When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Credit: Leeds United/Juventus/Bristol City/Manchester City Once upon a time, football crests were ...
The University of Texas broke tradition by adding corporate logos to its football field, a year after athletic director Chris Del Conte said he wasn't considering it. The additions of Humann logos on ...
The Fighting Irish will have a new look come next football season. Notre Dame revealed an updated football-specific logo on Thursday, replacing the Leprechaun logo which had been in use since 1964.
So maybe I'm the anomaly here, but I'm not a fan of the change. The leprechaun with his fists up is a trademark for Notre Dame, especially the football program - why change it? Few colleges or ...
The Notre Dame Fighting Irish had social media buzzing with fans eager for the program to take their money after unveiling the school's new "Football Leprechaun," which is one of the best college ...
The Notre Dame football program is looking forward to what should be another strong 2025 season on the heels of their national championship game appearance a year ago. Notre Dame will once again be ...
Modernizing and staying with the trends is just a way of college football nowadays. Conferences are changing, apparel brands are being swapped for one another, and now, even some of the most ...
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (WISH) — The University of Notre Dame’s iconic mascot has a new look in a recently unveiled logo. The logo has the Fighting Irish mascot has the same face drawn into a scowl, leaning ...
Days before the college football season begins, the University of Notre Dame unveiled a new logo for its storied program Thursday — one that emphasizes football while downplaying the "fighting" in the ...
Notre Dame and its leprechaun mascot have become synonymous with each other, and on Thursday the university shared its revamped football logo for the 2025 season. The athletic department will tweak it ...
Once upon a time, football crests were sacred. They weren’t “logos” at all. They were heirlooms, passed down like pocket watches, stitched into kits, carved into memory, it’s safe to say for many it ...