No actual contract for Notre Dame Series

Submitted by wolverine2003 on

Interesting article on aa.com.  Apparently, we have no actual signed agreement with ND to play until 2031.  Hopefully, when they actually work this out there are some additional breaks so we can schedule a different big name opponent. That, or ND joins the Big Ten.

http://www.annarbor.com/sports/um-football/michigan-notre-dame-never-signed-contract-to-extend-rivalry-series/

 

Don

May 19th, 2010 at 6:09 PM ^

I say make it a four years on, two years off, or three on, one off arrangement. That way, we can then schedule some other heavyweights in the years ND isn't on the schedule. Georgia? LSU? Tennessee? Va Tech? Texas? Oklahoma? Missouri? Cal?

How about West By God Virginia?

Srock

May 19th, 2010 at 7:05 PM ^

ND should join the Big Ten. Keep us at 12 teams. you play 11 conference games, complete round robin and 1 or 2 (as soon as the NCAA extends the season to 13) non-conference games. Yes, certain years you have 5 home and 6 road games in conference, but I do like the idea, you'll still have 7 to 8 home games (same as now) and you'll have 1 to 2 more BCS teams coming in each year.

Maize and Blue…

May 19th, 2010 at 8:08 PM ^

If expansion happens and they are not part of it all Big 10 teams should immediately drop them from their schedule. Having no contract would make it all the easier. Then lets see who the Irish fill their schedule with.

03 Blue 07

May 19th, 2010 at 8:26 PM ^

Although a written contract would obviously be more iron-clad, the first thing you learn in Contracts in law school is that a "contract" can be oral and binding, and does not have to be in writing.

That being said, if one side backed out, I doubt the other side would pursue legal remedies of any sort, for no other reason than not wanting to look like either of us "need" each other. And it would just be kind of lame for a program of the history and prestige of either UM or ND to say to the other,  "hey! you gotta play us! I'm gonna get an injunction in Federal Court!"

Although it could be argued that breaking an understanding/gentleman's agreement/oral contract is equally as lame.