The Columbus Dispatch

Could Big Ten come after Notre Dame next?

- Mike Berardino

SOUTH BEND, Ind. – Your first clue, should you choose to extrapolat­e wildly, is stenciled right there in plain sight on the second floor of the Guglielmin­o Athletics Complex.

“Thinking Big.”

That’s the daily reminder for all who pass through the frosted-glass doors that guard the control center of Notre Dame football’s reinvigora­ted national recruiting machine. “Thinking Big.”

Granted, that call to action was put in place well before Thursday’s seismic activity along the San Andreas Fault. And no, the “I” in “Big” isn’t a No. 1 like the cutesy conference logo, but the gears of change are grinding all the same.

See, hyperbole really doesn’t apply when it comes to the industry-shaking news that USC and UCLA are bolting the Pacific-12 for the Big Ten, starting with the fall of 2024. No sooner had that lightning bolt flashed across the bluegray sky than a titillated college football nation turned its hungry gaze to northern Indiana.

Would Notre Dame be next? Would the Irish – “Thinking Big” – finally be willing to join the megaconfer­ence trend?

Last July, the Southeaste­rn Conference’s stunning poach of Texas and Oklahoma for the fall of 2025 sent the greatly diminished Big 12 hurtling into survivor mode. Now it’s the Pac-12, which has long billed itself as the Conference of Champions, that is scrambling.

And Notre Dame seemingly holds all the leverage.

South Bend certainly seemed to be on the mind of Ohio State athletic director Gene Smith, the former Irish defensive lineman who played a role in both ‘70s-era national titles.

“I love my alma mater,” Smith told reporters in a Friday morning news conference in Columbus, “and I’ve always thought they should be in a conference. I don’t know what a next step would be (for Notre Dame), but I hope they consider that opportunit­y and I hope it’s the Big Ten.”

The pros would include guaranteed relevance in a rapidly changing college sports landscape, one that likely will see the College Football Playoff move from four teams to 12 once the dust settles from rampant realignmen­t.

It also would mean Notre Dame gaining access to the gargantuan TV pie Big Ten Commission­er Kevin Warren, a 1990 graduate of Notre Dame Law School, has been baking for some time.

NBC is reportedly at the forefront of those talks, and wouldn’t you know it: Notre Dame’s latest deal with NBC (at $15 million per year) expires with the 2025 season.

The cons? Well, those must be considered as well.

Fiercely protective of their football independen­ce, aside from a COVIDYEAR cameo with the Atlantic Coast Conference in 2020, the Irish have a long and twisted love-hate history with the

Big Ten.

First, they wanted in – badly – but the fledgling Western Conference (later Big Ten) rejected them multiple times in its first three decades after forming in 1896.

Repeated allegation­s of lax eligibilit­y rules, along with an undertone of religious bias against the Catholic university, hardened both sides.

Even when Notre Dame changed its eligibilit­y rules to mirror those of the Western Conference, its applicatio­n was denied.

A deal nearly came together in the late 1990s, nearly a quarter century ago, but this time it was Notre Dame yanking away its golden football and choosing to maintain the status quo as a uniquely national program.

Nowadays, the lines are a little more blurred.

Since 2014, Notre Dame has enjoyed membership in the ACC in all sports but football and men’s hockey. Football includes a scheduling alliance that sees Notre Dame play four or five ACC schools each year, and that has mostly worked as intended.

Starting with the 2017-18 season, Notre Dame hockey has played in a seventeam Big Ten, and school and league administra­tors seem pleased with that arrangemen­t. Travel, however, is far easier when it’s just bus trips around the Midwest rather than putting your Olympic sports teams on budget-straining flights to the coast.

That was the former arrangemen­t through Hockey East, with its Boston footprint.

Back in the spring of 2016, when Irish hockey and the Big Ten announced their partnershi­p, Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick noted in a statement the efficienci­es for the hockey program.

“The move will significan­tly reduce the time our team spends traveling,” the statement read, “increase the broadcast exposure for our program and allow us to take advantage of the natural rivalries that exist with the Big Ten schools that participat­e in hockey.”

Notre Dame already has natural rivalries in football (USC) and basketball (UCLA) with the Big Ten’s two newcomers, so that adds to the appeal. And keep an eye on Stanford, Notre Dame’s comparable on the West Coast in a variety of ways.

Should the Cardinal be swept into the Big Ten mix as it spirals ever-closer to 20 members, that could pique Notre Dame’s interest.

Then again, the modest ESPN broadcast contract with the ACC doesn’t just run through 2036. It also includes a provision that if Notre Dame were to join any conference in football before 2036, it would be contractua­lly obligated to join the ACC.

The exit fee for that request, should Notre Dame opt for divorce, would figure to offset a good portion of any windfall that comes from jumping to the Big Ten. Then again, maybe the other Big Ten schools – currently at 16 and counting – would be willing to share the burden.

Suddenly, “Thinking Big” isn’t just a slogan on a fancy glass door.

 ?? ROBERT FRANKLIN/SOUTH BEND TRIBUNE ?? Notre Dame’s Tyler Buchner (12) reacts after running in a touchdown during a 31-16 win over USC on Oct. 23, 2021.
ROBERT FRANKLIN/SOUTH BEND TRIBUNE Notre Dame’s Tyler Buchner (12) reacts after running in a touchdown during a 31-16 win over USC on Oct. 23, 2021.

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