Showing posts with label scheduling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label scheduling. Show all posts

March 09, 2011

Buffet of Irish Goodies: Mardi Gras Edition

Plenty of ground to cover in a remarkable couple of weeks for Irish athletics.

First things first, Mike Brey deserves a standing applause for the job he's done this season.  So take a moment, stand up from your CPU and acknowledge the Mock with a hearty three cheers clap.

Ahh, that's better.  This season has felt like a dream where we keep pinching ourselves to snap back to the reality that's been ND basketball for 20+ years.  Except the team keeps rolling and is picking up momentum.  Even as the wins mounted against the upper echelon of the BEast, my stubborn reflex of expecting the other shoe to drop persisted.  But now I'm coming around to the fact that the 2010-2011 Irish squad should be judged on their own merits and not compared to past disappointments.  We've been watching legitimately one of the top teams in the country.  This team is really good!!  Start believing.  There's more noise to make.

With a reliance on team more than any other school in the country, Brey has done the unthinkable and positioned the Irish for a tantalizing #1 or #2 seed in the Big Dance.  Alright, I have to pinch myself again...a #1 seed wouldn't shock anyone?!  How in the name of Matt Gotsch did we get here?!

Nobody in their wildest dreams could have predicted this, and we certainly didn't come close in our season preview.  While I was confident the team would be dancing come March, I didn't think we'd be picking our partner, so to speak.  We got hung up on the athletic potential of other schools without giving enough credit to a tight core group who know each other's games inside and out and are willing to scrap, claw and gut their way to victory after victory.  From all accounts, the team is hell bent on advancing to the conference final in MSG, a feat that would be a program first.  Why doubt anything from this group now?

I can't see any way the selection committee can seed ND lower than a #2, which should be good enough to land the coveted Chicago pod.  Matchups are always the deciding factor in March, but playing two games in a quasi-home atmosphere should propel them to the 2nd weekend for the first time since 2003 when Torin Francis and Chris Thomas led the team to victories over Wisconsin-Milwaukee and Illinois.  That's a long freaking hiatus from making any sort of bracket commotion - hence the reluctance to wholeheartedly buy into the Mike Brey method.

But give the Mock his due (and he has, by Yahoo and the Big East today!).  He's finally struck upon the right balance of players who know their roles and can all do multiple things well.  Hansbrough has been a revelation, galvanizing the team as a lightning rod leader and gutsy clutch scorer.  He completely deserved being named POY over Kemba Walker.  Abromaitis fills the Brey "lean-on-him-to-a-fault" streak shooter, but Tim does much more as an active rebounder and a smart presence at all times.  Carleton Scott prowls the paint on defense and does a little bit of everything on offense.  He's also never afraid to shoot and knock down buckets in crucial situations.  Ty Nash brings a savvy "old man at the Y" flair to his post game.  He uses his butt better than any Irish player since Harold Swanagan.  Nash's improvement at the FT line has been a huge lift as he's not a liability at the end of games.  Scott Martin is capable of athletic plays when you least expect.  Eric Atkins is used as a change of pace guard and Cooley logs lumbering minutes and has shown more than enough capacity to bang and produce on both ends.

We'll check in with the team later in the week, but confidence is brimming in these parts.  Keep proving to the non-believers out there.

Power 10 - Most Dangerous Tourney Teams
1. Duke - Still have to go through the defending champs with two excellent playmakers on the inside and outside.

2. Ohio State - Solid senior nucleus complemented by the immovable freshman force in the middle.  If Diebler keeps up his NBA Jam "On Fire" routine, they'll be dancing in the streets of Columbus.

3. Kansas - Guard play is suspect, but they've been an absolute machine this season.

4. Pittsburgh - One of these years Jamie Dixon will make the leap.  The Panthers are the definition of tough.  Not a team you want to face.

5. North Carolina - Out of nowhere, Roy Williams turned this squad into the ACC champs.  I'm a little leery of the reliance on two freshman, but if you're good, you're good.

6. Purdue - Maybe the best 1-2 punch in the game with Johnson and Moore.

7. Notre Dame - It's crazy that this may be too low.

8. Wisconsin - Completely throttled by a revenge-seeking OSU at home on Sunday, but Bo Ryan works wonders and has two great players to lean on.

9. Kansas State - Jake Pullen can absolutely pull a Puckett and invite the Wildcats to jump on his back.  They're finding their team rhythm at the right time.  Maybe I should pick a 3rd Big East team here, like Syracuse, but the power of Pullen frightens me more than anything Cuse or Jimmer can do.

10. Butler - Representative of every Cinderella that opened the floodgates for every mid-major (Gonzaga, BYU, San Diego State, George Mason, VCU, etc.) to say why not us.  Well, Butler is back and returns much of the team that made everyone's heart skip three beats.  Seeing their name on the other side of the bracket is the last thing any coach or fanbase wants to see.

A Real Hoot
This headline would be much different if the basketball team had announced a 3-game series with Temple instead of football.  So be it.  Schedule news is always worthy of dissection on these pages.  The Owls were finally rising from the eternal grave of their moribund program with the Golden touch of Miami's new head coach.  Looks like the momentum should continue with up and coming former Florida coordinator Steve Adazzio finally getting his turn at head coach.

I wouldn't put this matchup on the level of Western Michigan's "buy" game, even though both schools hail from the MAC.  It serves a dual purpose of keeping the East Coast in the rotation for a barnstorming tour stop (which has been pretty successful so far, according to an excellent and insightful Swarbrick interview by SBT's Eric Hansen) and primes the pump of the Pennsylvania recruiting pipeline.  Look past the fact that Philly is a basketball town, though Brey could reap some spillover benefits.  Would I trade this 3-game series for a similar deal with someone like Clemson, NC State or Georgia Tech?  In a heart beat.  But it's nothing for ND Nation to wring their hands over.

Early Commits to Football Class of 2012 
Lost in the hullabaloo surrounding the basketball team has been Brian Kelly's first two verbal commitments for 2012.  California CB Tee Shepard (video) made the first splash in the recruiting pool, jilting USC and other top schools, to join the trending #NDdefenserules.  Shepard knows the secondary is up for grabs and will ample chance to push for playing time from the start.  Some guys have names built for their position.  Tee Shepard has a great ring to it for a disruptive defensive back (Lito Shepard might have something to do with that).  Whether he ultimately plays safety or corner, it's a solid first step out of the gate for the Irish.  And we didn't have to wait too long for the #2 commit as Dayton-area Taylor Decker made it official this week.  Decker has a huge frame at 6'9'', 265 lbs. and projects to be an OT.  Paul Longo's got to be licking his chops to start molding him into a physical specimen.  Love his candid thoughts about being so decisive in the process.  When it feels right, why wait?  He recognizes the good thing happening on campus and wants to be a part of it.  More power to both of these individuals.  Let's see this snowball.

April 28, 2009

Scheduling Tidbits

Buried in the news of Domers signing on with NFL teams as free agents is a tasty nugget of scheduling info, courtesy of East Lansing. Looks like the series that took root in 1897 will officially continue through 2025, and that's fine. I have no qualms maintaining our relationship with MSU. They probably rank 3rd in terms of historical tradition with Notre Dame - USC and Michigan obviously being ahead of them.

A couple thoughts: HUGE statement from Dantonio & Co. with home-and-homes against West Virginia and Alabama. I'm sure the Spartan faithful will work themselves into a frenzy welcoming Saban back to town. Alabama and Notre Dame as non-conference opponents in 2016-17 might be biting off more than Sparty can chew, but I tip my cap to them for having the cajones to pull it off.

More important for Notre Dame's future schedule flexibility are the two-year breaks in the extension with Michigan State, due in 2014-15 and 2020-21. Weis and Swarbrick must jump at the opportunity to beef up the schedule with another traditional jewel like Texas, Bama, Florida, Miami, Georgia or LSU. If MSU can do it, it would be a shame if we didn't up the ante and cue up some "Games of the Year" in their place. I can't even fathom the prospect of more watered down regional matchups. That's not what Irish football was built on.

There's a glimmer of hope. At the Annual Rockne dinner for the Chicago Alumni Club last week, Swarbrick spoke about the tradition of playing national schedules, specifically Jesse Harper's first season on the sidelines in 1913. Harper scheduled road games with Army, Penn State and Texas within 27 days of each other, en route to a 7-0 undefeated campaign and putting Notre Dame football on the map for good. When Rockne took the reins, he merely continued Harper's legacy of testing yourself against the best competition. The fact that Swarbrick is publicly talking about this tradition bodes well. Hopefully there's some exciting news to come shortly.

September 24, 2008

Counting Down Football's Cathedrals

If you're like us at We Is ND, then college football is in your blood. Saturdays are holy days of obligation, not simply to rejoice or wallow with the outcome of the Irish, but an opportunity to join a greater congregation across the country. The palette of conferences and regions that canvas the U.S. is a dazzling array of tradition and pageantry in the sports landscape. The experiential component at each school makes Saturdays an all-day affair that is much more than just 60 minutes of football between the lines. Gameday atmospheres combine campus pilgrimages, generations-old traditions and cheers, tailgate parties that transcend your typical get-togethers, young and old fans alike basking in the opportunity to celebrate the love affair each shares with the school and team.

If the games are the service that we attend to witness the drama unfold, then the stadiums are the cathedrals, standing monuments that open their doors to the ticketed masses. They come in all sizes, shapes, colors, and quirks. Some are built with the architectural intention to contain the cacaphony of clapping hands and cheering voices within its structure, giving rise to true home field advantage. There are few greater natural highs than walking through the gates of any stadium, sitting down and basking in the spectacle that surrounds you. The pomp and circumstance of the college game sets it apart from its corporate counterpart, the NFL. Student sections dominate the decibel readings, imploring the rest of the crowd to join them in the art of disrupting the visitors.

Thanks to Notre Dame's independence (which has been questioned on these pages), we have had the opportunity to visit various locales and enjoy other tradition rich schools. I conducted a poll among the We Is posse to compile a ranking of the stadiums we have been a part of. In fairness, only those stadiums at least two of us had been to were used for the ranking. This is an ongoing quest to travel to all parts of the land and join in as many traditions as we can. Just because your favorite stadium wasn't ranked doesn't mean it's not on our list of places to go.

A rundown on how the stadiums were scored. There were 6 categories to score a school, 1 - 10, 10 being the highest. I averaged the score of each category and added up the 6 averages to get an aggregate final score. The six categories:

Campus Vibe - basically a "cool" scale on what it's like to be at a given school - what's to like, or not like, about campus?

Fan Factor - pretty self-explanatory, but how passionate and loud are the fans? Also, are they welcoming or obnoxious to visitors? Educated or ignorant football fans? The people make the place, so how do they stack up?

Tailgate Scene - rising early to join the pre-game festivities and winding down after the game, some fanbases can write the book on tailgating;

Tradition - the goose bump factor: pre-game, during game, post-game; you know when you're a part of something bigger than the game, and it makes a difference;

Surrounding Area - the bar scene and direct area around campus that makes the preceding night and post-game fun to be around...or not around;

Intangibles - what happened on the trip that made it unique; this either makes you rehash the fond stories every time you're together, or you've pushed the awful memories into the farthest recesses of your mind;

Stay tuned for the countdown.........

August 09, 2008

Cuse is in the House??

Looks like a 10 year home and "home" (home being the Meadowlands for the Cuse) series with Syracuse is on the verge of happening.

What do you think Irish fans?? Is this the marquee November matchup you've all been dying for?? Are you as excited as I am that we never picked up the phone to return Miami or Alabama's call for a series and instead lined up a ten year series with a team that went 2-10 last year??

I don't have any problem with this series, but not at the expense of other quality games. Syracuse will turn their program around eventually with a new coach, but I hope that this series doesn't prevent us from lining up other quality home and home matchups.

In case you are curious, here is our projected 2010 football schedule (Jimmy Clausen and Robert Hughes' senior years):

9-4 Purdue
9-11 Michigan
9-18 @ Michigan State
9-25 Stanford
10-2 @ Boston College
10-9 Pittsburgh
10-16 Army @ Chicago
10-23 Navy @Baltimore, MD
11-7 Connecticut
11-13 Utah
11-20 Syracuse
11-27 @ Southern California

Is anyone as excited as I am about those back to back November home games against Utah and Syracuse?? Can't wait to put in my lottery requests for those huge matchups. Well, I guess we will have as good a chance as ever to go undefeated that year.

Checking in on an opponent, USC QB Mark Sanchez dislocated his knee cap yesterday in practice. Sounds like he will be out for the opener and possibly longer. Could be something to keep an eye on. Maybe Mitch Mustain will have his day in the sun after all.

August 06, 2008

Maui Invitational Bracket

For you college hoops fans out there, the Maui Invitational bracket has been released. Notre Dame and Indiana are squaring off in the first round. I have to say that I am pretty excited for that one, and it will be a great start to Thanksgiving week. It makes me a little nervous to see that Indiana name, but they are going to really struggle next year. Who is left in that program?? Crean will build them up in the next few years, but it should be an easy win for the Irish this year.

It looks like we will have to go through Indiana, Texas, and North Carolina to win the tournament, so it could be a daunting task. If we make the final, that 10 pm championship game on the night before Thanksgiving on ESPN could be a doozie between Notre Dame and North Carolina.

Maui is going to set the tone for ND this year. If we perform well in this tournament, it could set up a great season. At the very least, a great performance by the Irish in Maui could take some of the sting out of a potentially bad performance a few days later at the LA Colisseum against the USC Trojans.

Here is further information on the Maui Invitational:

Dates: Nov. 24-26
Site: Lahaina Civic Center, Maui, Hawaii
Official Bracket (last season's record; home team listed second):
Monday, Nov. 24:
Quarterfinal #1: Saint Joe's* (21-13) vs. Texas* (31-7), 3 p.m. ET, ESPN2
Quarterfinal #2: Indiana* (25-8) vs. Notre Dame* (25-8), 5 p.m. ET, ESPN2
Quarterfinal #3: North Carolina* (36-3) vs. Chaminade% (21-8), 9:30 p.m. ET, ESPNU
Quarterfinal #4: Oregon* (18-14) vs. Alabama (17-16), 11:59 p.m. ET, ESPN2
Tuesday, Nov. 25:
Consolation #1: 1:30 p.m. ET, ESPNU
Consolation #2: 4 p.m. ET, ESPN2
Semifinal #1: 7 p.m. ET, ESPN
Semifinal #2: 9 p.m. ET, ESPN
Wednesday, Nov. 26:
Fifth-place game: 2 p.m. ET, ESPN2
Third-place game: 4 p.m. ET, ESPN2
Seventh-place game: 7 p.m. ET, ESPNU
Championship: 10 p.m. ET, ESPN

In other ND news, here's a good blog update from Andy Katz on ND hoops and our upcoming trip to Ireland.

Finally, there's also a good blog update from Katz on Travis Ford's first few months at Oklahoma State. Mark it down, Travis Ford is going to do big things at Oklahoma State. They are a major sleeper in the Big 12 this year. He's a Pitino disciple and loves to get up and down the floor, so look out for the Cowboys.

July 09, 2008

ND-Miami: Make it happen


The U is calling us out for a game. Memo to the new athletic director, we want this game. Get it done, and I'll be there with a "Catholics vs. Convicts" tshirt ready to go. We haven't played Miami in almost 20 years, so it's time to restart the rivalry. They are actually a good opponent for a neutral site game instead of a home and home since we have had bad experiences down at "The OB" in the past. Get this game to a fan-friendly neutral site somewhere on the east coast, and it would be a huge game. Heck, I'll play them at Del Boca Vista retirement community if they want. ND-Miami is a no-brainer, and it's a perfect fit for NBC to use for its primetime telecast vehicle. We don't even need a new AD to say yes to Miami for this game. Then again, knowing our current administration, we'll probably turn it down and immediately use that spot for Baylor. Why set up a game that fans would be excited about for years when you can set up a 48-0 win over Baylor in front of a half-full crowd and about 13 viewers on NBC??

Here's the article from the Miami Herald with the relevant text:

"Hocutt said UM won't play FIU but wants to book marquee opponents and would be interested in speaking with Notre Dame about one of its new, annual prime-time neutral site NBC games."

http://www.miamiherald.com/news/breaking_news/story/597430.html

Just seeing that "ND to renew storied rivalry with Miami" headline on the front page of ESPN.com would be awesome and send an immediate message that we are always willing to line up marquee games.

I'll throw out a perfect venue as well. Giants Stadium. If ND wants to barnstorm, let's take our act to the biggest media market in the country.


Miami is on record saying they want a game. The ball is in our court. We should respond quickly with two words:

"Anytime, anywhere."

If we don't respond, the silence will be deafening.

July 02, 2008

What's in a tier??


As the ten people who actually read this blog are well aware, there's been a lot of consternation in recent years about the future of Notre Dame's football schedule. If you care about seeing legendary games along the lines of 1988 Notre Dame-Miami and 1993 Notre Dame-Florida State ever again in Notre Dame Stadium, you are probably as concerned as I am about the recent changes to ND's football schedules.

We'll get into some other thoughts in a minute on ND's schedule, but I wanted to address this recent "tiers" discussion that has been going on the last couple weeks over on NDNation.com. As an ND fan and alum, I appreciate their efforts to bring the issues regarding ND's decision to lighten the schedule to the forefront for discussion, but I think that the recent "tiers" stuff is a classic case of overanalysis. Everyone is trotting out various models (4-4-4 vs. 3-6-3) for schedules and throwing out formulas for which teams are "tier one" programs and which teams are "upper tier two" programs and whether a team belongs in "tier two" or "tier three." While I enjoy the discussions of whether Cal is a "tier one" football program, is that really the point here?? It seems like the topic has veered off course a little bit.

For the record, I'm as hot and bothered about the proposed changes to ND's scheduling philosophy as anyone. The fact that Kevin White and John Heisler were out there openly turning down home and home matchups with Alabama and Georgia because of a prevoius commitment with UConn still bugs me to this day. The powers that be at ND have been preaching the "no new heavyweights" mantra and are demanding to play our road games in pro stadiums. If these proposed schedules are the ones that we'll be seeing for the next decade, then my interest in Notre Dame football will significantly decline. I'll still watch the games on tv, but it's going to be tough to get me excited to go up to South Bend for that proposed 2010 home schedule. Can't wait for that 5 week stretch of Army, Navy, "Buy game" (read: Duke), Rutgers, "Buy game" (read: UConn). We've basically formed the Notre Dame football conference for future opponents: Navy, Stanford, Purdue, MSU, USC, UConn, Michigan, Pitt, BC, and Army. What a league!! Ugh.

ND is a legendary program because we have always had the attitude that we will play "anyone, anywhere." Now, it is Pete Carroll and USC who are telling the world that they'll play "anyone, anytime, anywhere." Anyone who roots for ND and cares about our legacy in the college football world should be concerned about the decision of the athletic department to dumb down the schedule in the name of revenue generation and an easier path to the national championship. Kevin White's version of "anytime, anywhere" was to play Baylor in Dallas and UConn in East Rutherford. Whoopee. That's not the Notre Dame way, and fans don't want to play a soft schedule. I don't want to take the West Virginia route to get to the BCS.

NDNation has done a great job in the last year or two driving home this point, but I don't agree with the idea that we need to follow a particular formula for setting up the schedule. I'd prefer to use a different term: the smell test. Does our football schedule pass the "smell test"?? If you look at our schedule, does it look like a quality schedule?? Do other college football fans (i.e. SEC fans) respect our schedules?? I don't need categories or formulas. I just want to look at the schedule and see interesting games, big matchups, good balance, and some potentially good road trips. I'd like to see games against teams from all different conferences, and games in different regions of the country. I don't care whether Texas A&M or UCLA are tier one teams or tier two teams. Both those teams would be interesting and exciting opponents for a home and home series, and it doesn't matter to me whether they fit some predetermined quota for "tier one" teams.

Our athletic department has made a conscious effort to avoid seeking out games like the ones mentioned above, and that's the most important issue. I don't care whether we play 4 tier one teams or 3 tier one teams. The bottom line is that Notre Dame's future schedules are not up to par with past schedules, and let's focus on doing what we can to get more quality games on the schedule.

Some other thoughts on the ND schedule while we're here:

The SEC -

Here is a list of all the SEC teams we're scheduled to play in the next ten years:










Yup, NONE. What the heck happened to SEC teams?? Why don't we schedule them anymore?? We can line up a 10 year deal with UConn but can't find some room for Alabama or Florida?? We have Nick Saban practically begging us for a game, and we're telling him that we have a "no new heavyweights" policy?? WHAT ARE WE DOING??

And to make matters worse, word has come out that Georgia asked us about a home and home series, and we asked to play the "road" game in Atlanta instead of on Georgia's campus. Are you kidding me?? It's flat out insulting for us to ask someone like Georgia to play their home game in Atlanta. Did Kevin White miss the memo that Georgia is in the top 5 this year?? Same would go for asking Texas to play their "home" game in Dallas instead of Austin. Those schools are every bit as big as us in terms of negotiating clout, so it's ridiculous to think that they wouldn't expect a home game out of the deal. It's just a terrible way to come to the negotating table. White was giving out terms that no reasonable program would agree to and then not budging on it. It's not a coincidence that Kevin White wasn't able to land big names on the future schedules when he was taking that style of negotiation. Georgia called us about a deal, and we couldn't get it done. Based upon all the other evidence of White's scheduling philosophy, I find it hard to believe that Georgia was the problem in that negotiation.

If we're not going to play the SEC, at least give me a game like Clemson or Virginia Tech or somebody like that. Or how about a lesser SEC team like South Carolina or Arkansas?? Is this so hard?? What happened to getting some big home games on the schedule?? Who the heck is going to attend these November games against UConn and Army and Baylor?? Does ND really think we're going to want to go to those games??

No New Heavyweights


It's never a good sign when your athletic director is openly telling the world that we don't want to play any more "heavyweights." For you fans of the tier system, he's talking about big games. Marquee games. Games against teams like Texas and Alabama and Florida and Auburn and Nebraska. Games that make you pump your fist when they are announced. Games that you are so excited about that you have trouble sleeping the night before the game. Those kinds of games.

I like playing USC and Michigan every year, but I'd like to add one more "big name" team to the schedule for a home and home series every year. You could usually guarantee an LSU or Tennessee type game on the schedule, or maybe someone like Florida State. It gives us a little variety, and I like taking road trips to places like Tennessee, LSU, Bama, Texas, etc. The SEC teams are playing 4-5 powerhouse teams a year, so I don't see why we can't get 3 good games on our schedule. I think we should have at least one big time SEC or big time Big 12 team (or Miami/FSU) on the schedule every year. I'm not asking for 10 top 10 teams a year. Just one. There is some clamoring for four tier one games a year, but I think four is unnecessary. If you add one big time game and make other adjustments (which we'll get to), that type of schedule would be plenty tough. We supposedly have added Oklahoma for 2012 and 2013 (no contract signed yet), so it would be nice to build on that momentum.

It's more of an attitude than anything. With USC,you know they probably would play anyone, anwhere, and at least they are trying to put together the best schedule that they can. With our AD, we have an attitude like "well we don't really want to play too many road games and we don't want too many heavyweights, so we lined up November games with Baylor and Army....enjoy!!" It just doesn't fly with me.

Road Trips

What is going to be the big "road trip" for the students these days like we had with Nebraska and Tennessee and FSU and other games?? A trip to Foxboro for freaking UConn?? I'm pretty sure that won't match up to watching ND march into the home of the #1 ranked team in America with 80,000 cornfed Husker fans cheering them on. And I don't think that going to see ND-Baylor in Dallas will live up to the pandemonium of walking out of a completely silent Neyland Stadium singing the ND fight song after shocking the world in 2004.

Could you imagine being an ND student in 2008?? No SYRs, no underage bars, no tailgating, Reslife breathing down everyone's neck, now no good road trips for football games because our athletic department is afraid to schedule some good teams. Good god, I'm pretty sure I would be filling out my transfer paperwork within a few months.

7-4-1

Probably the three most infamous numbers these days in Notre Dame sports. After the recent NBC contract extension (which is a great thing for ND football as far as I'm concerned), it pretty much confirmed the long-rumored 7 home games-4 road games-1 neutral site game formula as our scheduling policy through 2015. NBC wants a night game, so we are giving them a night game on a neutral field (brief comment---why is ND so afraid of having a night home game?? God forbid we actually have an intimidating home environment for a change).

Honestly, I don't have a huge problem with this 7-4-1 setup in some ways, but it doesn't work with all of our other obligations. With our 3 game commitment to the Big East, the 3 "rivalry" games (USC, Navy, Michigan), and the inexplicable long term commitments to Purdue, Michigan State, and Stanford, there's no room for any other home and home matchups. If we are only playing 4 road games a year, they are already used up with those previous commitments. So if you are looking to see a home and home with Alabama or Texas or Miami, there's no room now that ND has boxed itself in with the 7-4-1 policy and all the other commitments.

The 7-4-1 can work as a model for scheduling if we need the revenue and want to keep pace with other schools who are playing 7-8 home games a year, but we need to make some changes if we're going to see the variety on our schedules that the fans want to see. One obvious solution would be to cut down or rearrange some of those long term partners. Let's address those one at a time.

Stanford

Of all the schools who are permanent or semi-permanent on our schedule, the one that makes the least amount of sense is Stanford. Do you all realize that ND has played Stanford for the last 12 straight years and 19 of the last 21 years with no end in sight?? Why is Stanford a permanent fixture on our schedule?? How did this happen?? I don't get it. Unless we're talking about the greatest golfer of all-time, what is even remotely interesting about Stanford athletics??

Stanford football is just plain lousy. Other than the 2005 comeback win at Stanford, I can't think of one highly anticipated game with them in the entire history of the series, and yet we play them every single year. I don't see what they bring to the table, and I definitely don't see the need to play them every year. I know that we like to play a game out west every year and need a west coast opponent when we play USC at home, but is Stanford the only option?? Why?? It's not like there are a ton of ND alums in the Bay Area (the game at Stanford never seems to be sold out), and it's not really a hot bed for recruiting talent. Why not mix it up with some other schools and use the west coast road trip to visit some other parts of the west??

If I was in charge of scheduling, the first thing I would do is announce that the series with Stanford has been reduced from a yearly event to a rotation with other Pac 10 teams. Move Stanford into a rotation with Cal, UCLA, Arizona State, Oregon, and Washington. If we replaced Stanford with a home and home with Oregon, that would be a HUGE upgrade to the schedule alone. Adding Oregon to our home schedule would be a unique game that would generate excitement, and the return road trip out to Eugene would be entertaining. I refuse to believe all the hype about the "intimidating" atmosphere at Autzen Stadium, but I'd love to head out there to check it out and see for myself. Moving Stanford into a rotation with other Pac 10 schools is an obvious solution to the limitations of the 7-4-1. Honestly, that move alone would make our schedules much more interesting.

Purdue and Michigan State

While I do have an interest in playing Purdue and Michigan State on a regular basis, I'd like to see a couple changes in our relationship with them. Personally, I'd like to see us occasionally take Purdue and Michigan State off the schedule for the purposes of opening up a spot for a big home and home game with someone like Texas. We're using all our good early season spots (when conference teams are playing their nonconference schedules) on Purdue and Michigan State. If we want to get some big games on the schedule, we need to open up spots for them early in the year.

Another option would be to demand that these teams play us in November or we move on to someone else. We absolutely NEED good opponents in November. I know I keep harping on this, but you cannot close your season with Navy, Army, Rutgers, Duke, Pitt, Stanford. If we are going to be playing those types of schedules down the stretch, we are going to get crucified by the national media.

We're just asking to have the ESPN hacks all over our backs as soon as these schedules become public. The last thing I want is to see a 12-0 ND team get dropped in the polls in a couple years because our schedule wasn't good enough. And if people don't think we will get screwed by those types of schedules, they're kidding themselves. You can't trot out that kind of schedule and expect anyone to take you seriously, especially when we aren't in a conference and don't have conference championship games or anything like that.

So if we want to beef up that November schedule, it makes a lot of sense to ask Purdue/MSU to move some games there. If they don't want to do it, move on to someone else.

The Big East

The Big East takes a lot of flak from ND fans, but I don't have any problem with playing 3 Big East teams a year. The Big East has been great for the hoops program, and I like the idea of showing loyalty to our partners in the Big East by making the commitment to play them in 3 games. The Big East is a good league. They don't have the powerhouse teams (LSU, USC, Michigan, Texas type games), but just about everyone in the league is a solid middle tier game. A lot of the Big East teams (UConn, South Florida, Louisville, Cincy) are up and coming programs, so some of those games could turn out to be barnburners. We could line up home and homes with Rutgers, Pitt, WVU, South Florida, Cincy, Louisville, and UConn, and they would be good additions to the schedule. There is no difference between playing those teams and the Purdue/MSU type teams. 3 Big East teams a year is fine with me. I also like that they are willing to play us in November.

Heck, I would be ok with a 10 year deal with UConn if we were simultaneously working on some home and homes with Georgia, Texas, Florida, etc. But Kevin White tried to set up schedules so that UConn is potentially going to be one of our "big" games, which is absolutely comical. It is a big game compared to Baylor and Duke, but not against our historical standards of scheduling. And if we can't get games with Georgia or Texas, then go get the next best thing and line up some games with Clemson, Texas A&M, Arkansas, Georgia Tech, South Carolina, Oklahoma State, Cal, Arizona State, and UCLA type teams. Not all of them, but maybe a couple. If we struck a deal to play at Arkansas in October and then Clemson at home in November and then reversed them the following year, I would be very pleased and very excited. It's certainly better than building a November schedule of Navy, Baylor, UConn, Rutgers, Stanford and expecting to get any respect out there. The 2010 schedule has consecutive games against Army, Navy, "Buy Game" (UConn), Rutgers,"Buy Game" (Baylor/Duke??), and then USC. You gotta be kidding me. That's a borderline MAC schedule until the SC game.

The neutral site game

Of all the games announced in recent months, it seems like the one game that has bothered ND fans the most has been these neutral site games. To be perfectly honest, I like the neutral site games and think they add intrigue to the schedule. The two games that have been announced (Washington State in San Antonio in 2009 and Arizona State in Dallas in 2013) are fairly solid games against respectable Pac 10 teams. The ASU game in the new Cowboys Stadium should be a doozy now that Dennis Erickson is running the show in Tempe.


With that said, I am concerned about some of the other proposed games. Other than the two announced games, it that all the other proposed neutral site games involve Army and Baylor. Considering that we are already facing the possibility of having to schedule 2-3 "buy games" at home every year, why are we also setting up neutral games with Army and Baylor?? We don't need that many weak games on the schedule. If we're not going to schedule someone decent like ASU, why not use that neutral site game to take care of one of our other commitments (Big East team or Navy)?? If we played Navy in the neutral site venue, we could use their spot to get a home and home series with someone else. If we played South Florida in New Orleans instead of Baylor, there's another option for freeing up room on the schedule. When John Heisler is saying "we don't have room for anyone else," he's being disingenuous. We don't have room for anyone else because we've chosen to box ourselves in. If we were thinking creatively, we could have the neutral site game and the 7-4-1 arrangement and still have a quality schedule.

Michigan, Navy, USC

As far as I'm concerned, these games are the cornerstones of our schedule and should always be on there. We have 3 locks and the other 9 should be at our discretion. Start the year with Michigan, USC, and Navy in pen, and then get working on 9 interesting games from there.

The way our schedule is shaping up in the future, it is actually going to be among the weaker schedules in the country. I don't like that at all. 7 home games, only 2 big games, one neutral game against a Baylor type opponent, and 4 road games. That's WEAK and going too far in the other direction. No one is going to remember another ND-Baylor game, but we will all remember an ND-Texas game. Isn't that what college football is all about?? I know we want to get to the title game, but isn't there something to be said for the journey?? Won't it be more satisfying knowing that you took on the best and beat the best?? I'm not asking for 5 huge games a year. I just want to see three. Right now, we only have 2. That's not good enough.

Proposals:

Just looking at the 2010 schedule, it would be so easy to tweak this:

Current 2010
S04 PURDUE
S11 MICHIGAN
S18 at Michigan State
S25 STANFORD
O02 at Boston College
O09 PITTSBURGH
O16 vs. Army (Chicago)
O23 vs. Navy (Baltimore)
N07 **BUY GAME**
N13 RUTGERS (tentative)
N20 **BUY GAME**
N27 at USC

A proposed 2010 schedule incorporating some ideas discussed earlier:

S04 PURDUE
S11 MICHIGAN
S18 PITTSBURGH
S25 at Boston College
O02 STANFORD
O09 NAVY (Orlando)
O16 at Arkansas
O23 RUTGERS
N07 at Michigan State
N13 CLEMSON
N20 UCONN
N27 at USC

Move Navy to the neutral site, push MSU toward the end to get better November games, sign up a home and home with Arkansas and Clemson for late in the year, and sprinkle in the Big East games to balance things out. Our schedule suddenly would have 6 good games to end the year, and we can get some major respect from the pollsters.

Same for 2011:

Current 2011

S03 at Purdue
S10 at Michigan
S17 MICHIGAN STATE
S24 at Pittsburgh
O01 SOUTH FLORIDA
O08 **BUY GAME**
O15 vs. Army (Orlando)
O22 USC
O29 RUTGERS/NAVY (resolve conflict)
N05 CONNECTICUT
N12 **BUY GAME**
N26 at Stanford

My proposed 2011 schedule

S03 ARMY
S10 at Michigan
S17 MICHIGAN STATE
S24 at Pittsburgh
O01 SOUTH FLORIDA
O08 at Clemson
O15 CONNECTICUT (Foxboro)
O22 USC
O29 NAVY
N05 at Purdue
N12 ARKANSAS
N26 at Stanford

Move Army to the first game, move Purdue to the end, add Arkansas as another good home game. Good balance in all three months.

If you want to get an additional heavyweight into the mix, how about these two sample schedules??

Rice
Michigan
Syracuse
@ South Carolina
Stanford
@ Maryland
bye
Texas
@ Pitt
Connecticut (neutral-Meadowlands)
@ Navy
Michigan State
@ USC

3 power games (USC, Michigan, Texas), 4 weak teams (Rice, Syracuse, UConn, Navy), and 5 mid-level teams (USF, Maryland, Arkansas, Pitt, MSU,Stanford). 2 HUGE home games with Michigan and Texas.

Duke
@ Michigan
Clemson
Purdue
@ Syracuse
BYU
bye
USC
Navy
Louisville (neutral - Orlando)
@ Alabama
Rutgers
@ Cal

3 power games (Bama, Michigan, USC), 3 weaker games (Navy, Syracuse,Duke), 6 mid-level games (BYU, Purdue, Rutgers, Louisville, Clemson,Cal). There are two legitimately good homes games there (Clemson and USC). Plus, the added bonus of an awesome road trip to Tuscaloosa.

Isn't that infinitely more exciting than the currently planned schedules?? That's just the tip of the iceberg. We can use our 3 rivalries, 3 Big East games, and then have fun setting up the next six. If you move Big East games and/or Navy to the neutral site and occasionally drop or move Purdue/MSU, you can even accomplish these schedules under the 7-4-1 format.

Get it done. Don't know how Kevin White couldn't figure this out.

To conclude, I'll finish with ND's football schedule in 1988 (our last national championship) with their AP ranking when we played them

MICHIGAN (#9)
@ Michigan State
Purdue
Stanford
@ Pittsburgh
Miami (#1)
Air Force
@ Navy (neutral)
Rice
Penn State
@ USC (#2)

Isn't that the type of schedule we're talking about?? 4 traditional powers (Michigan, Penn State, USC, Miami), 3 cupcakes (Air Force, Navy, Rice), and 4 mid-tier teams (MSU, Purdue, Stanford, Pittsburgh). 2 huge and memorable home games (Miami and Michigan). Keep in mind that it was an 11 game schedule. I imagine that we probably would have added another mid-tier team if it was a 12 game schedule. In other words, it's just about perfect in terms of what the fans want.

Sometimes the easiest thing to do is look into your past to find the answers.