Notre Dame has been playing football for 135 years and along the way some momentous decisions were made to shape the history of this storied program now entering a daring new phase of college sports. This off-season, we look back at the 10 best decisions made for the Fighting Irish in the decades past.

#6
Michigan’s Malfeasance

Keep your friends close and your enemies closer is a quote that Michigan would’ve been wise to remember. In November 1887, a pair of Michigan students linked up with former Notre Dame students to come back to South Bend and teach the game of football on campus. In front of a small assembled crowd, the two sides played a game leading to a 8-0 Michigan win. In April the following year, the schools played a pair of games on back-to-back days leading to 2 more Michigan wins. In total, the Irish were outscored 44-10 in what became the first 3 football games in school history.

The school’s would play several more times in the early days of the 20th Century before Notre Dame–coached by former Michigan player Frank “Shorty” Longman–upset Michigan 11-3 in Ann Arbor during the 1909 season to break the 8-game losing streak to the Wolverines.

The reaction to that defeat from Michigan changed the course for Notre Dame.

To many, the history is well known. Michigan head coach Fielding Yost threw a hissy fit, cancelled the 1910 matchup with Notre Dame at the last second, and then spent years making sure the growing Notre Dame program was blackballed from playing other Western Conference (the precursor to the Big Ten) opponents and denied entry into the league.

The inability to schedule Western teams lasted just 8 years but the denial of Notre Dame into the league (when the school very much wanted access) shaped the program in incredibly positive ways, ultimately backfiring on Michigan.

There was a home-and-home in 1942-43 that broke the icy relations but after Notre Dame’s 35-12 win in Ann Arbor there was yet another renewed attempt by Michigan to blackball the Irish from the Big Ten, although several league opponents continued to schedule the Irish in defiance of the Wolverines edict from on high.

In essence, Michigan in their pathetic way tried to suffocate Notre Dame football but the Irish overcame it and only grew stronger. So many decisions from this friction-filled relationship with Michigan resulted directly or indirectly in many other circumstances that also made the top 10 countdown in our list of best decision in Notre Dame football history.