Yeah, I get it, you want to bet me money that these sell as well or better than last year's. No, I'm not making that bet. 1) Because I can't imagine that's publicly available information, 2) sales will hinge much more on the team's performance than whether people actually like the uniform or not, 3) I don't really care if people like them better than last year's because that doesn't change my own opinion, and 4) I didn't especially like last year's either. I think they looked very good on the players over pads, but the ones available for sale weren't great with the all gold sleeves.
yep, hated these
In today's game, not going the alt uni route degrades your brand as it's one less branding campaign you get to run. If you aren't keeping up with the Jones' you are falling behind them.
That's not Wooly's point. There used to be something distinct about The University of Notre Dame brand. We never sought to keep up with the Joneses, we had no aspirations to be like the Joneses at all. We've gone from something distinct and unique to something that's just like everyone else, we just hope to be good at it. These fool uniforms are perfect for the brand of "generic college football team," but Notre Dame has never taken the path of "generic college football team" until recently.In today's game, not going the alt uni route degrades your brand as it's one less branding campaign you get to run. If you aren't keeping up with the Jones' you are falling behind them.
Yeah, I get it, you want to bet me money that these sell as well or better than last year's. No, I'm not making that bet. 1) Because I can't imagine that's publicly available information, 2) sales will hinge much more on the team's performance than whether people actually like the uniform or not, 3) I don't really care if people like them better than last year's because that doesn't change my own opinion, and 4) I didn't especially like last year's either. I think they looked very good on the players over pads, but the ones available for sale weren't great with the all gold sleeves.
That's not Wooly's point. There used to be something distinct about The University of Notre Dame brand. We never sought to keep up with the Joneses, we had no aspirations to be like the Joneses at all, and then we started losing, a lot.
My over-the-top reaction is to the broader trend that is perpetuated by this ensemble. The "degradation of the brand" as Wooly said.If you had said #3 and #4 from the jump, I wouldn't have said a word. But you had quite a different over-the-top reaction than that when you first saw them, and that is what I was responding to.
Notre Dame is losing sight of the fact that their "base" is a bunch of 25 to 65 upper-middle-class CPAs and attorneys.
I'd bet that "base" makes up <1% of ND fans.
I disagree. I think our base is definitely somewhere in the 25-65 middle-upper class male. Who else would it be?
You know damn well that if we matted the gold paint on our helmets, you'd be in here bitching about how they look like FSU's or BC's.
Very decent, but they would've been HOT FIRE with a darker shade of green.
The profession had nothing to do with it, I was just making the rhetorical point that we're not talking about a bunch of teenagers from Inglewood and Shreveport. It's the "blue hairs" argument. On the demographic spectrum that ranges from blue hairs to five-star recruit, Notre Dame's decisions have skewed drastically towards the latter, while the bulk of the fan/alumni base is somewhere in between.Plus, being an upper-middle-class CPA/attorney should probably have no bearing on whether or not you like the jerseys lol.
Our gold helmet is a brand, once a year we poop on it.
Agree. I understand they were trying to go with the whole Green Monster Theme. I can't tell if they were trying to match the color but it seems it should be darker than Kelly Green. It would be much better with a darker green for sure.
They botched the shirt on the left. If you're going to phoneticize the Boston accent, you'd have to modify "after" as well as "park" and "dark".
When you are "keeping up with the Jones'es" that means that they aren't trying to keep up with you.
Our gold helmet is a brand, once a year we poop on it.
That's not Wooly's point. There used to be something distinct about The University of Notre Dame brand. We never sought to keep up with the Joneses, we had no aspirations to be like the Joneses at all. We've gone from something distinct and unique to something that's just like everyone else, we just hope to be good at it. These fool uniforms are perfect for the brand of "generic college football team," but Notre Dame has never taken the path of "generic college football team" until recently.
That's not Wooly's point. There used to be something distinct about The University of Notre Dame brand. We never sought to keep up with the Joneses, we had no aspirations to be like the Joneses at all. We've gone from something distinct and unique to something that's just like everyone else, we just hope to be good at it. These fool uniforms are perfect for the brand of "generic college football team," but Notre Dame has never taken the path of "generic college football team" until recently.
It's not the uniform that's the problem. The uniform is a symptom.Acting like the Notre Dame world is falling down around our shoulders over 1 uniform set per year is mind-numbing.