Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The University of Notre Dame's TV contract with NBC expires after the 2024 college football season. Notre Dame receives about $22 million per year from NBC. Notre Dame is seeking at least triple the amount under any new contract with NBC (seeking in the area of $65 million to $75 million). No progress has been reported on the negotiation of a new contract between the two parties.
Big Ten Conference will pay about $90 million to each of its members in just a few years, but will be paying in the $70 million to $75 million per team over the next two years under the terms of its new deal with Fox, NBC, and CBS.
My understanding is that independent football teams, such as Notre Dame, are ineligible to receive a bye in the first round of the newly designed College Football Playoffs.
Projected payouts for SEC football teams are about $60 million per member.
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https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/1141897.page
Anonymous wrote:The University of Notre Dame's TV contract with NBC expires after the 2024 college football season. Notre Dame receives about $22 million per year from NBC. Notre Dame is seeking at least triple the amount under any new contract with NBC (seeking in the area of $65 million to $75 million). No progress has been reported on the negotiation of a new contract between the two parties.
Big Ten Conference will pay about $90 million to each of its members in just a few years, but will be paying in the $70 million to $75 million per team over the next two years under the terms of its new deal with Fox, NBC, and CBS.
My understanding is that independent football teams, such as Notre Dame, are ineligible to receive a bye in the first round of the newly designed College Football Playoffs.
Projected payouts for SEC football teams are about $60 million per member.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NBC telling them that the numbers they think they will get aren't happening.
At the same time, ND gets bumps in the rankings because it's on NBC every week.The essentially play a mid major schedule and still get more consideration for the playoffs than any other team with a similar resume would ever get. In the big 10, would they be really happy just being a second tier power hoping to occasionally challenge for a conference championship?
Under the new 12 team CFP system, multiple teams from the same conference can make the College Football Playoffs. Plus, all Big Ten members share in the payout from CFP games involving a member of that conference.
Scheduling may be an important key to being ranked high enough to make it to the CFP. If Notre Dame continues to play a modest or weak schedule, the CFP qualification becomes more difficult. Without the advantage of a bye in any round of the CFP for non-conference members, Notre Dame's chances for a future National Championship in football are not good.
Anonymous wrote:NBC telling them that the numbers they think they will get aren't happening.
At the same time, ND gets bumps in the rankings because it's on NBC every week.The essentially play a mid major schedule and still get more consideration for the playoffs than any other team with a similar resume would ever get. In the big 10, would they be really happy just being a second tier power hoping to occasionally challenge for a conference championship?
Anonymous wrote:I'm an ND alum and this is the first time ever where I think it's actually a possibility that ND is going to consider joining a conference. These new mega-conferences are just going to tie up scheduling too much. Additionally, one of the strongest arguments for not being in a conference was that ND is a national school and wanted to play games all over the country - well now that the conferences don't have any meaningful geographic alignment, that's not as relevant. Now we could join the big 10 and still play USC every year as an in-conference game. Except for Stanford and Navy, we could play a very normal-looking schedule from within the Big 10. Navy can still be our out-of-conference game, and frankly i don't care if we never play stanford again.