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Notre Dame AD Fires Back at ESPN and CFP Committee

Notre Dame Fighting Irish, NCAA Football
Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports

In a stunning conclusion to the college football regular season, the College Football Playoff selection committee released its final rankings on Sunday, demoting Notre Dame to the No. 11 position and effectively shutting the Fighting Irish out of the 12-team field.

The drop marked a two-spot fall for Notre Dame from its No. 9 ranking heading into the final weekend, despite a dominant 49-20 road victory over Stanford on November 29 that closed out a 11-1 regular season.

Meanwhile, Alabama held steady at No. 9 even after suffering a lopsided 28-7 defeat to Georgia in the SEC championship game. Miami, which did not play over the weekend, leapfrogged the Irish by climbing two spots to No. 10 after Duke upset Virginia in the ACC title game.

The decision left Notre Dame officials furious. Athletic director Pete Bevacqua did not hold back in his criticism of the selection process, arguing that the playoff berth had been unfairly taken away from his players.

Bevacqua also took direct aim at ESPN, the broadcast partner of the playoff committee, accusing the network of turning the weekly ranking reveals into spectacle rather than a serious evaluation of team résumés.

“Any rankings or show prior to this last one is an absolute joke and a waste of time,” Bevacqua said. “If the rankings shows are legitimate, there is no logical explanation of what happened to us. Have one ranking show at the end, like Sunday.”

The controversial outcome reignited long-standing discussions about whether Notre Dame, as college football’s most prominent independent program, should finally join a conference to secure more consistent postseason access. The Irish finished the year on the playoff bubble despite losing their two defeats—by a combined four points—to teams that both earned playoff bids.

Despite the high-profile exclusion, Bevacqua made it clear that the program remains committed to its independent status and has no intention of pursuing conference membership.

“We are out there fighting for ourselves,” Bevacqua said. “That’s something we accept.”

With the playoff door closed, Notre Dame now turns its attention to a prominent bowl invitation later this December as the team looks to cap its strong campaign with one final victory.

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