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ACC On High School Friday Nights

ACC Is Celebrating Its Intrusion Into High School Friday Nights

Everyone in the football food chain used to have their place. Friday night was for high school football, no matter what state you live in. Saturday was college football. And then Sunday, and Monday were for the NFL. Then money crept in. Both the NFL and college football added Thursday nights into their television viewing package. Now the ACC is celebrating its intrusion into Friday nights, putting further attention squeeze on high school football.

Friday Nights No Longer Just For High School Football

The conference sent out a press release last week announcing the further expansion of its schedule, for TV purposes. “ACC To Own Friday Nights This Fall,” the statement declared. The week two game featuring Louisville against James Madison moved off its original Saturday scheduled date to Friday night, September 5th. “Atlantic Coast Conference football is set to dominate Friday nights this fall, with a league-record 12 games scheduled on Fridays.”

Twelve Friday night games in a 12-week schedule. There will be a couple of weeks with no Friday night games and other weeks with multiple Friday night games. Ironically, Black Friday, the day after Thanksgiving, a day that is a college football tradition and not a significant day for high school football, only has one scheduled conference game.

The Schedule

List of ACC Games on Fridays in 2025

August 29 – Georgia Tech at Colorado

August 29 – Kennesaw State at Wake Forest

September 5 – James Madison at Louisville

September 12 – Colgate at Syracuse

September 26 – Florida State at Virginia

October 17 – Louisville at Miami

October 17 – North Carolina at California

October 24 – California at Virginia Tech

October 31 – North Carolina at Syracuse

November 14 – Clemson at Louisville

November 21 – Florida State at NC State

November 28 – Georgia at Georgia Tech (Mercedes-Benz Stadium)

The Power Two Conferences Leave Friday Nights For Others

No one is going to mistake this for being Texas, where Friday night football is legendary. However, it also makes it clear where the ACC is in the big picture of conference competition. In recent years, it has been the MAC or other smaller conferences that have further moved their games into weekdays, seeking the attention of the television audience. Now, as Friday nights become a new element, at the expense of the traditional high school days, the SEC is not moving its games. The Big 10 is not moving its games. The Big 12 has moved some. And the ACC has moved more than anyone else, with a dozen mostly non-prime matchups in an effort to find more eyes for its games.

Main Image: Bob Donnan-USA TODAY Sports

About Tony Siracusa, CFB Managing Editor

Tony has been with Last Word on Sports for seven years covering college football around the country. A native of Southern California, now living in North Carolina, he has been working in broadcast, print and digital media for nearly 30 years. He is on the Board of Directors for the Football Writers Association of America. That makes him one of the 20 panelists who cast the final vote each year for the FWAA All-American team, the Outland Trophy, and the Nagurski Award. Tony is also a voter for the Biletnikoff Award, Lombardi, Groza, Broyles, Eddie Robinson, and Ray Guy awards. Tony can be found on twitter and Blue Sky, @tonybruin. https://lastwordonsports.com/collegefootball/author/tony-siracusa-contributor/