Why would they do that. That would freeze one of their teams out.
ChatGPT disagrees:Individual schools can decide not to schedule them. Banding together as a group to do so constitutes restraint of trade under US law.
Don't think that ND would turn to ChatGPT for adjudication. Ask it for a deeper dive into its point 3.1.ChatGPT disagrees:
Short answer: Extremely unlikely.
Notre Dame would almost certainly have no viable legal claim against the Big Ten simply for choosing not to schedule them in football.
Below is a clear explanation of why.
1. Conferences have no legal duty to schedule Notre Dame
The Big Ten is a voluntary athletic conference. Its members and the conference office choose their own non-conference scheduling arrangements. There is no legal obligation—contractual or statutory—that requires the Big Ten to schedule Notre Dame.
To sue, Notre Dame would need to show that the Big Ten:
- Breached a contract
- Violated antitrust law
- Committed tortious interference, discrimination, or some other legal wrong
The Big Ten simply declining to schedule ND does not meet those thresholds.
2. There is no contract guaranteeing games
Notre Dame does not have an existing compulsory scheduling agreement with the Big Ten. Without a contract, there is nothing to “breach.”
Even if individual Big Ten teams once regularly scheduled Notre Dame, past practice does not create a legal obligation to continue doing so.
3. Antitrust claim? Also unlikely
Notre Dame could theoretically argue that conferences collectively refusing to schedule them is a form of group boycott, which can fall under antitrust law.
But this would require showing:
- A coordinated agreement among Big Ten schools to exclude ND
- Harm to competition, not just harm to Notre Dame
- No legitimate pro-competitive justification
Problems:
- The Big Ten choosing opponents for competitive, logistical, or strategic reasons is normally presumed lawful.
- Declining to schedule a single independent school likely does not affect the overall competitive market for college football.
- Conferences change scheduling policies frequently without legal consequences.
To win an antitrust case, Notre Dame would need evidence of collusion for the purpose of harming Notre Dame, which is extremely hard to prove.
4. Tort or discrimination claims? No real basis
There is no recognized tort for “not scheduling a team.”
Unless Notre Dame could allege illegal discrimination based on a protected class (which they cannot—this is about football), such claims would fail immediately.
5. Practical reality
Teams and conferences decide their schedules freely. Many schools refuse to schedule certain opponents for strategic, financial, travel, or competitive reasons. None of this has ever led to a successful lawsuit.
Conclusion
Notre Dame could try to sue, but the case would almost certainly be dismissed.
Without a contract, legal duty, or provable antitrust violation, the Big Ten is fully within its rights to schedule—or not schedule—any opponent it chooses.
If you want, I can also analyze:
- Possible antitrust angles in more depth
- Whether Notre Dame joining a conference would change the legal landscape
- Historical examples of scheduling disputes in college sports
Just let me know!
One of my favorite moments was booing him at Big 10 trophy ceremony, 2016
Plus we didn't pass Herbie's eye test.While the Big 10 commissioner lobbied for Ohio $rate behind the scenes. Gotta love that support for your Conference Champion!
Anytime there is a selection committee, it is going to be subjective. Alabama being in over ND is where the complaint should be. I know their 3rd loss was in the SEC Championship Game, and it isn't supposed to be held against them, but they played awful. Play a close hard-fought game and lose is one thing, but they got clobbered.I agree. But the process suffers now from what it suffered back then - too much subjectivity.
The a in chatgpt apparently does not stand for antitrust.Don't think that ND would turn to ChatGPT for adjudication. Ask it for a deeper dive into its point 3.1.
Klatt was spot on with this. There would have been zero outcry if there was not a week to week ranking by the CFP. The mistake is allowing fans to "see the sausage made (Klatt's language) versus the end result. The end result was the correct one (save the Group of 5 teams). Notre Dame lost both the games it played against quality opponents. Its best win was against a 9 and 3 USC team. Notre Dame needs to join a conference and win it or just STFUrankings are opinions , miami beating nd on the field IS REAL !!!
Correct...Washington not Ohio State was the issue. We had absolutely no chance of getting in over Ohio State.Similarities, but also very different.
And PSU fans are - obviously - still hot about it.
FWIW:
It was Washington, not OSU, that kept PSU out of the Final 4. (The rankings were Alabama, Clemson, Ohio State, Washington - in that order)
Washington was ranked ahead of PSU every step of the way, from the first committee rankings to the last.
Now, to make it more similar to the current situation vav Notre Dame:
Imagine PSU was ranked AHEAD of Washington every step of the way...... and then, after the season concluded, the "committee" said: "Nah, we was just foolin' Washington is actually the better team. PSU is out"
I am sure you would agree PSU fans would be (justifiably) apoplectic.
As fun as it may be to revel in Notre Dame's misery, anyone who would fail to recognize that would have to be adamantly ignorant.
They did but they also beat Georgia in Athens. The rematch factor is largely why they weren't penalized at all.Anytime there is a selection committee, it is going to be subjective. Alabama being in over ND is where the complaint should be. I know their 3rd loss was in the SEC Championship Game, and it isn't supposed to be held against them, but they played awful. Play a close hard-fought game and lose is one thing, but they got clobbered.
Jim Delany, our bestest buddy and friend!What a clown, Who was that?
Clemson smoked tOSU 31-0 in that playoff game. I'm not saying PSU would have won, but I believe that offense would have put up some points.Similarities, but also very different.
And PSU fans are - obviously - still hot about it.
FWIW:
It was Washington, not OSU, that kept PSU out of the Final 4. (The rankings were Alabama, Clemson, Ohio State, Washington - in that order)
Washington was ranked ahead of PSU every step of the way, from the first committee rankings to the last.
Now, to make it more similar to the current situation vav Notre Dame:
Imagine PSU was ranked AHEAD of Washington every step of the way...... and then, after the season concluded, the "committee" said: "Nah, we was just foolin' Washington is actually the better team. PSU is out"
I am sure you would agree PSU fans would be (justifiably) apoplectic.
As fun as it may be to revel in Notre Dame's misery, anyone who would fail to recognize that would have to be adamantly ignorant.
Bubble team? One of the conference teams will be shut out to make way for notre dame and their lame schedule.How does not playing Notre Dame freeze one of their teams out?
The deal giving Notre Dame a playoff spot that freezes a bubble team out.
This might work.CFB really needs to go to a performance-based playoff system. Go to 14 teams, with 4 AQ's each from the BIG and SEC, 2 each from the ACC and Big 12, 1 from the Group of five, and 1 at-large. In that scenario, ND's only path to the playoff is by getting the one at-large bid. Otherwise, subjectivity is taken out of the playoff selection process.
Championship weekend then becomes a defacto first round of the playoffs, with a ton of meaningful games. The BIG champ and the SEC champ winners get automatic first-round playoff byes, while the BIG and SEC championship losers still make the playoff. Meanwhile, BIG and SEC teams 3 and 6 and teams 4 and 5 play to determine who fills the other two slots. Teams 1 and 4 and teams 2 and 3 in the ACC and Big 12 also play to determine their two playoff participants.
The current committee selection process is hopelessly flawed.
16 seeded teams and no byes.This might work.
If there was some system to change which conference got the bye it would be interesting. If 7 years from now the ACC has a strong conference and the SEC has gotten weaker, but SEC still gets the bye that would give us something else to b!t<h about.
The most anti-PSU DB of all-time. A true crook and one miserable SOB!
Conference champions and no subjectivity.16 seeded teams and no byes.
Yeah, our boys put up 49 and lost to a 3-loss team that Bama trounced 52-6. 2016 is the longest lasting wanna have a participation trophy complaint that exists.Clemson smoked tOSU 31-0 in that playoff game. I'm not saying PSU would have won, but I believe that offense would have put up some points.