Notre Dame Should Kill College Football, and the Conferences, in Their Current Form

Absolutely everything is wrong with college football. No, I get it, you like going to games, and you should, but that doesn’t change what I said. From mega conferences to the ESPN rankings show every week, college football is simply a slave to big network money, whether it’s Disney/ESPN, Comcast, or FOX. Great old rivalries like Penn State-Pitt, Oklahoma-Oklahoma State, Pitt-West Virginia, Notre Dame-Michigan, or whatever one you miss, all ended because of conferences, television money, and greed. Let’s be honest, did a single person in the world really want to see the Washington-Purdue game, or the Mizzou-Vanderbilt game, or the Stanford-Wake Forest game? Of course not. The four major conferences now have zero geographical sense, and more teams than can possibly play each other in a year. “Conference championships” literally decided by obscure tiebreakers and computers. The SEC literally had one (maybe two, if you think Michigan or Georgia Tech is actually good) good out of conference win as a collection of 16 schools, and yet they got five teams into the playoffs (at the expense of the one good team they beat), basically because their network runs the process. The conference hasn’t won a national title since the NIL took over the game, and I think the reasons are abundantly obvious for that (by the way, Ed O is a national treasure). It’s a paper tiger, but one that has to be held up because ESPN has so much at stake in them. The only teams down there with a chance to do anything now are teams who have large NIL potential, basically the Texas teams (include Oklahoma, because oil) and Georgia. It’s a joke.

Conferences no longer have anything to do with old rivalries, or geography, or anything sane. They have to do with television markets. The more big markets you are in, the more money you are worth, the better your conference becomes. This basically sucks for the game. I just got done ripping the SEC, but let me give them some credit here for a second, they are the only major conference that truly makes any geographic sense at this point, but it only works because they’re the only part of the country that is more obsessed with college football than the NFL. The ACC has decided to go north and west, and makes zero sense now. The Big 12 is literally a collection of whoever is left out of the other three. The Big Ten? It’s the worst offender, now literally holding court in almost all of the top ten markets in the country. I mean sure, we all wanted Rutgers-UCLA, right?

How you spend your money says everything about what matters to you. ESPN has the SEC. It also has the ACC, and it added quite a few dollars onto that TV deal to insure that it essentially had Notre Dame’s road games in the deal with the ACC (Usually three or four a year). Notre Dame gets about $17-22.1 million a year from the ACC according to Google AI (though the ACC claims that’s not football related), on top of their $50 million plus from NBC. The new revenue model adds about $10 million per school for the top teams, who now will play Notre Dame more often (for instance, Clemson will now play them for 12 years, starting in 2027). At the time of the deal, ESPN added $3 million per school (approximately $50 million) to the payout. That number has only grown. Finebaum and the other talking heads can claim Notre Dame isn’t the ratings giant it claims, but both Disney and Comcast pay out money that says otherwise. Clemson and Florida State are still unhappy with their media payouts, but they would almost certainly leave if the $10 million or so boost they got was suddenly gone. It’s basic math. Unless you think both Comcast/NBC and Disney/ESPN are morons, Notre Dame is clearly making everyone a lot of money. Does Notre Dame get to pocket a lot more money than the ACC teams? Yes, sure. It’s obviously worth it to them too though.

What everyone wants from Notre Dame is to strip them of their independent TV deal with NBC. It would make less than zero sense for Notre Dame to give that up voluntarily though. The ACC isn’t going to stop scheduling games with them if they add $50 million plus annually to their TV deal. Two Big Ten teams this year, and three next year, line up to play them. A pair of SEC teams seem to show up every year. All told, Notre Dame gets ten Power 4 games easily, and they don’t have to split money with teams who add little value. It pisses off fans from other teams, but let’s be honest, if Alabama could add this kind of value, they wouldn’t be sharing with Kentucky and Mississippi State. Same for Michigan and USC. Again, how you spend your money says what’s important to you.

The ACC promoting Miami’s case for the CFB Playoff is not on it’s face offensive. Miami is a member school, and splits the payout with the other member schools. Miami campaigning for Miami is also not an issue, of course they would. In fact, Miami getting in over Notre Dame isn’t really a problem, while I think Notre Dame is better and Miami isn’t a contender, Miami won the game. Miami wasn’t the issue. The issue was the efforts to which ESPN, the ACC and SEC’s TV partner, went to campaign for Alabama at the expense of Notre Dame, and the degree to which the ACC took part. Both Miami and Notre Dame were better teams than Alabama this year. Again, winning SEC games is not some special achievement anymore. The ACC putting the Miami-Notre Dame game on a loop on their ESPN administered network the week of the selection, not to mention direct attacks on social media, was harmful. If the ACC isn’t an ally, why is Notre Dame participating with them? Do we not think one of the other conferences would enter into a deal with Notre Dame that *adds* money to their TV payouts for every member school? Of course they would. The only reasons they are in conferences is money. Don’t kid yourself.

Notre Dame should leave the ACC. It would kill the ACC, yes, and maybe that’s not great, but it’s probably necessary to do any real damage to ESPN. Skipping the Bowl Game did directly hurt the bottom line, and did damage to the value of the bowl brand, which hurt ESPN too, but that’s not the big hit. Killing one of their conferences would send the message that ESPN and the conferences are not really in charge here. It’s time for the NCAA to re-assert control, and Notre Dame could speed up that process in football right now. Break an entire conference and set off a domino effect the other three can’t quite handle. Or better yet, form a true “scheduling consortium” with a few other powerhouse teams where everyone can have their own TV deals and show how useless these conferences are. The point is, once one school shows they can devalue an entire conference, the whole game is over. Someone will have to step in, and the only possible entity is the NCAA.

I know this isn’t popular, because Notre Dame is not as popular as it once was. In the 1900’s, the overwhelming majority of Americans didn’t go to college, so they chose their team allegiances based on other factors. Notre Dame being forced to go independent and travel the country, as well as their ties to the Catholic Church, built in millions of fans. Today, a lot more people go to college, and most of them don’t go to Notre Dame. They don’t like Notre Dame being unique, because people hate unique things, and their schools are not unique. They’re going to kick and scream about Notre Dame delivering a shock to the system. If Notre Dame has the courage to soldier through it though, everyone will be better off when the conferences die, for football (to be clear, they’re not as problematic in other sports). They’re out of control and need to be reigned back in.

The NCAA needs to separate “power four” football into it’s own division. The “group of 5” conferences are playing a different sport where there are smaller budgets, little TV money, and tiny bits of NIL. The 18 Big Ten teams, 16 SEC teams, 17 ACC teams, 16 Big 12 teams, Notre Dame, Oregon State, Washington State, UCONN, and between 1 and 9 more teams should be put into a separate division altogether. This would form a division of 72 to 80 teams, which should them be split into 8 regional divisions of 9 or 10 teams (based on which number you pick). You would play 8 or 9 division/conference games, against EVERYONE in the conference/division. The eight champions should make the playoff, period. You can schedule anyone you want with your 3 or 4 other games. This is the only sensible way forward, the only way for college football to act like a serious sport. Consolidate the “Group of 5” schools into four conferences and create a playoff for that division too. From pure budget perspectives, this would be fair.

Notre Dame can do what needs to be done here. Live by the values that made the program great- independence. It was forced on Notre Dame. Notre Dame is big enough to force it on the sport. Tear down this house of cards and do everyone a favor. Neuter the overrated SEC.

How I Would Fix FBS College Football

Coaches being paid out millions to get lost, conference re-alignment that makes no sense, and games on the schedule that shouldn’t be played. This is the reality of NCAA Football in 2025. There are a lot of things that make no sense. When is the portal actually opened or closed? How many teams should be in the playoffs? Why are we still playing bowls?

It’s madness.

I’ve thought about it a bit this season, and begun to come up with how I want it to look- which won’t be how it goes. Even so, we have to start making some level of sense of the game again. What does winning your conference mean? What makes a team a playoff team? Can there be fairness with independent teams? Why did we kill geography? All of these can be answered. And fairly.

So let’s start at the important thing- the conferences. Realignment is basically rendering all conferences but two as irrelevant. If that’s the case, maybe we need a third D-1 to go with FBS and FCS. I don’t think we should go there. I would create six conferences of 20 teams- the Big 20, SEC, Atlantic 20, Big West, PAC 20, and American 20-, one conference of 16 (MAC), and Notre Dame can stay independent how they want. Here’s how I’d break them out-

  • Big 20– Penn State, Ohio State, Michigan, Michigan State, Indiana, Purdue, Northwestern, Illinois, Mizzou, Iowa, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Nebraska, Kansas, Colorado, Utah, Washington, Oregon, UCLA, and USC. They get their national conference. They shed a couple of schools who are better off elsewhere. Everyone can be happy and regionalism can die a slow death.
  • SEC– Virginia, North Carolina, Duke, Kentucky, Tennessee, Vanderbilt, South Carolina, Clemson, Georgia, Florida State, Florida, Alabama, Auburn, Ole Miss, Mississippi State, LSU, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Texas, and Texas A&M. And here is the most regional conference literally ever. They get to go all the way up to Virginia and bring in the whole old confederacy, plus. Who says no?
  • Atlantic 20– UMASS, Boston College, UCONN, Army, Syracuse, Rutgers, Temple, Pitt, West Virginia, Cincinnati, Louisville, Navy, Maryland, Virginia Tech, NC State, Wake Forest, Georgia Tech, UCF, South Florida, and Miami. And here we get the entire eastern seaboard united in what is essentially some sort of mix of Big East and ACC. Basically every big east coast market from Boston to Miami gets in on this. The Big 12 is free of it’s weird eastern arm. The teams that wanted out of the ACC get to leave, everyone else plays on.
  • Big West– Houston, Baylor, SMU, TCU, Texas Tech, Oklahoma State, Kansas State, Iowa State, Air Force, Colorado State, Arizona, Arizona State, BYU, UNLV, Boise State, Washington State, Oregon State, Cal, Stanford, and San Diego State. Basically, this is the premier conference west of the Mississippi River. There is somewhat of a mix academically, and that could make it a bit interchangeable with the next conference, but it would make for fun rivalries.
  • PAC 20– Louisiana, Tulane, Arkansas State, Memphis,Tulsa, Sam Houston, UTSA, North Texas, Rice, Texas State, UTEP, New Mexico State, New Mexico, Utah State, Wyoming, Nevada, San Jose State, Fresno State, Sacramento State, and Hawai’i. Again, another large Western leaning conference.
  • American 20– Delaware, James Madison, Liberty, ODU, Appalachian State, East Carolina, Charlotte, Coastal Carolina, Georgia State, Kennesaw State, George Southern, Jacksonville State, FIU, Florida Atlantic, South Alabama, Troy, UAB, Southern Miss, Louisiana-Monroe, and Louisiana Tech. This is a more east leaning version of the last conference.
  • MAC– Ohio, Buffalo, Northern Illinois, Central Michigan, Western Michigan, Eastern Michigan, Toledo, Kent State, Akron, Miami Ohio, Ball State, Bowling Green, Marshall, Western Kentucky, Middle Tennessee, and Missouri State. We all love the MAC.
  • Independent– Notre Dame.

Ok, so now that I am sure I pissed most of you off, good. Now we move on to scheduling. Every one of these conferences should agree to an 8 game schedule inside the conference. The “power” conferences (the first three or four) should agree to 8 conference games, 2 games against other power conferences, and no FCS games. Since Notre Dame has no conference and no conference title game, they should agree to a 13 game schedule, ten of which are against power conferences, and no FCS games. In exchange, the power conferences get two automatic bids to the playoffs, and Notre Dame can qualify automatically at 10-3 or 11-2 every year. Make the season 15 weeks to give every team a week or two off.

As for the playoff- 16 teams, period. All seven conference champions qualify automatically. The “power 4” conferences get a second. Notre Dame can qualify automatically if they win enough. That gives you 11 or 12 teams in automatically every year. Four or five at-large bids for the committee to hand out as they see fit. Seed based on BCS ranking. Week one at the higher seed. Then rotated the Rose, Orange, Sugar, Cotton, Fiesta, and Peach Bowl for the next two rounds. Highest seed can pick where they go among that round’s options. The rest of the bowls continue as is.

As for the portal and the NIL, there needs to be some rules. The portal should have very specific pre and post season dates that don’t move often at all. The package the schools actually are involved with for NIL’s should have a “by sport” salary cap. You can’t regulate outside groups, but at least reign it in.

This would be my initial fix. Some people would hate it, but it’s a start.