Watch: James Corden speaks out against European Super League in 2021

This is so strange to hear now.

Everyone and their father knows it by now: The Big Ten is expanding to 16 teams in 2024 with the addition of USC and UCLA. The path to that conference and the SEC becoming super-conferences has been cleared, and college football as we know it is about to change.

European soccer fans had this feeling only a year ago when the continent’s top teams announced plans to form a new Super League. The league was scrapped after taking widespread criticism from all parts of the soccer world. One person who spoke out was James Corden, who did so on his late-night TV show. While not everything he says mirrors what’s happening in college football right now, it’s eerie to hear some of these thoughts that easily could be applied to the current situation:

His concluding thought about the higher powers beating the love and joy out a sport he loves for money hits home. Money indeed is all these conferences and athletic directors are seeing, and that is leading to the complete upending of college football at the expense of everything besides money. If only respect for tradition was considered, which it clearly is not. What a shame.

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Follow Geoffrey on Twitter: @gfclark89

Super-conferences will ruin college football as we know it

This all sucks so badly.

For years now, word has been brewing that college football supremacy will be challenged for only by a select few. A major step in that direction has been taken with the reported defection of USC and UCLA from the Pac-12 to the Big Ten. That appears to only be the beginning as other Pac-12 schools could follow suit. USA TODAY’S Paul Myerberg believes this all eventually will lead to the Big Ten and SEC becoming two super-conferences at the expense of the remaining Power Five conferences.

All I can say is this absolutely sucks. Never mind what this might mean for Notre Dame. What about college football as a whole? Geographical regions and rivalries suddenly mean far less than who can make the most money out of having ESPN, Fox and whatever other network or streaming service pay for showing the games to audiences.

What happened to the thrill of preparing to beat an opponent only a few hundred miles away? Are we really going to see Rutgers travel to Los Angeles for a game that kicks off at 9 a.m. local time? This is an absolutely ridiculous thought, and one that inexplicably is about to become reality. Say goodbye to team buses for most conference games and hello to being jet lagged during those games on a regular basis.

Yes, I know this is all about money, and I know players are allowed to make it through NIL deals now. But this is where we have to bring up the cliche of money being the root of all evil. In this case, it’s destroying everything that has made college football beautiful for over a century. The future of the sport appears to be a professional league disguised as college football, and that’s not what it’s supposed to be about.

You might remember the major backlash when the European Super League was announced a year ago. Pretty much everyone who loved soccer demonstrated such an outrage over it that the league ultimately ended before it even began. Where’s the anger over this? It’s probably too late, but if fans don’t put up the slightest fuss, this will become our new reality:

If this has to be our new reality, there needs to be a complete realignment of the levels of college football. The idea that all Football Bowl Subdivision teams are under the same umbrella has been laughable at best and an outright lie at worst for some time now. When this all comes to pass, any remaining Power Five programs need to compete for their own championship, as do all Group of Five programs. No one from that latter group ever is going to make the College Football Playoff anyway, so why keep stringing them along?

This latest proposal means that the sport future generations watch will not be the one we, our parents, grandparents and great-grandparents watched. Only the most prominent college football programs will be allowed to compete for the mountaintop, and every other school can forget about ever ascending to that level. Very few of the best players in the country are going to Group of Five schools now, and this will ensure that none of them will go there because they want a chance to go all the way, and they want the most exposure possible.

If none of this bothers you even a little bit, I don’t know how you possibly can enjoy watching the rich get richer. It’s not like college football has a whole lot of integrity these days, and this will annihilate whatever is left of it. We are at a tipping point, and history will remember it as such. That is, if history hasn’t been bought and paid for by another power entity that will ruin that, too.

Contact/Follow us @IrishWireND on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Notre Dame news, notes, and opinions.

Follow Geoffrey on Twitter: @gfclark89

Rivals: Kelly Hire Great, Notre Dame to Join Super Conference?

The Irish hiring of Brian Kelly gets praise once again, and Rivals Mike Farrell dreaming about four superconferences.

First it was ESPN giving Notre Dame’s hire of Brian Kelly away from Cincinnati as one of the best and now it is Rivals Mike Farrell giving props to the Irish for hiring Kelly. Farrell ranked the top coaching hires since 2008, with Kelly being ranked 6th among his coaching peers.

Farrell ranked Kelly behind Oklahoma’s Lincoln Riley and LSU’s Ed Orgeron and a few others who have made a lot of noise since their hires. Farrell said “Kelly is 92-37 at Notre Dame and has been to a national title game. Dealing with academic restrictions, he’s done a great job.” Don’t forget Kelly guided the Irish to a College Football Playoff spot as well.

The most interesting part of Farrell’s article was his proposition of forming a ‘Power Four’ conference alignment. Farrell eliminates the Big XII, giving each conference in his scenario 16 teams with the Irish’s addition to the ACC giving them 17 teams. He propositions that every game would be a conference game except one, saying “we still want to see Notre Dame-USC and others, right?”

Farrell has the ACC adding the Irish along with West Virginia and TCU. Notre Dame would be in a division with newcomer TCU, Clemson, Florida State, Syracuse, NC State, Boston College, Louisville, and Wake Forest. Farrell believes that “Notre Dame in the same division as Clemson would be awesome,” but would it really? Part of the Irish allure is having a national schedule, playing teams from all across the country. This would limit those games, as traditional games against opponents like Stanford would be off the table.

This is just an idea, as Farrell states at the end “I know it’s impossible and won’t happen, but it sure is fun to imagine it. The ACC and the Pac-16 would certainly be much more interesting than they are now.” Yes, more interesting but would it work? Would you like to see the Irish join the ACC and have just one out of conference foe each year? I like it the way it is.