Pan, that all makes sense when you lay it out on the table like that. Assuming we add FSU sometime in the next 1-3 years and then wait on ND, isn't there a chance that ND is 5 years more mediocre by 2017? Seems to me that they're becoming less and less of a player in all this as time goes on because they're so plain. Am I missing the boat on all this?
Notre Dame may have lost a little luster, but it will always be the crown jewel of college football.
crap, the Big 10 has tried for decades to entice them. If the Big XII could pull this off, it would be THE defining moment in our history and a landscape shifting moment in college sports.
Let's not underestimate it.
This is why we're going to move slowly.
The Big Ten, Pac-12, and ACC all hurt their chances, immeasurably, by signing their Tier 3 rights over to the conference. I don't care how good of a "fit" Notre Dame would be in the ACC; it is extremely unlikely they'd sign up for a league where their cut is the same as Wake Forest's.
Let's just say that the Big 12 adds ND and FSU, gets a CCG back, and the overall payout for Tier 1 and Tier 2 is around $24 million per team (which is pretty realistic given that mix). That's $7 million more per year than what the ACC will give them for all three Tiers. If ND can start their own network, similar to Texas, and make around what Texas makes, they'd make nearly $40 million per year in TV revenue alone. Factor in bowl money, playoff money, NCAA basketball tournament money, and other various conference payouts, and the fact that ND won't have to worry so much about losing an arm and a leg by going to a bowl game (since the Big 12 helps with those costs).
I understand that Notre Dame values independence over all. It's a part of their identity. But that identity and desire for independence is rooted from a place where Notre Dame wants and needs to feel "special". Well, the most "special" program in college football right now is Texas, and there's only one place where you can be like Texas. As we move forward, there's only one place that lets you have that amount of freedom, while having a seat at the big kids table, and that is the Big 12.
People who look at things that don't matter, like academics and cultural fit, don't see Notre Dame being here. People who realize what drives decision making in college football know that the Big 12 is the perfect fit for Notre Dame.
And given that the people in charge of this conference are incredibly savvy people at this point (Dodds, Neinas, Bowlsby, Luck, the Animal, Del Conte, etc.), they aren't going to screw this up. This is the rainmaker deal you get one shot at. They are going to make sure this is done right.