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cincibuck;2212291; said:Well, as the book BB73 scanned and placed on here states, Notre Dame WANTED into the Big 10 in the 1920s, but Yost and Michigan kept them out. Michigan tried to pass a resolution that ALL Big 10 teams would refuse to schedule them, but Purdue wouldn't go along. Michigan state wanted into the Big 10, but Michigan kept them out claiming that their schedule wasn't up to Big 10 standards so Notre Dame offered the Spartans a series and the Big 10 accepted MSU to replace Chicago.
MaxBuck;2212133; said:How in the world does ND remaining independent in football affect postseason play for them? Swarbrick speaks nonsense.
GaTechBuckeye;2212301; said:During the press conference they said that Notre Dame can take the ACC's second automatic birth if they're within 1 win of the ACC team.
For instance, a 9-3 Notre Dame team can get in over a 10-2 ACC team.
AuTX Buckeye;2212306; said:they sold their soul to the devil ..... looks like its still gonna be a long time before the ACC wins a BSC game.
saw somewhere ND has to pay $5 Mill... but wait 27 months before joining the ACC.
Piney;2212312; said:The sold their soul for existence. I would bet that increase in exit fees would not have been approved if Notre Dame wasn't attached to it. So now the ACC teams cannot be poached (unless $50 million becomes pocket change in 10 years)
And really... this is a good deal for both parties. Probably better for Notre Dame, but the ACC benefits too. Now with Notre Dame part of their bowl lineup the price of those bowls go up. I am sure that Orange Bowl deal doesn't happen if this wasn't in the works. And since the ACC teams have hard times selling out their own stadiums, a visit from Notre Dame every 3-4 years would probably do wonders for their gate. The downside? A couple of teams that never travel to bowls get pushed down even further? Not like they have enough fans to care about that.
Dryden;2212316; said:The ACC has been so bad in BCS bowl games they've sold their soul to allow a team that's won two bowl games in 18 years to be their standard bearer?
ORD_Buckeye;2212305; said:After watching the domers take bowl bids away from Big East teams and never give back anything, how can the ACC be so [censored]ing stupid. ND takes; they don't give. You have a better chance of entering a mutually beneficial agreement with the Chinese or Tony Soprano than you do with the domers. And now that the playoff rules ensure that ND won't have to join a conference, why would anybody buy into their self-serving bull[Mark May].
I also wonder how their faculty feel about this after wanting to get into the CIC so bad. Big Ten schools should just start poaching anyone of value off their faculty. Gut the fucking place.
I'd say it just about cuts the Big 10 off at the pass. Brings the ACC to the Chicago market, they've already got a big imprint on the East Coast.ORD_Buckeye;2212319; said:From an on-field perspective, I agree. It does nothing to make the ACC nor ND more relevant in the immediate future. My take is larger and more long term in the sense of the conference footprint, the BTN exposure, recruiting and ultimately athletic department revenues.
The phoenix like rise from the ashes of the ACC doesn't necessarily weaken the Big Ten immediately, but it conceivably cripples our options for future growth and expansion.
cincibuck;2212331; said:Without looking anything up - or as Click and Clack would put it, "without the benefit of the scientific method" - I would say that the ACC is probably close to the BIG scholastically. Virginia = Michigan, UNC = Ohio State or Illinois or Wisconsin, Duke v Northwestern is a toss up, Ga Tech = Purdue. Don't know that much about the rest, but Miami is supposed to be academically sound and NC State has the benefit of the research triangle.