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    Friday, April 19, 2024

    Subway alums on board for Notre Dame return to New York City

    Notre Dame's Emil Sitko (14) grabs a pass intended for Army's Bill West, center right, during the fourth quarter of a Nov. 9, 1946 game at Yankee Stadium. At left, Notre Dame quarterback John Lujack (32) holds out his hands for a possible lateral. The game ended in a scoreless tie. The Fighting Irish were regular visitors to the New York area during the first half of the 20th Century, when their wanderlust turned Notre Dame football into America’s team. (Harry Harris/AP Photo)

    New York — Joe Delaney grew up in New Jersey listening to Notre Dame games on the radio with his father, who — like many blue-collar Catholics at the time — never stepped foot on the school’s campus but was passionate about its football team.

    The Fighting Irish were regular visitors to the New York area during the first half of the 20th century, when their wanderlust turned Notre Dame football into America’s team.

    Notre Dame’s famous Four Horsemen rode through upper Manhattan in 1924 at the Polo Grounds. When Knute Rockne implored the Fighting Irish to “Win one for the Gipper” in 1928, it was at Yankee Stadium in the Bronx. The Fighting Irish played mighty Army every season from 1923-46, all but once in New York City and 21 times at Yankee Stadium, cultivating a huge following of so-called Subway Alumni — like Delaney.

    The third-ranked Irish return to their East Coast stronghold Saturday to face No. 12 Syracuse (8-2, No. 12 CFP) in the highest-stakes college football game played at Yankee Stadium since the 1946 Game of the Century between No. 1 Army and No. 2 Notre Dame .

    These Fighting Irish (10-0, No. 3 CFP) also bring national championship hopes to the Big Apple, two victories away from likely securing a spot in the College Football Playoff. Plenty of Notre Dame supporters are upset such an important game, so late in the season, is being played away from South Bend, Indiana, forcing the Irish to travel to the East Coast this week and then the West Coast next to play Southern California. That will be the second trip to California for Notre Dame in five weeks.

    Delaney, like most Notre Dame fans, is concerned about how all that travel will affect the players, but there is no doubt in his mind the Fighting Irish will have a home-field advantage to feed off at Yankees Stadium.

    “That crowd will be as raucous and as supportive of the Irish as if they’re playing in South Bend and maybe more so,” said the 73-year-old Delaney, who did not attend Notre Dame but is a longtime member and former president of the Notre Dame Club of Staten Island. “We don’t take for granted when Notre Dame comes to New York to play. We’re out there to support the team 110 percent.”

    This game is part of Notre Dame’s Shamrock Series, an almost annual off-site home game the Fighting Irish have played since 2009. It’s a nod to Notre Dame’s history of adventurous independence and the vision Jesse Harper, the coach of Notre Dame’s first great teams, had for turning a small Catholic school in the Midwest into a national powerhouse.

    “It’s born of that, but I think it has current value,” Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick said. “If you’re going to be independent you have to use independence. You have to take advantage of it. And a big part of that, just as it was when Jesse Harper first developed this strategy back in 1913, is you’ve got to be willing to travel the country and be a national brand and national presence.”

    Notre Dame played Army in a Shamrock Series game in 2010 at the new Yankee Stadium and a return trip had been in the works for a while. With Syracuse on the schedule as part of Notre Dame’s deal with the Atlantic Coast Conference, this seemed like the ideal season to come back.

    The problem was it created a schedule in which Notre Dame played just one game in its own stadium over the last five games of the season. Further complicating the situation, Notre Dame’s annual game against Navy was set to be played in San Diego on Oct. 27. When the Navy game was slotted for a night-time kickoff, Swarbrick considered the possibility of bringing the Syracuse game back on campus. After conferring with coach Brian Kelly, it was decided to leave it as is.

    Everybody involves knows it is not ideal.

    The Irish have been tweaking routines, Kelly said, with an eye toward this late-season grind. The team stayed overnight in San Diego after the Navy game and tried to stay on Eastern time.

    “All year we have avoided any unwanted travel, extra travel. We have not visited stadiums. We’ve gone right to the hotel. We’ve changed up that routine, which saves us a good hour,” Kelly said. “It gives us another hour or so at the hotel to rest, stretch, nutrition, recovery.”

    One loss could doom Notre Dame’s playoff chances. If it comes in Yankee Stadium or on the back end of consecutive games away from home, you can bet Swarbrick and his Shamrock Series will be blamed by some fans.

    “In this business when you make decisions like this, and this one goes back almost eight years in origin, you make them and you move on you don’t worry about them,” Swarbrick said. “I’ll only be nervous about the outcome Saturday.”

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