Notre Dame’s schedule puzzle has been getting a little harder to solve, and one Big Ten program is being floated as an answer: Iowa.
The Fighting Irish usually manage to line up a couple of strong opponents each season, but being independent always leaves some gaps. Those holes have become more noticeable since USC pulled out of its annual rivalry game with Notre Dame, creating even more uncertainty in future slates. That’s where Iowa enters the conversation.
Earlier this month, Hawk Fanatic writer Pat Harty made the case for bringing back a matchup that once carried real weight. Notre Dame and Iowa haven’t played since 1968, and Harty wants that old series revived. He even suggested Irish athletic director Pete Bevacqua should pay attention.
“ As somebody who grew up in Des Moines cheering for both teams as odd as that might seem, it’s time to look into renewing this once-proud rivalry,” Harty wrote. “… The skeptics will say that as long as Iowa has to play Iowa State every year, there isn’t enough scheduling flexibility to fit in another Power Four opponent such as Notre Dame.”
“However, that also seems to be another way of saying that facing two Power Four nonconference opponents in the same season is just to risky, especially with the Big Ten now having 18 teams that stretch from coast to coast.”
There’s a practical argument against it, of course. Most Big Ten teams have already embraced a softer nonconference approach, and this season’s league schedule is a clear example of that. USC, Harty noted, backed away from Notre Dame because the Trojans already felt they had enough Power 4 opponents on the docket.
He also pointed to another wrinkle: Iowa’s future with Iowa State isn’t fully locked in. The current contract between the Hawkeyes and Cyclones runs through 2027, which opens the door to all kinds of scheduling possibilities down the road. If Iowa were ever to drop that game, Harty’s pitch becomes a lot more realistic.
The history is there, too, even if it’s mostly been forgotten. Notre Dame and Iowa used to meet every year from 1951 through 1964, usually late in the season, with the Hawkeyes often closing their year against the Irish. It was a tight series overall, with Notre Dame going 6-5-2 over that stretch.
And from Iowa’s perspective, the matchup would carry real value now. Kirk Ferentz has had the Hawkeyes in the mix for College Football Playoff contention for a while, and a win over Notre Dame would only strengthen that case, especially if the playoff field eventually grows to 24 teams.
Even when Iowa isn’t putting together a standout season, the Hawkeyes have a habit of making life miserable for better Big Ten teams. That kind of profile would give Notre Dame another strong opponent and help quiet some of the criticism that always follows an independent schedule.
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