ND at Yankee Stadium Official - 2010!

NDinL.A.

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Notre Dame will play Army at Yankee Stadium, but in 2010 as opposed to 2013. The Army AD must have seen the real $$$ that the game would bring his school, because at first he was 'shocked' that Swarbrick had talked about the idea without talking to him first. This is probably why the 2010 schedule was never publicly finalized. Check out the article:

NOTRE DAME AND ARMY AT YANKEE STADIUM OFFICIAL « ROAD TO GAME DAY
 

BGIF

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I understand the nostalgia of playing at Yankee Stadium but not the economics. The new stadium seats 52,000. ND used to play to 75 -79,000 fans at The House That Ruth Built.

The agrument for playing Rutgers at Giants Stadium versus New Brunswick was the additional 25,000 seats in The Meadowlands. Rutgers Stadium has 2,000 more seats than the New Yankee Stadium.

The same situation exists with Soldier Field in Chicago. 120,000 fans used to pay to watch the Irish play there. The reduced capacity of the current facility is around 60,000 which means 20,000 less ND fans get to watch the game live than they would if the game was played in South Bend.
 

jason_h537

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Yeah but the Yankees cant even sell out the house so they are trying whatever they can to make money.
 

BGIF

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Yeah but the Yankees cant even sell out the house so they are trying whatever they can to make money.

It's been common for more than a 100 years for baseball stadiums to be rented out to make money from other activities such as, football games, religious services, concerts, soccer matches, championship fights, and hockey games among others. The Yankees rented out the Old Yankee Stadium for the Pope, Championship Fights, NY Giants Football, U2, and ND football. Most ball parks have done the same over time. The Mets, Indians, Orioles, Tigers, Red Sox, Phillies, Giants, and Dodgers have all rented their facilities to bring in additional revenue via ND football games.


The point was 20,000 - 30,000 fewer ND fans get to see the game in each of these cases, be it Yankee Stadium vs Giants Stadium, Soldier Field vs ND Stadium, Rutgers Stadium vs Giants Stadium, or Rentschler Field vs Gillette Stadium.
 

ShamrockOnHelmet

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The point was 20,000 - 30,000 fewer ND fans get to see the game in each of these cases, be it Yankee Stadium vs Giants Stadium, Soldier Field vs ND Stadium, Rutgers Stadium vs Giants Stadium, or Rentschler Field vs Gillette Stadium.

I'm sure the Yankees are required to make up the difference in money from the gate a home game would typically bring in. These contracts aren't negotiated by a couple of fourth graders thinking it would be "cool" to see - The Irish aren't going to do this unless they are guaranteed some nice coin.
 

BGIF

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Irish, Army to play first game at Yankee Stadium

Irish, Army to play first game at Yankee Stadium

AP July 17,2009

NEW YORK (AP) - Notre Dame and Army will play the first football game at the new Yankee Stadium next year, rekindling a tradition that took off after Knute Rockne's "Win one for the Gipper" speech more than 80 years ago.

The teams will meet in 2010, across the street from where they played more than 20 times, a person familiar with the arrangement told The Associated Press on Friday. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the official announcement is next week.

"I think it'd be cool. But the way that park's playing, I don't know if it can hold a 100-yard football field," said Chicago Cubs pitcher Jeff Samardzija, a former star wide receiver for the Fighting Irish. The Times Herald-Record of Middletown, N.Y., reported earlier on the pairing between two of college football's most storied programs.

The New York Yankees called a news conference for Monday. Army is expected to play more games in the future at the $1.5 billion baseball stadium, with Rutgers and possibly Syracuse involved, another person familiar with the scheduling told the AP on condition of anonymity.
Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick said the negotiations were far along, but would not acknowledge a completed deal. He said such a matchup would be a home game for the Fighting Irish, meaning it would be broadcast on NBC.
Added Notre Dame senior associate athletic director John Heisler: "We've been talking about playing Army in some way, shape or form, but we just haven't nailed down all the details. Now we're trying to figure out where does Yankee Stadium fit in terms of opponents, years, when and how."
Notre Dame still has two dates not scheduled for next year, including one home game. November would appear to be a prime month to play the game.
"I think it's great. I'm excited to watch it - as long as they don't do it in September," Yankees manager Joe Girardi said before Friday night's game against Detroit.
The Irish and Army played at the old Yankee Stadium nearly every year from 1925-46, when the two programs were among the best in the nation. The House that Ruth Built was the site in 1928 when Rockne invoked the memory of the late George Gipp during a rousing halftime speech. The twice-beaten Irish beat undefeated Army 12-6.

The matchup grew so popular that $3.30 tickets for the 1946 showdown were sold for as much as $200, a game that ended in a scoreless tie between No. 1 Army and No. 2 Notre Dame.
Future Heisman Trophy winner Johnny Lujack of Notre Dame made a game-saving open-field tackle of fellow Heisman winner Doc Blanchard. The 0-0 result was considered by many at the time to be the greatest college football game in history.
"I know there's a big East Coast following for Notre Dame," Samardzija said before the Cubs' game at Washington. "I think it's good for Notre Dame, being countrywide, to play as many different spots as possible. ... The more they can travel, the better it is for them."
"I'd like to see them go overseas like they used to do. They used to go to Dublin and places like that. They used to play at the old Polo Grounds, so I think it'll be cool. That's the cool thing about going to Notre Dame - you never know what'll happen, who or where you'll play. It'll be exciting."
Milwaukee Brewers infielder Craig Counsel, a Notre Dame alum, liked the idea. "I know that was a tradition, but I don't really remember it. It's a long time ago. But I think anytime you go into those venues, it's kind of cool," Counsell said. "I thought when they played hockey in Wrigley Field, that was a little different and definitely cool."
 

mooneytostle

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I wonder if Yankee season ticket holders will get priority for tickets. They don't own a seat license (like at Giant stadium) but who knows.
 

BGIF

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The $8 Million Man

The $8 Million Man

28 of the 49 ND v Army games have been played in the NYC metro area, 1 at Ebbets Field, 1 at Shea Stadium, 1 at the Polo Grounds, 3 at Giants Stadium, and 22 at The House That Ruth Built.

ND has a 13 game winning streak against Army going back to 1965. Ara, Devine, Faust, Holtz, Davie, and Weis are all undefeated facing Army. The closest that streak came to ending was in '95 at the Meadowlands when backup CB Ivory Covington made the $8 million tackle with 39 seconds left in the game as Army was attempting a 2 point conversion for a one point win. Army's 240 pound TE, Ron Leshinski caught a pass on the 1 yard line, all he had to do was take one step forward and fall into the endzone for the win. Instead Covington, all 161 pounds of him, hit Leshinksi, wrapped up the 80 pounds heavier TE, and dropped him for an ND win, and an $8 million trip to the Orange Bowl.

YouTube - 1995 Notre Dame vs. Army
 
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