Notre Dame looks like it’s working on independent future

Notre Dame isnt acting like a loyal, upstanding, proud member of the Big Ten this week at the conferences spring meetings in Chicago.

While speculation swirls, the Irish go about their business. (US Presswire) Its hard to be loyal, upstanding and proud when you havent been invited. We keep hearing that invite might be coming sooner than later and in a much more significant form for the Irish. The specter of the conferences biggest and best expansion candidate hangs over the meetings that began Monday and conclude on Wednesday.

No formal announcements are expected this week while expansion speculation grinds on. Still, you might have noticed over the weekend that word leaked out about ND and Miami renewing hostilities. The rivalry developed into one of the fiercest in college football in the past 40 years. Start with Catholic vs. Convicts and the tunnel fight in 1988. No matter what side youre on, your heart rate just increased.

The schools are reportedly talking about playing three times through 2016. Get ready for Kelly vs. Konvicts.

Thats not the end of it. Various reports have ND playing Oklahoma (2012, 2013), Arizona State (2013, 2014, 2017) Pittsburgh (2010-2014), South Florida (2011) and Wake Forest (2012).

Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick wont make anything official. He says the 2011-15 schedules will be announced in the near future.

What does this have to do with the Big Ten? Im looking at Notre Dames 2012 “nonconference” schedule and I already see a mother. Lets assume the Irish jump to the Big Ten. Their non-con is essentially set that year with Miami at Soldier Field, a road game at Oklahoma in addition to Pittsburgh and Wake Forest at home. Its hard to spot any breathers.

In 2013, its Oklahoma at home, Arizona State in Arlington, Texas and Pittsburgh on the road. In 2014, there is a game against Miami (home or away), a road game at Arizona State and a home game against Pittsburgh.

Now plug in, say, an eight-game Big Ten schedule. Well, you cant unless Notre Dame is about to drop Southern California and Navy. One is half of the longest intersectional rivalry in the sport. Notre Dame administrators have a soft spot for Navy. That game isnt going away either.

When news hit about the Miami series, was ND quietly telling the world a decision about its independence has been made? It cant say so publicly, not yet, because no one knows how this conference realignment thing is going to end up. NDs minor sports need a p as long as it exists. Despite Notre Dames determination to stay independent, the school is smart enough to leave itself an out. Brian Kelly reiterated his programs stance last week but added: “It w you know that. …”

At least now we know some fairly big-game contracts are going to have to be bought out or delayed if Notre Dame goes to the Big Ten.

Yes, the Irish regularly play Michigan, Michigan State and Purdue. But they dont regularly play Ohio State, Wisconsin and Penn State. All those schools are in play to create a mega-schedule if Notre Dame joins the Big Ten.

Sure, ND would be chasing a Rose Bowl in the Big Ten. But considering the way it is scheduling ahead, it will be chasing a bunch of Outback Bowls in the Big Ten. At best.

Lets just say things are a lot easier playing Western Michigan and Tulsa (as the Irish do in 2010).

Any Big Ten invite would be complicated and tied up in political machinations. I hear that Notre Dame would have to come crawling to the Big Ten after leaving it at the altar in 1999. The reported last month that Notre Dame was definitely out of Big Ten discussions. So why havent we heard it from the leprechaun himself?

The only certainty is that the Irish still look a lot like Americas Team. Independence has its privileges, which is why Ill say it again:

The only way any of this Big Ten expansion talk makes sense is if Notre Dame and Texas are involved. Texas is out of it because of the geographical challenge and the likelihood that the Big 12 is going to survive, at least in some form.

ND is in it until it says otherwise, definitively. The program doesnt want to regionalize itself by playing in a conference. Its national appeal hasnt waned. This year alone Notre Dame will travel to Boston, New York (twice for Navy and Army) and Los Angeles.

No matter how many trees die or keyboards wear out chronicling the worthiness of the likes of Rutgers, Pittsburgh, Missouri, Nebraska or Syracuse, theres something that doesnt add up about Irish-less Big Ten expansion.

Those are fine schools, sure, but in the space of six months theyve become perceived as gold mines. I get the Big Ten Network stuff and the conference expanding its footprint. But there are major holes in each non-Notre Dame schools résumé.

• Until some TV source Ive talked to make a big impact on the New York market. Ive been told over and over that New York is not a college athletics town, never mind a college football town. A little bit of Penn State, Notre Dame and Big East tournament here and there, maybe, but the Big Apple does not long for Rutgers-Michigan State games.

• Pittsburgh isnt a fit because the Big Ten (and its network) already is in Pennsylvania with Penn State.

• Missouri and Nebraska believe theyre going to the Big Ten. Why do I get the feeling this is the biggest tease since the thong? Nebraska brings a brand, not a market. Missouri brings a couple of middle-of-the-road markets (Kansas City, St. Louis) but isnt a brand.

Meanwhile, the No. 1 brand is holding out, while it can, making northern Indiana the biggest market there is.

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