Wisconsin, Notre Dame Reach Agreement for Football Games in 2020 and 2021

by | Aug 14, 2017 | Football Blogs, Headlines, RRSN News | 0 comments

Wisconsin, Notre Dame Reach Agreement for Football Games in 2020 and 2021

Badgers and Irish will square off at Lambeau Field and Soldier Field

CHICAGO – The University of Notre Dame and University of Wisconsin have agreed to a two-year, neutral-site football series beginning in 2020.

The Irish and Badgers will play Oct. 3, 2020, at Lambeau Field in Green Bay, Wisconsin, and Sept. 25, 2021, at Soldier Field in Chicago. The contests will mark the first meetings between Notre Dame and Wisconsin since a three-game series from 1962-64.

The Irish and Badgers have played on 16 previous occasions, with Notre Dame leading the series 8-6-2. Notre Dame earned a 31-7 victory in the most recent meeting between the schools on Sept. 26, 1964, in Madison, Wisconsin, in Ara Parseghian’s debut as head coach for the Irish. The Irish and Badgers met for the first time on the gridiron on Nov. 10, 1900, when Wisconsin shut out Notre Dame, 54-0. The Badgers captured the first three all-time meetings (1900, 1904, 1905) with the Irish.

 

Neutral site matchups are nothing new to the Notre Dame-Wisconsin series. The 1904 and 1905 games were played in Milwaukee, while legendary Irish head coach Knute Rockne led Notre Dame to a 19-0 victory over the Badgers on Oct. 19, 1929, at Soldier Field.

 

Notre Dame has played 12 games at Soldier Field, most recently in 2012 when the Irish routed Miami, (Fla.), 41-3, in a Shamrock Series matchup. The Irish own an all-time record of 10-0-2 in the current home of the Chicago Bears.

 

Wisconsin has played three games at Soldier Field. In addition to the ’29 meeting with the Irish, the Badgers defeated Great Lakes in 1942 and Northern Illinois in 2011.

 

Interestingly enough, 2020 will mark Notre Dame’s first-ever appearance at legendary Lambeau Field, which is named after Curly Lambeau – former Irish player and eventual founder of the Green Bay Packers. Wisconsin has played just once in the stadium, last year’s 16-14 victory over No. 5 LSU.

 

The Wisconsin-Notre Dame meeting in 2020 will mark just the second major college football game in the history of Lambeau Field, and the second college game of any kind since NCAA Division III St. Norbert faced Fordham in 1983.

 

Notre Dame-Wisconsin Connections

 

  • “The Kangaroo Kicker” Pat O’Dea not only was Wisconsin’s first great football star but he also served as Notre Dame’s head football coach. He played for the Badgers from 1896-99 and was a two-time captain. O’Dea was named an All-American in 1899 and helped Wisconsin to a 9-2 record. He was named the fifth head football coach of the Fighting Irish in 1900, and remained in that role for two seasons (1900-01).
  • Wisconsin basketball coach Walter “Doc” Meanwell established the Badgers into one of the most accomplished basketball programs in the nation in the early 1900s, guiding UW to four Big Ten titles and three Helms Foundation national titles. Knute Rockne, then a young track and field coach and assistant football coach at Notre Dame, admired Meanwell and brought his Irish track squad to Madison. After Rockne took over for Jesse Harper as head football coach in 1918, he continued to coach track and kept in touch with Meanwell, making more visits to Madison.
  • As Rockne’s football success soared, he was in demand as a presenter on the sport at summer programs of various universities’ physical education departments. He eventually partnered with Meanwell to create the Rockne-Meanwell Coaching School, which had segments for both football and basketball coaches, as well as a program on physical training. From coast to coast, hundreds of high school, prep school, and small college coaches would gather to learn from the pair each summer.
  • Rockne and Meanwell also combined to publish the first authoritative guidebook on athletic training, injury prevention and treatment.
  • Harry Stuhldreher, quarterback of the Four Horsemen, immediately jumped into coaching after graduation from Notre Dame in 1925. He served as Villanova’s head coach for 11 seasons before accepting the Wisconsin head football coach and athletic director position in 1936.
  • Paul Hornung, the 1956 Heisman Trophy winner at Notre Dame and legendary Green Bay Packer, was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1985 and Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1986.
  • Current Wisconsin athletic director and former Badgers head football coach Barry Alvarez was an assistant coach at Notre Dame from 1987-89. He was promoted (linebackers to defensive coordinator to assistant head coach) by Lou Holtz in each of his three seasons. The Irish went 32-5 in Alvarez’s three seasons and won the 1988 national title.

 

Wisconsin in NFL Stadiums

 

  • Over the last six seasons, Wisconsin has played 11 games in NFL stadiums, posting a 7-4 record in those games:
    • 17, 2011 vs. Northern Illinois at Soldier Field (Chicago) – W, 49-7
    • 3, 2011 vs. Michigan State at Lucas Oil Stadium (Indianapolis) – W, 42-39*
    • 1, 2012 vs. Nebraska at Lucas Oil Stadium (Indianapolis) – W, 70-31*
    • 30, 2014 vs. LSU at NRG Stadium (Houston) – L, 28-24
    • 6, 2014 vs. Ohio State at Lucas Oil Stadium (Indianapolis) – L, 59-0*
    • 1, 2015 vs. Auburn at Raymond James Stadium (Tampa, Fla.) – W, 34-31 (ot)^
    • 5, 2015 vs. Alabama at AT&T Stadium (Arlington, Texas) – L, 35-17
    • 30, 2015 vs. USC at Qualcomm Stadium (San Diego, Calif.) – W, 23-21^
    • 3, 2016 vs. LSU at Lambeau Field (Green Bay, Wis.) – W, 16-14
    • 3, 2016 vs. Penn State at Lucas Oil Stadium (Indianapolis) – L, 38-31*
    • 2, 2017 vs. Western Michigan at AT&T Stadium (Arlington, Texas) – W, 24-16^

* – Big Ten Championship Game

^ – denotes bowl games

 

  • Prior to 2011, Wisconsin had played 10 games in NFL stadiums, winning just twice:
    • 19, 1929 vs. Notre Dame at Soldier Field (Chicago) – L, 19-0
    • 17, 1942 vs. Great Lakes at Soldier Field (Chicago) – W, 13-7
    • 13, 1981 vs. Tennessee at Giants Stadium (E. Rutherford, N.J.) – L, 28-21^
    • 2, 1995 vs. Duke at Tampa Stadium (Tampa, Fla.) – W, 34-20^
    • 24, 1997 vs. Syracuse at Giants Stadium (E. Rutherford, N.J.) – L, 34-0
    • 1, 1998 vs. Georgia at Tampa Stadium (Tampa, Fla.) – L, 33-6^
    • 31, 2003 vs. Auburn at The Coliseum (Nashville, Tenn.) – L, 28-14^
    • 1, 2005 vs. Georgia at Raymond James Stadium (Tampa, Fla.) – L, 24-21^
    • 2, 2006 vs. Bowling Green at Cleveland Browns Stadium (Cleveland) – W, 35-14
    • 1, 2008 vs. Tennessee at Raymond James Stadium (Tampa, Fla.) – L, 21-17^

^ – denotes bowl games

 

  • The 2020 and 2021 games against Notre Dame are the only future regular season games for the Badgers currently slated to be played in NFL stadiums.

 

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