If the ACC wanted ND as a full time member now is the time to act!

Irishblooded

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Right now the ACC has an opportunity to take steps to ultimately entice Notre Dame to become a full-time member, but only if they handle the situation correctly.
I’ve seen comments from many members of the media who are advocating for the ACC and other leagues to take a strong stance with Notre Dame in an attempt to bully the Irish into joining a conference. Beyond the pettiness and childishness of this argument, it’s also a poor strategy.
John Swofford didn’t become commissioner of the ACC by making poor and short sighted decisions, and I don’t see him making one right now. Swofford has to know that this is his best chance at getting Notre Dame to become a full-time member in football.
He can choose to take a stick approach, or he can choose to take a carrot approach.
Taking the stick approach, which many seem to advocate for, would be foolish. Not only would Swofford likely not convince Notre Dame to join the league, he could find himself in a situation where the leadership at Notre Dame starts looking for ways to get out of its current contract with the league. That would be very bad news financially for the ACC.
The carrot approach would work much, much better. Just ask Navy.

During World War II, the Naval Academy stepped up and helped Notre Dame to survive as an institution, and Notre Dame has repaid that with over 70 years of loyalty by playing the Midshipmen every single season. For much of the last four decades playing Navy has done absolutely nothing for Notre Dame, but that hasn’t stopped the Irish program from remaining loyal to an institution that stepped up to the plate in their time of need.
Swofford should be on the phone with Notre Dame director of athletics Jack Swarbrick and say, “Hey, Jack, whatever you need, let us know.” If that means keeping the six games, great. If it means keeping four games while Notre Dame schedules the six independent schools, great.
At the same time, if Swofford was really savvy he would offer Notre Dame the opportunity to join the league as a full-time partner for just one season. That offer should come with no future promises or guarantees. That sign of friendship, partnership and loyalty would not go unnoticed by the leaders at Notre Dame.
Just as important, it would not go unnoticed by Notre Dame fans, who for the most part fully embrace the program's independence. I guarantee you’d see a lot of pro-staying independent fans soften their stance if the ACC stepped up and helped savage the 2020 season.
Allowing Notre Dame in as a full-time partner for one season would give the ACC the opportunity to lay out the red carpet, which would be the wise thing to do. Coaches can talk all they want about how Notre Dame needs to pay their fair share, but that is unwise. Some in the media and non-Notre Dame fans will eat that up, but it makes no business sense.

Coaches are coaches, they should coach and stick to coaching. The fact is the ACC is a basketball conference, and even if Florida State returns to form it will still be a basketball conference. The problem with that is the biggest revenue generator, by far, is football. You don't convince ESPN to throw tens if not millions of more dollars at you by being a basketball conference.
Making small, short-term financial decisions that favor Notre Dame is the best way to lead to a more long-term partnership that would mean a lot more money for everyone. An ACC that has Notre Dame is going to be far, far more attractive to the major networks the next time the ACC is looking for a new deal. It would add a great deal of credibility to the league from a football standpoint.
Swofford knows this, and that is why I fully anticipate him doing everything in his power to have Notre Dame’s back in 2020.
 
I'm not sure I buy everything in the article. I don't think Notre Dame is going to join the ACC just because ACC leadership is "nice" to them. The bottom line is ND is going to remain independent in football until it is in their interest to join a conference. Right now there TV revenue remains among the top in college football and they have access to the CFP. Until one of those two things change, ND isn't going to join a conference.

Could the ACC try to leave ND out in the cold? I'm sure they could try but there's no guarantee it would work. The ACC benefits from playing ND in those 4 guaranteed games a year. If the ACC and ND's relationship soured, ND would probably break off the alliance. A lot of those ACC vs. ND games were some of the highest rated ACC games during the last couple of seasons.
 
What enticed me about the article was the carrot and stick idea

You are correct. ND can remain Indy for years and will get away with it many of their fans today dont remember the ND of yesteryear. And those that do are getting up there in age and just dont care anymore. And it isnt like ND is going to run out of opponents. ND could literally play 12 home games every year and line up opponents just with the promise they are guaranteed to be on national TV that week and not have to share viewing.

However. If the ACC plays this right. There is a shot in the dark that they could silence a lot of the naysayers if it was done right.
 
What enticed me about the article was the carrot and stick idea

You are correct. ND can remain Indy for years and will get away with it many of their fans today dont remember the ND of yesteryear. And those that do are getting up there in age and just dont care anymore. And it isnt like ND is going to run out of opponents. ND could literally play 12 home games every year and line up opponents just with the promise they are guaranteed to be on national TV that week and not have to share viewing.

However. If the ACC plays this right. There is a shot in the dark that they could silence a lot of the naysayers if it was done right.

I agree that the ACC strong arming ND isn't going to work. I just don't think the ACC leadership playing nice with ND is going to make a difference either. The ACC benefits from playing ND just as much as ND benefits from their partnership with the ACC. Unless the dynamics of college football changes and being independent puts ND at a disadvantage financially and/or competitively, they aren't going to join the ACC. That said, I think the ACC is the conference ND is most likely to join IF those dynamics change.
 
What enticed me about the article was the carrot and stick idea

You are correct. ND can remain Indy for years and will get away with it many of their fans today dont remember the ND of yesteryear. And those that do are getting up there in age and just dont care anymore. And it isnt like ND is going to run out of opponents. ND could literally play 12 home games every year and line up opponents just with the promise they are guaranteed to be on national TV that week and not have to share viewing.

However. If the ACC plays this right. There is a shot in the dark that they could silence a lot of the naysayers if it was done right.

I agree with you and I like the article. ND could be in trouble if the NCAAF(let's face it, the conferences) goes to conference only schedule. IMHO that is more likely to happen every day so that would leave ND out of football for a year. A one year only deal with the ACC makes a lot of sense for both parties. You cant fish without putting something into the water.
 
I agree with you and I like the article. ND could be in trouble if the NCAAF(let's face it, the conferences) goes to conference only schedule. IMHO that is more likely to happen every day so that would leave ND out of football for a year. A one year only deal with the ACC makes a lot of sense for both parties. You cant fish without putting something into the water.
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