There has been a lot going on in recent weeks with Notre Dame football so it could have been easy to miss but just before the Fighting Irish made the trip to the National Championship game, athletic director Pete Bevacqua spoke about a possible new annually rivalry game.
Bevacqua praised the consistency of Clemson‘s program back at Media Day ahead of the National Championship and mentioned what the benefits of an annual game with the Tigers would bring.
Fast forward not quite two weeks and it sure seems like Bevacqua knew changes to Notre Dame’s deal with the ACC may be coming.
As most of you probably are aware, Notre Dame has had a deal with the ACC since 2014 where the Irish play five opponents from the conference each season. It allows Notre Dame to have a strong enough foundation to stay independent, and the ACC to benefit by getting Notre Dame on schedules of teams it normally wouldn’t be on.
Ross Dellenger of Yahoo Sports has a report this morning about the ACC finalizing a deal with ESPN to stay with the network through 2036. In that report Dellenger reveals some potential changes to Notre Dame’s deal with the conference:
ACC presidents met Wednesday for a briefing and are expected to accept, if they have not already done so, the network’s extension, though there is little to no other option. Within the ACC’s deal with ESPN, the network — not the league — is afforded the option to extend the package by its own discretion.
As part of a scheduling arrangement under discussion, the league’s biggest brands — Florida State, Miami and Clemson — are expected to play more football games regularly with Notre Dame. The Irish are expected to play, at the very least, two of the three each season in a rotation.
Dellenger’s piece also gets into the ACC agreement and its changes that look to keep the conference together and not disrupt that all-important Grant of Rights deals between schools.
The deal is great by ACC Commissioner Jim Phillips if it quiets the noise from Clemson and Florida State about possibly leaving the conference, but comparing those three programs in football is hardly an even match.
The last 15 years has seen Clemson rise to a college football superpower. Although Dabo Swinney’s squad has taken a slight step back in that regard, it was still a College Football Playoff team this past season after going 10-3 overall and winning the ACC championship.
It’s Florida State and Miami that are a bit more of a question. It’s not to say Florida State hasn’t had success, it won it all in 2013 and should have been a playoff team in 2023 following a perfect regular season, but it has had extreme lapses as well. The last four seasons Notre Dame has played Florida State the Seminoles have combined to go 15-30 in those seasons (2018, 2020, 2021, and 2024).
Meanwhile, Miami still has that “U” on the side of its helmet but has failed to be truly elite in years. The Hurricanes joined the ACC back in 2004 and is still yet to win an ACC championship. Furthermore, the Hurricanes have played in just one ACC Championship game in that time. For reference, Notre Dame has played in as many ACC Championship games in that time, and Notre Dame has only played in a conference for one season since it first played football back in 1887.
Essentially, it’s great for Notre Dame getting name brands on the schedule regularly, but is anything but a guarantee that those games will actually end up being as big as they are hyped before a year.
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