All about the Benjamins
If you haven't been paying attention over the past few months, Notre Dame/Dr. White has become pansies when it comes to scheduling. A host of top teams wanted to have a series with us, but we "don't have room". Why? Because we've implemented a 7-4-1 schedule (7 home games, 4 away games and 1 neutral game). A home-and-home series with somebody like Alabama wouldn't work out because of our obligations to teams we have to play. So common sense would allow ND to free up that neutral game for a marquee opponent, right? Wrong. From the Orlando Sentinel
The Gators would like a top-tier foe but a 2014 date vs. Notre Dame won't work.
Dave Curtis
July 25, 2007
Notre Dame needs a football dance partner for its 2014 visit to the Citrus Bowl. Florida needs a non-conference game that season and for years has considered locking up with a titan in a marquee neutral-site clash.
Sounds like a Central Florida dream, no? The Irish and the Gators teeing it up out by the 408? Won't happen, said Steve Hogan, executive director of Florida Citrus Sports.
"It's a game I'd love to put together," Hogan said by phone. "It'd be a blockbuster. But I don't think it would work for either school."
UF remains interested in exploring a neutral-site game at the Citrus Bowl for no earlier than 2012, said Greg McGarity, UF's senior associate athletic director. Florida would want a top-tier opponent -- McGarity mentioned Michigan as an example -- and not need to play a road game or second neutral-site game to complete the deal.
Hogan, McGarity and UF Athletic Director Jeremy Foley have discussed such a game, but those talks remain in the earliest stages.
"We did say we would entertain any ideas or proposals that would generate a big-time opponent," McGarity said. "We would definitely sit down and be very interested."
Even in the preliminary chats, obstacles have popped up. Hogan has booked Notre Dame for 2011 and 2014 and FSU for a 2012 neutral-site game, leaving 2013 as an ideal spot for UF. But Florida is slated to play Miami in South Florida early that season.
Both Hogan and Notre Dame senior associate athletic director John Heisler said UF-ND in 2014 wouldn't work. The Irish's trips to Orlando are part of a series of neutral-site games around the country that school officials hope will allow more fans to watch the team live.
"Our approach from the start is that these would be home games that are just played someplace else than South Bend," Heisler said. "We want to provide more access to our football team."
That means a bulk of the tickets would go to Notre Dame, said Heisler, who estimated that Irish fans could fill the Citrus Bowl on their own. With an opponent such as the Gators, especially with the game in Florida, both schools could make such a claim, defeating ND's purpose for playing. A more ideal game for the Irish will come in 2009 when they meet Washington State in San Antonio.
Other issues, including ticket distribution and the all-important television rights, would need to be sorted out. The Southeastern Conference has TV deals with CBS and ESPN; Notre Dame has a deal with NBC. Although both contracts expire by 2011, their extensions might prevent Notre Dame from playing neutral-site games against teams such as Tennessee or Alabama, Heisler said.
Why exactly do we have to treat this neutral game as a home game? Heisler explains that they want to "provide access" to fans across the country. BS. It's all about the money. Notre Dame will use this as an 8th home game (are we in the NFL now?) so that it can sell it's own seats and eat it's own TV money. Why? Because we're money whores. Err, the Athletic Department has become money whores. Don't argue with the Doc.
I can just see our AD's riding around town in one of these
Last time I checked, Notre Dame and the athletic department are doing just fine when it comes to funds. But we've become inundated with trying to amass the biggest profit no matter what the cost is. I'm honestly surprised that Notre Dame hasn't gone public yet (the ticker symbol `ND' is available). It seems to me that these are two golden rules that Notre Dame should always follow. Here they are:
Times it's okay to make money:
1. Going to a BCS bowl game. Notre Dame would have earned over $10 million more last season if not for Dr. White and Monk Malloy's renegotations a few years back.
Time it's not okay to make money:
1. When it comes to us selling our independent football tradition (See: 7-4-1 rule) or whoring ourselves to sponsors (See: Jumbotron).
It isn't that hard, Doc.
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