Probably.Wondering tho’ (don’t know) if it will be more difficult for an Indy ND to schedule tough non-ACC games in a new super-conference world?
That’s the thing , when people stop wanting to play us we’ll have to join a conference. It’s not happening…yet.Probably.
This Big Ten-SEC challenge they're talking about - on top of nine conference games in the Big Ten and probably eventually the SEC - isn't going to leave a lot of appetite in either conference for home-and-homes with us. That's 10 games. Most programs will keep their last two slots for easy tuneups and maybe the occasional in-state rivalry with an ACC or Big 12 (SCAR-Clemson for instance). Even USC may be hard-pressed to justify playing us.
That, of all the things, might be the thing that finally forces our hand, if we can't schedule teams from the two conferences that matter more than the others.
That’s the thing , when people stop wanting to play us we’ll have to join a conference.
Tom Osbourne, Big Ten Legend.Vince Young now considered an SEC Legend…
Thanks. I hate it.
I thank the ACC for starting all of it in the summer by claiming Katie LedeckyTom Osbourne, Big Ten Legend.
Swaggy Jack.“ If it reaches the championship game…the school will have earned a total of $20 million, plus $3 million per round to cover expenses. If a Big Ten team such as Oregon or Ohio State runs the table, it will only take in $1.1 million.”
“ND’s first-round opponent, the Indiana Hoosiers, received just $222,000 of the $4 million that it earned for the Big Ten Conference by qualifying for the CFP. The Irish got to keep all $4 million.”
10% to Golden and Denbrock, give them their due. Then have Marcus fan himself with the cash casually dropping which positions they're targeting in the portalall proceeds to NIL?
This is why have nots will never get to have.“ND’s first-round opponent, the Indiana Hoosiers, received just $222,000 of the $4 million that it earned for the Big Ten Conference by qualifying for the CFP. The Irish got to keep all $4 million.”
To be fair, Indiana also gets $222,000 apiece for Penn State and Ohio State's first round games, so $666,000 for the first round, and the same for the second round from Oregon, Ohio State and Penn State. As will Purdue, which went 1-11.“ If it reaches the championship game…the school will have earned a total of $20 million, plus $3 million per round to cover expenses. If a Big Ten team such as Oregon or Ohio State runs the table, it will only take in $1.1 million.”
“ND’s first-round opponent, the Indiana Hoosiers, received just $222,000 of the $4 million that it earned for the Big Ten Conference by qualifying for the CFP. The Irish got to keep all $4 million.”
That may become a lot more difficult to do in the near future as the superconferences start playing more intraconference games and are less interested in scheduling an ND or other strong/dangerous OOC opponent.View attachment 3057499
View attachment 3057500
I don't see a great deal of issues here. No Citadel, no Mercer, etc.
There will never be a time where programs will stop scheduling Notre Dame. It’s the the premier brand in football, and ADs love money.It’s nice and all, but if we can’t schedule good teams then what?
Uh oh, it’s happening. They’re getting scared. SEC already closing up shop as they see their dominance crumbling.That may become a lot more difficult to do in the near future as the superconferences start playing more intraconference games and are less interested in scheduling an ND or other strong/dangerous OOC opponent.
That may become a lot more difficult to do in the near future as the superconferences start playing more intraconference games and are less interested in scheduling an ND or other strong/dangerous OOC opponent.
They're already scared lolThat may become a lot more difficult to do in the near future as the superconferences start playing more intraconference games and are less interested in scheduling an ND or other strong/dangerous OOC opponent.