Considerable schadenfreude has erupted throughout the
Twitterverse/Blogosphere/ Webscape since the unveiling of the uniforms Notre
Dame will don vs. the University of Miami this October.
Many have enjoyed the very public gnashing of teeth
displayed by Notre Dame alums about the uniforms.
Most of the discussion has centered on the design of the uniforms.
But I would suggest that what has twisted the knickers of Notre
Dame alums has nothing to do with the design that adidas came up with, and the
University approved.
There are three main reasons why we don’t like the uniforms:
1) Lack of Originality
This isn’t the first time the Notre
Dame football program has veered from tradition, including scheduling neutral
site games the past three seasons in Texas, New York and Washington, DC (and future games in Chicago and Dallas).
One of
the reasons why Notre Dame alums haven’t been up in arms about the “Shamrock
Series” of games is that it was our idea. Astute followers of
college football history know that after Notre Dame was denied entrance into
the Big Ten Conference (and many of its schools, including Michigan, refused to
schedule them), it was forced to schedule games outside the Midwest. Knute Rockne relished the attention and "us against them" mentality the schedule created. The 1929 team won the national championship playing all of its games on the road during the construction of Notre Dame Stadium (a feat that will certainly never be equaled). The team
was even nicknamed the “Ramblers” due to its wayward scheduling.
But wearing different uniforms for one game a year is not a
new idea, and their product life cycle is arguably in decline. We don’t like
playing follow the leader, and certainly not in the footsteps of schools such
as Oregon, Maryland and Oklahoma State (number of consensus national championships among them: 0), whose uniform manufacturers (Nike and Under Armour) started
the trend that adidas is merely copying.
2) Too Much Commercialism
There’s a reason why sponsors of
Notre Dame, such as Team Notre Dame members McDonald’s, Comcast, Gatorade,
Sprint, et al. don’t have signage at Notre Dame stadium. Notre Dame alums
donate so much money to the school that it makes the amount provided by each
corporate sponsor (in the neighborhood of $1-$2 million per year) look like
couch change. If but a few of those donors (I unfortunately am not among them) felt
the inclusion of corporate signage at the stadium meant that their donations weren’t
needed, there would be one less building built on campus next year.
So when adidas designs special uniforms and parades them out
on Media Day, it reeks of just a bit too much commercialism for these donors. Unlike companies like Russell Athletic and Nike, who make football uniforms for a
living and supply them to hundreds of high schools and universities, adidas
outfits teams like Notre Dame, UCLA and Michigan for brand building, and the
halo effect of associating the brand with the winningest college programs in
history.
But that doesn't mean that alums have to like them making such a public display of their association with the University.
3) A Matter of Necessity?
Others have argued that Notre Dame
alumni and fans should not get worked up about the uniforms since they are not
designed for them. They are intended to pique the interest of 12-17-year-old
high schoolers. And that’s fine.
What bothers us is that we need it. No one can argue with the
fact that Notre Dame football, despite ranking second all-time in winning
percentage, is not among the top 10 of that list since 1950. Or, as esteemed
ND alum John Walters pointed out, that ND is 32-32 over its past 64 games.
But with graduation rates for student-athletes (and
African-American football players in particular) ranking among the best in the
country, fantastic facilities, an unmatched academic support system and all
games on live television, Notre Dame shouldn’t have to resort to uniforms to
impress recruits.
The feeling among most alums is that if Notre Dame has to spruce up its uniforms to impress a recruit, he's probably not someone Brian Kelly would call a RKG "Right Kind of Guy."
The feeling among most alums is that if Notre Dame has to spruce up its uniforms to impress a recruit, he's probably not someone Brian Kelly would call a RKG "Right Kind of Guy."
And last I remember, Alabama’s uniforms didn't change a
wink while they won two of the past three national championships.


