Lou Holtz changed his mind. He thinks Notre Dame should join the Big Ten.
"I'm an old man, and all my life I've said that Notre Dame should remain independent because it's a national school," said Holtz, a former Fighting Irish coach who was in the Twin Cities last weekend. "We played the very best in the country from Texas to Tennessee to Miami of Florida to Southern Cal.
"However, two days ago was the first time I've ever said that I think Notre Dame ought to seriously consider joining the Big Ten. Because what I see happening, I see four or five superconferences."
Holtz, 73, is a great commentator on college football for ESPN. He coached the Gophers in 1984 and '85 before leaving for the Irish. He was in South Bend from 1986 to '96, won the national title in 1988, went to a school record nine consecutive bowl games and was 100-30-2 at Notre Dame.
"Why'd you have the Big Ten? Because you had a lot of schools with a lot in common," Holtz said about the conference that basically was formed 114 years ago. "Geographically, they weren't very far away."
Now it's all about athletic programs trying to make as much money as they can.
"What you're trying to do is build up your Big Ten Network [on television], so by bringing Nebraska in or Notre Dame, or whoever else may be ... it's not just about football, you have to look at what Notre Dame's non-revenue sports and Olympic sports, where they're going to go, where they're going to compete, where they going to have a chance to win the championship.
"And, I think that for the first time, Notre Dame ought to consider joining the Big Ten. I never felt I would say that. But I believe that in my heart now, and I think that maybe they will."