Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Irish should form an integrity conference

- By Kenneth Woodward Kenneth Woodward, a former religion editor for Newsweek, is writer-in-residence at the Lumen Christi Institute at the University of Chicago.

WHILE the college football world waits to see how the University of Notre Dame responds to the engorgemen­t of the Big Ten and the Southeaste­rn Conference, I have a suggestion for Notre Dame athletic director John Swarbrick, President John Jenkins and the university’s board of directors: Form a new and formidable football conference on principles other than money.

Call it the Integrity Continenta­l Football Conference and invite only schools with a reputation for high academic standards and enforcemen­t of those standards. For example, no universiti­es that offer athletes majors like athletic marketing and administra­tion would be included.

Forming a new conference would mean enticing schools away from several existing athletic conference­s, including the two new behemoths. That would not be easy, but Notre Dame is the only university with the national reputation, following and appeal to pull it off.

Here’s an initial list of target schools: Northweste­rn University from the Midwest.

Boston College from the Northeast. United States Naval Academy from the East.

Wake Forest University and the University of Virginia from the South.

Brigham Young University from the Mountain States.

Stanford University from the West Coast.

The University of Pittsburgh, the University of North Carolina, Georgia Tech and the University of California at Berkeley are other possibilit­ies. But one of the keys for success would be to limit conference membership to eight schools, which would allow each of them to play some teams from the two supersized proto-profession­al athletic conference­s.

Would such a move cost Notre Dame its cherished football independen­ce? Not necessaril­y. Through its current athletic arrangemen­t with the Atlantic Coast Conference, under which all of the university’s other sports teams compete in the ACC, that independen­ce is already qualified. Moreover, the Irish routinely play the teams on my projected list — and in the cases of Navy and Stanford, every year.

The proposed league would fall somewhere between the Ivy League and the preprofess­ional superconfe­rences.

At the moment, it appears that Notre Dame is in the enviable position of having both superconfe­rences as suitors, with the Big Ten holding the inside track.

The real temptation to join the Big Ten is money. The super-conference is expected to command more than $1 billion for the right to televise its football games, with an annual payout to each member school projected at around $65 million.

On the other hand, Notre Dame is reportedly seeking to up its contract with NBC to a bulbous $75 million a year for the rights to broadcast its football games. That would allow the Irish to remain an independen­t football power.

But thread throughout all this is an “X” factor: The College Football Playoffs. Will the playoffs expand from four to eight teams? If so, how many at-large spots would be allowed for an independen­t team like Notre Dame?

These are real economic issues for a team with no league title to aim for and for a school where football revenue supports the rest of its intercolle­giate sports programs. But I would hope that in the end, they are not the decisive ones.

Notre Dame is indeed in an enviable position, and I hope the university puts it to good use.

Notre Dame has always presented itself as higher-minded about collegiate sports than its competitio­n. Here’s a chance to prove it.

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