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2012's Shirt

Letter to the Editor

Published: Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Updated: Tuesday, January 24, 2012 22:01

It's great to see the annual debate about the The Shirt has already begun. With that in mind, as President of The Shirt Project, it is my responsibility to shed some insight concerning The Shirt Project and how it operates.

The Shirt began as a student-led initiative to unify the stadium, and a subsequent Shirt was created to support a student with dire medical needs. That year 30,000 shirts were sold and it set the precedent for future Shirts.

22 Shirts later, The Shirt 2011 sold 162,000 shirts and set a record for quantity of shirts sold in one year. The Shirt Project today remains true to its initial mission of being created by students, for students and supported by thousands of Notre Dame fans around the world.

As the largest student-run fundraiser at Notre Dame, The Shirt Project must always account for its financial obligations to our fellow students. In sum, The Shirt Project profits help defray medical bills for students who suffer from extraordinary medical conditions and fund student clubs, organizations and residence halls to support their activities. In addition, money generated from The Shirt Project also supports the Rector Fund (which helps students in financial need purchase football tickets, participate in JPW and service learning trips, buy textbooks, etc.). Finally, The Shirt Project contributes financial resources to establish memorial awards in the names of students who have passed away while at Notre Dame.

In the past, The Shirt Project has tried consistency in colors, but there was a significant shortfall in sales. From 2002-2004, The Shirt Project made shirts that were variations of green. In 2002, 130,000 shirts were sold. In 2003, 122,000 shirts were sold. Finally, in 2004, 52,000 shirts were sold. The Shirt Project each year strives to find a balance with a Notre Dame color and a unique design that makes Notre Dame fans proud to wear it. One of the ways we accomplish our goals is by changing the color each year.

More than anyone, I would love to see Notre Dame Stadium all in one color. As a former junior manager for the football team and current student manager for the women's rowing team, I can attest that the lack of color in Notre Dame Stadium is a challenge. I also recognize that the same color provides an intimidation factor to opposing teams. It is my goal as President of The Shirt 2012 to hopefully see Notre Dame Stadium unified under the same color as The Shirt. My committee is committed to creating innovative methods to spread the word about The Shirt for the 2012 football season.

For more information, please visit our website,

theshirt.nd.edu, or follow us on Twitter @theshirtND.

Go Irish,

Andrew Alea

junior

Stanford Hall

Jan. 24 

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9 comments

Double Chief
Fri Jan 27 2012 17:57
Do you really think that you are in charge of the shirt? Just look at the fiasco in 2000 to see who REALLY is in charge of the shirt. The admin lets you think you are in charge, but you are really only allowed to do what the admin wants you to do. Touchdown Jesus says football and religion don't mix.
Anonymous
Thu Jan 26 2012 14:10
You confirmed what I had suspected. And I'm very disappointed.

The assumption that sales drops are directly correlated to color change and nothing else.

Not thinking outside the box on how you can improve sales in other ways (different products - sweatshirts, gloves, winter caps).

I think fans deserve better. And I think there should be a grassroots movement to decide on a Notre Dame color to wear in the stadium. Then The Shirt sales can follow suit if The Shirt project won't champion that movement itself.

Anonymous
Wed Jan 25 2012 20:14
The argument is absurdr.
Is the drop off off shirt sales correlated to to color?
willingham's first year, hype 130,000
after the 10-3 year and fiesta bowl 122,000
after 5-7 season 52,000 sold - tailspin season that got Willingham fired.

since all three of those were green, it looks like sales are tied to team performance more than color...

Anonymous
Wed Jan 25 2012 13:32
@'93Alum

If you were to look into the mission of The Shirt Project (what it IS and what it always HAS been), it seems to be extremely obvious that yes, the mission of The Shirt is to create revenue for all the clubs, organizations, and funds mentioned. And yes, 52,000 shirts is impressive... But do you know what's more impressive than 52,000 shirts? 162,000 shirts... Try telling a Fortune 500 company that raking in less than 33% of their potential profit is quite the accomplishment. Missing out on a probable $100,000 dollars is not something to brush under the carpet for the sake of making it simple for those who have trouble choosing between wearing blue, gold, or green to the stadium. If you are a fan of Notre Dame Football, you're likely to have a shirt that happens to be the same color as The Shirt!

Anonymous
Wed Jan 25 2012 11:48
In the meantime, the fans can certainly match the color of their gameday apparel with the color of The Shirt-at least in the warmer months. (Granted, this becomes more of a challenge with serious winter gear. ) Gameday fans- let's commit to a unified stadium color for home games once The Shirt is unveiled in April. Most of us already own ND apparel in green, blue, navy, gold...shouldn't be too difficult. This is a chance to show opposing teams that we are One ND.
Anonymous
Wed Jan 25 2012 11:35
Do you really think that the color of the shirt can stop all three QB's from throwing interceptions?
The notion that the mission of "The Shirt" needs to change to help the team win is silly. Why not make the same arguement to the liscensing office and bookstore....only clothing of a single color can have Notre Dame on it can be sold by anyone, anywhere. Change the official colors to one single color. Change the nickname to something that doesnt have a color associated with it. Only admit fans that have a ticket AND are dressed in the one single color....
Anonymous
Wed Jan 25 2012 11:34
Do you really think that the color of the shirt can stop all three QB's from throwing interceptions?
The notion that the mission of "The Shirt" needs to change to help the team win is silly. Why not make the same arguement to the liscensing office and bookstore....only clothing of a single color can have Notre Dame on it can be sold by anyone, anywhere. Change the official colors to one single color. Change the nickname to something that doesnt have a color associated with it. Only admit fans that have a ticket AND are dressed in the one single color....
Anonymous
Wed Jan 25 2012 09:48
In 2002 the team went 10-3 (130,000 sold)
In 2003 the team went 5-7 (122,000 sold)
In 2004 the team went 6-6 (52,000 sold)

I am not sure if there is a causality between team record and sales (given that I suspect many shirts are sold before the first gameis played for the season), but I could make the argument that its not the color of the shirt that dictated the enthusiasm for the sales.

'93 Alum
Wed Jan 25 2012 09:20
So, what you're saying is that it truly is about generating revenue and not about establishing a consistent school spirit and helping unite the fans in their support of the football team. It sounds to me like 52,000 shirts is quite an accomplishment. What's wrong with that? And to the point of a previous letter, expand your product in other ways. Sell a unique (kelly green) Shirt for each game? Sell them for away games? Sell sweatshirts and windbreakers? Be more creative with the Shirt designs so that people want the latest version. There are many ways to expand the reach of the product while staying true to a cohesive school spirit and color. Finally, I'm always frustrated when I hear that a university with the largest endowment in the country requires an outside group to make their own money to fund student clubs and allow financially constricted students to purchase textbooks. Step it up Notre Dame! Support your teams, your fans and your students! Stop supporting the almighty dollar!






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