College football realignment: Finebaum predicts where Notre Dame lands - College Football HQ
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I may actually agree with all of his takes in this article.
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Finebaum picking ND-B1G is like picking a bear to crap in the woods.
If it WILL happen remains to be seen, but if the Irish ever cave on independence, it ain't going to be with the SEC.
Finebaum said he would like to see Notre Dame join the SEC, but that it's unlikely for a variety of reasons.
Finebaum could tell me water is wet and I'd disagree with himCollege football realignment: Finebaum predicts where Notre Dame lands - College Football HQ
College Football HQwww.si.com
I may actually agree with all of his takes in this article.
The article linked in the OP mentions the Notre-Dame / ACC deal. But I'd read elsewhere (maybe it was The Athletic) that Notre Dame did NOT have part in the same long-term media rights commitment that the rest of the ACC has, regarding the rest of their sports. I don't know who is right.IIRC, Notre Dame has surrendered their media rights to the ACC in all sports except football until sometime in the mid-2030s. They remain remain independent in football. Are we looking at the possibility of a school having membership in two differenct conferences, B1G in football, ACC in every other sport?
They will likely never join the SEC because their academic side won't allow it. They don't "need" the money either but I've heard from some pretty good sources that their professors want the money and access to research opportunities that exist in the B1G.I’m more interested in someone reliably telling us WHEN Notre Dame will join a conference. If the Big 10 invitation is still viable, it’s hard to fathom them joining the SEC instead. Its hard to list the last 3 games they’ve played vs the SEC off the top of my head. But games vs Purdue, Michigan, Michigan State, USC, even Nebraska are easy to recall.
Not sure if the money could work, but culturally the ACC makes sense after the Big 10 before the SEC is conceivable.
Is Notre Dame still in Evaluation Mode regarding the current invitation, or have they declined again until the next time?
Does it really matter? As @Cornjob said, perhaps the GOR is not as extensive for ND as it is for other ACC schools due to their non-football alignment. Even if it is, however, is it really that much of a deal-breaker? Outside of men's basketball, would the B1G really care if media rights to ND's non-football sports (home games only) belonged to someone other than BTN and/or Fox (or whoever pays the big bucks for the next contract)? There isn't nearly as much money (or interest) in those events. The B1G could say that's OK, we'll take you, bring you into the conference for everything, and just waive the media rights to the other sports until the 2030s (or whenever), or pay the fines associated with those sports (again, not much in the grand scheme of things). Men's BB would be the one sport with some value, but it pales in comparison to football-related rights.IIRC, Notre Dame has surrendered their media rights to the ACC in all sports except football until sometime in the mid-2030s. They remain remain independent in football. Are we looking at the possibility of a school having membership in two differenct conferences, B1G in football, ACC in every other sport?
College football realignment: Finebaum predicts where Notre Dame lands - College Football HQ
College Football HQwww.si.com
I may actually agree with all of his takes in this article.
Notre Dame's options include leaving for the Big Ten in 2024 and paying the ACC's exit fee — which is estimated in the range of $100 million (or equal to three times the ACC's most recent annual revenue) — or the Fighting Irish could stay put and determine what their next TV contract would fetch once the current deal with NBC expires in 2025. Notre Dame is the most attractive expansion pawn left on college football's realignment table and the Fighting Irish know it.
I doubt it. The B1G has leverage here as they're the best option for ND and everyone knows it. The B1G wants all the sports.247/sports
What I'm thinking about is a third option. Since ND is independent in football, could they could join the BIG in football and stay in the ACC for everything else, thus avoiding the exit fee?
IMO, ND is going to sit it out until they either sign another contract with NBC (or perhaps another network?) or until negotiations break down. If they don't get a contract comparable to a potential B1G payout, they'll jump to the B1G. That leaves the B1G with somewhat of a condundrum. With ND in the fold, their TV contract would be more lucrative. Without ND, ND's new contract with NBC might be closer to the B1G payout and would be worth staying independent for.