PSUFAN wrote:I agree completely with that, Van. I think ND would benefit enormously from joining the big 10. The conference would have a better schedule and probably a CCG.
That would benefit the conference. But how would it benefit ND?
I think the only reason they won't is because the current ND moneymakers foresee their personal shares dwindling. If someone could present them with a scenario where they personally made more money, they'd be all over it. Everything points to positives for the program, university, fanbase and the new conference...but without an increase in the bottom line for the few at ND, it's a non-starter.
Only reason???? C'mon, Dave, you of all people should know better. The principal reason ND won't join the Big Ten is the same reason Penn State won't join the Big East -- a history of animosity between the school and the conference. Only, in the case of ND and the Big Ten, it goes on over a much longer period of time, and at a much deeper level, than for Penn State and the Big East.
Van wrote:In ND's case, joining the Big 10 means they automatically pick up Ohio St and Penn St on their schedule, most years. Put 'em all in the same division and they get 'em every year. They still get Michigan and Michigan St. Plus, they also get the match-ups against Wisky and Iowa, which helps during those seasons when those teams are decent. (The Big 10 teams also all get help from having ND on their schedule, during those years when ND is decent. Even when they're not decent they're still a marquee program, so it's still a big win for the likes of an Iowa, Indiana or Northwestern.)
But that's not what's gonna happen, and you know it. Michigan and Ohio State want to be in separate divisions. ND will get Michigan, Michigan State, Northwestern, Minnesota and Wisconsin as annuals. The latter two are not appealing in the least to ND fans.
Throw in an annual interdivisional matchup, and ND's options are basically Purdue or Penn State. Won't be Ohio State, since they'll get Michigan. Iowa would make more sense with an annual vs. Minnesota, and Illinois-Northwestern also would make more sense. I don't think they'll get Indiana, since Purdue would consider that a snub.
So it comes down to Penn State or Purdue. And given that a ND-Penn State rivalry would be a threat to the hegemony that Michigan and Ohio State enjoy, I'd say it's at least 99% certain that it would be Purdue.
With eight conference games ND still gets USC, Navy, BC and a pan of meatloaf.
ND has a better chance of continuing with Pitt than with BC. Hell, maybe even with Stanford, for that matter. As it is, ND is already set to drop BC from the schedule in the next 3-4 years, maybe less (depends on which sites you look at).
Given that Fredo considers ND their #1 rival, I'd suspect that Fredo doesn't want ND in the Big Ten.