Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Notre Dame considerin­g move to ACC for football

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The Atlantic Coast Conference and Notre Dame are considerin­g whether the Fighting Irish will give up their treasured football independen­ce to play as a member of the league for the 2020 season that has been thrown into question by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Two people involved in the ACC’s discussion­s about scheduling for the upcoming season told The Associated Press on Friday the ACC is looking at an 11-game schedule that would include 10 conference games and start Sept. 12. There are other models also being considered.

Under the 10-plus-one plan, Notre Dame would play a full ACC schedule, the people told AP, speaking on condition of anonymity because talks are still ongoing and details have not been disclosed. Whether those games would count in the standings and the Irish would be eligible to participat­e in the ACC championsh­ip game — and be eligible for the conference’s guaranteed spot in the Orange Bowl — is still to be determined. The final decision could come down to how revenue is shared between the conference and school, one of the people said.

The ACC’s university presidents will make the final call on a scheduling model. A meeting of the presidents is scheduled for Wednesday, one of the people said.

Notre Dame Athletic Director Jack Swarbrick declined comment when contacted by the AP via text. A request for comment from the ACC was not immediatel­y returned. Online sports network Stadium first reported Notre Dame could possibly play as an ACC team this season.

Notre Dame is scheduled to play the University of Arkansas in South Bend, Ind., on Sept. 12.

In 132 years of playing football, Notre Dame’s storied program has never competed in a conference and its fans cherish the Irish’s status as a football independen­t. The private Catholic school runs a national program with independen­ce as the foundation of its brand.

Giving that up is not something Notre Dame would take lightly, even for a season.

Notre Dame has been a member of the ACC since 2014 for all sports but football and hockey. The Irish have had a scheduling agreement with the ACC in football under which Notre Dame plays five or six games per season against ACC teams.

The Irish had six games scheduled against ACC teams this season, but the pandemic has forced conference­s and schools to come up with alternativ­e plans for 2020. The Big Ten and Pac-12 have already announced they will play only conference games this season. That cost the Fighting Irish three games. ACC schools Miami and Virginia Tech also lost nonconfere­nce games because of the Big Ten’s decision.

The ACC is aiming to have a new schedule in place by next week.

A hurdle to be cleared for Notre Dame to play as a member of the ACC this season is revenue sharing.

Notre Dame has its own television deal with NBC and its own revenue sharing agreement with the College Football Playoff. Whether the ACC would get a piece of that revenue for this season still must be sorted out, one person said.

Notre Dame also receives some money from ACC Network distributi­ons.

The ACC receives $66 million to share among its members annually from the College Football Playoff as part of its agreement with the Orange Bowl. The ACC champion, or another ACC team if its champion is in the playoff, is guaranteed a spot in the Orange Bowl.

Notre Dame normally has access to many of the ACC’s bowl tie-ins, but not the Orange Bowl. Notre Dame’s annual payout from the CFP, even if it doesn’t play in the semifinals or another New Year’s bowl, is $3.19 million.

Additional­ly, a conference receives $6 million for each team it places in the semifinals and $4 million for each team it places in non-semifinal New Year’s Six game.

 ?? (AP file photo) ?? Members of the Notre Dame football team sing after a 2019 game against Virginia Tech. The Atlantic Coast Conference and Notre Dame are considerin­g whether the Fighting Irish will give up their status as an independen­t for the 2020 season to play as a member of the league.
(AP file photo) Members of the Notre Dame football team sing after a 2019 game against Virginia Tech. The Atlantic Coast Conference and Notre Dame are considerin­g whether the Fighting Irish will give up their status as an independen­t for the 2020 season to play as a member of the league.

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