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Bleacher Report College Football - 3 weeks 3 days
Nike has done a good job in designing uniforms for college football programs. They have also done some bad jobs in designing like when they designed Maryland's new uniform.
Overall, Nike has changed the face of clothing in football and will look to expand to more teams in the near future.
In this article I will be taking a look at the top 10 Nike Pro Combat uniforms and will give my analysis on each uniform.
Enjoy.
Bleacher Report College Football - 3 weeks 3 days
Decision-makers are meeting this week in Hollywood, Fla. in an effort to narrow down the options for college football's future postseason format. Included in the meetings are the conference commissioners for all 11 Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) conferences and Notre Dame director of athletics Jack Swarbrick.
As my colleague Michael Felder over at Your Best 11 pointed out, Notre Dame is still quite healthy on the business side of things.
It's a shame it hasn't been relevant on the football field lately.
At some point, Notre Dame is going to have to get back in the BCS title hunt or join a conference, because that bottom line isn't sustainable if Notre Dame remains irrelevant.
The television money being thrown around is mind-boggling these days. Kristi Dosh of ESPN.com estimates that the new BCS contract—which Notre Dame will be included in—is worth anywhere between $600 million and $1.5 billion per year.
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This is coming on the heels of groundbreaking television deals by the Pac-12, Big Ten and Big 12 and will be followed by what's certain to be a mammoth re-negotiated deal for the 14-team SEC.
Conference expansion, four-team playoff discussions and giant television contracts are all leading us into an era of four super-conferences and an eventual split of FBS into two separate divisions.
NBC currently holds the rights to Notre Dame broadcasts through 2015, and that contract is a big reason why the athletic department is so profitable.
But what happens if the landscape changes again?
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I've already noted that BCS leaders have chosen not to reserve spots in a four-team playoff for conference champions—and that's a good thing. But what if the next time the leaders of our sport negotiate the postseason television rights, we have a 16-team SEC, 16-team Pac-12 and other conferences that are in the midst of another round of expansion?
In that scenario, a postseason conference champion mandate will probably be more likely, and with the money that will be thrown around, Notre Dame isn't powerful enough to elbow its way into that format.
NBC is clinging to its one major college football property. That property isn't nationally relevant on the field now, and BCS leaders are kicking the can down a road where it might not make financial sense to hang on to it from a business perspective in the future.
Notre Dame's football program cherishes its independence, and that's fine. But it shouldn't hang on too tight, otherwise it may be left out in the cold.
Read more College Football news on BleacherReport.com
Bleacher Report College Football - 3 weeks 3 days
The Bo Pelini era chugs onward in Nebraska.
The Cornhuskers coach has received a small raise and an extra year on his contract, according to the Omaha World Herald.
Here are the details:
Nebraska coach Bo Pelini's salary increased from $2.775 million to $2.875 million this spring — per terms of the revised agreement signed a year ago — but no other financial changes were made to his contract.
NU Athletic Director Tom Osborne, however, confirmed through a university spokesman that one additional year was added so that it again is extended to five years (through the 2016 season).
This is pretty standard procedure for coaches who aren't on the hot seat in this day and age: Keep the coach under contract for as long as his latest class of recruits will be in school, and he can sell stability. In this day and age of college football, stability equals success.
Moreover, why wouldn't Nebraska want to hang onto Pelini? He hasn't been in the national title conversation yet, but he's been remarkably consistent at 38-16 since being hired by Nebraska in 2008.
Under Pelini, the Cornhuskers have won at least nine games in every season, including two 10-4 seasons. Nobody's going to confuse Pelini for Bob Devaney or Tom Osborne at this point, but nobody's going to confuse him for predecessor Bill Callahan, either, and that's quite a good thing.
Furthermore, Pelini's still only 44 years old and this is his first real head coaching gig (he was the Huskers interim coach in the 2003 Alamo Bowl). He could easily be a 20-year coach with the Huskers. As long as the athletic department takes care of him from a contractual standpoint and Pelini's still winning at least nine games per year, that looks like a situation tailor-made for stability.
Read more College Football news on BleacherReport.com
Bleacher Report College Football - 3 weeks 3 days
Rise and shine, friends. Here's what's going down in the Big Ten today.
- Penn State needs to stop scheduling zeroes and start scheduling heroes, says the York Dispatch (in a few more words, anyway), and it's true: PSU's non-conference scheduling is a far, far cry from the slates it used to challenge itself with back when the program was independent.
That all said, it is (sadly) rare that a team's bowl bid is affected by the difficulty of a non-conference schedule over the actual record itself. Thus, it's almost always in a team's best interests to schedule wins. That is what Penn State is doing. C'est la vie, PSU fans!
- Michigan WR Junior Hemingway is climbing on draft charts, according to AnnArbor.com. Hemingway shined at the combine with the fastest three-cone and short shuttle times of all wide receivers, and apparently more and more teams are realizing that Denard Robinson was the guy in charge of getting Hemingway the ball.
Meanwhile, TE Kevin Koger's already modest draft stock took a huge hit when he tore an Achilles tendon during March workouts. He will miss a significant portion of the 2012 NFL season.
- Wisconsin LB A.J. Fenton is freshly shorn after a season of long hair and long bearded-ness, and he has also worked his way into the starting role at strong-side linebacker. As a proud member of Team Hirsute, this is concerning to say the least. Correlation does not equal causation, and people should not look at their hair as a football performance inhibitor. Take care, keep your hair!
- Alfonzo Dennard posted bond after getting arrested for, among other things, throwing a punch at a police officer after being involved in separate incidents in downtown Lincoln after the bars were closed last Saturday morning. Presumably, alcohol was a factor. Steven M. Sipple writes that Dennard should prove his doubters wrong with his performance, but presumably NFL GMs won't be looking the other way come this weekend just because Dennard is good at football.
Read more College Football news on BleacherReport.com
Bleacher Report College Football - 3 weeks 3 days
Tennessee released its post-spring depth chart late Tuesday evening, giving Vol fans a look at where the team stands as it heads into player-run practices before fall camp.
One of the biggest questions facing the Vols in 2012 is the running game. Tennessee finished last in the SEC with a 90.08 yards-per-game average on the ground, which was 34 yards fewer than Kentucky in 11th place.
The depth chart didn't give any indication of where the running back position stands. Marlin Lane, Rajion Neal and Devrin Young are all listed as first-team running backs with "or" beside Neal and Young.
Should Vol fans read anything into that?
Maybe, but it's probably more a product of the three players being able to do different things out of the backfield.
Lane is more of the pure running back and is Tennessee's leading returning rusher. Neal is a converted wide receiver who can be a big-time threat catching passes out of the backfield. Young was Tennessee's leading punt and kick returner from last year and can provide a nice change of pace out of the backfield.
Gut feeling: They will all get plenty of carries, and Lane will emerge as the No. 1 running back before the season starts.
Also of note is the way Tennessee's defense is listed.
New defensive coordinator Sal Sunseri was brought in to install his 3-4 defense, but Tennessee's defense is still listed like a 4-3. Jacques Smith played defensive end last season, but he worked out at the "jack" linebacker position this spring. He is listed at left end on the post-spring depth chart.
It probably doesn't mean anything and is just leftover programming issues from last season, but it's still noteworthy.
Zach Fulton entered spring as the starter at right guard, but an early injury allowed James Stone to gain ground. The two will exit spring as co-starters at right guard.
Read more College Football news on BleacherReport.com