Phil Steele’s latest home-field rankings have Notre Dame Stadium sitting outside the top 20, and that placement is already drawing plenty of pushback.
Steele ranked college football’s home environments from the 2021 through 2025 seasons, and the Fighting Irish landed at No. 21.
That puts Notre Dame behind programs such as James Madison, UTSA, the Ohio Bobcats, Toledo and even NC State, which checked in one spot ahead at No. 20.
The ranking appears to lean heavily on home record, and that’s where the first problem shows up. Steele listed Notre Dame at 27-7 at home since 2021, but that total is off by one. Since 2021, the Irish have actually lost six games inside Notre Dame Stadium.
That stretch began in 2021 with a loss to Cincinnati, their only defeat of the regular season. In 2022, Marshall and Stanford both left South Bend with wins.
In 2023, Notre Dame’s only home loss came against Ohio State in a heartbreaking finish. In 2024, Northern Illinois beat the Irish at home in their only regular-season loss.
This past season, Notre Dame opened at home with a 41-40 loss to Texas A&M.
Steele was right about the 27 home wins if you include Notre Dame’s home playoff win over Indiana in 2024. But even that doesn’t tell the full story of what South Bend has been during that span.
Notre Dame also played several neutral-site games in that window, including Wisconsin in 2021, BYU and Navy in 2022, Navy again in 2023, and Army and Navy in 2024. The Irish went 6-0 in those games.
The bigger issue is that home-field advantage is about more than a record. A win-loss line can tell you who won and who lost, but it can’t fully capture what makes a stadium difficult to play in.
That’s where the ranking feels thin, especially when Delaware is placed at No. 10 ahead of Texas. Delaware’s 17-3 home record edges Texas’ 28-5 mark in Steele’s system, but that kind of comparison is hard to swallow.
NC State’s spot just ahead of Notre Dame adds another wrinkle. The Wolfpack have seven home losses since 2021, and one of them came against the Irish in 2023. Then, when NC State came to South Bend this past season, Notre Dame beat the Wolfpack 36-7.
There are plenty of ways to measure football success, and stats matter. But home-field advantage has layers that don’t fit neatly into a record column, and that’s why Steele’s list is getting questioned. For Notre Dame, the number next to its name doesn’t seem to match the reality of what teams face in South Bend.
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