COLLEGE FOOTBALL RANKINGS: Notre Dame Rises to #3 During Bye Week; Irish Probably Should Be #1 — ND Only Top-5 Team to Beat Another Top-5 Team, As Currently Ranked

U.S. Map, adapted from image at usda.gov

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Notre Dame rose to #3 in both the AP and Coaches Poll during their bye week, thanks to previous-#2 Ohio State getting blown out at Purdue.  The Fighting Irish are the only top-5 team that has beaten another top-5 team, as currently ranked. That fact alone should have propelled Notre Dame into the #1 spot, since neither #1 Alabama nor #2 Clemson can make the claim that they have beaten a top-5 opponent.  (In fact, ESPN’s NCAA football analytics already have Notre Dame at #1 for “Strength of Record” (click here to open graphic in new window))

Notre Dame opponent Michigan climbed into the #5 spot, with the Wolverines’ only loss on the year coming to Notre Dame in the season opener, when the Irish prevailed 24-17. (The only loss for #4 LSU was to current-#9/#11 Florida, who, themselves, have a loss.)

In fact, there is an argument to made that Notre Dame and Michigan should be #1 and #2.

The first official College Playoff Rankings, however, will not come out for nine days, on Tuesday, Oct. 30.File Photo of Levi Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., from Super Bowl, adapted from image at defense.gov by Steven C. Welsh www.stevencwelsh.com :: www.stevencwelsh.info

In addition to beating current-#5 Michigan, Notre Dame also beat then-#7 Stanford, who are currently ranked #24 /#23. Notre Dame opponent Syracuse is in the “also receiving votes” category in the Coaches Poll. Additionally, Virginia Tech was in the top-25 when Notre Dame beat them on the road.

Nominal-#1 Alabama’s only win against a ranked opponent was against then-#22 Texas A&M, who are now unranked. Nominal-#2 Clemson’s only win against a ranked opponent was this past weekend, against North Carolina State, who promptly dropped from #16/#15 to #22. The only loss for #4 LSU was to current-#9/#11 Florida, who, themselves, have a loss. Keep in mind that the “SEC conference,” for example, might function more like two separate mini-conferences, where teams are sometimes insulated from playing each other, instead of functioning like a bona fide, unified conference.  For example, most recently, Georgia and Alabama have only had one regular season game scheduled in 10 years.  Georgia has not played in Tuscaloosa since 2007.


(first-place votes in parentheses) (Notre Dame opponents marked in dark blue)

AP

Rank Team Record Points

1 Alabama(61) 8-0 1525
2 Clemson 7-0 1454
3 Notre Dame 7-0 1400
4 LSU 7-1 1327 1
5 Michigan 7-1 1250
6 Texas 6-1 1186
7 Georgia 6-1 1136
8 Oklahoma 6-1 1065
9 Florida 6-1 998
10 UCF 7-0 996
11 Ohio State 7-1 958
12 Kentucky 6-1 754
13 West Virginia 5-1 747
14 Washington State 6-1 692
15 Washington 6-2 677
16 Texas A&M 5-2 622
17 Penn State 5-2 528
18 Iowa 6-1 489
19 Oregon 5-2 450
20 Wisconsin 5-2 357
21 South Florida 7-0 291
22 NC State 5-1 186
23 Utah 5-2 180
24 Stanford 5-2 144
25 Appalachian State 5-1 79

Also receiving votes: Texas Tech 54, Utah State 50, San Diego State 48, Fresno State 35, Miami 34, Virginia 25, Houston 19, Purdue 17, Michigan State 8, Cincinnati 7, Auburn 5, Boston College 2, Mississippi State 2, UAB 1

Coaches Poll

Rank Team Record Points

1 Alabama(60) 8-0 1548
2 Clemson(2) 7-0 1488
3 Notre Dame 7-0 1409
4 LSU 7-1 1352
5 Michigan 7-1 1228
6 Georgia 6-1 1207
7 Texas 6-1 1146
8 Oklahoma 6-1 1075
9 Ohio State 7-1 1030
10 UCF 7-0 1008
11 Florida 6-1 968
12 West Virginia 5-1 794
13 Washington 6-2 729
14 Kentucky 6-1 689
15 Washington State 6-1 633
16 Penn State 5-2 606
17 Texas A&M 5-2 583
18 Iowa 6-1 447
19 Wisconsin 5-2 430
20 South Florida 7-0 390
21 Oregon 5-2 383
22 NC State 5-1 222
23 Stanford 5-2 180
24 Utah 5-2 107
25 Miami 5-2 95

Also receiving votes: Appalachian State 78, Utah State 63, San Diego State 62, Houston 30, Cincinnati 30, Fresno State 22, Mississippi State 18, Virginia 17, Auburn 13, Colorado 9, Buffalo 9, Army 8, Duke 8, Texas Tech 8, Purdue 7, UAB 6, South Carolina 5, Virginia Tech 4, Syracuse 3, Georgia Southern 2, Michigan State 1

Notre Dame, of course, partners with the ACC, with roughly half of Notre Dame’s schedule being against ACC teams, with the mix worked out with the ACC itself.  Another third of Notre Dame’s schedule this year is against the PAC-12 and B1G/Big Ten, plus one SEC opponent.  So Notre Dame plays a mix of ten power conference opponents, plus Navy (of the American), plus one MAC opponent.

In any event, if Notre Dame can get past Navy next week in San Diego, and if “the math” is done in a rational manner, one wonders how Notre Dame could not be #1 in the first College Football Playoff Rankings that come out a few days after the Navy game.

With regard to other Notre Dame opponents, Northwestern, at 4-3 overall, is first in the B1G/Big Ten West and plays top-20 Wisconsin next week, at home in Evanston, before hosting Notre Dame in two weeks.

Notre Dame opponent Florida State is hovering above .500 and has a date with top-25 North Carolina State coming up.  If Syracuse continues returning to their winning ways, they might start knocking on the door of the rankings again, by the time Notre Dame plays them in Yankee Stadium in November.  Southern Cal also is hovering above .500 and has a few weeks left to gain a stronger footing.

A side note — when looking at “SEC” teams in the rankings, and contemplating the weak schedules for some of them, one point to keep in mind is that, as a practical matter, the SEC is not really a single, unified conference.  The “SEC,” in football, is more like a de facto partnership between two mini-conferences that schedule a postseason game yet, otherwise, sometimes insulate each other from actually playing head-to-head.

So it would not really make any sense for so-called “SEC” teams to feed off each other’s rankings for prestige purposes, since they do not necessarily even play each other.

For example, Alabama has only played in Athens, Ga., once in the past 10 seasons, the only regularly scheduled game between Alabama and Georgia since, and including, 2009.

As a practical matter, it is possible that, in football, even independent, ACC-partner Notre Dame has a closer conference-like relationship with teams from the ACC, and a few of the PAC-12 teams, than the would-be football relationship that exists among some of the so-called “SEC conference” teams.

As a result, it does not really matter if “SEC” teams clog the rankings. Rankings by one separate gaggle of “SEC” teams should not really have a logical bearing on the prestige of another separate gaggle of SEC teams, if they do necessarily even play each other, or do not play each very often in the regular season, and therefore do not really function as a combined conference.

To put it in perspective, by comparison, back when the WAC had a football conference, there was a conference official, from either the Mountain West or the WAC, who proposed having the WAC champion and the Mountain West champion play each other in a special post-season game, with the winner getting an automatic BCS bid.

If that had ever happened, the relationship between teams from the WAC and Mountain West might have been similar to the supposed “conference” relationship between the two mini-conference “divisions” that form the so-called “SEC” — perhaps playing some regular season games here and there, with the two lead teams meeting in the ad hoc post-season game.

On another note, when it comes to strength of schedule, there are the “SEC” scheduling extremes where, on the one hand, they are called upon to schedule a non-conference game against a power conference opponent (or the equivalent), while, on the other hand, they continue to schedule weak Div. I-AA/FCS opponents.

This year, Alabama plays The Citadel (luckily for The Crimson Tide, Alabama gets The Citadel right after the Bulldogs take on Samford — not STANford … rather, SAMford).  LSU played Southeastern Louisiana, who just lost to Abilene Christian.  Georgia played Austin Peay.  Florida played Charleston Southern (the Buccaneers, who did just defeat the Presbyterian “Blue Hose”).

Notre Dame Head Coach Brian Kelly has pointed out that the inclusion of those minor league games effectively diminishes any claim a team might make about having an “extra” game if they end up making it to a conference title game.

Now, that all-important, self-styled “conference title” game did make the difference where Alabama has played Georgia a whopping two times in the past ten years under SEC auspices, instead of just one game, which was how it was originally scheduled.  There was a fourth game between Alabama and Georgia since 2009, under the auspices of the NCAA in last year’s College Football Playoff Final.  Of course, the only reason either team got to the playoff in the first place was that the “SEC” insulated them from playing each other in the regular season.  Had the “SEC” functioned as a true conference and had Alabama and Georgia play each other, the loser would have had two losses, and probably would not have made the College Football Playoff.

With that said, Notre Dame, of course, has had a rich tradition playing “SEC” teams, dating back a number of years, including in bowl games as well as regular season games. And some individual “SEC” teams, of course, are elite programs. As rankings go, however, one should take aggregate assessments of “SEC” top-25 rankings with a big, big grain of salt, because they do not necessarily even play each other, and the ranking of one does not necessarily have much bearing, at all, on the prestige of others.

An added note — Central Florida, the only team in Div. I-A/FBS to go undefeated last year, who were still left out of the College Football Playoff but beat Auburn in a major bowl, the Peach Bowl, are undefeated right now.  Yet they still seem to be facing a kind of glass ceiling at the #10 spot.  They play undefeated South Florida later in the year, with the Bulls now sitting at #22/#21.  There needs to be serious consideration about whether an undefeated American Athletic Conference team needs to be ranked above 1-loss SEC teams, especially if that team is a Central Florida team that beat Auburn less than a year ago.  Last year’s results do not count for this year, yet undefeated is undefeated, and Central Florida has demonstrated that they are a strong program.

In fact, perhaps the rankings should be Notre Dame, Michigan, Alabama, Clemson and then Central Florida, with Central Florida then jumping ahead of an Alabama or Clemson that picks up a loss, if Central Florida can keep winning.

COLLEGE FOOTBALL RANKINGS: Undefeated Notre Dame Jumps to #6/#7 After Win Over Then-Top-10 Stanford; Road Game at #24/#23 Virginia Tech Next Saturday Night

U.S. Map, adapted from image at usda.gov

[click here to jump to polls]

After their decisive 38-17 win over then top-10 Stanford, Notre Dame rose slightly in both polls, to #6 in the AP and #7 in the Coaches Poll, also jumping Oklahoma in the AP in the process. Next week the Irish take on a resurgent #24/#23 Virginia Tech team in Blacksburg.

While some commentators or fans got the feeling that Stanford might be Notre Dame’s last ranked opponent of the regular season, in reality Virginia Tech had stayed in the rankings in the Coaches Poll even after a freakish upset loss to Old Dominion. The Hokies then rebounded with a strong 17-point win over then-#22/#23 Duke, to carry what is now a #24/#23 ranking for Virginia Tech into next Saturday’s primetime contest with the Irish.

Notre Dame opponents Michigan and Stanford remain in the top-15.

Notre Dame opponent Syracuse nearly knocked off top-5 Clemson on the road, only to get edged out in the final minute. The Orangemen/Orange, whom Notre Dame has slated for a neutral-site game at Yankee Stadium on Nov. 22, are getting votes in both polls, sitting at de facto #28 in each.

Notre Dame probably should have jumped ahead of Clemson in the polls.  Of special interest will be how Notre Dame and Clemson fare against common opponents, and how close those games are, especially when Notre Dame plays Syracuse on a neutral field in Syracuse’s home state.

Notre Dame opponents Southern Cal and Florida State have clawed their way back to winning records, and the Trojans are getting votes in the Coaches Poll, although not as many as Syracuse. Several of the earlier losses both teams suffered were to Notre Dame opponents, with Southern Cal having lost to Stanford, while Florida State lost to Virginia Tech and Syracuse. (Southern Cal also picked up an early loss to Texas.)

The polls are likely to ebb and flow significantly in the coming weeks and months, and the first official College Football Playoff rankings are not due out for a month, set for Oct. 30.

There already is speculation about whether Notre Dame can run the table in the regular season, and the significance of whether Notre Dame’s opponents are ranked, or how highly.

Yet a peek back at the standings at the end of last year’s regular season reveals that the only team left undefeated was Central Florida.  No major program — indeed, no other program besides Central Florida — was undefeated.

This year, if Notre Dame — as a major program, playing a major program kind of schedule — does manage to finish the 2018 regular season undefeated, they just might find themselves the only team in that position, or perhaps one of a few.  It would be bizarre for them to be left out of the playoff in that instance. Alternatively, even if another team, or a few, do manage to stay unbeaten, it seems highly unlikely that there could be four.

In any event, as Lou Holtz would point out, the team’s job is not to beat everybody in the country.  The team’s job is to beat the team they play next.  And right now a resurgent Virginia Tech, in Blacksburg, might prove even more dangerous than Stanford if Notre Dame does not come loaded for bear.


(first-place votes in parentheses) (Notre Dame opponents marked in dark blue)

AP

Rank Team Record Points
1 Alabama (58) 5-0 1497
2 Georgia 5-0 1405
3 Ohio State (1) 5-0 1395
4 Clemson (1) 5-0 1278
5 LSU 5-0 1233
6 Notre Dame 5-0 1216
7 Oklahoma 5-0 1193
8 Auburn 4-1 1002
9 West Virginia 4-0 998
10 Washington 4-1 978
11 Penn State 4-1 920
12 UCF 4-0 759
13 Kentucky 5-0 707
14 Stanford 4-1 700
15 Michigan 4-1 687
16 Wisconsin 3-1 642
17 Miami 4-1 600
18 Oregon 4-1 462
19 Texas 4-1 403
20 Michigan State 3-1 281
21 Colorado 4-0 225
22 Florida 4-1 210
23 NC State 4-0 118
24 Virginia Tech 3-1 89
25 Oklahoma State 4-1 88

Others receiving votes: Boise State 86, South Florida 83, Syracuse 74, Cincinnati 35, Iowa 34, Texas A&M 31, Washington State 14, TCU 13, California 10, Maryland 10, Missouri 8, Boston College 3, Mississippi State 3, BYU 3, Appalachian State 2, Arizona State 2, San Diego State 1, Hawai’i 1, Duke 1

Coaches Poll

Rank Team Record Points
1 Alabama(61) 5-0 1597
2 Georgia 5-0 1490
3 Ohio State(1) 5-0 1467
4 Clemson(2) 5-0 1417
5 Oklahoma 5-0 1313
6 LSU 5-0 1285
7 Notre Dame 5-0 1246
8 West Virginia 4-0 1055
9 Auburn 4-1 1049
10 Washington 4-1 1027
11 Penn State 4-1 1002
12 Wisconsin 3-1 797
13 UCF 4-0 763
14 Stanford 4-1 753
15 Kentucky 5-0 690
16 Michigan 4-1 627
17 Miami 4-1 587
18 Oregon 4-1 453
19 Michigan State 3-1 376
20 Texas 4-1 342
21 Oklahoma State 4-1 255
22 Colorado 4-0 170
23 Virginia Tech 3-1 167
24 Boise State 3-1 160
25 NC State 4-0 121

Others receiving votes: South Florida 109, Florida 105, Syracuse 48, Washington State 43, Cincinnati 42, TCU 40, Appalachian State 34, Texas A&M 31, Iowa 23, Missouri 21, Maryland 14, Mississippi State 13, USC 10, San Diego State 9, Boston College 9, Arizona State 8, South Carolina 6, Troy 5, California 5, Duke 5, BYU 4, Army 4, Louisiana Tech 2, Fresno State 1


COLLEGE FOOTBALL RANKINGS: Undefeated Notre Dame Sustains #8 Ranking; College Football Playoff Implications Next Week

U.S. Map, adapted from image at usda.gov

[click here to jump to polls]

After their strong road win over Wake Forest, Notre Dame sustained their #8 ranking in the AP and Coaches Polls, as the Irish head into a two-game gauntlet against the only ranked opponents still looming on their schedule.

In the next two weeks, Notre Dame has #7 Stanford at home before taking on Virginia Tech in Blacksburg. Incredibly, Virginia Tech is still ranked in the Coaches Poll, at #24, even after losing by two touchdowns to previously winless Old Dominion. Meanwhile, Stanford rallied from a multiple-touchdown deficit to knock off a strong Oregon team in overtime in Eugene.

Interestingly, after falling out of the polls previously, end-of-the-year opponent Southern Cal is now clawing back, getting votes in the Coaches Poll. Meanwhile, one of the reasons that Notre Dame opponent Florida State fell out of the polls was a big loss to Syracuse (as well as an earlier Seminole loss to Virginia Tech.) Syracuse also is on Notre Dame’s schedule, for a neutral site game at Yankee Stadium. Syracuse is getting votes in both polls, at de facto #28 in the Coaches Poll and a bit further down in the AP.

Notre Dame Stadium FacadeNotre Dame has not won a major bowl game in a quarter-century, and attempting that feat is probably the most important goal they can have this season, especially after winning a second-tier sub-major New Year’s bowl last year when they beat LSU in the Citrus Bowl.

Yet, the College Football Playoff also still beckons, at least on the Irish Wish List, even if their trip to the unofficial BCS title game six years ago was wiped off the history books by NCAA sanctions.

With five power conferences, for Notre Dame to get into the College Football Playoffs, at least two power conference champions have to be left out.

Stanford is currently the highest-ranked team in the PAC-12, and Notre Dame plays them next week. Notre Dame and Stanford, as mentioned above, are clustered together at #7 and #8. Ranked above Notre Dame and Stanford are three SEC teams, an ACC team, a B1G/Big Ten team and a Big 12 team.

Golden Dome in Bright SunlightIf Notre Dame can survive Stanford (as well as Southern Cal later in the year), they would have an argument for surpassing the PAC-12 champion for a playoff berth. (Washington is knocking on the door of the top-10 again, yet Washington already has a loss, to a one-loss Auburn.)

The SEC can only produce one champion, although that might not preclude boosters from arguing for multiple SEC berths. While last year’s results have no bearing, it still might be interesting to see how #5 LSU ends up, considering that Notre Dame did beat them in last year’s bowl game.

Notre Dame partners with the ACC, of course, but their partial ACC slate does not include #3 Clemson. A key consideration might be how Clemson fares against ACC opponents that they share in common with Notre Dame. Ohio State, at #4 still has to play the rest of their B1G/Big Ten slate, including a top-15 Michigan team that Notre Dame already beat.

Of course, seasons tend to unfold in unexpected ways, as Virginia Tech just demonstrated. And, for Notre Dame, just continuing to win from week-to-week will be their most immediate challenge.


(first-place votes in parentheses) (Notre Dame opponents marked in dark blue)

AP

Rank Team Record Points
1 Alabama (60) 4-0 1523
2 Georgia 4-0 1422
3 Clemson (1) 4-0 1409
4 Ohio State 4-0 1363
5 LSU 4-0 1238
6 Oklahoma 4-0 1201
7 Stanford 4-0 1143
8 Notre Dame 4-0 1067
9 Penn State 4-0 1001
10 Auburn 3-1 987
11 Washington 3-1 946
12 West Virginia 3-0 923
13 UCF 3-0 727
14 Michigan 3-1 698
15 Wisconsin 3-1 662
16 Miami 3-1 571
17 Kentucky 4-0 541
18 Texas 3-1 308
19 Oregon 3-1 297
20 BYU 3-1 270
21 Michigan State 2-1 256
22 Duke 4-0 244
23 Mississippi State 3-1 241
24 California 3-0 118
25 Texas Tech 3-1 106

Others receiving votes: Colorado 83, Boise State 58, Virginia Tech 55, South Florida 50, Oklahoma State 44, Texas A&M 41, Iowa 31, South Carolina 31, Florida 29, NC State 28, Syracuse 25, TCU 24, Cincinnati 10, North Texas 10, Utah 9, Missouri 7, Ole Miss 7, Maryland 6, Buffalo 6, San Diego State 5, Arizona State 4

Coaches Poll

Rank Team Record Points
1 Alabama (61) 4-0 1597
2 Clemson (2) 4-0 1497
3 Georgia 4-0 1473
4 Ohio State (1) 4-0 1431
5 Oklahoma 4-0 1300
6 LSU 4-0 1234
7 Stanford 4-0 1206
8 Notre Dame 4-0 1135
9 Penn State 4-0 1108
10 Auburn 3-1 997
11 Washington 3-1 959
12 West Virginia 3-0 946
13 Wisconsin 3-1 776
14 UCF 3-0 705
15 Michigan 3-1 603
16 Miami 3-1 554
17 Kentucky 4-0 531
18 Michigan State 2-1 376
19 Mississippi State 3-1 311
20 Oregon 3-1 281
21 Oklahoma State 3-1 199
22 Texas 3-1 171
23 Duke 4-0 170
24 Virginia Tech 2-1 160
25 Boise State 2-1 145

Others receiving votes: BYU 141, South Florida 113, Syracuse 83, Colorado 73, TCU 67, NC State 61, Texas Tech 56, South Carolina 52, California 38, Washington State 34, Florida 29, Texas A&M 29, Appalachian State 25, Iowa 23, Cincinnati 22, North Texas 17, Missouri 14, Maryland 9, Boston College 8, USC 8, Arizona State 8, San Diego State 6, Troy 5, Army 4, Arkansas State 3, Virginia 3, Utah 2, Buffalo 2


COLLEGE FOOTBALL RANKINGS: Undefeated Notre Dame Still Nurses Top-10 Ranking, Even After Lackluster Wins Over Unranked Opponents; Meanwhile, Only Two Future Opponents Remain Ranked

U.S. Map, adapted from image at usda.gov

[click here to jump to polls]

Despite two close calls in a row against unranked Ball State and Vanderbilt, Notre Dame has sustained their #8 ranking in the unofficial AP and Coaches Polls.

Of perhaps greater interest in the long run, only three Notre Dame opponents are still ranked, down from five in the preseason polls. Notre Dame’s two remaining ranked opponents, Stanford and Virginia Tech, appear as a back-to-back, two-game mini-gauntlet in just a few weeks. After a road game at Wake Forest in potentially bad weather next Saturday, Notre Dame faces top-10 Stanford at home followed by top-10/13 Virginia Tech on the road.


Time will tell, how much polls might ebb and flow down the line, and how many marquee opportunities to impress will be afforded a still-developing, somewhat rough-hewn Notre Dame club. (An added note — Notre Dame opponents Florida State and Southern Cal, both ranked earlier in the year, now have losing records at this point, including one or more multiple-touchdown losses each.)

(first-place votes in parentheses) (Notre Dame opponents marked in dark blue)

AP

Rank Team Record Points
1 Alabama (58) 3-0 1521
2 Georgia 3-0 1416
3 Clemson (3) 3-0 1405
4 Ohio State 3-0 1357
5 Oklahoma 3-0 1283
6 LSU 3-0 1241
7 Stanford 3-0 1055
8 Notre Dame 3-0 1034
9 Auburn 2-1 958
10 Penn State 3-0 947
11 Washington 2-1 947
12 West Virginia 2-0 841
13 Virginia Tech 2-0 816
14 Mississippi State 3-0 790
15 Oklahoma State 3-0 587
16 UCF 2-0 556
17 TCU 2-1 502
18 Wisconsin 2-1 486
19 Michigan 2-1 448
20 Oregon 3-0 399
21 Miami 2-1 362
22 Texas A&M 2-1 193
23 Boston College 3-0 130
24 Michigan State 1-1 86
25 BYU 2-1 75

Others receiving votes: Iowa 64, Boise State 62, Duke 61, Colorado 49, California 40, Kentucky 38, South Florida 14, Texas 12, NC State 10, Arizona State 9, Missouri 8, Utah 6, San Diego State 5, North Texas 4, South Carolina 4, Washington State 2, Syracuse 2

Coaches Poll

Rank Team Record Points
1 Alabama (60) 3-0 1572
2 Clemson (2) 3-0 1477
3 Georgia 3-0 1436
4 Ohio State (1) 3-0 1405
5 Oklahoma 3-0 1339
6 LSU 3-0 1171
7 Stanford 3-0 1116
8 Notre Dame 3-0 1083
9 Penn State 3-0 1070
10 Virginia Tech 2-0 927
11 Auburn 2-1 921
12 Washington 2-1 909
13 West Virginia 2-0 824
14 Mississippi State 3-0 780
15 Oklahoma State 3-0 672
16 Wisconsin 2-1 626
17 TCU 2-1 508
18 UCF 2-0 500
19 Oregon 3-0 384
20 Miami 2-1 373
21 Michigan 2-1 354
22 Texas A&M 2-1 150
23 Michigan State 1-1 141
24 Boise State 2-1 114
25 Boston College 3-0 109

Others receiving votes: Kentucky 98, Duke 55, South Florida 45, Colorado 41, South Carolina 40, Iowa 36, Washington State 35, BYU 30, Missouri 21, NC State 19, Appalachian State 13, Syracuse 11, California 11, Utah 10, Cincinnati 10, Texas 9, North Texas 5, Troy 4, Minnesota 3, Florida 3, Arizona State 3, San Diego State 3, Vanderbilt 2, Houston 2, Tennessee 2, Arkansas State 2, Fresno State 1


[PDF] IRISH NEWSLINK: “UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME PUBLIC INFRACTIONS DECISION, NOVEMBER 22, 2016” – NCAA

File Photo of Football on Turf with Yardlines

“… The agreed-upon violations in this case centered on multiple years of academic violations by a former student athletic trainer and football student-athletes …”

IRISH NEWSLINKS: “A Letter from the [University of Notre Dame] President on the NCAA Infractions Case” – NDedu

Saint Joseph's Lake with Golden Dome and Basilica of the Sacred Heart in the Distance

“We are deeply disappointed by and strongly disagree with the denial of the University’s appeal, announced today by the NCAA, of an earlier decision by the NCAA’s Committee on Infractions to vacate Notre Dame’s 2012 and 2013 football victories due to academic misconduct by several student-athletes. Our concerns go beyond the particulars of our case and the record of two football seasons to the academic autonomy of our institutions, the integrity of college athletics, and the ability of the NCAA to achieve its fundamental purpose. I write this letter so that you can understand the underlying facts, the reasons we believe that the NCAA is in error, and how we intend to move forward. …”

IRISH NEWSLINK: “NCAA appeals committee upholds vacation of Notre Dame wins ” – NCAA

NCAA Headquarters Facade

“Notre Dame must vacate all records in which football student-athletes participated while ineligible during the 2012-13 and 2013-14 football seasons, according to a decision issued by the NCAA Division I Infractions Appeals Committee. In the NCAA Division I Committee on Infractions’ decision, the panel found a former Notre Dame athletic training student violated NCAA ethical conduct rules when she committed academic misconduct for two football student-athletes and provided six other football student-athletes with impermissible academic extra benefits. The panel prescribed the vacation of records, along with a probation period and a show-cause order for the former athletic training student. …”

IRISH VIDEO: “Beat Wake – @NDFootball – Notre Dame vs. Wake Forest 2017” – WatchND

Notre Dame Stadium Facade

#3 Notre Dame vs. Wake Forest, Saturday, November 4th, 3:30pm ET on NBC

 

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