NoJusticeNoPeace
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We need to get moving on joining a conference ASAP.
We need to get moving on joining a conference ASAP.
Kelly Sees Advantage of Independence
SOUTH BEND, Ind. -- As the game of musical chairs that is conference re-alignment takes place across the nation, Brian Kelly remains head coach at Notre Dame, a football independent. Having coached at a Big East school, Cincinnati, two years ago, Kelly has had a view from both sides of the landscape.
"Football independence at Notre Dame, I think it's schedule and recruiting," Kelly said during his Sunday teleconference of the advantages. "Those are the two things. You can put together a schedule that gets you from the East Coast to the West Coast, and in recruiting it allows you to have that large sampling. You're not marginalized geographically in your recruiting. On the other side, you're not playing for a conference championship. So, there's pluses and minuses. I like the pluses that we have as an independent right now, but like anything else, I think I've said this a number of times, we'll keep our ear to the ground."
Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick was surprised by the departure of Syracuse and Pitt for the ACC, telling reporters Saturday that he never envisioned such a scenario.
The moves became official this morning, leaving the conference 18 of the Fighting Irish's other teams compete in smaller by two.
Still, Swarbrick insisted, football independence remains Notre Dame's intention, according to the Chicago Tribune:
"We will approach this, no matter what the change is, with that as our goal," Swarbrick said. "We'll see whether we can manage our circumstances to meet that goal."
Kelly said the constant shuffling doesn't affect his day-to-day operations as a football coach, though he does feel the timing of the circus takes away from what college football Saturdays are generally about — football games.
"Yeah I think so," he said. "I think anytime there's movement like this, it takes a little bit away from the games on Saturday. But I think for the average fan, they care very little bit about this. They're more interested in their teams, and they know the networks are more interested in showing these games. So I think it's just good talk for the media. But I think the people that are involved, week-to-week, their focus is on the game and their opponent."
Well it sounds like Texas is going to end up in the Pac-12/16. Big Ten seems like our best landing at this point.
I would bet highly that Notre Dame and Texas are in this together. Take it FWIW
For all sports or not football?
UCONN academics is fine they are a top 50-75 school nationally.
Also, going to the ACC will really boost ND LAX program! Which, as we already know is darn good.
I'd like that also but aren't Clemson and FSUngoin to the SEC
West Virginia and some other team are applying as we speak.
no worries.....its all good brahAnd with that... The landscape of college football will start to change forever.
ND and Texas are teaming up I heard on 247. They are going to call it the only 2 conference. Might be the wrong spot tp post this, but i heard green-beckham committed to ND.
First thing that popped into my head about the ACC was how sweet it would be for ND LAX, which then reminded me of you. i thought you would be pumped for that.6 of the top 8 lacrosse programs in the country would then be in the ACC with Syracuse and Notre Dame. The only other two on that level right now are Cornell and Johns Hopkins. Would be really interesting.
I think Notre Dame is a great fit in the ACC academically and with the large amount of fans/alumni we have on the east coast.
Let's imagine what Swarbrick is weighing as to this future scenario:
A). he wants to stay independent for a lot of reasons, football-wise. One of those is that he foresees the possibility of the Notre Dame "network" evolving into a multi-electronic media presence ultimately without any dependence upon an established network like NBC.
B). He seriously wonders about the near-future chance of there being four 16-team superconferences. Here's how he does the math. There are 67 teams in the major 6 conferences now [I'm counting TCU in the Big East]. The future superconferences need 16x4=64 of them. Who, other than us in his ND-independence scenario will they be?
C). One would guess that the three abandoned step-children will come from the K-State/KU/ISU Big12 leftovers, or the Louisville/Connecticut/Rutgers/Cincinnati leftovers, OR Texas might be weighing something Media-similar to NDs vision.
D). However it shakes out, if there are four superconferences of two eight team divisions each [a rational organization], the likely scheduling pattern for these giants would be to play everyone in your division [seven games] and rotate through the other division two per year. This would give each team 9 conference games and three non-conference. Teams would want to play at least one patsy, but Notre Dame could occupy one of the remaining two slots with, say, Michigan, MSU, Purdue, USC, Stanford, as they do now. Swarbrick would have to roll the dice that such would remain possible. Economically, it would seem to remain attractive to opponents to do so, especially if ND is raking in large profits from its own network.
E). there is a chance that Texas [and BYU] see the same thing, and go with their networks. If so, they constitute another two games we could get every year. Swarbrick would want to watch Texas closely as their decision gives him some security.
F). In the best scenario above, we get Texas, BYU, Navy, Air Force possibly, and a MAC opener every year, retain our three "Big Ten" regional rivals, retain our two "PAC 12" California rivals, plus Pitt and BC for a familiar potent schedule. Or we could toy with scheduling Cincinnati, Rutgers, Boise, or the like.
The point of this post is to say that it's probably not at all obvious to Swarbrick from either a scheduling nor a business perspective that he HAS to go to a conference, and there are big reasons to hold out against it. THAT last will depend upon the future of MEDIA, not football, I surmise.
Also looking at that...I would be looking forward to seeing Maryland come up to Rentschler field inj Hartford. Edsell thought he would never see UCONN again lol.What are the chances we see a 16 team ACC with:
NORTH:
UCONN
Pitt
Syracuse
Notre Dame
Boston College
Maryland
Virginia
Virginia Tech
SOUTH:
Clemson
Miami
FSU
UNC
Duke
NC State
Georgia Tech
Wake Forest
I could totally go for that.
D). However it shakes out, if there are four superconferences of two eight team divisions each [a rational organization], the likely scheduling pattern for these giants would be to play everyone in your division [seven games] and rotate through the other division two per year. This would give each team 9 conference games and three non-conference. Teams would want to play at least one patsy, but Notre Dame could occupy one of the remaining two slots with, say, Michigan, MSU, Purdue, USC, Stanford, as they do now. Swarbrick would have to roll the dice that such would remain possible. Economically, it would seem to remain attractive to opponents to do so, especially if ND is raking in large profits from its own network.
Let's imagine what Swarbrick is weighing as to this future scenario:
A). he wants to stay independent for a lot of reasons, football-wise. One of those is that he foresees the possibility of the Notre Dame "network" evolving into a multi-electronic media presence ultimately without any dependence upon an established network like NBC.
B). He seriously wonders about the near-future chance of there being four 16-team superconferences. Here's how he does the math. There are 67 teams in the major 6 conferences now [I'm counting TCU in the Big East]. The future superconferences need 16x4=64 of them. Who, other than us in his ND-independence scenario will they be?
C). One would guess that the three abandoned step-children will come from the K-State/KU/ISU Big12 leftovers, or the Louisville/Connecticut/Rutgers/Cincinnati leftovers, OR Texas might be weighing something Media-similar to NDs vision.
D). However it shakes out, if there are four superconferences of two eight team divisions each [a rational organization], the likely scheduling pattern for these giants would be to play everyone in your division [seven games] and rotate through the other division two per year. This would give each team 9 conference games and three non-conference. Teams would want to play at least one patsy, but Notre Dame could occupy one of the remaining two slots with, say, Michigan, MSU, Purdue, USC, Stanford, as they do now. Swarbrick would have to roll the dice that such would remain possible. Economically, it would seem to remain attractive to opponents to do so, especially if ND is raking in large profits from its own network.
E). there is a chance that Texas [and BYU] see the same thing, and go with their networks. If so, they constitute another two games we could get every year. Swarbrick would want to watch Texas closely as their decision gives him some security.
F). In the best scenario above, we get Texas, BYU, Navy, Air Force possibly, and a MAC opener every year, retain our three "Big Ten" regional rivals, retain our two "PAC 12" California rivals, plus Pitt and BC for a familiar potent schedule. Or we could toy with scheduling Cincinnati, Rutgers, Boise, or the like.
The point of this post is to say that it's probably not at all obvious to Swarbrick from either a scheduling nor a business perspective that he HAS to go to a conference, and there are big reasons to hold out against it. THAT last will depend upon the future of MEDIA, not football, I surmise.