As our fearless leader, Eric, wrote about yesterday, news came down Thursday morning that Jack Swarbrick would step down as athletic director (not surprising given his age and lengthy tenure) and be replaced by NBC Sports Group chair Pete Bevacqua (a fair bit surprising). Like Swarbrick, Bevacqua is a Notre Dame alum.

Swarbrick’s legacy and Bevacqua’s arrival

It’s a natural time for Swarbrick to step aside for three reasons. First, he just made the last of three hires in about three years in the three major sports at ND, in men’s hoops coach Micah Shrewsberry. Shrewsberry joined Niele Ivey (hired in 2020 for women’s hoops) and Marcus Freeman (hired in 2021 for football) under the Golden Dome. (Less newsy but also noteworthy: He also hired Shawn Stiffler in baseball and Salima Rockwell in volleyball within the past year and a half.) Second, the 12-team College Football Playoff he helped devise as part of a working group over the course of a couple of years will come to fruition in 2024. Third, he’s nearing age 70, although he said he’s not retiring and wouldn’t mind playing another role before he does.

Like anyone who has been around as long as Swarbrick has, his tenure has its supporters and detractors. No one would argue, though, that with the possible exception of Moose Krause, he’s the most influential athletic director ever at ND given everything that happened at the school under his watch. Whatever you think about any of them, hiring Brian Kelly (and, 12 years later, Freeman), the most recent football stadium expansion, Compton Family Ice Arena, the ACC deal, the Under Armour deal, his work with the CFP and probably many things I’m forgetting are all things in which Jack played a key role. He’s a massive reason for where the Irish are sitting as an athletic department right now.

The decision to have Bevacqua succeed Swarbrick is interesting. In some ways, it echoes the Freeman hire to replace Kelly. Though Bevacqua is not the spring chicken Freeman was and is (he’s in his early 50s), he’s a relative novice in collegiate athletics with deep affection for ND. (He said yesterday that he “didn’t have a burning desire, necessarily, to be an athletic director. I had a burning desire to be the athletic director at Notre Dame.”) He’s only held his current position since 2020. He’s replacing a man who had a lengthy background in amateur sports prior to taking the ND job. Like Freeman, he’s inheriting an enterprise that is seemingly in a stable position, at least in terms of personnel, due to work done by his predecessor.

Also like Freeman, Bevacqua will be taking his new job at what’s continuing to be a turbulent time in college sports. It’s cliché at this point to write “given the transfer portal and NIL”, but I’m doing it anyway. Even more of an issue for the Irish right now is the SEC and B1G’s collective decision to effectively turn all of college sports into a proxy turf war, which could affect ND’s independence.

Football’s next TV deal

Another factor in that: Notre Dame’s television deal with NBC is set to expire after the 2025 football season, which means it will soon be time to negotiate the next one.

Obviously hiring someone directly from NBC as athletic director signals that the Irish have minimal, if any, interest in straying from NBC for its next media deal. (In any case, it seems to nuke their leverage if they were ever considering doing so, which in all likelihood they weren’t anyway.)

NBC’s recent deal with the B1G was reportedly supported by ND, who viewed the conference as ‘shoulder programming’ that could make NBC more of a factor in the sport and as a result could in turn get ND the big increase in media rights revenue it’s seeking for itself. However, rumors have swirled ever since USC and UCLA took orders from FOX decided to join the B1G that this one, for real this time, might force the Irish into the league themselves. Bevacqua said all the right things about independence in yesterday’s SI story:

“I’m a fan of independence, for sure. It’s another element of what makes Notre Dame different. I think those differentiators for Notre Dame are more important and more valuable today than they’ve ever been.”

But money talks, and if ND can’t negotiate the same kind of threefold increase that the B1G and SEC have been getting for their media rights – and/or if the Irish find their schedule suffers as a result of those leagues’ increasing insularity – Bevacqua might end up having to make a very difficult decision very early in his tenure.