a conference championship doesn’t eliminate ND from the playoffs. And it seems we’ve found common ground that with conference schedules being easier, the situation ND would find themselves in, often enough, would be a shot at a conference championship where a loss wouldn’t necessarily wipe them from playoffs.
Scenario A: ND wins the conference championship. Maybe gets the bye, maybe doesn’t
Scenario B: ND doesn’t win the conference championship -> now ND has to go 3-0 in the playoffs.
Scenario C: ND remained independent -> no conference championship, ND has to go 3-0 in the playoffs.
You’d rather just sign up for scenario C, than try for Scenario A and, at worst again, end up in Scenario B (which is the same as Scenario C)
The one factor that is not considered, is a 16th game. In your scenarios where we play a conference championship game and don’t get a bye, we will play an extra game. As an Independent, we will only play 15 games max.Maybe I’m just the one confused. So clearly in this part of the discussion we’re (for the moment) considering the situation where a loss in a conference championship doesn’t eliminate ND from the playoffs. And it seems we’ve found common ground that with conference schedules being easier, the situation ND would find themselves in, often enough, would be a shot at a conference championship where a loss wouldn’t necessarily wipe them from playoffs.
Scenario A: ND wins the conference championship. Maybe gets the bye, maybe doesn’t
Scenario B: ND doesn’t win the conference championship -> now ND has to go 3-0 in the playoffs.
Scenario C: ND remained independent -> no conference championship, ND has to go 3-0 in the playoffs.
You’d rather just sign up for scenario C, than try for Scenario A and, at worst again, end up in Scenario B (which is the same as Scenario C)
So in quickly catching up - the strongest objective reason to stay independent is "it's tradition"?
Can you add a single, objective reason?Shocking that the person who deputized themselves on this topic comes to this conclusion. Keep grinding Barney Fife.
"It's tradition" is not a reason. Shitting outside was tradition until indoor plumbing.We already have dude. U need to read more post less
The silence is the answer.What legitimate ND traditions/experiences would be altered by no longer being an Independent? From my POV, none that actually matter. Maybe I am not thinking of something, so I'll hang up and listen if someone has a good answer.
What legitimate ND traditions/experiences would be altered by no longer being an Independent? From my POV, none that actually matter. Maybe I am not thinking of something, so I'll hang up and listen if someone has a good answer.
With all due respect, this doesn't identify a single benefit of Independence for ND football in 2023 and beyond. It's another "it's tradition".You don't understand, it's the brand. /s
Until the 1990s, there were plenty of independent teams. The Big East really ended that era. But really it's only been about 30 years with Notre Dame being the only elite independent program, and I'd argue for the last 5-10 it has served no purpose at all. So it had a 20 year run of being both unique and worth it.
Personally I wish Congress would get involved and separate football from Title IX and make it its own separate league and the Olympic sports can go back to regional conferences. But Congress doesn't do a whole lot, so that is a pipedream.
Doesn't USC joining Big 10 where we would play them annually make that a moot point? We can always play Navy as a OOC game. It already is for Navy and they show up willingly for their punishment every year..I think it's almost entirely revolved around scheduling. Being able to hang on to those rivalries AND have the flexibility to schedule a variety of "news worthy" opponents such as pOSU or Texas or Georgia or Texas A&M throughout the years was deemed to have significant value to Notre Dame. Join a conference and it seems like one of those will have to be sacrificed.
I have no doubt that we will eventually move to a conference at some point. That some point could be very soon. The advantages of being independent seem to have less strength as time passes and the value of joining a conference seems to be increasing. Hopefully it's the Big Ten when it does happen.
The only thing that can be said that is positive about playing Stanford is the current arrangement where we have at least one game on the west coast season because we play them away the years we play Southern Cal at home.Doesn't USC joining Big 10 where we would play them annually make that a moot point? We can always play Navy as a OOC game. It already is for Navy and they show up willingly for their punishment every year..
Even if we have to sacrifice a game, as long as it's not USC, it's not close to balancing the rest of the disadvantages.
Stanford specifically - We are keeping Stanford relevant by playing them in a game that does nothing for us. We need to nail it with thr academic athletes, and letting Stanford die in the abyss helps us.
West coast exposure. Lets the staff get in front of Cali kids every year in combination with USC. The school likes being associated with another highly regarded academic institution. And they suck, so it's a rivalry game where we SHOULD be guaranteed a win almost every year.Stanford specifically - We are keeping Stanford relevant by playing them in a game that does nothing for us. We need to nail it with thr academic athletes, and letting Stanford die in the abyss helps us.