Notre Dame football adds familiar foe to its 2026 and 2027 schedule

The Megaphone Trophy will be on the line in 2026 and 2027

It’s never too early to be scheduling gaming for the coming seasons and on Thursday, Notre Dame football announced a home-and-home against Michigan State.

The two teams have met 79 total times, the first one happening all the way back in 1897, when the Irish prevailed. Notre Dame leads the all-time series against the Spartans 47-29-1, with the last meeting in 2017, an Irish 38-18 victory.

It’s great to see that the rivalry will continue, as Notre Dame has held the [autotag]Megaphone Trophy[/autotag] for the first time since 2013. The two teams have been back-and-forth since 2000, with MSU winning 8 games, while the Irish have been victorious in eight of those contests as well.

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Michigan State football announces home-and-home series with Notre Dame

Michigan State football announces home-and-home series with Notre Dame

The Megaphone Trophy is back. Michigan State football and Notre Dame have one of the most historic rivalries in college football, dating back to 1897, and now that rivalry will officially return, as the Spartans announced a home-and-home series with the Fighting Irish that will take place in 2026 and 2027.

In 2026, the game will be played in South Bend on September 19. In 2027, it will be in East Lansing on September 18.

Since 1949, this game was played for the Megaphone Trophy. Notre Dame leads the all-time rivalry with a record of 48-28-1, and they lead the Megaphone Trophy aspect 33-27-1.

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Former annual rival offers prized Notre Dame commitment

With Notre Dame’s “friends with benefits” deal with the ACC the meetings between the Irish and Spartans have become a lot more rare as the two haven’t met since 2017 and won’t again until 2026 and 2027.

Notre Dame and Michigan State used to play annually in football in a series that featured one of the most famous games in the history of college football, the 10-10 tie in the 1966 battle.

With Notre Dame’s “friends with benefits” deal with the ACC the meetings between the Irish and Spartans have become a lot more rare as the two haven’t met since 2017 and won’t again until 2026 and 2027.

Just because the teams haven’t met on the field for a while doesn’t mean the battles in recruiting have gone away as new Michigan State head coach Mel Tucker recently offered prized 2021 cornerback and Notre Dame commitment Philip Riley, Jr. a scholarship.

Riley committed to Notre Dame on May 5 in what was a huge win for new cornerbacks coach Mike Mickens and the Fighting Irish.

Riley had some big time offers before choosing Notre Dame as the likes of Clemson, Oregon, Penn State and Texas were just a few of the several.

It seems like it’d still be a major upset to see Riley not ultimately wearing blue and gold but it’s worth noting and worth following a bit how hard Tucker and Michigan State go here as that will tell us what we need to know about how open, or not open Riley may be to potentially even looking elsewhere.

A Candidate for Brian Kelly’s Biggest Notre Dame Win

Had it not been for Notre Dame besting the Spartans 17-13 on September 21 that year, Michigan State would have been set to take on Florida State in what wound up being the final BCS National Championship Game.

What was Notre Dame’s biggest win of the decade?

Myself and Jeff Feyerer discussed this and have a list we will be unveiling one at a time shortly. Plenty of our votes (we each picked 12) went to 2012 where Kelly and Notre Dame shocked the world en-route to a 12-0 regular season.

Spoiler alert – a year that didn’t give top-ten worthy love on our list was 2013.

It started with the drama following getting destroyed by Alabama: Brian Kelly dipping his toes in the NFL waters, Manti Te’o’s too good to be true story ultimately not being true. Don’t forget the hectic signing period that saw five-star defensive tackle Eddie Vanderdoes sign his national letter of intent before backing out and eventually ending up at UCLA.

The off-season was hectic enough and the year previous was fortunate enough that you knew a regression was likely coming. That only became more obvious quarterback Everett Golson was kicked off the team for the season.

Ultimately that 12-1 from 2012 dipped to 9-4 in 2013 and instead of a title game appearance, the season and Tommy Rees’s Notre Dame playing career ended in a Pinstripe Bowl victory over Rutgers.

But for one September afternoon, everything was right for Kelly and the Fighting Irish as their performance kept a former annual rival from their own national championship appearance.

Mark D’Antonio stepping down last week got me thinking about this and perhaps we’ll take a deeper look at him compared to Kelly and their impacts on their respective programs later this week.

Under D’Antonio, Michigan State had been a program on the rise up to that point. They had twice won 11 games under his direction before falling back to a 7-6 campaign in 2012. 2013 however was a different year in East Lansing.

Led by the likes of Connor Cook, Jeremy Langford and a defense that allowed 20 points just twice all regular season, the Spartans went 12-1 and won their first outright Big Ten Championship since 1987.

Michigan State closed the season with a Big Ten Championship victory over No. 2 Ohio State and a Rose Bowl victory over No. 5 Stanford.

Had it not been for Notre Dame besting the Spartans 17-13 on September 21 that year, Michigan State would have been set to take on Florida State in what wound up being the final BCS National Championship Game.

The game is most remembered for Notre Dame drawing four pass interference calls on Michigan State and another defensive holding. That and a very odd decision to have running back RJ Shelton throw a pass that was intercepted by Notre Dame’s Matthias Farley.

It may not have appeared as that significant as Notre Dame was a four point favorite that afternoon.

It certainly didn’t feel like it at the time and because of how that season ultimately went, the win didn’t carry a whole lot of weight. But looking back, was it Brian Kelly’s biggest win at Notre Dame?

It was after all against a team that finished ranked third overall but Michigan State remained unranked at all until the first week of November that season.

Because of what eventually happened with Notre Dame going 9-4 it didn’t feel that big but is it Kelly’s best win at Notre Dame?

The impact of winning at Oklahoma in 2012 launched Notre Dame from being a nice story and turning them into a legit championship contender which is why I still give it the nod, but the win over Michigan State does certainly only get better over time.