Capital Gazette Laments Temporary Loss of Notre Dame-Navy Game

Under any other circumstance, there would be widespread outrage over Notre Dame and Navy not playing each other during the season.

Under any other circumstance, there would be widespread outrage over Notre Dame and Navy not playing each other during the season. But COVID-19 has proved to be the one circumstance that there isn’t. Most people understand that concessions have to be made if college football goes on as scheduled. After all, everything else has been affected.

However, that hasn’t stopped the Capital Gazette in Annapolis, Maryland, from saying something about it. On Sunday, the newspaper’s editorial board published a piece about the cancelation of this year’s game. It talks about how different the college football landscape is today compared to when the Notre Dame-Navy rivalry began. The piece’s main gripe is with the ACC, which it says forced the Irish to pick revenue over loyalty to the rivalry by mandating its teams to play its one allotted nonconference game in its home state.

With growing pessimism that college football takes place this fall, opinions like this might be moot pretty soon. Still, the things Notre Dame has had to sacrifice for the season like its independence and all of its annual rivalry games reflect the times we’re living in. We all want everything to go back to normal as quickly as possible. Until then, we’ll have to accept that this is how it has to be without anything to combat the virus besides face masks and social distancing.

89 Days Until Notre Dame Football

In 89 days we get Notre Dame football back. How are we counting down today? Check it out now!

In 89 days we’ll gladly all welcome Notre Dame football back when they take on the Navy Midshipmen in Annapolis.  In the meantime, we have rosters to break down, opponents to preview and position battles to discuss.

All of that will come in short order.  In the meantime, let’s spend today’s part of the countdown remembering a key play that kept BCS game dreams alive in 1998.

89:  Yards on Bobbie Howard’s interception return for a touchdown that helped Notre Dame past LSU in 1998.

Watch it below…

[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nhuaa3ZyN1M&w=560&h=315]

89 days.

Let’s go!

Related: Way Too Early Game-By-Game Predictions for 2020 Notre Dame Football

Countdown to Notre Dame Football: 94 Days

In 94 days we’ll again see Notre Dame football on the field as the 2020 season will open. Find out today’s ND Football fact about 94 now!

Welcome back my friends to the show that never ends.  Notre Dame is set to open their 2020 football season now on Labor Day weekend at Navy as the Irish will play in Annapolis for the first time in the series that’s seen 93 meetings to date.

Yesterday we got news of the game being pushed back a week and moved from Ireland to Annapolis so we moved the counter back up to 95 as we count down the days to the Saturday of Labor Day weekend.

Today we move back down to 94, a number we discussed a week ago as we remembered former star defensive lineman Willie Fry.

Today we look at another 94 in regards to the history of Notre Dame football and it has an obvious link to the 2020 season opener.

94:  This year will be the 94th meeting all-time in the series between Notre Dame and Navy.

As you’re most definitely aware, Notre Dame has dominated this series for the better part of a century, leading all-time against Navy with a 79-13-1 mark to date.

Some quick facts about the Notre Dame/Navy series:

  • Having been played every year since 1927, Notre Dame and Navy is the longest uninterrupted inter-sectional rivalry going in college football.
  • The series has been played in 11 different cities:  Baltimore, South Bend, Chicago, Cleveland, Philadelphia, East Rutherford, Dublin, Landover, Orlando, Jacksonville and San Diego.
  • Notre Dame won 43 straight in the rivalry from 1964-2006, a streak that started with the Irish beating the reigning Heisman Trophy winner Roger Staubach and the Midshipmen, 40-0 in Philadelphia.
  • Navy’s four wins in the series from 2007 to 2016 match the amount of wins they had against Notre Dame from 1957-2006.
  • Why keep playing such a one-sided rivalry?  As fans of both programs are likely aware, Navy using Notre Dame as a training center for V-12 candidates during WWII, paying the University enough in that time to keep the doors open.

Fans at Notre Dame/Navy This Year?

Notre Dame and Navy have changed their season opening venue to Annapolis. Navy AD shared thoughts on if there will be fans in attendance

Notre Dame and Navy have been playing each other 93 straight seasons with episode 94 now coming Labor Day weekend.  As announced earlier, that game will take place on Navy’s actual home turf for the first time in the history of the rivalry.

If you’re like me at all you have an interest college football road trips and want to experience as many of the unique venues as you can.  For me Navy is high on that list and Notre Dame now playing there makes it that much more compelling for me to try and get to.

But before I or we can go, do we know if there will be fans allowed in the stands?

Navy athletic director Chet Gladchuk was on the ABC News affiliate in Washington, DC on Tuesday and discussed exactly that.

On a visit with the Baltimore ABC station he shared a little more information on the Labor Day weekend affair.

So a limited crowd is what it appears to be.  Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium seats roughly 38,000 people and the pandemic means for this possibility.  If Navy goes the route that Iowa State did just over a week ago it’d mean that roughly half of that would be allowed in attendance, 19,000 in this case.

Let’s hope that Gladchuk is right (since he wasn’t for much of the spring) and that fans are in the stands.  Even if it’s just at half or a quarter capacity, it’d still mean for a memorable experience for those able to go because like he said, it won’t be happening again.

College Football Morning Announcements: June 2, 2020

One of the best WRs in college football will miss 2020. What does it mean for his teams title hopes? And Notre Dame/Navy reschedule opener.

Happy Tuesday to each and all of you.  If you’re looking to escape the craziness of the world we live in for a few minutes then check out my podcast, the “College Football Morning Announcements”.

I don’t get an episode out quite every day (yet) but am looking to grow it in the not-so-distant future.

Today’s episode is short with two main topics:

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Subscribe to Nick Shepkowski’s CFB Morning Announcements on Apple Podcasts

Notre Dame/Navy: Dublin Game Moved to Annapolis

Notre Dame and Navy will meet for the first time ever on Navy’s campus this Labor Day weekend.

As has been expected for quite some time, Notre Dame’s season opener against Navy has been moved and rescheduled.  No longer will the teams open up in Dublin, Ireland, instead they’ll play at the Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium on Labor Day weekend in a national broadcast on either ABC or ESPN.

The moving of the game is because of the worldwide Coronavirus that will keep attendance at college football games down significantly this fall.

The Navy release also adds that both programs will work with event organizers to plan a return trip to Ireland in the future and that information about ticket refunds will be forthcoming.

This will be the 94th consecutive meeting between Notre Dame and Navy, the longest-continuous-sectional-rivalry in college football.  Never in the 93 times previous has Notre Dame ever played at Navy’s home stadium in Annapolis.

Notre Dame leads the all-time series against Navy 79-13-1 and has won eight of the last nine contests against the Midshipmen after dropping three of four in the series from 2007 to 2010.

Read the entire release…