December 9, 2025

Read in Browser

Front Office Sports

POWERED BY

Want to know why a furious Notre Dame is refusing to play in a bowl game televised on sister ESPN network ABC? If you follow the money, Notre Dame and athletic director Pete Bevacqua’s decision seems like revenge. 

—Michael McCarthy and Ryan Glasspiegel

Notre Dame’s Bowl Boycott Is a Direct Shot at ESPN

Michael Caterina-Imagn Images

There will be plenty of theories about why 10–2 Notre Dame is taking its ball and going home rather than playing a bowl game. But the story could be more straightforward, college football and media industry sources tell Front Office Sports. The Fighting Irish are giving the old middle-fingered salute to the College Football Playoff selection committee, the ACC, and ESPN.

When the CFP snubbed Notre Dame in favor of Miami and Alabama, it probably thought the Irish would be peeved—but still willing to attach their gold-plated brand to some second-rate bowl game. It didn’t expect athletic director Pete Bevacqua to boycott bowl season. But maybe it should have.

“Notre Dame’s pride is hurt,” says one source. “This is the Irish saying ‘fuck you’ to the committee, the ACC, and ESPN.”  

You could argue Notre Dame is acting like a petulant child throwing a tantrum. Yes, the Irish can be insufferable with their gold helmets, Touchdown Jesus, and Knute Rockne. Yes, they could have avoided this year’s CFP snub by joining a conference rather than holding themselves aloof, then throwing a pity party for themselves. “It is Notre Dame’s fault,” said Paul Finebaum on ESPN’s Get Up on Monday. “They think they’re better than everybody.”

But if you follow the money, Notre Dame and Bevacqua’s decision makes sense. The Irish have their own TV deal worth an estimated $50 million a year with NBC Sports. And Bevacqua is a former chairman of NBC Sports, with no love lost for ESPN. 

Meanwhile, ESPN began a 10-year, $3 billion deal with the SEC Conference last year. Did we mention a record five SEC teams were selected for this year’s CFP? (Including Alabama despite being boat-raced by Georgia in the SEC championship game.) Or that ESPN’s sister Disney network, ABC, will show the Pop-Tarts Bowl in Orlando on Dec. 27? That’s probably the bowl game Notre Dame would have played if they agreed to participate. In January, ESPN extended its $3.7 billion deal with the ACC through 2036.

In short, there’s no reason for Notre Dame to drive viewers and advertisers to an ESPN bowl game. Especially, since there’s growing belief inside and outside of South Bend, that some ESPN personalities campaigned for the network’s SEC and ACC partner schools at the expense of Notre Dame. 

As former Notre Dame quarterback Brady Quinn wrote on X/Twitter: “So folks at @espn are upset ND isn’t playing in a bowl game after weeks of folks politicking against the lack of conference affiliation, using them as a pawn for their CFB playoff selection show, having the ACC network play the UM/ND game on repeat for 48 hours during Conf Champ week. BUT now it’s a bad look they don’t want to serve ESPN’s best interest by playing in an exhibition bowl game? Got it.”

Former Notre Dame wide receiver Robby Toma is also happy to see his old school stick it to ESPN by opting out: “ESPN was clearly hoping to profit big off a BYU vs. Notre Dame ‘first two out’ matchup. Hard pass,” he tweeted. “If you think ND owes ESPN a damn thing after they spent the entire weekend campaigning against them, you’re out of your mind and probably not very business savvy.”

Still, there’s no question Notre Dame’s absence from the CFP and bowl season is bad news given their outsized presence in college football, says former ESPN executive John Kosner. Last season’s 14–2 Irish team made it all the way to the national championship before falling to Ohio State. That was a thrilling run for the school’s millions of fans nationwide. How many viewers and advertisers will be MIA this year without Notre Dame?

“They are one of the biggest TV attractions in the sport,” Kosner notes. “It’s obviously not a good development for the TV appeal of the 2025 CFP. Still the CFP selection process is subjective and has been from the event’s inception. These things happen. I have no evidence that Notre Dame’s reaction is part of a campaign on the part of the school and its TV partner NBC. I’d say they have a beef on the merits.”

Notre Dame’s beef isn’t over. In fact, it’s just beginning. During an appearance with Dan Patrick on Monday, Bevacqua said the ACC caused “permanent damage” to their Notre Dame relationship with their antics during the CFP debate. Among other campaigning from the ACC and Miami, ESPN’s ACC Network repeatedly replayed Miami’s opening week 27–24 win over Notre Dame in the lead-up to Selection Sunday. 

“We were mystified by the actions of the conference to attack, really, their biggest business partner in football. And a member of their conference in 24 other sports,” Bevacqua said. “I would tell you, Dan. I wouldn’t be honest with you if I didn’t say they have certainly done permanent damage to the relationship between the conference and Notre Dame.” 

As part of Notre Dame’s hybrid relationship with the ACC, the football program remains independent, while the other athletic teams are full members. Notre Dame’s football team plays five ACC schools per season.

In a statement late on Monday, ACC commissioner Jim Phillips called Notre Dame “an incredibly valued member of the ACC” but added that “and I stand behind our conference efforts” to lobby for Miami’s inclusion in the Playoff. He denied ever negatively campaigning against Notre Dame.

So will the Fighting Irish reevaluate their business partnership with ACC? Bevacqua wouldn’t say, except to tell Patrick the relationship is “strained.” 

But if the thriving independent ever does join a conference, my money’s now on the Big Ten, not the ACC. And what do you know? Fox Sports, ESPN’s biggest rival in college football, is the primary rights holder for the Big Ten. Stay tuned.

SPONSORED BY WSC SPORTS

Stop Hunting. Start Creating

Content managers waste 3–6 weeks a year just finding the right clip. While you’re digging through folders named “misc_highlights_final_v3,” competitors are posting your story.

WSC Sports’s Asset Management kills the treasure hunt. AI that actually understands sports—not just “ball detected”—tags every frame with player, play type, and context the second it hits your library. That buzzer beater? Already cropped for Instagram Stories. That celebration? Ready for TikTok.

Partners get their own portal instead of blowing up your Slack. You can upload from the tunnel on mobile. And everything connects to automated content creation, so finding assets becomes using assets.

Your best content is already shot. Stop losing to people who just find it faster.

Tessitore, Orlovsky to Call Omaha/Overtime High School Football National Championship

The Record

When Omaha Productions and Overtime collaborate to air the first high school football national championship game on ESPN2 on Wednesday night, there will be a high-end announce team.

Joe Tessitore and Dan Orlovsky will be on the call for the game, in which Corner Canyon (Utah) faces Saint Frances Academy (Maryland), a rep for Omaha confirmed to Front Office Sports. 

As is the case in college football where there are certain programs that are breeding grounds for NFL talent, specific prep high schools have emerged as high-volume talent sources for Power 4 conferences.

“In the last generation where you have the hyper scrutiny and attention on recruiting, programs have funneled their way to be national programs,” Tessitore told FOS. “The prestigious academic boarding schools of Connecticut are now where national recruits go because they have post-graduates and the SEC is recruiting Avon Old Farms and Choate and Loomis Chaffee and Andover, Exeter, and Deerfield Academy [in Massachusetts] to the schools in North Jersey, Georgia, Texas, Florida, and California West Coast. Add what we see with Corner Canyon in Utah—these are powerhouses where kids know that if you play at those places you’re talking about 10, 15, 18 Division I recruits a year. You’re just starting to see a funneling of talent.”

Corner Canyon, which is in Wednesday night’s game, didn’t even exist until 2013. But in the last 12 years, it’s become a breeding ground for quarterbacks. Giants rookie Jaxson Dart played there, as did Zach Wilson, who was the second overall pick in the 2021 NFL Draft. Devin Brown, a five-star recruit who went to Ohio State before transferring to Cal, played there as well. So did Wilson’s younger brother, Isaac, who’s now a quarterback at Utah.

Corner Canyon’s current starting quarterback, Helaman Casuga, is committed to Texas A&M’s 2026 recruiting class. “You’re talking about a place that, in the span of a decade, is producing five to six massive quarterback recruits,” Tessitore said. “They score 50 points a game.” 

Styles make fights, and Saint Frances is a defensive powerhouse. Tessitore described safety Jireh Edwards as “the next Ed Reed.” He is committed to Alabama’s 2026 class. The other starting safety, Khmari Bing, is committed to Ohio State. Another defensive back, Wayne Henry, is committed to Auburn, and cornerback Amauri Polydor flipped his commitment from Penn State to Virginia Tech when James Franklin landed in Blacksburg. Another cornerback, Raylaun Henry, is committed to Texas A&M. 

The game takes place at Under Armour Stadium in Baltimore at 7 p.m. ET on ESPN2 on Wednesday. 

ESPN BET Show on Hiatus Amid DraftKings Transition

Phil Ellsworth-ESPN Images

ESPN BET Live is gone right now, but not forever. 

The program has been off-air this month, but the plan is for it to be reimagined and ultimately return in a different form, an ESPN spokesperson confirmed to Front Office Sports. A timetable for the show’s comeback was not immediately known. 

ESPN switched its gambling affiliation on Dec. 1, after pulling out of a deal to license its name to Penn Entertainment. DraftKings is ESPN’s new official betting odds provider. Penn transitioned its betting platform, ESPN Bet, into theScore Bet. 

ESPN BET Live aired on weekdays on ESPN2. In its most recent form, it was hosted by Tyler Fulghum and featured regular analysts including Joe Fortenbaugh, Erin Dolan, Anita Marks, and Pamela Maldonado. 

The show originally launched in 2019 as Daily Wager, hosted by Doug Kezirian. Kezirian left the network in 2023, and the show rebranded as ESPN BET Live in conjunction with the Penn deal later that year.

Around the Dial

Stephen A. Smith and Amina Smith discuss topics during ESPN's live broadcast of First Take at Memorial Hall on the campus of Delaware State University on October 29, 2025.

Wilmington News Journal

  • Stephen A. Smith had an interesting response to Max Kellerman’s interview with Bill Simmons on Straight Shooter with Stephen A. During his Simmons interview, Kellerman referred to himself as “Muhammad Kellerman,” suggesting Smith broke up their five-year partnership in 2021 because he couldn’t handle sparring with his powerhouse opponent five days a week. Once Smith stopped laughing at Kellerman’s grandiose Muhammad Ali comparison, he got serious. “Are you really sure you want to go there?” asked Smith. “Because I’m not unless you take me there.” Still, Smith said he would never have suggested breaking up their partnership if he knew Kellerman would lose his job. After losing his First Take gig, Kellerman stayed at ESPN at full pay, pointed out Smith. He’s also willing to go on Kellerman’s new show with Rich Paul for The Ringer. Given the ongoing feuds between Smith, Kellerman, Jason Whitlock, Marcellus Wiley, Michelle Beadle, Sage Steele, etc., it makes you wonder what the hell was in the water in Bristol a decade ago.
  • Chargers quarterback Justin Herbert acted the fool with ESPN’s Laura Rutledge after Los Angeles’s 22–19 win over the Eagles on Monday Night Football. When Rutledge tried to ask him the usual postgame questions on the field, he blew her off saying he was “trying to celebrate with my team.” Great job by Rutledge chasing him down to answer some questions. Seriously, this is Herbert’s sixth NFL season. The 27-year-old star knows the quick postgame Q&A with the sideline reporter is part of the TV drill. Grow up—and let Rutledge do her job and yours. 
  • The NFL has flexed the Week 16 Patriots-Ravens matchup into prime time on NBC’s Sunday Night Football while moving Bengals-Dolphins to CBS at 1 p.m. ET. Meanwhile, CBS’s No. 1 team of Jim Nantz, Tony Romo, and Tracy Wolfson get a break from calling mostly Chiefs games in Week 15. Instead, they will call Packers-Broncos at 4.25 p.m. ET this Sunday, while Kevin Harlan, Trent Green, and Melanie Collins will get Chargers-Chiefs at 1 p.m. ET.
  • MLB insider Jesse Rogers has signed a multiyear contract extension with ESPN per Barrett Media.
  • FOS’s Eric Fisher covered all the sports-related elements of Paramount Skydance’s hostile takeover bid for Warner Bros. Discovery. 

Loud and Clear

Michael Wilbon

YouTube

“I’m glad they’re home. I’m glad they’re going nowhere. … Get out, Notre Dame. I do hate them, today more than ever.” 

—Pardon the Interruption’s Michael Wilbon on Notre Dame getting snubbed by the College Football Playoff.

One Big Fig

Detroit Lions wide receiver Amon-Ra St. Brown (14) makes a catch against Dallas Cowboys cornerback Shavon Revel Jr. (34) during the second half at Ford Field in Detroit on Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025.

Detroit Free Press

19.39 million

That was the record viewership for Amazon Prime Video’s stream of Cowboys-Lions on Thursday night. Prime says Dallas-Detroit was the most-watched Thursday Night Football’s regular-season game. The giant streamer averaged 19.39 million viewers—eclipsing the previous high of 17.76 million for Packers-Commanders in September. Meanwhile, Prime’s TNF Tonight studio show also reached an all-time high, averaging 2.53 million viewers.

Question of the Day

Do you think Notre Dame declined a bowl bid as revenge on ESPN?

 YES   NO 

Thursday’s result: 41% of respondents think “New Heights” will remain Spotify’s top sports podcast in 2026.

Events Video Games Shop
Written by Michael McCarthy, Ryan Glasspiegel
Edited by Lisa Scherzer, Catherine Chen

If this email was forwarded to you, you can subscribe here.

Update your preferences / Unsubscribe

Copyright © 2026 Front Office Sports. All rights reserved.
460 Park Avenue South, 7th Floor, New York NY, 10016

Subscribe To Our Daily Newsletters

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.