In 1990, Notre Dame signed a glitzy football television contract with NBC. The deal revolutionized college athletics and brought millions into Notre Dame's bank account. It was a huge financial windfall that guaranteed the Fighting Irish would remain independent from other conferences.Chances are, you still think that Notre Dame is banking major revenue from this agreement in comparison to other teams. Chances are, you're wrong. What do Vanderbilt and Northwestern have in common when it comes to football? Answer: They likely both get more money for their televised football games than Notre Dame does. As does every other team in the Big Ten and the SEC.
Notre Dame doesn't release their finances publicly, but there is zero doubt that a colossal rewriting of collegiate athletics has occurred in the 19 years since the Irish and NBC first became television partners. How has this happened? Television has a voracious appetite and hours of programming to fill. Bundling and selling a major conference to ESPN's network of properties, as the SEC has done, or creating their own network while selling some games to ESPN, as the Big Ten has done, is more valuable now than selling one great property, like Notre Dame football. In college sports, the whole is truly greater than its parts.
Now for some numbers.
In 2008, NBC ponied up an extension to the Fighting Irish television contract. USA Today reported that the current contract paid Notre Dame in the neighborhood of $9 million per year. The new deal won't begin until 2010, but it's doubtful the rights fees increased very much, since Notre Dame's television ratings have been dwindling for several years. (Last season, the average Notre Dame game on NBC drew less than half the ratings that CBS and ABC averaged for their college football games.) The new NBC deal only covers eight Irish games a year (seven home tilts plus one neutral site game), Television rights for the remaining four away games are part of the rights packages sold by those other teams. The Irish also bring in a share of revenue from the Big East for basketball. But that number is set contractually and isn't particularly large.
For example, Syracuse, a member of the Big East for football and basketball, took in just $4.7 million from the Big East in 2007. Even assuming that Notre Dame gets half of this number (which it likely doesn't, because football floats the boat in college athletics), Notre Dame's television and shared Big East conference revenue in 2009 will be, at best, $11.35 million.
Why's that number important? Because in 2008, every school in the Big Ten will clear north of $15 million from the conference, a number that will only increase in years to come. Every school in the SEC will bank, conservatively, $17 million. (Looking at the numbers it's likely the SEC will hit $20 million within a couple of years.) The reason for these increases is simple, spiraling television money. The Big Ten Network distributed $7.5 million to each conference school last year, and in conjunction with the 10-year, $1-billion deal that the Big Ten signed with ABC/ESPN, there's a whole lot of new television money floating around. Let me repeat that, the Big Ten Network alone has almost equaled the payout for Notre Dame's sacrosanct contract with NBC.
Every team in the SEC has also eclipsed Notre Dame since signing a new $3-billion contract with CBS and ESPN that tripled existing rights fees ($2.25 billion reportedly comes from ESPN, while the CBS deal is $825 million). Throw in that Notre Dame now nets just $4.5 million for an appearance in a BCS game (against $1.3 million each year if it doesn't go to a BCS bowl) and you're looking at a financial mountain that is becoming increasingly uphill for Notre Dame. Television revenue at most conferences is rapidly accelerating while at Notre Dame it's staying the same. Where once the Fighting Irish were king of the television universe, conference affiliation deals are now lapping the Irish.
So add it together and even in a BCS bowl season, the best possible result for a football season, the Irish are bringing in something in the neighborhood of $15.85 million for televised football and Big East basketball. Miss the BCS -- thanks Charlie Weis -- and it's $12.65 million, in all likelihood a generous estimate of Notre Dame's total revenues for television and Big East funds. Now Notre Dame still makes a large amount of total revenue from football -- $59.8 million in 2008 --but that revenue is not growing very rapidly, their television money is stagnant.
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Penn State football coach Joe Paterno is surrounded by the media, Thursday, June 11, 2009, in State College, Pa. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
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Penn State football coach Joe Paterno talks to the media, Thursday, June 11, 2009, in State College, Pa. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
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Penn State football coach Joe Paterno is surrounded by the media, Thursday, June 11, 2009, in State College, Pa. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
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Penn State football coach Joe Paterno pauses after he talked to media, Thursday, June 11, 2009, in State College, Pa. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
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Penn State football coach Joe Paterno talks to media, Thursday, June 11, 2009, in State College, Pa. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
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SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - JUNE 11: Australian gridiron player Adrian Thomas poses for a portrait at Dover Heights on June 11, 2009 in Sydney, Australia. Thomas who originally played for the Sutherland Seahawks in Sydney, currently plays college football for the University of Hawaii and is aiming to be drafted into the NFL rookie season in 2011. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Adrian Thomas
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SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - JUNE 11: Australian gridiron player Adrian Thomas poses for a portrait at Dover Heights on June 11, 2009 in Sydney, Australia. Thomas who originally played for the Sutherland Seahawks in Sydney, currently plays college football for the University of Hawaii and is aiming to be drafted into the NFL rookie season in 2011. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Adrian Thomas
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SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - JUNE 11: Australian gridiron player Adrian Thomas poses for a portrait at Dover Heights on June 11, 2009 in Sydney, Australia. Thomas who originally played for the Sutherland Seahawks in Sydney, currently plays college football for the University of Hawaii and is aiming to be drafted into the NFL rookie season in 2011. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Adrian Thomas
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SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - JUNE 11: Australian gridiron player Adrian Thomas poses for a portrait at Dover Heights on June 11, 2009 in Sydney, Australia. Thomas who originally played for the Sutherland Seahawks in Sydney, currently plays college football for the University of Hawaii and is aiming to be drafted into the NFL rookie season in 2011. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Adrian Thomas
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SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - JUNE 11: Australian gridiron player Adrian Thomas poses for a portrait at Dover Heights on June 11, 2009 in Sydney, Australia. Thomas who originally played for the Sutherland Seahawks in Sydney, currently plays college football for the University of Hawaii and is aiming to be drafted into the NFL rookie season in 2011. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Adrian Thomas
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Now, if you're a Notre Dame fan you can pop the four-leaf clover on your chest and argue that college athletics is not all about money. That there are psychic values associated with remaining independent. And that's all well and dandy. It's important that college sports retain some of their soul even if if we all know that college sports is a big business now. But Notre Dame fans who are making that present-day argument are directly opposing the stance taken by their leaders in 1990 when they announced the new television contract with NBC.
Back then, Notre Dame stated they were signing their deal with NBC, per the New York Times, in order "to maximize television revenue and receive the widest possible exposure." Notre Dame also said another issue was of "paramount importance," that they receive the most money possible to share with the academic side of the university ledger. If that reasoning still holds true, Notre Dame is failing to keep pace with other schools and shortchanging their own students in the process. Refusing to join the Big Ten and create a seismic payout via a two-division format that leads to a Big Ten Championship game, for instance, is leaving an awful lot of cash on the table. Cash that fellow academic stalwarts Vanderbilt and Northwestern are grabbing hand over fist. That's money that Notre Dame can't redistribute to their students, money that doesn't go towards ensuring the Fighting Irish remain a golden university on the hill of academia.
In all the talk about whether Notre Dame should stay independent, few of the points of discussion ever focus on the financial ramifications of their decision. I think that's because most fans incorrectly assume that Notre Dame has already maximized their financial standing. That line of thinking is a vestige of the 1990 NBC contract that was truly monumental in scope. But since that time, cable television has proliferated to such a degree that 24 or so hours of programming over the course of a Notre Dame football season just isn't that big of a deal. Not when you compare it with hundreds of hours of conference programming for networks, such as ESPN, with many platforms of distribution and hours and hours of content to fill. This isn't just an opinion, the ratings reflect that college football fans are voting for conference affiliation with their eyeballs, they watch the average Big Ten and SEC game on ABC/ESPN and CBS, as noted above, much more often.
What does all of this mean? Notre Dame's television revenue is going to continue to fall relative to the Big Ten and the SEC. If Vanderbilt and Northwestern aren't already ahead of the Irish, which I think the numbers prove they definitely are, another couple of years of increasing television money will erase all doubts. This will continue all the way up through 2015 when Notre Dame's newest extension with NBC runs out. By that time, the financial ramifications of Notre Dame's independence will have become more apparent to everyone. The Big Ten Network will be thriving, throwing off cash to the 11 member institutions. ESPN, the Big Ten, and the SEC will be smoking big cigars as the ratings gold pours in from their deals.
And, mark my words, Touchdown Jesus will stick out his palm. Yep, at long last the Fighting Irish will be begging for a piece of the Big Ten pie.













Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Do you people even check facts before you sit down and start “writing”? Do you actually go back and read the moronic assumptions and conclusions you come to before you hit send and file your columns? Notre Dame stands alone it stands on its own and is the only university that can do that. No SEC, Big East, ACC or Big 300 you toss together do what Notre Dame does. While you talk about cable packages and rites fee’s paid to conferences that show their games regionally N.D. plays nationally every week. And that new contract expands coverage from 6 games a season to 8. Shock a Tennessee game will get better numbers than a ND game in TENNESEE ! But that game isn’t being seen in every home in America. While the schools you mention depend on hedge fund run endowments from Billionaires. Notre Dame Football pays for the schools entire sports program both women’s and men’s. And since its first contract with NBC N.D. Football has contributed 26 MILLION in academic scholarship money to the schools fund. That’s after expanding the stadium rebuilding all its Facilities and sports complex. In a 2007 survey, Forbes reported that the Notre Dame Football program returns $21.1 million to academic initiatives. That’s annually .and a total that is more than the survey's next five Programs combined. All this is done autonomously by the football programs revenue. Something they wouldn’t be able to do if they had the Big 10 SEC or Big East telling them what to do with that money. You all complain that big time college football and sports is all about the money and not the academics. And you all hate Notre Dame? Or dare to know what’s best for this university? Touchdown Jesus hands may be empty but that’s only because he’s giving not taking.
Murph
hopefuly: Notre Dame Class of 2013
Why don't you stick to facts before you start going off about what a Big 10 or SEC team could or could not do.
ND stinks I don't get why NBC renews their contract.
ND suck son why renew their contract silly NBC.
Murph has already swilled the ND Koolaide.He does have the pompous attitude down already though. Thank god for the Domers!!
Pompous ? I’m not being pompous, I was defending a university I have loved and hoped to attend my entire life. A school I have worked hard to be accepted to. And if the pompous kool-aid swilling masses buy another sweatshirt and it helps me get a few extra scholarship dollars ( because I’m not rich and will need it) GO IRISH !!
Winning solves everything. If ND starts winning, their television contract revenues will rocket back above any big 10 or SEC school, thanks to their national fanbase. If they keep losing, well, not much of anyone will continue caring what happens. And the reason ND gives so much more money to academics is that they don't have an athletic department sucking up all the funds, and they still do the most important money making thing in football, sell-out every single game (even in 2007). Even the SEC schools usually don't do that against the opening slate of FCS schools.
You do realize that TV is not Notre Dame's only source of revenue, right? Even if ND could, as you suggest, make about $6M more from sharing in the Big Ten's TV contract, ND would also have to share the rest of its $70M football revenues! Notre Dame will never join a conference for the same reason you should never buy the most expensive house on the block. Everyone around you can only lower your property value.
How can this be so hard to understand. As long as ND is making more money than the average conference member (and they make more than EVERY Big Ten member), they would be losing money by joining the conference. 100% of ND's revenue is far, far, far greater than 8% of the combined revenues of Northwestern, Indiana, Purdue, Etc.
Keep dreaming.
Congrats to you Murph, glad you got in to the school you wanted, I too have college age children and know the struggles of paying your way. But, this is not about the academic side of the issue, this is in my opinion, about having the name Notre Dame basically rammed down your throat when they haven't really been relevent in the big money sports in quite a while. In fact, my school,Penn State, I hope they never play Notre dame again. ND wants to play half their schedule against the Big Ten (PSU/MICH/MICH ST. PURDUE)as well as the armed forces schools, but don't want to be a part of a conference. Granted Army/Navy/Air Force are not in one conference but my point is they want to take the money from the Big ten but not be a part of it. That's fine, but it is hypocrytical (for the Big ten schools as well) to keep playing each other when the end result is not financially equitable. That is where I feel tthe ND fan base is pompous, not everyone wants to play them, and I am in that group. Best of luck to you academically.
It is just another example of how money is destroying sports.
Exactly which SEC school does not sell out every game? I went to UF and we sold out every game the entire five years that I was there. I cannot speak for the other SEC schools because I did not attend them, but I am pretty damn sure that all schools (including Vandy) sold out all their games.
Wrong, I live in South Carolina and USC does not sell out games against schools like Wofford. The only reason UF sells out games against the likes of Western Carolina and Charleston Southern (and by the way you should be embarrassed by your ridiculous schedule) is they give the damn tickets away. I paid 5 bucks each for four Western Carolina tickets last year. Oh yeah when you have 40-50 thousand students - what the hell is the big deal about selling out a ninety thousand seat stadium? That is why your coach says ND is his dream school.
Lot's of people go to school for five years...
Nomad900, again,I don't know where it is that you get your information, but Florida does not give football tickets away...they are sold. And we sell out games because Florida has devoted fans, it has nothing to do with the fact that our school's student body extends beyond 50,000. And Otis, I am not sure what you mean by your comment, but everyone in Gainesville who earns both Electrical and Computer Engineering degrees stay for five years.