NorthDakota
Grandson of Loomis
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How was gilman not graded out one of our highest with 18 tackles
Got torched on a touchdown
How was gilman not graded out one of our highest with 18 tackles
Were the Replay Booth Officials from the SEC or ACC?
Were the Replay Booth Officials from the SEC or ACC?
<iframe src="https://giphy.com/embed/3o7TKLQ9P5idp11hvi" width="480" height="480" frameBorder="0" class="giphy-embed" allowFullScreen></iframe><p><a href="https://giphy.com/gifs/maradona-diego-el-3o7TKLQ9P5idp11hvi">via GIPHY</a></p>Even the replay analyist had a “I hate dem Catholics” southern twang to him,....
Wow, someone from ESPN who gets it:
http://www.espn.com/college-footbal...-football-playoff-simply-create-more-blowouts
The Irish lost, but they weren’t dominated.
The Tide could name its score
If you're an Irish fan, you should be hoping for a playoff expansion, not remaining at 4 teams. 4 teams generally means we have to run the table to get to the playoff, and that's nearly impossible most seasons. We needed a lot of luck in both 2012 and 2018 to make it happen. At 11-1 you have to hope that two out of the three Power 5 Champs have 2 losses or more, and there's no guarantee one of those don't get in ahead of us or that a runner up like Georgia doesn't sneak ahead.
Aside from just qualifying for the playoff, you also have to look at potential matchups. What if Alabama were to face Georgia again in the first round of an 8 team playoff and they manage to slip up? More games in the playoff means more chances for the king to take a fall. Sure, it means it's one more game that we would have to win too, but I would take my chances against a three team playoff with the chance Alabama/Clemson slips up in the first two rounds rather than face one of those two again. If the Playoff era has shown us anything it's that those two are in a league by themselves and everyone else is pretty much on the outside looking in. The more opportunities for them to have a bad night, the better. Saban doesn't want the playoff to expand, that should tell you everything you need to know.
Graphing Clemson vs. Notre Dame: Brian Kelly was right — it’s a lot closer than it seemed
(RollBamaRoll)
He also graphed the Alabama-Oklahoma game:
Graphing the Tide vs. Oklahoma: Not remotely as close as the score
If they ever go to eight teams it would probably include the (5) conference champions, a Group of Five team, and two 'next best' teams. I've heard people say that right now we have four chances to get in but with expansion we would only have two. I agree that in the current scheme we have to run the table in order to get in...not sure it gets any easier with 8 teams.
If they ever go to eight teams it would probably include the (5) conference champions, a Group of Five team, and two 'next best' teams. I've heard people say that right now we have four chances to get in but with expansion we would only have two. I agree that in the current scheme we have to run the table in order to get in...not sure it gets any easier with 8 teams.
I agree. Depending on your seeding, what’s to say ND wouldn’t end up playing tOSU, Clemson & then Bama? That’s an impossible gauntlet after a 12 game season that is filled w/ all FBS schools.
If we're 11-1, and all the Conference Champions are already in, who is going in before us? Maybe SEC runner up and that's probably it. If we're 10-2 we don't belong anyway.
I've been all for shitting or getting off the pot with the ACC from day one... join and make Clemson the on field template. FSU won't be down forever and us, Clemson and FSU should be more than enough to give the conference any immediate future respect it may not have currently,... just my thoughts. It'll also be nice to play for something other than 'natty or bust' every year.
I've been all for shitting or getting off the pot with the ACC from day one... join and make Clemson the on field template. FSU won't be down forever and us, Clemson and FSU should be more than enough to give the conference any immediate future respect it may not have currently,... just my thoughts. It'll also be nice to play for something other than 'natty or bust' every year.
I, for one, would have little interest in a conference Notre Dame who would be subject to the ACC's (or any conference) determination on televised games and, which would regionalize our appeal. Notre Dame students come from all states as well as internationally. Trading our football autonomy for a debatable better chance at making the playoffs, a bigger revenue disbursement for being a conference member, and abandoning playing national opponents is a non-starter and reduces interest in football. This would be a one way street with almost all the advantages to the ACC. They play a nine game conference schedule. We have long-term contracts with USC, Stanford (alternating for annual West Coast games) and Navy. That would be our non-conference schedule without any flexibility. Dropping Stanford, for instance, would let us put one game we could schedule annually. That's the reality of conference life.
Ideally, the number of teams in a conference should be reduced in number, following the NFL divisional model, and have less "intra-division" games - say six games - and rotating scheduling inter-division teams, e.g. Pac 12 v ACC for four games. That also would let teams that historically have regional rivalries like Texas and Texas A&M schedule each other annually.
Only then would college football become more of a national game than of regional interest. Looking at it from our opponents standpoints, what interest would an ACC Notre Dame be to a Texas or Oklahoma have in scheduling ND?
I, for one, would have little interest in a conference Notre Dame who would be subject to the ACC's (or any conference) determination on televised games and, which would regionalize our appeal. Notre Dame students come from all states as well as internationally. Trading our football autonomy for a debatable better chance at making the playoffs, a bigger revenue disbursement for being a conference member, and abandoning playing national opponents is a non-starter and reduces interest in football. This would be a one way street with almost all the advantages to the ACC. They play a nine game conference schedule. We have long-term contracts with USC, Stanford (alternating for annual West Coast games) and Navy. That would be our non-conference schedule without any flexibility. Dropping Stanford, for instance, would let us put one game we could schedule annually. That's the reality of conference life.
Ideally, the number of teams in a conference should be reduced in number, following the NFL divisional model, and have less "intra-division" games - say six games - and rotating scheduling inter-division teams, e.g. Pac 12 v ACC for four games. That also would let teams that historically have regional rivalries like Texas and Texas A&M schedule each other annually. Build in an independence and flexibility instead of all the restrictions. That would have a greater national audience and answer questions about which teams deserve to be in a playoff. Prove it on the field in the regular season.
Only then would college football become more of a national game than of regional interest. Looking at it from our opponents standpoints, what interest would an ACC Notre Dame be to a Texas or Oklahoma have in scheduling ND?
Not "spewing the party line" unless you mean the majority of Notre Dame fans. We get all our games scheduled because of the NBC contract and ESPN wants to pick up our away games because of our current scheduling.
I would agree that historically a bit over half the games could be considered regional. We had room in 1997 to schedule Michigan State, Purdue, Michigan, Pittsburgh as well as USC and Stanford. Not sure how the math of twelve games results in a figure of 55%, but that is not the point. If one is also saying that 50% of our games were not regional, I also agree to that.
National interest in college football is generated by national games, not restricting yourself to a region and some easy games and one rival. I have no interest in seeing an annual game against NC State or Duke or Wake Forest but would rather see Georgia, Michigan, Texas, Oklahoma, as well as USC and Stanford annually and, in the future, Ohio State, Alabama, Texas A&M on their campuses, as well as Big Ten schools, etc. Playing Navy in Ireland, Jacksonville, San Diego, etc. or playing home and home games against non-conference national teams is what drives ESPN to televise them.
There is a reason that a home game for ND ACC opponents in Blacksburg, Clemson, Miami, Tallahassee sells out because ND does not play there every other year and that games in Austin, Ann Arbor, Chicago, L.A., NYC, Athens, etc. are some of the hottest tickets for their season ticket holders as well as our Irish nation spread across our country. I'd also like some flexibility to schedule private schools like Wake, Northwestern, Vanderbilt, Rice, etc as well as the Navy, USC, Stanford annually.
Conferences as now composed are restrictive in nature and not at all either in ND's or their fans interest.
No ACC. Just wait for the NCAA implosion when the Top 64ish teams take their ball and go home. Then ND will be a part of whatever that ends up being... or they'll bail with their then $17+ Billion endowment and join the Smarty Pants Football Conference.
I've been all for shitting or getting off the pot with the ACC from day one... join and make Clemson the on field template. FSU won't be down forever and us, Clemson and FSU should be more than enough to give the conference any immediate future respect it may not have currently,... just my thoughts. It'll also be nice to play for something other than 'natty or bust' every year.
No ACC. Just wait for the NCAA implosion when the Top 64ish teams take their ball and go home. Then ND will be a part of whatever that ends up being... or they'll bail with their then $17+ Billion endowment and join the Smarty Pants Football Conference.