Tuesday, November 29, 2005

Electrolite | by Mike

Charlie Weis spent the month of May traveling across the country in almost ceaseless pursuit of the nation's top football prospects. When asked whether he enjoyed racking up the frequent-flyer miles, Weis explained:

“I’ll enjoy it when I know what the results are."
With a little over two months left until National Signing Day, the results have begun to emerge. Weis has secured the verbal commitments of twenty-two high school stars from fifteen different states.

Recently, Gatorade announced the winners of its 2005 High School Player of the Year awards. A winner from each state is chosen. In seven of the fifteen states that boast a Notre Dame recruit, the winner is headed to Notre Dame. These states are:
Georgia - Morrice Richardson
Illinois - Demetrius Jones
Indiana - Luke Schmidt
Massachusetts - Barry Gallup
Missouri - Munir Prince
Nevada - Jashaad Gaines
New York - Eric Olsen
Three other winners are being heavily recruited by Notre Dame:
Florida - Sam Young
Minnesota - Matt Carufel
Oklahoma - Gerald McCoy
Current members of the Irish who won the award include Scott Raridon (Iowa), John Sullivan (Connecticut), Tom Zbikowski (Illinois), Victor Abiamiri (Maryland), Trevor Laws (Minnesota), Darius Walker (Georgia), Justin Hoskins (Michigan), D.J. Hord (Missouri), and Asaph Schwapp (Connecticut).

Monday, November 28, 2005

Samardzikoff | by Pat

Jeff Samardzija started off with an 80-yard bang and made some big catches during the final game-winning drive against Stanford and now is up for ABC Sports All-America Player of the Week honors as well as being awarded a "game ball" by the Master Coaches Survey. If he wins the Player of the Week award, he'll join 2-time winner Brady Quinn and Tom Zbikowski as ND's third winner of this particular award.

Below I figured that Hass seemd the most likely candidate for the Biletnikoff Award, but I really think that Samardzija has a legitimate shot now. I updated the table with Jeff's up-to-date numbers. The biggest thing in my mind is that Samardzija brought his yards/catch average up an entire yard and is very near Hass' average now.

Wide Receiver
Games
Catches
Yards
TDs
Yds/Catch
Yds/Game
Misc.
Mike Hass
11
90
1532
6
17.02
139.27
1st 3-time Pac-10 1,000 WR
Dwayne Jarrett
11
75 1070
14
14.27
99.90
Has one game remaining
Jeff Samardzija
11
71
1190
15
16.80
108.2
Leads nation in TD catches

I don't think that Jarrett will win unless he has some sort of highlight worthy game-winning catch against UCLA. He's only a sophomore which I'm sure will keep some voters from picking him, as will the thought, factual or not, that Jarrett faces defenses more concerned with containing Reggie Bush. In the battle between Hass and Samardzija, Hass has the edge in most of the stats and the better personal story as the former walk-on turned All-American caliber player, but Samardzija has joined Brady Quinn as a poster boy for the resurgence of the Irish program.

So, while I was leaning towards conceding the award to Hass just a few days ago, I've flip-flopped and now think that Samardzija should be the front runner. Hass's yardage production is impressive, but the big hit in my mind is the fact that Samardzija has 2.5 times more touchdowns than the receiver from Oregon State. While Jeff was catching 2 touchdown passes in a closer than expected victory necessary for a spot in the BCS, Hass failed to catch a touchdown in the Beavers' final four games (they went 1-3) as they ended the season one win shy of bowl eligibility.

Sunday, November 27, 2005

Clearing up the speculation | by Pat

Earlier in the year many Irish fans were surprised when it was announced that Travis Leitko would not be a member of the 2005 Irish team. Amid concerns from depth chart engineers about ND's razor thin margins at defensive end, the rumors started to fly as to the reason for his absence and many were not flattering. His reputation and character took more than a few hits and low blows.

Now however, Eric Hansen reports on a side of Leitko that not many have seen while all the attention has been on the Irish team. This fall semester, Leitko has been back at his home in The Woodlands, Texas taking care of his parents, both of whom are battling cancer.

"I've been pretty much bed-ridden since the end of May," said Travis' mom, Janice, who has been struggling to deal with internal scarring from radiation treatments to eradicate her cancer. "They say God has a reason for everything, and I pray this is not the reason this has all happened to Travis. However, I don't know what I would have done without him.
Travis still has plans to return to Notre Dame in 2006 and rejoin the football team. In the meantime he will continue to take care of his parents and take classes at the local community college and University of Houston. And while I'm sure he is glad he can be home to be close to his parents, he's also keeping one eye on the Fighting Irish.
"I'm so happy for my guys," Travis said. "They're doing so well, but it hurts not to be out there. I've tried to stay out of their hair, but I've talked to a few guys and they seem to be doing pretty well.

"I wasn't really surprised by how well they've done. I knew we had talent. I knew guys could get the job done. Especially in the spring, I could see there was a different mental attitude."
It really is a touching story that hopefully will remind all Notre Dame fans of the caliber of players who unfortunately at times get measured solely by their contribution to the weekly box score.



Speaking of players and rumors, one current player that has been a target of many internet rumors is Rashon Powers-Neal. RPN has been suspended from the Irish team since the Purdue game and recently was not on the field for the final home game of his final season. This past week he came clean about the reason for his suspension -- a DUI while home in Minnesota during ND's first bye week -- and accepted the blame for his mistake.
"I'd like to apologize to my family, teammates, coaches and to the University of Notre Dame for the problem that I caused with my poor decision-making on Oct. 8," he told The Tribune via telephone on Friday. "I realize I placed many others and myself in jeopardy, that I paid dearly for my choices on that day. I ask that you forgive me, and I assure you that this type of incident will never occur again."
According to the article, the University imposed suspension officially ends on December 7th, at which point it will be up to Coach Weis to decide if RPN can return to the team or not.
"To my understanding, it's all up to the coaches after that," Powers-Neal said. "But I wasn't about to talk to them about it this week. I'm just going to let them worry about winning this next game."
RPN also clarifies that he did not sit out of the game against Michigan State due to any suspension or punishment. The decision not to play him was solely a coaching decision, not a disciplinary one.

At this point I'd like to point out that while we like to have some fun from time to time on this site, I don't think this is the situation where we should compare Rashon's punishment to those meted out at other programs around the country. As Lou Holtz once said, "burning down your neighbor's house doesn't make your own house look any better."

Odds & Sods, Chardonnay and Brie Edition | by Mike

This week's thoughts...

Two states. Brady Quinn looked like two different quarterbacks in Saturday's game. In the first half, Quinn struggled with Stanford's defensive scheme. To the Cardinal's credit, they appeared to craft a well-designed gameplan that exploited Quinn's occasional tendency to try and force a deep pass when the short route is open. Whatever the source of Brady's problems, Weis and Quinn solved them at halftime. Quinn's first half numbers: 9/19, 175 yards, 2 touchdowns, 2 interceptions. Quinn's second half numbers: 16/19, 257 yards, 1 touchdown, no interceptions. His quarterback rating for the second half was 215.2.

Walking to do. While several other key Irish players appeared to be slowed by nagging injuries, Darius Walker appeared to have finally recovered from the bumps and bruises that had slowed him down earlier in the season. Walker contributed 241 total yards to the Irish effort, every one of them critical. He rushed for a personal record of 186 yards on 35 carries and hauled in five passes for 55 yards. Walker finished the regular season with a 4.7 yard/carry average, bulling his way to a six-yard TD and taking a direct snap in for the 2-point conversion on his final two touches.

Carry the zero. Several Notre Dame players had statistical milestones within their reach entering the Stanford game. These milestones quickly fell by the wayside as the Irish offense zipped along to 665 yards. With his 80-yard catch and run on the second play of the game, Jeff Samardzija passed the 1,000-yard receiving mark, becoming only the third Irish receiver to do so. His second touchdown reception of the first quarter gave him 15 on the season. With 15 receiving TDs, Samardzija finds himself leading the nation. (However, because teams that play Hawaii are allowed an extra game, Dwayne Jarrett (14) will have the opportunity to catch or pass Samardzija when USC plays its twelfth game of the regular season next week.) When the game ended, Samardzija had racked up 191 receiving yards. Samardzija's season total of 1,190 yards gives him an Irish record, passing Tom Gatewood (1,123). Playing on a bum ankle did not prevent Maurice Stovall from recording a 136-yard night that brought him past the 1,000 yard mark, bringing his season total to 1,023. His second-half touchdown gave him 11 TD receptions on the season, tying Derrick Mayes for second on the Irish single-season list. Walker's bravura performance gave him 1,106 rushing yards on the season. Notre Dame and Miami of Ohio are the only schools with a 1,000 yard rusher, two 1,000 yard receivers, and a 3,000 yard passer. If Steve Smith notches 100 yards receiving against UCLA, USC will join this group.

Line of best Vic. In the first half, Notre Dame's offensive and defensive lines seemed to be showing the effects of a season's worth of wear-and-tear on units with limited depth. This was particularly true on the defensive line, where attrition has thrust new faces into significant roles. During the summer, Notre Dame's depth chart at defensive end projected to be something like this: Victor Abiamiri, Chris Frome, Travis Leitko, Ronald Talley, Justin Brown. Leitko was the first casualty, departing the university for a year. Frome suffered a season-ending injury against USC, and Talley suffered an injury against Syracuse that kept him out of Saturday's game. Thus Justin Brown notched his first start against the Cardinal. The new configuration along the defensive line seemed to have trouble in the first half, particularly when Trevor Laws sat out a few series. However, the line put things together for most of the second half. Abiamiri simply refused to be blocked, collecting four sacks for 43 yards.

Can I kick it? During the Syracuse game, Steve Gregory hit punter D.J. Fitzpatrick while Fitzpatrick's kicking leg was fully extended, drawing a personal foul. When Brady Quinn punted for the Irish in the first quarter, it was too early to tell whether Quinn was used primarily for the element of surprise or because Fitzpatrick had not fully recovered. However, when Fitzpatrick, wearing a cumbersome knee brace, missed his first PAT of the seaon, it looked like Fitzpatrick's injury would figure prominently in the game. Following Fitzpatrick's missed FG attempt in the third quarter, Carl Goia was given the opportunity to kick Notre Dame's first FG attempt of the fourth quarter. Yet when Notre Dame neededd a field goal to seal the game with 2:15 left, Fitzpatrick was sent out again and missed from 29. While Fitzpatrick's willingness to play through injury is commendable, the decision to use Fitzpatrick on the final attempt was perplexing. Fortunately, Fitzpatrick has five weeks to recover before the Irish take the field in their BCS game.

Jack-ass. Long-time BGS readers know how I feel about Keith Jackson. ABC's refusal to put the old fool out of his misery forced viewers to suffer through disconcerting displays of Jackson's dementia. Throughout the night, Jackson's descriptions of play were wildly inaccurate, such as the time he declared "completes it" as a pass was intercepted or when he stated that Stanford's PAT attempt was "for the win" or when he speculated the Notre Dame would use a tee on an FG attempt. However, Jackson moved from mere senility to outright jackassery when discussing Matt Shelton. Having suffered a second major ACL injury, Shelton was unable to repeat his spectacular performance of 2004, one that saw him torment Michigan defensive backs. Nonetheless, Shelton's ability to come back and contribute after another reconstructive surgery is certainly more laudable than, say, June Jones's solicitude of felons. While ESPN praised the latter on Friday, Jackson scoffed at the "horrible" season Shelton was having. The blustering fool made this comment after Shelton threw the block that sprung Samardzija on the 80-yard TD. Shelton would go on to haul in a 25-yard reception on a critical third down.

What if we give it away? As Stanford kept the game competitive until the final minute, it was hard to keep visions of past last-season crushing losses out of mind. Would the Stanford game turn out like '91 Tennessee, where Notre Dame's inability to kick a field goal following Craig Hentrich's injury allowed the Volunteers to pull off the largest comeback in Notre Dame Stadium? Fitzpatrick's injury and the two missed FGs made this comparison hard to ignore. Or would '93 Boston College be the more appropriate comparison? At times, Matt Traverso looked like Pete Mitchell against Rick Minter's defense. Or were we witnessing another '96 USC, where a certain trip to a Bowl Alliance game was lost in the final regular season game due to a missed extra point? Fortunately, one ruthlessly efficient final drive and Abiamiri pressure spared us this debate.

The blueprint. Saturday's game can be cast into several familiar narratives. For example, one could describe how Stanford followed the blueprint for an upset victory to near perfection. The familiar formula for an underdog victory is to win the turnover battle, limit penalties, and make big plays in special teams. Stanford did not commit a single turnover, finishing the game +2 in turnover margin. Only two penalties were enforced against the Cardinal (others were called, but those were declined). T.J. Rushing's 87-yard kickoff return provided Stanford with a huge special teams play. The Trees were also aided by Notre Dame's inefficacy in the kicking game due to a hobbled D.J. Fitzpatrick. It was this formula that allowed Stanford to remain in the game despite being outgained by over 300 yards. Viewed in this light, Notre Dame's seven-point win doesn't look so bad. Alternatively, one could interpret the game as a disappointing performance by a team that isn't quite as good as it thinks it is. Notre Dame never needed to punt in the second half, reaching the Stanford red zone on every second-half possession. Yet the Irish red zone offense sputtered, leading to two missed field goals. Which narrative is more accurate? Probably somewhere in between. That the Irish were able to win a game where they made so many more mistakes than their opponent is a good thing, but of course it's a bad thing that they made so many mistakes in the first place.

Saturday, November 26, 2005

Holy. Crap. | by Pat

Never in doubt...right?

A Major Award | by Pat

Recognition for Notre Dame's offensive explosion continues to flow in as a trio of Notre Dame players have all been named finalists for three of the more presitgious college football post-season awards. Brady Quinn was named as one of three finalists for the Davey O'Brien award which is awarded to the nation's best quarterback. Jeff Samardzija was named a Biletnikoff Award finalist for the nation's best wide receiver and Anthony Fasano was named finalist for the Mackey Award as one of the best three tight ends in the country. All three with be invited to the Home Depot College Football Awards Show, set to air live on ESPN on December 8th from 7-9pm, where the winners will be announced. Until that day, fans can vote for their choice here.

Brady Quinn's finalist nomination isn't entirely surprising given his Heisman darkhorse status, but it is still a nice honor for the junior QB. The interesting thing is that Quinn wasn't even listed as one of the 33 pre-season nominees even though he was listed as a pre-season nominee before his sophomore year in 2004. His competition for the award is USC quarterback Matt Leinart and Texas quarterback Vince Young. Stats wise Quinn is right there with the Rose Bowl bound QBs with each player one game away from finishing their regular season.

Quarterback
Games
Comp. %
Yards
TDs
INTs
Rating
Misc.
Matt Leinart
11
66.38
3217
24
7
161.9
#1 ranked offense, 38-1 as starter
Brady Quinn
10
64.85 3201
29
5
161.5
Only first season in new system
Vince Young
10
63.52 2414
22
8
169.8
774 yards & 8 TDs rushing

Of course, the award is supposed to incorporate more than just statistics. The official site describes the nominees as being judged on:
  • Quarterback skills/athletic ability
  • Academics
  • Being a team player
  • Character
  • Leadership
  • Sportsmanship
As with the Heisman, I feel that Quinn is going to finish behind Leinart (my best guess for winner) and Young but he should be the clear front runner for 2006 even if Young comes back for his senior year. It's possible that Quinn could sneak out a win here, but I really think that Leinart will win this award, mainly because he's being squeezed out of a possible repeat Heisman, despite better numbers, by Reggie Bush and Vince Young.



One of Quinn's favorite targets, Jeff Samardzija pulled off the somewhat surprising leap to finalist for the Biletnikoff Award. I say surprising because there are a number of highly publicized receivers who had good years and still didn't make the list and Samardzija wasn't a pre-season nominee. Still, Samardzija has earned this honor with a breakout season that should put Quinn to Samardzija on near equal billing with Huarte to Snow. Here's the breakdown of the three finalists; Samardzija, Mike Hass of Oregon State, and Dwanye Jarrett of USC.

Wide Receiver
Games
Catches
Yards
TDs
Yds/Catch
Yds/Game
Misc.
Mike Hass
11
90
1532
6
17.02
139.27
1st 3-time Pac-10 1,000 WR
Dwayne Jarrett
11
75 1070
14
14.27
99.90
Tied for national lead in TDs
Jeff Samardzija
10
63 999
13
15.86
97.27
TD catch in 9 games

I'd have to say that Hass is the likely favorite, especially since he is the only senior on this list and lacks the surrounding offensive talent that benefit Samardzija and Jarrett. But like Quinn with the O'Brien award, Samardzija has set himself up nicely for next year as an odds on favorite. For those interested, the selection committee has many media crossovers with the selection committe for the O'Brien award.

What is interesting is that with still one game left, Maurice Stovall has an outside shot at surpassing Samardzija in nearly every category. I'm sure by the time you're reading this that the game is over (greetings from the past!) and Samardzija is still ahead of Stovall, but I wanted to highlight just how close Stovall and Samardzija are statistically. Of course, the key difference in my mind is that Samardzija started the season hot and made big catches in every game. While Stovall can match Samardzija circus catch for circus catch, Stovall still collected 7 of his 10 touchdown receptions against Navy and BYU while Samardzija scored on everyone save Navy. That type of consistency, along with the quick start, is key to garnering media attention. It's a shame Stovall won't get quite the same recognition for what has been a fabulous season, but I suspect that his reward will come on April 23rd.



Last but not least, Anthony Fasano has made it to the final round of the Mackey Award. Unlike Quinn and Samardzija, Fasano was actually a pre-season nominee for this award. But like Quinn and Samardzija, it might be hard for Fasano to win the award this year. His competion comes from fellow finalists Vernon Davis of Maryland and Marcedes Lewis of UCLA, and both seem to have the edge in term of noticable offensive output. Here's a look at the reception stats for each candidate.

Tight End
Games
Catches
Yards
TDs
Yds/Catch
Yds/Game
Misc.
Vernon Davis
10
43
763
5
17.74
76.30
2-time TE of the Week
Anthony Fasano
10
42 545
2
12.97
54.50
Superb run blocker
Marcedes Lewis
10
55 711
10
12.93
71.10
Helping UCLA to 9-1 record

From the look of things, Fasano falls way short. But while Fasano is used as both a blocker and receiver, it seems that Davis and Lewis are more on the receiver side of things. The fact that both lead their team in receptions serves as solid evidence. And while such accomplishments are impressive, there is still more to being a tight end than out-running linebackers. Fasano has contributed devestating blocking this year to the point that Weis has mentioned that very few NFL tight ends combine pass catching and blocking skills as seamlessly as Fasano. Just ask Purdue's Ray Edwards who had a rough day even getting near Quinn and Walker due to Fasano's blocking. I'm also convinced that Fasano also leads the nation in times getting completely airbone while tackled. Whether he's diving for extra yards, somersaulting into a first down, or jumping over a hapless defender in one of this season's most memorable plays, he is always looking for that extra yard. Vernon Davis may win the award, but I'd argue that Fasano has been as productive and key to his team's success as any tight end in the country.

Friday, November 25, 2005

One Last Turkey Sandwich | by Jay

The last of the leftovers. So we've come to the end of the season, and there's just enough left for one more turkey sandwich, one final helping of cranberry sauce, one last slice of pumpkin pie. We're off to Stanford to trim the Trees and ice a BCS bowl, and there's not much more to say about this game other than we should win it, and handily.

The Walt Harris Experience is off to a shaky start (although it's probably faring better than the Wannstache Bash): problems at quarterback (Edwards banged up), problems at running back (16 yards rushing last week), problems on the offensive line (Cal sacked them nine times). Stanford's best game against a quality opponent was probably taking UCLA to overtime (yet losing) on October 29th; their worst, an ignominious early-season loss to UC-Davis.

Still, most Saturdays against APU (Aspirational Peer U.) there'd be a chance for a letdown, and maybe even a 'trap' game for us. Stanford's got some movable parts on offense and a heady coach that ordinarily might give us fits, and there's that little tradition of Stanford de-pantsing a good Notre Dame team from time to time.

Tomorrow won't be one of those games. Unfortunately for the Trees, they're catching us after we just played our worst game of the season. Against Syracuse, our focus was anywhere but on the field, and for most of that bright, windy game last Saturday, I didn't even recognize the boys in blue -- and neither did Charlie, if you read the postgame presser. (For some good Weis witticisms, check out the pre-Stanford presser -- it's one of his best all year). Unlike last week, we should be zeroed-in and laser-locked.

The difference tomorrow? We're actually playing for something. "Win this one, and we're BCS-bound" -- you can bet that's been the message this week in practice. I wouldn't be surprised to see a thorough domination, the first complete game we play all year. The last time we played at Stanford Stadium it was a 57-7 rout; except for Charlie's disinclination to run it up, expect a similar outcome.

By the way, after the on-field demolition comes another destruction: the wrecking ball swings on Stanford Stadium (an ironically-named venue whose greatest moments had nothing to do with Stanford football) immediately after the final gun. Don't tarry too long in the stadium, or you'll be a permanent resident.

Finally, Pat Morita passed away last night. I've always tried to live my life according to the wisdom of Mr. Miyagi, and it's led me out of some nasty scrapes with skeleton-suited bullies over the years. Miyagi once said, "Man who catch fly with chopstick can accomplish anything," and I think that's really important to remember as we kick off against the Cardinal tomorrow night. Wax on, wax off.

Thursday, November 24, 2005

Giving Thanks | by Mike

On November 24, 2004, Notre Dame was coming off a 41-38 loss to Pittsburgh in which Tyler Palko threw for an opponent-record five touchdowns. The loss was Notre Dame’s fourth of the season, and on November 24th the Irish were a mere three days away from the previous staff’s annual 31-point drubbing at the hands of the hated Trojans. It was not a pleasant time to be an Irish fan.

Today, November 24, 2005, the Irish stand two days away from locking up a Fiesta Bowl berth with a win over former aspirational peer Stanford. A sea change has occurred at Notre Dame, and for that Irish fans have many reasons to be thankful. There are also several people that deserve the thanks of Irish fans. Today seems like an appropriate time to recognize the efforts of those who have contributed to Notre Dame’s current direction.

Thanks to Rev. John I. Jenkins, John Affleck-Graves, Philip Purcell, and Patrick F. McCartan. Last year, these men had the courage to take the necessary action in the face of the inevitable tidal wave of media criticism. Notre Dame has an obligation to the student-athletes who work so hard on the field and in the classroom to provide them with elite coaching. Because these university leaders recognized that this duty outweighed the attacks of petty media talking heads, Irish fans have the opportunity to celebrate something of consequence this Saturday night.

Thanks to Coach Weis and his staff. Even the casual observer must realize how relentless these men have been in the film room and on the recruiting trail. Weis has impressed with his innovative play-calling on the field and his integrity off the field. In addition to baffling defensive coordinators, Weis has kept his promise to Montana Mazurkiewicz, visited the SC locker room following a crushing loss, and brought his team to salute the Midshipmen during their alma mater. While Weis’s staff has been less visible than the head man, we can be sure they have been working just as hard as Coach Weis. Weis has commented on how hard he was driven by Bill Parcells. It seems certain that Weis is just as demanding of his assistants. Their efforts are easy to notice on the recruiting trail, where the only remaining drama is which highly-touted recruits will secure one of the few remaining spots in this year’s class.

Thanks to all the members of the football team. Without their hard work and resilience, this fall would not have been so enjoyable for Notre Dame fans. In particular, thanks to the seniors. This class endured three separate coaching regimes prior to Weis’s arrival. However, rather than packing it in when handed a new coach for their final year, this class provided vital leadership. Previously maligned Irish such as Maurice Stovall and Mark LeVoir have had outstanding years. Corey Mays patiently waited his turn, then seized the opportunity when it finally presented itself. Brandon Hoyte has been a rock for the defense. The freshmen class also deserves special recognition. At a time when ND was getting absolutely hammered in the media, these men stayed true to their commitments. Their resolve has been rewarded with the opportunity to contribute immediately. Eleven of the fifteen members of the freshmen class have seen playing time this year.


Jay: I didn't spend 4 years
as an Evil Communications
major for nothing!
Finally, here at BGS we should thank our readers. On November 24, 2004, BGS was still a couple weeks away from its first post. Although our Fearless Leader has been too humble to mention this, earlier this month BGS received its 1,000,000th visit. Thanks to our readers for your comments and emails. (Sorry, I don’t have the coverage map.) Thanks for checking our facts and helping us avoid the groupthink of the BGS Lounge.


Happy Thanksgiving everyone.

Wednesday, November 23, 2005

Clearing the bench | by Pat

Not sure a full position rundown is warranted after playing what looked like Syracuse's JV team. So I'll just comment on a few things that I noticed and that Mike didn't cover in his excellent Odds and Sods.

Honestly, the Orange had one of the worst offenses I've seen in a very, very long time. Poor play-calling, bad throws by the QB, bad drops by the wide receivers. Outside of the one long run and two broken play scrambles by their QB, the Syracuse offense didn't accomplish anything...except a 51 yard touchdown scoring drive against our walk-ons that still required 11 plays to complete.

Perhaps a function of being less than enthused about playing a 1-8 Syracuse team, the Irish started the game pretty flat. The line didn't seem to get the same push and 'Cuse linebacker Kelvin Smith slipped through the line on delayed blitzes a bit too much. Eventually the Irish righted the ship, but it was a pretty lackluster beginning. It was the first time all season that ND failed to score in the 1st quarter.

One player that did show hustle and effort from the start was Chase Anastacio. He never seems to get much credit and recognition from ND fans, but his two blocked punts were a major reason that ND held Syracuse's punter -- who was averaging over 43 yards a punt -- to a 30.6 yard average against ND. That gives Chase three punt blocks on the year and he will be the special teams captain for the Stanford game, the second time he has earned the honor. It's great to see a guy that has been knocked down the depth chart a bit at his main position contribute elsewhere on the field.

It helps that Syracuse couldn't really hit the broad side of a barn with their passing game, but the secondary still looked good out there. Richardson made some nice moves to step in front of passes and Ferrine took full advantage of a gift-wrapped interception. I hope that the increase in confidence in our secondary leads to more blitzing from our linebackers. Mays and Hoyte were all over Patterson all game long and if it wasn't for the fact that Patterson is built like a linebacker, they would have had about 5 or 6 more sacks.

Of all the improbable stats, who would have guessed with one game left in the season -- after all of the inexperience in our defensive backfield and facing QBs named Palko, Henne, Stanton, Leinart, and Ainge -- that the ND defense would have intercepted as many passes (13) as they allowed to go for touchdowns (13). I don't think anyone would have predicted that.

Lastly, one of the best things that I didn't witness was a Halls Fruit Breezers "Screaming Fan of the Game" contest. Yeah, the time spent comparing Brady Quinn's look to Zoolander's Blue Steel was a minute of my life I'll never get back. And I certainly didn't need to hear Pat Hayden hypothesize that Quinn was probably "all night tough" in addition to "all day tough". But we made it through an entire home game season with nary a single second wasted on what was definitely the most obnoxious form of advertising I've ever seen on an ND on NBC telecast. The absence of that annoying gimmick alone is one of the best developments of the 2005 season. Actually, it's almost a pity they didn't bring it back for the last game because I think Weis would have locked up the award with his diatribe towards the sideline official after the questionable personal foul penalty called on Tom Zbikowski.

Statistically Speaking | by Pat

With one game left, the Irish offensive players have some milestone stats well within range. Brady Quinn is 299 passing yards away from 3,500 on the season. Samardzija is 1 receiving yard away from 1,000 while Maurice Stovall is a slightly more challenging 113. Stovall is also 77 yards away from 2,000 career yards and Samardzija is 124 yards away from the single season receiving record. Darius Walker is 80 yards away from 1,000 rushing yards and Marty Mooney is 984 yards away from 1,000 passing yards.

For some historical context, we all know that Quinn is now by himself at the top of the record book so obviously he would be the first to 3,500. Notre Dame has had two 1,000 yard receivers before (Snow, 1964; Gatewood, 1971) but neither were in the same year. Likewise, Notre Dame has never had a 1,000 yard receiver and 1,000 yard rusher in the same season. If Walker manages to get 80 yards, it will be the 14th time a ND runner has his the 1,000 yard mark. He will become the 9th runner to accomplish this feat. It should be noted that bowl game stats count in the official single season totals, so even these levels aren't reached against Stanford, they should be well within range for the bowl game.

With all the records that Quinn has been setting, one record he won't break is single season inteception ratio. However, he could nab 2nd place. Matt LoVecchio's 0.8% (1 for 125) is untouchable at this point, but at 1.36% (5 of 367) Quinn is on pace to pass up Ron Powlus' runner-up mark of 1.72% (4 of 232). Quinn can still grab 1st place in the career category though as his career mark of 2.53% (35 of 1382) is currently better than first place LoVecchio's 2.57% (5 of 194) talley.

Maurice Stovall's touchdown against Syracuse gives him 10 for the year and makes Stovall and Samardzija (with 13 TDs) the only wide receiver teammate combo with double digit touchdown receptions each. Both enter the Stanford game with a legitimate shot at ending up as the nation's leader in receiving touchdowns. There are currently three players tied for the national lead with 14.

There is an interesting statistic regarding D.J. Fitzpatrick, extra points, and ND single season records, but I refuse to write about it for the same reason that every time an announcer mentions who accurate a field goal kicker is, he misses his next kick. If you want to know, it's noted on the game release.

One more obscure record to keep an eye on during the Stanford game. Tom Zbikowski currently has 5 interceptions for 136 return yards. The interception yards record is 197 yards set in 1965 by Nick Rassas (on 6 interceptions). The number 2 slot belongs to Frank Carideo who had 151 yards on 5 returns in 1929.

Season Long Running Averages

First six games breakdown here.

Category BYU UT
Navy
'Cuse
1st Six
2005
2004
Yards per rush
1.9
1.4
5.7
3.7
3.6
3.6
3.32
Avg yards per PA
11.4 8.9
9.2
7.5
8.4 8.7 7.2
Avg yards per PC
14.6 14.8
12.9
13.0
13.3 13.5 13.4
Pass completion %
78%
61%
71%
58%
63%
65%
54%
3rd downs conv.
6/11 (55%)
7/16 (44%)
8/12 (75%)
6/17 (35%)
46/96 (48%)
73/152 (48%)
68/183 (37%)
Rushing yd avg 44.0
48.0
221.0
134.0
170.8
147.20 (58th)
127.4 (85th)
Passing yd avg 467.0
295.0
284.0
286.0
318.8
324.50 (4th)
218.1 (54th)
Passing Eff. (Quinn)
222.0
164.46
184.05
138.48
150.9
161.5 (5th)
125.87 (55th)
Total offense yd avg
511.0
343.0
505.0
420.0
489.7
471.70 (10th)
345.5 (81st)
Scoring Offense
49.0
41.0
42.0
34.0
36.0
38.20 (7th)
24.1 (72nd)
Time of Possession
26:21 32:12
28:25
32:12
35:12 33:02 30:50
Red Zone TDs 3/4 (75%)
1/3 (33%)
5/5 (100%)
1/5 (20%)
21/27 (81%)
31/ 44 (70%)
25 / 36 (69%)

Defense

Category BYU
UT
Navy
'Cuse
1st Six
2005
2004
Yards per rush given up
2.2
2.8
4.1
3.8
4.4
3.9
2.7
Avg yards per PA
7.0 5.8
7.5
3.5
7.7
7.2 7.9
Avg yards per PC
12.2 14.4
18.8
8.7
14.8
14.1 13.6
Pass completion percentage
58%
41%
40%
41%
52%
51%
58%
Quarterback sacks
4
3
0
3
13
23
30
Rushing yd avg. against 75.0
109.0
239.0
143.0
126.3
132.40 (39th)
88.2 (4th)
Passing yd avg. against 317.0
187.0
75.0
78.0
304.8
248.60 (92nd)
281.2 (116th)
Passing Eff. def. avg.
122.73
90.39
116.00
76.6
122.24
116.14 (37th)
138.34 (98th)
Total yd offense avg. against 392.0
296.0
314.0
221.0
431.2
381.00 (67th)
369.4 (54th)
Scoring Defense
23.0
21.0
21.0
10.0
25.67
22.90 (37th)
24.08 (46th)
Red Zone Defense
3/4 (75%)
4/4 (100%)
3/3 (100%)
2/2 (100%)
16/23 (70%)
28/36 (77.8%)
33/38 (87%)
Red Zone TD Def.
3/4 (75%)
2/4 (50%)
3/3 (100%)
1/2 (50%)
13/23 (57%)
22/36 (61%)
19/38 (50%)

Turnovers

Category BYU
UT
Navy
'Cuse
1st Six
2005
2004
Interceptions by ND
2
2
1
1
7
13
9
Fumbles Forced / Recovered
0/0
2/1
2/1
1/0
13/7
18/ 9
27 / 12
Turnovers gained
2 3
2
1
14
22 21
Had Intercepted 0
0
1
0
5
6
10
Fumbles / Lost 3/2
2/1
0/0
1/0
9/3
15/ 6
15 / 6
Turnovers lost
2
1
1
0
8
12
16
Turnover Margin +0
+2
+1
+1
+6
+10
+5

Special Teams

Category BYU
UT
Navy
'Cuse
1st Six
2005
2004
Kickoff return average
17.2
23.3
13.5
19.5
19.8
18.8
18.7
Kickoff return average allowed
21.7 21.4
26.5
18.5
19.1
20.5 19.9
Punt return average
7.5 39.3
12.5
7.3
16.5
17.2 10.8
Punt return average allowed
11.8
4.7
-
5.0
5.2
6.2
8.2

Fun Stat O' the Day: Notre Dame is currently 4-4 against Stanford on the road. Renovation on Stanford Stadium will commence after the game is over, so ND has a chance to not only send out the old stadium with a loss, but also push the ND/Stanford away record to ND's favor.

Tuesday, November 22, 2005

Would You Like to Play a Game? | by Jay

(First things first: Pick Six is updated from the latest BCS standings.)

Remember in the movie WarGames when Joshua started running through all the different variants of Global Thermonuclear War? That's what the BCS landscape looks like right now: a million different options, and many of them disastrous.

Believe it or not, there are eighteen different teams that still have a shot at a BCS bowl, and sixteen different games between now and December 3rd that still have some bearing on the BCS outlook.

How many possible outcomes are we talking about? I broke out my old Finite Math 101 textbook and started doing some permutations and combinations, but it quickly got to be too much. Instead of working out all the possibilities, we simply tried to lay out each team's fortunes as best we could. Click here for the master matrix.

Take a gander. Comments and clarifications are most welcome.

Sure shots. Penn State and Southern Cal are already in. Yep, Southern Cal would win the Pac 10 -- even with a loss to the Bruins, according to the arcane Pac 10 bowl selection criteria. If UCLA beats Southern Cal, there will be a three-way tie for the Pac 10 among the Trojans, UCLA, and Oregon. UCLA would be the first team eliminated from the tiebreaker, due to a loss to Arizona (whom USC and Oregon both beat). USC would then trump Oregon with a head-to-head win, and win the Pac 10.

The Longest Shot. Did you know Iowa State still had a shot at the BCS? Neither did we, until we started looking at all the possibilities. The Cyclones can win the Big XII with a little help, and a whole lot of luck. They've got one regular game against Kansas which they must win. Couple that with a Colorado loss against Nebraska, and they'll win the Big 12 north and go to the conference championship game. Then all they have to do is beat Texas.

Keeping in mind this year's BCS bowl priority system, let's do a little forecasting.

Probable scenario. This is how we (and most of the rest of the hoi polloi, including Pat Forde) think it'll probably play out:

Most Likely:
Rose
- USC vs Texas
Fiesta - ND vs Ohio State
Orange - Penn State vs Virginia Tech
Sugar - LSU vs West Virginia
The drama here is who will get the second at-large invitation after Notre Dame, with Ohio State and Oregon being the two most touted contenders. Oregon, by the way, is going full-throttle on the PR campaign to sway Fiesta Bowl officials that they should be the second at-large pick.

Possible scenario. What if Texas were to lose a game, either to A&M or Colorado? (Don't scoff -- when's the last time Mack Brown went undefeated?) Penn State might move up to #2 and go to the Rose to play USC, with either Texas or Colorado playing in Tempe. Orange would then get the first at-large pick, and you might have something like this:
if Texas loses:
Rose
- USC vs Penn State
Orange - Virginia Tech vs Notre Dame
Fiesta - Texas (or Colorado) vs Oregon
Sugar - LSU vs West Virginia
Possible, but ridiculous scenario. Yeah, it could happen -- a slew of terrible teams still have designs on the BCS. Here's what it would look like.

Texas drops both game; Iowa State sneaks in. Florida State drops its game to Florida but still wins the ACC. Georgia loses to Georgia Tech, but wins the SEC. Pittsburgh backs into the Big East. Notre Dame loses to Stanford. The BCS doomsday scenario might look like this.
all Hell breaks loose:
Rose
- Penn State vs USC
Orange - #24 Florida State (8-4) vs Ohio State
Fiesta - unranked Iowa State (9-3) vs Oregon
Sugar - unranked Pittsburgh (6-5) vs #15 Georgia (9-3)
The only option...is not to play.

The Quotable Charlie Weis | by Pat

From today's presser, another entry for the "Best Of" Charlie press conference quotes.

Now, let's talk about their defensive line. There's one guy who I like. I don't know him, but this guy (Chris) Horn, No. 95, I like him because he lists his favorite place that he's been on vacation as the Jersey Shore. I'm going to have to look him up because he's already on my good side. He actually splits time with (Gustav) Rydstedt, who's actually a kid from Sweden, so it's an interesting combination, a guy who loves the Jersey Shore and a guy from Sweden.

Schedule's out | by Jay

'06 and '07 are now set in stone.

2006
Sept. 2 at Georgia Tech
Sept. 9 Penn State
Sept. 16 Michigan
Sept. 23 at Michigan State
Sept. 30 Purdue
Oct. 7 Stanford
Oct. 21 UCLA
Oct. 28 at Navy *
Nov. 4 North Carolina
Nov. 11 at Air Force
Nov. 18 Army
Nov. 25 at USC
* in Baltimore
2007
Sept. 1 Georgia Tech
Sept. 8 at Penn State
Sept. 15 at Michigan
Sept. 22 Michigan State
Sept. 29 at Purdue
Oct. 6 at UCLA
Oct. 13 Boston College
Oct. 20 USC
Nov. 3 Navy
Nov. 10 Air Force
Nov. 17 Duke
Nov. 24 at Stanford

Notes:

• Army, which we heard rumblings about being the 12th game, is now official for the '06 season.

• Bye weeks: before UCLA in '06, before Navy (and just after USC) in '07.

• The beginning to '07 is fairly rough: eight straight games against decent competition without a breather, culminating with Southern Cal.

• "at UCLA" in '07 has the potential to be one of the better road trips in recent memory.

• How strong are these schedules? Tough to say, and too early to tell. '06 is a real cipher: the resurgent Penn State, UCLA, and Georgia Tech squads give the appearance of strength, but we saw what happened to our schedule this year, the most "brutal schedule in college football". Preseason AP had Southern Cal #1, Tennessee #3, Michigan #4, Purdue #15, and Pitt #23, with Notre Dame nowhere to be seen. Two of those teams have survived the top 25, one just barely.

• That said, I like our chances in '06. With almost every important cog returning for another year, things look good for a National Championship run. (2007, on the other hand, could be a little bit of a rebuilding year once Brady, et. al., graduate.)

If we win the NC in '06, remember, you heard it here first.

Monday, November 21, 2005

Odds & Sods, Screwdriver Edition | by Mike

Sundry thoughts about Syracuse...

Race for the prize. Darius Walker rushed for 123 yards and 1 touchdown on 26 carries. This gave Walker his sixth 100-yard game of the season and brought him within 80 yards of a 1,000-yard season. Most importantly, Walker's 37-yard run in the first quarter gave him the Irish's longest run of the season. Prior to the Syracuse game, this honor belonged to backup quarterback David Wolke, who had a 22-yard scamper in the fourth quarter of the Pittsburgh game. Thus Irish fans have been spared an offseason of message board whining about how our running back couldn't put up a longer run than the backup quarterback. Given how little there is to be unhappy about under Weis, you know the Master Shakes among the Notre Dame fanbase would have latched on to this one.

Wave of mutilation. Linebackers Brandon Hoyte and Corey Mays crashed through the Syracuse offensive line all day. Mays finished with 10 tackles, 3.5 of which were for a loss. Brandon Hoyte contributed 5 tackles, 2.5 of which were for a loss. Part of the reason the two were in the Syracuse backfield for most of the game was defensive coordinator Rick Minter's willingness to bring pressure and utilize the delayed blitz. Nonetheless, it was great to see the two seniors who formed the heart of Notre Dame's defense put up these numbers in their final game in Notre Dame stadium.

Marquee moon-ey. Charlie Weis declared that Marty Mooney's 16-yard strike to fellow senior walk-on Michael O'Hara was his "favorite play of the game." However, O'Hara is probably only Mooney's second favorite receiver. As happy as Weis was with the play, it's telling that Mooney was only given the opportunity to pass when the down, distance and game situation called for it. When the play was called, Notre Dame was in third-and-long and needed a first down in order to run out the clock. Given what we've seen from Charlie, I think this is the only situation in which he would have allowed Mooney to throw. Although Wolke and Mooney have combined to finish out all but three games this year, they have only been allowed to throw a combined four passes. Charlie's not one for needlessly throwing on a defeated opponent.

999 problems. As of the close of the Syracuse game, Biletnikoff finalist Jeff Samardzija has 999 receiving yards on the year. With just one more yard, he will become Notre Dame's first 1,000-yard receiver in thirty-five years. Maurice Stovall is not far behind with 887 yards, and Anthony Fasano has 545 yards. In twelve games last year, only Rhema McKnight (610) and Matt Shelton (515) had more than 400 yards receiving.

Let's get known. All 34 seniors saw playing time against Syracuse. Throughout the week, Weis reiterated that the theme for the Syracuse game was sending the seniors out the right way, and that is exactly what Notre Dame did. While Syracuse ultimately scored a touchdown when Weis emptied the bench on Syracuse's final drive, the Orange offense had their hands full against Notre Dame's senior walk-ons and reserves. Syracuse needed fourteen plays and two fourth-down conversions for their first-string to score against this group. While I would have loved to have seen the defense hold Syracuse on one of the fourth downs and keep the Orange out of the endzone, these players - many seeing their first game action - gave another team's frontline players all they could handle.

This protector. Just as he did against Michigan and Purdue, Ambrose Wooden once again used his blazing speed to make a game-saving tackle. In the first quarter, Wooden caught Syracuse running back Damien Rhodes from behind, putting an end to Rhodes's 51-yard run at the 14 yard line. The Syracuse offense then proceeded to sputter and was forced to settle for a field goal. This refusal to give up on plays explains why Notre Dame stands 37th in scoring defense despite the yardage the defense has given up this year. This play also provided a stark contrast to the 2003 Syracuse game, where the team gave up long before Brady Quinn took a knee on the final play. Both games illustrated Weis's truism that "the attitude of the head coach will be permeated through the players."

This and that | by Pat

Eric Hansen of the South Bend Tribune has a nice round-up article on the past weekend talking about BCS implications, Brady Quinn staying for his senior year, recruiting, and Weis' chances at being named National Coach of the Year. Check it out.



For those watching the game on NBC, you may have missed that Weis had the seniors take a lap around the stadium after the game before they walked off the field for the final time. Here is video from irisheyes.com of the moments on the field following the end of the game. You don't quite get to see the victory lap, but it's a unique perspective that not many get to see.



Continuing with the more aggressive PR stance they have taken this year, Notre Dame has set up a few pages on the und.com site to promote and highlight the various Fighting Irish players up for post season awards.

Now, I'm not a big fan of the heisman websites and cheesy promotional tie-ins you hear about every year, but I like the fact the school is at least recognizing that players like Quinn are in the race for some pretty prestigious awards.

Here is a link for the rundown of the major award candidates. Besides Quinn, Fasano, Stovall, Samardzija, Hoyte, and Zbikowski are all featured. Quinn also gets his own web page, complete with video highlights and links to various media articles. Enjoy.

Saturday, November 19, 2005

Final home game of 2005 | by Pat

Friday, November 18, 2005

61* | by Jay

Roger Maris's record wasn't the only asterisked event in the fall of 1961. Today's the anniversary of another controversial outcome: Notre Dame's victory over 10th-ranked Syracuse on a "do-over" field goal with no time remaining.

Seventeen seconds were on the clock when the Irish hauled down Syracuse back, and eventual Heisman Trophy winner, Ernie Davis just short of a first down on their own 30, and the ball turned over on downs. Seventy yards from the end zone, the Irish were trailing 14-15, and had just seventeen seconds to get into field goal range.

Frank Budka, ND's sophomore quarterback, scrambled out of the pocket on first down, making it to midfield, but eating up nine precious seconds. Eight seconds left. Budka then hit George Sefcik who stepped out of bounds at the Syracuse 39. The clock showed three seconds remaining.

Placekicker Joe Perkowski lined up for the 55-yard try. The snap came back, and Sefcik, the holder, grabbed the ball, but was hit by the onrushing Syracuse end Walter Sweeney as Perkowski kicked. The ball came to rest far to the right, in the field of play. Apparently the game was over.

But then a flag fluttered onto the field -- the head linesman had called a foul on Sweeney, roughing the holder. They marked the ball 15 yards closer, and Pekowski got another chance, this time booting it through the uprights.

Thousands of students rushed the field, mobbing the Irish players and attempting to bring down the goalposts. The Irish had won, 17-15.

The next day, the commissioners of the Big 10 and the Eastern Intercollegiate Athletic Association (Syracuse's conference) issued a statement that the officials had erred in permitting the game to continue beyond regulation after the foul (the Big 10 and the EIAA had supplied the officials for the game.) They contended that the ball was not in Notre Dame's possession at the time the foul occurred, because the ball had crossed the line of scrimmage on the kick. Under an official rule interpretation, a period cannot be extended if the ball is not in the possession of the team against whom a foul is committed, and since ND had given up possession on the kick, there could be no extension of time for a second kick. That was their contention, anyway.

This kicked off a war of press releases. Father Joyce, then Executive VP at Notre Dame, issued the Irish response almost immediately.

"We are quite surprised at the developments following our last-minute victory over Syracuse. We felt and will still feel that the officials made the proper decision on the field. The infraction occurred before the clock ran out and before the ball was dead. Therefore, it seems mandatory that a penalty be invoked. It is strange that the officials now feel otherwise.

At any rate, the interpretation given to the basic NCAA football rules as it applied to the point in question seems to us to be both ambiguous and illogical."
Lew Andreas, the athletic director at Syracuse, then said this in a terse, two-sentence statement:
"It is certain that, except for the misinterpretation of the rule, the game would have ended with Syracuse ahead 15 to 14. The rule in question is explicit."
The interpretation apparently took no notice of a rule pointed out by Notre Dame which said that in the case of the field goal try, possession remains with the kicking team if a roughing penalty is accepted. Joyce was flabbergasted.
"The lack of logic in their ruling is overwhelming. The game didn't end the second the ball left the kicker's toe. The only way a penalty means anything in this case is another play."
But Father Hesbrugh, in a television interview, hinted at a possible forfeit.
"Obviously it is a question of interpretation of the rule. Everybody knows Notre Dame doesn't want to win a game if it really didn't. If the rules committee determines that we didn't, we'll act accordingly."
Both schools asked for a ruling from the NCAA. A couple of days later, the chairman of the NCAA rules committee, Gen. Bob Neyland of Tennessee, issued a one-man decision that the field goal was illegal, and the win, therefore, tainted. However, instead of rolling over, as Hesburgh hinted ND would, Joyce fired back again, sending a letter to the NCAA and asking for a judgment by the full NCAA committee. At ND's athletic banquet in early December, Joyce explained the stance they were taking. The Chicago Tribune covered the story:
The Rev. Edmund P. Joyce, Notre Dame's executive vice president and chairman of the faculty board in control of athletics, said tonight that the university had stood firm against the obvious gesture of giving away the disputed Syracuse football game because an important principle was at stake.

Expressing his reluctance to draw out a matter which had been decided by the players and the officials on the field, he said that he was discussing it only because he felt that the group before him expected and was entitled to a statement...

He said that it is up to the NCAA rules committee to clarify the rule so that never again will any school be put in the embarrassing position of Notre Dame.

"We were the team which was fouled, yet it was made to appear that we were attempting to squeak through to a questionable victory in one of the most exciting finishes ever," Father Joyce said.
Finally, a month later, the NCAA reviewed the rule again and issued an amendment. Under the amended rule, Notre Dame, as it did on the disputed play, would get an extra play under the same circumstances. Notre Dame and the officials on the field that day were proven correct. Today the admendment takes the form of the rule that a game may not end on a defensive penalty.

Thankfully, Father Joyce hung tough in the face of controversy, and in the end, the game went into the books as a clean, pristine Irish win.

Senior Salute | by Pat

As you know, tomorrow's game against Syracuse is the final home game of the season and as such, the final time for the 5th year and senior class to run through the tunnel and out onto the field. Und.com put up a really nice photo gallery of all of the senior players, from starters to walk-ons, and I highly recommend you take the time to check out all 34 guys who gave so much to Notre Dame.

Action Jackson | by Pat

The dominos continue to fall. Yesterday, Florida prep wide receiver Richard Jackson announced at a press conference live on ESPN that he will attend the University of Notre Dame. Jackson was the second recruit to pick the Irish on Thursday following Chris Stewart's announcement earlier in the day, and became the 22nd known verbal to the Irish so far this year.

Jackson plays in the "big school" division in Florida and in 2004 was named 1st Team All-Central Florida, 1st Team All-Area, 1st Team All-District, and 2nd Team All-State. The 1st Team All-State wide receiver was Fred Rouse, who was the top-ranked receiver in the nation last year, so I think we can forgive Jackson for only getting 2nd Team as a junior. He was also named honorable mention All-State in basketball. The teams that were chasing Jackson include Miami and Georgia Tech, as well as Tennessee, Pittsburgh, Louisville, NC State, and South Carolina.

Jackson is the type of recruit that Notre Dame has had trouble getting in the past: he's a skill position player from Florida with offers from local schools like Miami, he grew up a Miami fan, and he wants to make a college decision primarily based on football. So it's no wonder Jackson likes what he's seen so far this season with Notre Dame's offense.

"There is a lot of tradition and a lot of history on the Notre Dame campus, and for someone like me who likes history, that was impressive," Jackson said. "The way Notre Dame has opened up its offense this year with [quarterback] Brady Quinn setting all kinds of passing records is great.

"Coach Weis has proved himself in the NFL and with what he has done at Notre Dame this year."
Still, it wasn't easy to get Jackson out of Florida. Visiting for the USC game, Jackson saw the campus at its best, and Weis really made an impression back during his recruiting trips earlier in the year.
"In all my 35 years of coaching, Coach Weis is the only head football coach who has been to one of my practices," East Ridge coach Bud O'Hara said. "That tells me he is really sincere about Richard and he is going to take care of him."
For those budding recruitniks out there, here is a free 5+ minute highlight video of Jackson; feel free to channel your inner Tom Lemming. (I understand the QB throwing the ball to Jackson in the video has the surname 'Batman'.)

Anyway, digging through some old articles...here's a report on Jackson written back in March.
Tremendous size, hard to keep on the line of scrimmage. Has a way of adjusting for the ball in the middle of a pass pattern. Has deceptive speed that is hard to judge unless you see it at ground level or play against him.

Watching film on Jackson can be misleading. He does things out of the view of the lens that you can only pick up by being there and watching. He is a "can't miss" prospect who seems to rise above all levels of competition.
Despite the state honors and an impressive scholarship offer list, recruiting reviews of Jackson are a bit varied. Rivals lists him as a 4-star WR and the 13th-best WR in the country, while Scout has him pegged as a 3-star guy, ranked 47th out of all receivers. Meanwhile, the Orlando Sentinel lists Jackson as the #5 recruit in all of Florida. This just goes to show that you shouldn't put too much faith into star rankings and such. We like to mention them for posterity, but such a wide range of opinion only goes to show that after perhaps the top 5 or 10 kids in the nation, the rest really are impossible to rank side by side.



With the recent flurry of commits, let's break down the recruiting numbers for the rest of the class. A couple of fast facts:

• Schools are only allowed to sign 25 recruits in February.

• Jackson is commit #22 for Notre Dame.

• However, Aldridge and Stewart are enrolling early, and will be counted against last year's class. (George West has also been rumored as an early admit, but for now, let's work with what we know for sure.)

• That brings the recruiting class to 20, with 5 slots open on board the Charlie Express (destination: Glory).

• So far, the haul looks like this:

QB
2
Frazer, Jones
DE 2
Ryan, Wade
RB
3
Aldridge, Prince, Schmidt
LB
1
Richardson
WR
4
Gallup, Jackson, Parris, West
CB
2
McNeil, Walls
TE
1
Mullen
S
3
Brown, Gaines, Gordon
OL
3
Olsen, Stewart, Webb
K
1
Burkhardt

• Looking at the balance of the class thus far, I'm guessing ND would probably would like to sign a few more offensive and defensive lineman and maybe another linebacker. As luck would have it, those are just the type of position players left on the board that are still considering the Irish.

We'll leave more of the specifics of who is leaning towards Notre Dame and who is a pipedream to the recruiting sites, but the names that keep popping up for those final few seats include TE Konrad Reuland, OL Matt Carufel, LB/DT Micah Johnson, OL Sam Young, OL Daniel Wenger, DL/OL Butch Lewis, DT Gerald McCoy, LB Toryan Smith, LB Anthony Lewis, WR Terrance Austin, OL Lou Eliades, and DT Jason Kates. The good news is all of those players are being heavily recruited by nearly everyone, which is a testament to their abilities. The bad news is that ND only will have room for 5 (or 6) of them.

Weis commented in a recent press conference that he plans on having recruiting nearly wrapped during the first few weeks of December and then start to really focus on junior recruiting. That means we should see the rest of the dominos fall pretty soon.

Yeah, there's a game tomorrow | by Jay

Where have you gone, Don McPherson? An orangey nation turns its lonely eyes to you.

Six questions for Saturday.

1. Who are we playing? Syracuse, a pretty good hoops school.

2. What happened last time we played these guys? I can't remember...it's a little fuzzy.

3. Who's the new coach over there? Greg Robinson, former defensive coordinator at Texas and a longtime veteran of the NFL. Some say he's been dealt a lousy hand at Syracuse. Possibly. But I have to question his coaching acumen when he says stuff like this:

"[Brady Quinn] was in a good system of offense for the last two years. Tyrone's a good quarterback coach...I don't think that this is just something that happened overnight. This was a great player coming out of high school. I just think that he's grown more and more comfortable. The things that Charlie does aren't that much different from the things that Tyrone was doing, in some ways."
I'll give him a pass; maybe he isn't following Irish football as obsessively as the rest of us.

4. Any history between Charlie and this guy? You bet. Charlie's got a 3-1 lifetime record against Robinson in the pros, when Robinson was the defensive coordinator for the Broncos & Chiefs.
  • 2002: W, Patriots 41, Chiefs 38
  • 2000: W, Patriots 30, Broncos 24
  • 1999: W, Jets 21, Broncos 13
  • 1998: L, Broncos 23, Jets 10 (AFC Championship game)
5. Who's good among the Orangemen? Running back Damien Rhodes isn't too shabby. That's about it.

6. Who's gonna win? More than any other game this year, this one's in the bag. Put it this way: the only team Syracuse has beaten is 1-9 Buffalo. Even Pittsburgh killed them, 34-17.

If you need reassurance, Bill's got the breakdown.

If you need even more reassurance, the AP already has the game recap up.

Thursday, November 17, 2005

Everything's bigger in Texas | by Pat



A third offensive lineman for the recruiting class of 2006 hopped on board when Klein High school standout Chris Stewart (#79 above, center) announced his plans to attend the University of Notre Dame.
"Overall I thought that in bigger picture, life in general without football being considered, Notre Dame was a better choice for me. Not only will I get guidance from one of the best offensive line coaches (John Latina) in the game, and one best head coaches. I get a chance to go in early. Notre Dame has the academics, the school prestige, I just feel in love with the school just being up there. I hadn’t ever been to the school and I fell in love with the entire campus."
We'll get to the "go in early" part in a bit. For now, let's focus on one of the biggest recruits to commit to Notre Dame in recent memory. Checking in at an unofficial 6'5" 360 lbs, Stewart has all the markings of a future road grader at offensive guard. With a reported bench press around 400lbs, he was selected as a 1st Team All-State player in his class group, which in Texas is quite an accomplishment. Recruiting ranking wise, he was tagged as a 4-star OL by both rivals.com and scout.com and his offer sheet reflects the high opinion (offers from Ole Miss, Tennessee, LSU, Texas A&M, Arkansas, Texas, Texas Tech, and Nebraska among many others). Imagine the lucky running back that gets to run behind him for the next four years...with Asaph Schwapp as the lead blocker.

Stewart's announcement came during a press conference where he also accepted an invitation to participate in the US Army All-American Bowl. That makes him the 7th ND recruit to be invited to play in the January game, joining James Aldridge, Darrin Walls, Raeshon McNeil, Demetrius Jones, Bartley Webb, and Zach Frazer. Other Army Bowl invitees still considering the Irish include Konrad Reuland, Sam Young, Dan Wenger, Gerald McCoy, Matt Carufel, Terrance Austin, and Micah Johnson.

More than just football, it was the combination of everything at ND that lead to Stewart choice to pick the Irish.
"Primarily one of the things I was looking at was the school itself," Stewart said. "I wanted to go to a school with great academics and great football tradition. Also, I wanted to go somewhere that had good coaches and could be a father figure for the players, and I wanted to be a part of something special rather than just a football team."
Backing up the "great academics" claim, Stewart is an accomplished student who has already earned 21 college credits through advanced work with his high school and the local area community college. The kicker is that Notre Dame didn't accept all the credits - only 5 of the 21 - so in committing to ND he is losing credit for taking some of the accelerated classes.



But here's the interesting thing: Chris Stewart will be enrolling a semester early at Notre Dame, joining incoming running back recruit James Aldridge as the first football players to enroll in the spring since Ara was the head coach. George West is rumored to also be considering early enrollment.

A recent South Bend Tribune article confirmed Aldridge's plans to head up to South Bend in a couple of months. Assistant provost and director of admissions Dan Saracino talked about the new policy.
"It's never been set in stone, and it's never really been questioned for a number of years why we haven't done it,"

"We're looking at it on an individual case-by-case basis. And we're surely open to other students. We're not just doing this for football. I guess we looked at this as an opportunity to look at the whole issue of not admitting students in January.

"Is this going to be a plan to open it up in a big way? Not at all. We are definitely open to admitting individual students with good reason in January, but we do not expect it to be more than a few. And by that, I definitely mean a few."
Aldridge heard the good news from Coach Weis this past Tuesday.
"It’s cool,” he said. “It’s groundbreaking. I’m pretty honored."
The effect that early enrollment has on the current recruiting class is that it will create more room for the current year's recruiting class. When a player enrolls early, the school is given the option to add them to the current (2006) recruiting class or the previous one (2005). The NCAA dictates a maximum of 25 players can come in on one class so with 15 recruits total in the 2005 class, there is more than enough room to add Stewart and Aldridge to last year's crop. That means that while Stewart is the 21st known verbal commit to the Irish (out of 25 possible), both he and Aldridge do not "count" against the 25 limit. Therefore, Notre Dame in effect still has room for 6 more recruits to hop on board.

The benefit to the player when enrolling early is that they are allowed to participate in winter workouts (Chris Stewart, meet Ruben Mendoza) and go through spring practice with the rest of the team, all while starting the college academic life without the added time constraints of in-season football. Eligibility-wise, the early enrollment has no effect as they still receive a full four seasons of playing time, complete with the option for a 5th year should they not play one year. Usually though, a player brought in early is one that not only appears ready to handle college life from an academic and maturity standpoint, but also appears ready to make an early contribution to the football program. Both Stewart and Aldridge certainly sound like they in that position.

It seems that Stewart will be using the extra time to help get himself into position to accomplish his main goal, which is to continue Notre Dame's winning tradition.
"With us being the first recruiting class for coach Weis, hopefully we can do what USC is doing now and get some championships. I think the unifying thing is that we know we’re coming in to work. We’re coming in to get something done. You have guys that are immortalized at Notre Dame from 1988 and 1966, you say to yourself ‘why not me?’ Let’s bring America’s team back to greatness.

20 and counting | by Pat

Notre Dame's recruiting efforts yielded another verbal committment when linebacker Morrice Richardson told the coaches he was coming to Notre Dame while on his official visit during the Navy game weekend. As he told Scott Kennedy of scout.com, it was "just the best place for me." In doing so, Richardson has become the 20th known verbal commit to the Irish.

Along with promising a national championship before he leaves, Richardson had high praise for the current Irish squad.

"It's a special team," he said of Notre Dame. "That's a special team right there."
Richardson plays defensive end for his Westlake team in Georgia but at 6'2" 228lbs was recruited at linebacker by nearly every school that offered him a scholarship. And there were plenty of schools that were after Richardson. He had offers from finalist Georgia Tech, Florida, Virginia Tech, Ohio State, LSU, Auburn, Alabama, Nebraska, and Oklahoma among others.

It seems that Richardson has always been around good football players. His high school has the most active NFL players out of any high school in the country and Richardson is cousins with Georgia Tech's star WR Calvin Johnson and everybody's favorite former Hurricane Michael Irvin.

As the recruiting class of 2006 fills up (with more good news potentially on the way today), I find it hard to believe that anyone will be able to top Richardson when it comes to this comment about Notre Dame.
"They have churches up there like Georgia has Waffle Houses."

Wednesday, November 16, 2005

Touchdown Jesus | by Jay

While we're on a book review kick, we thought we'd take a look at Touchdown Jesus, Scott Eden's (ND '97) new book about faith and fandom at Notre Dame.

For Eden, what started out as an exploration of the convergence of religion and football under the Dome slowly became something different, as the events of the 2004 season and Tyrone Willingham's ouster unfolded. A tableau of vivid character portraits, Touchdown Jesus also works as a chronicle of Willingham's last season, as seen through the eyes of Notre Dame's most fervent fans.

Recently we sat down for a few beers with the author to talk about his new book.

The Blue-Gray Sky: How did you get the idea for the book?

Scott Eden: Originally it was going to be a small article, drawn from wandering around the parking lots during tailgating. It was kind of a silly idea about the combination of the sacred and the profane on a Notre Dame gameday, about how people go to the Grotto, and then go to the tailgates, which can sometimes be fairly raucous. I wanted to explore that sacred-profane move, and I eventually published the article in this obscure literary magazine. It was called “Parking Lot Religion.”

Then a friend of mine who was a grad student at ND went on to become a publisher at Paulist Press. He suggested that I expand the article into a longer piece, but still short, 150 pages max, about how religion and football fandom intermingle at ND, how people treat ND as a pilgrimage site, both religiously and secularly. But do it over the course of an entire season, and really explore why people are fans, their passion, what draws them to ND.

So, of course, it was the ’04 season, the third of Willingham’s tenure, and the other thing that’s happening is this undercurrent of dissatisfaction over the last ten years, this percolating discontent, so I wound up exploring that, too.

I set off on the research pretty early last year, back in the summer of ’04. One of the first things I looked at that summer was something called the Notre Dame Football Fantasy Camp. I figured that would be a good way to get a look at some truly diehard fans; only the most diehard would be spending three thousand dollars on something like that, so I hung around the camp for three days. Ironically, it ended up not making the book, which is a shame, because there was a lot of good material there.

Then I wanted to find an ensemble cast of fans, from alumni, to subway alumni, trying to get at all the different angles. These would be my characters through the season.

That’s one of the greatest things about the book. You found some great fans – subway alums, the seminarians – all these representatives from all kinds of different demographics who follow ND.

And there’s plenty of people I missed, too.

How did you find all these different people? Just via friends and connections, through the ND message boards…?

Well, just a for instance, the Hallahan group that tailgates at the Neighborhood of Hope…I actually went to the Blue and Gold game in the spring of ’04, and that’s where I met Hallahan. There was this hive of activity, and of course they were having a good time.

And you just walk up, and say, Hi, I’m writing a book…

Sure, and they were immediately interested. And Tracy was there with his friends, and they’ve got the leprechaun tattoos, and his son was there…in the book, I describe him. He’s this big, burly red-headed Irish kid with a leprechaun tattoo and a gothic “Fighting” on one forearm and “Irish” on the other. So of course that interested me immediately.

Other people came up by word of mouth. Eddie Gadawski, the tavern owner in Niagara Falls, well, a friend of mine is from there, too, and he put me on to Eddie. Eddie, turns out, is fairly famous. He’s known in California and other places around the country, and he's known by this core group of people that come to every game, and their headquarters is the bar in the Morris Inn, Leahy's. That’s also how I found out about Sharon Loftus, the woman who moved from California to South Bend… So you kind of move from one person to the next. A lot of it was by word of mouth.

And for every one of these stories, there’s hundreds…

Yeah, you could just keep going.

Have you talked to any of those people after the book came out? What’s the reaction?

Very positive. Of course, Hallahan, being a very sentimental guy – and maybe he doesn’t want me to say this – but he was crying when I first presented him with a copy, and then later, after he read his chapter, he told me how much he loved it. Eddie Colton, the cop, loved it too.

So on one hand, you’ve got this great book about tailgating and all the colorful personalities that surround it, and it struck me that you could do that kind of book almost any football season – they’re great stories, and they’re timeless. On the other hand, since you were writing it last year, you got to see everything through the lens of the Willingham brouhaha. And the events last season really permeate all the character profiles, and as a topic of conversation, it just keeps coming up again and again.

And that stuff wouldn’t have been as important if the season hadn't ended like it had. It wasn’t that significant a piece of the book's original scope. It wasn't my original intent to get into all the palace politics. Let’s say Willingham hadn’t been fired—it would have been a different book. From beginning to end, the structure would have been different. The “Call for Change” letter wouldn’t have been up front, for instance. But everything got shifted because of what happened with Ty.

Was it difficult to blend everything together?

Yeah. Obviously, the book follows the chronology of the season, but in figuring out the book's structure, you also have to hang off of that chronology all these different topics you want to hit, and, in addition, you’ve got to tell the story of the firing. Then you’ve got to find places within that larger structure for all the topics that don’t have anything to do, directly, with that central, season-long narrative arch: the tailgaters and the history of subway alumni and so forth. Topics that could stand alone and be written about in any season. If the book had been written almost any other year, chronology wouldn’t have been important at all.

Whom did you interview from the University for the book?

Well, some I can say, some I can’t. Obviously, I talked to Monk, and I also sat down with Father Hesburgh. I never did talk to Kevin White. Some important people were kept off-limits, like John Affleck-Graves and Father Jenkins. Believe me, I tried. Couldn’t talk to Willingham, either. But there are a lot of people within Notre Dame that I talked to that were off-the-record conversations.

Was there any official reaction from the University towards the book?

Not the University, but you know, the bookstore will not promote it. Evidently, they’re carrying it now, but originally they said they wouldn’t even sell it. So as of right now they’re selling it, but I won’t be in the lobby signing books anytime soon. Basically, they considered it an “unfriendly portrait.” Of what, I don’t know. To me, it’s not unfriendly at all. It's just the opposite.

There’s a quote in the book from Jim O’Connor, the manager of the bookstore, where he sweeps his hand across the atrium and says, “The experience begins here. Nowhere else in college football, or in collegiate merchandising, will you have such a dramatic entrance.” I must admit I chuckled at that description, because if anybody has a criticism with the ostentatious merchandising of Notre Dame, that’s where it starts.

And that’s fine, that’s Jim’s job. But, as you say, I also make note of other opinions that exist out there. As any alumni or student or faculty member will tell you, some people are critical of the new bookstore. It’s just another interesting aspect of Notre Dame football, which is that it’s this amazing commercial endeavor.

It’s a fine line to walk. You want to exploit the brand, but at the same time you don’t want to dilute it.

And it is a brand. It’s very possible, of course, that the bookstore people are a little irate about that particular chapter.

You explored a lot of history in the book, and obviously there are some exhaustive histories of Notre Dame out there. But for your book, you were able to go back and get select passages and quotes from, for example, John Cardinal O’Hara, directly relating to football and fandom at Notre Dame.

A lot of those details I discovered by reading Murray Sperber's excellent history of Notre Dame football—Shake Down the Thunder. For me, the most surprising thing to discover during the research was the O’Hara stuff, and when he was the Prefect of Religion at ND especially. His views on the role that football plays at the University are fascinating—he felt that the religious and spiritual lives of Notre Dame students had an almost one-to-one relationship with how the football team performed. He even worked out this elaborate calculus of daily communion and how it would empower the team—that it was a communal kind of effort on Saturdays.

It reminds me of the current “Candle” ad that ND features right now as the halftime advertisement for the University. Here’s a girl with a prayer to get into Notre Dame, and her prayers are answered because she apparently prays hard enough. And that message is being conveyed via the medium of a football game.

Right. And what’s the difference between that, and praying for the team to win a game? It goes right back to O’Hara. The Grotto, for instance, does too. The O’Hara days are when the Grotto really became a pre-game “place”. His Religious Bulletin [a campus circular of the day] did a lot for how we conceive of Notre Dame football today. “Notre Dame football is a spiritual service” and stuff like that. All these rituals developed, I think, directly out of his ideas.

And you go through the history, down the line to Hesburgh…

Well, one of Hesburgh’s goals, and this goes beyond football, was to get away from a certain brand of piety at ND and in Catholic America at the time—as he calls it, a “results-oriented piety”, which in his eyes was kind of superficial. Faith for Hesburgh was more than just praying and going through the motions. And it wasn't just him, either. There’s the old English professor Frank O’Malley, who had Hesburgh-esque ideas in that way. O'Malley was also after a more intellectually rigorous spirituality.

You quote one of Hesburgh’s critical remarks, about not “prizing piety over competence”, which seems to be what Hesburgh was all about. And it’s what he did with the football team, too, in a sense. He was accused of “de-emphasizing” football, but he explained it as being “over-emphasized” to the exclusion of other things at Notre Dame.

Right. And the question is: What’s de-emphasis? What’s over-emphasis? What do those terms mean? Again, it’s this fine line—a line that shifts. To this day there’s a tension about the football team, and about the role of religion as it connects with sport at Notre Dame. At the end of the one chapter, there’s the story about the priest who goes out on the field after a game and spreads the ashes of George Gipp onto the field. Within Notre Dame and within the CSC there are people uncomfortable with that kind of ritual.

And someone told that priest he wouldn’t be allowed on the field anymore because he wasn’t insured.

So, it’s interesting that everything that Monk went through the wringer on with regards to football really is just a reliving of things that go on again and again in ND’s history, especially during Hesburgh’s time.

That was one of the points of retelling all that stuff, to show that what happened to Monk had happened to Hesburgh too. Hesburgh, who is now deified, who has become an icon of sorts himself, went through similar stuff when dealing with the football program.

You relied on the internet a lot for this book, for research and contacts and so forth. You also relied on it for showing the reaction of the anonymous common fan, the “man in the street”, especially during the time of the Willingham firing. Is there any danger to using anonymous quotes to characterize the feeling of the times?

Sure. Only a small percentage of the Notre Dame fan base actually posts on message boards, but because it’s a highly public forum, it seems like it’s a lot larger, and more representative of the status quo about how fans think, than it really might be. But I will say this: a lot of the fans that I talked to and profiled, like Hallahan and Gadawski, they weren’t frequenting the message boards at all, and yet their feelings pretty much mirrored what was going on on the boards.

The danger is – and I’m not sure I succeeded – is to not rely on opinions on a message board as the “majority” opinion of ND fans. Especially since there are different degrees of fans, from people who casually root for a team, to those who are posting on message boards a dozen times a day.

There are a lot of extreme viewpoints posted on a message board, so it was funny to read about posts being “printed out” and laid on the desks of officials at the University.

A place like NDNation changes things a bit, because while its chief posters might represent a fraction of all Notre Dame fans—the diehards, the ones that watch every single game or break down game tape or go to many games in a year—nevertheless, because it’s a public place, those message-board posters end up shaping opinion as well as reflecting it. Even if certain themes get put out there by the small fraction of fans who actually post on a message board, it’s still shaping opinion. So many more people read it, and even for those who read only once a week or so, or hear about it from someone else, the ideas get disseminated.

Do you think the NDNation “Call for Change” letter had a role in the firing of Willingham?

I have no idea how big, but, like the message boards themselves, I think the letter absolutely had a role in shaping general opinion about the direction of the team under Willingham. The letter voiced an opinion that was passed along not just on NDNation, but by word of mouth, or in articles that covered it in the Chicago Tribune and other papers, and it eventually formed the basis for the letter-writing campaign that occurred at the end of the season. And I have to think that people at ND must have acknowledged that there did exist a disgruntled percentage of alums and fans—however large or small—and I believe it had to have at least played a part in the ultimate decision to fire. It only makes sense, given the outcome. But there’s no way to gauge that, without sitting down with the decision makers and having them hash it all out. Or giving them some kind of truth serum.

And remember that many of the same reasons that were given by the letter were the same reasons that Father Jenkins has cited since then. So even if the Call for Change letter wasn't the prime motivator, the feelings about the situation were a shared thing; a lot of people were feeling the same way - not all of them, as we know - from grassroots subway alum all the way up to Notre Dame trustees. I think that much is obvious.

You talk about the media reaction to the Willingham firing a lot, and it’s all so recent. The book is very timely in that we just went through all this stuff, and a lot of the media reaction you can still look up online. And you pegged the two main themes that came out of all that; number one, that Notre Dame football is “dead”, and that Notre Dame is “selling its soul” to become a football factory. You point out that almost every article had one or sometimes both of those themes as its basis.

Yep, there’s an obvious cycle of ND media coverage that takes place, and now it’s turning again. Now it’s the “Return…” angle, which we’ve also seen again and again, even during Ty's first year. And as ND has success in the future, at some point it’ll be the football factory “selling-your-soul” angle again. I should say that this cycle observation isn't my own—others have pointed it out as well, and I'm not ashamed to say that I stole it. Good poets borrow, great ones steal, as someone once said.

Was there anything that didn’t make it into the book?

Oh, my gosh, lots. The ushers—the stadium ushers, I’m disappointed I couldn’t find a way to fit them in. Interesting people – diehards. And how it’s all run is very interesting, how they’ve made an effort to put a happy face on game day, “Welcome to Notre Dame stadium,” and all the ushers are graded on that. They have these meetings that are almost militaristic before the games, they get in their platoons, and there’s an interesting hierarchical organization with colonels and captains and lieutenants. They have uniform checks, and they get demerits when things aren’t right. And what’s more fascinating than that are the ushers themselves, and what lengths they will go to be ushers. There are guys who fly in from California for every game to be a part of it. And very few of them are alumni.

As an alum and a fan of Notre Dame football yourself, were you conscious of any pitfalls of perspective or subjectivity you had to avoid in writing this book?

Well, I tried not to make it too first-person-y. For one thing, I didn’t want it to be “the normal guy in the group of crazies," and let’s all chuckle at these nutball fanatics. Because I’m one of them.

I don't know if I succeeded, but I felt it would be just enough that at certain key moments I would reveal my own status as an ND fan. One of those moments is when I talk about the Boston College game in 1993, when I disclose that I was a freshman at this point, and here was me being a fan at that game. Mostly I wanted to be way in the background, and I preferred a third-person account. The “I” narrator wouldn’t have worked for all the ground I had to cover anyway, so I didn’t want it to be a travelogue account. I wanted the freedom to jump between different characters and different places in the country, or move into a digression on the history of subway alum, for instance, and if it's a first-person travelogue, you'd have less leeway to do that sort of thing. It would have taken up too many pages to explain why you were all of a sudden in Niagara Falls, New York.

Plus, I’m a boring guy. If I had an “I” narrator, then I'd have to explain myself. I'd be forced to go into my own autobiographical background, and who would want to read about that?

Thanks to Scott Eden for sharing his thoughts on his new book. Be sure to check out Touchdown Jesus: Faith and Fandom at Notre Dame.

Statistically speaking | by Pat

As usual, let's talk offense. The Notre Dame offense has improved its offensive output by 131.9 yards. That is the best improvement from the previous year in the nation. Interestingly, USC is 2nd in the nation in offense improvement at +128.5 yards while Penn State rounds out the top 3 at +126.7 yards. Consult the und.com game notes for the Top 10.

Continuing with a theme, the Irish have scored 348 points so far this season. The school single-season record is 426, set in 1991 over the course of 12 regular season games. It will take an average of 39 points over the final two games to break the record in only 11 regular season games. As it stands to reason then, the 2005 squad is currently on pace to break the school record for scoring average with a 38.67 points. The current record was set by the 1968 team that averaged 37.68 points.

No player has come on stronger lately than Maurice Stovall. After only notching 1 touchdown in the first six games of the season, Stovall has caught 8 TD passes in the last three. Interestingly, there hasn't been much middle ground for Stovall in terms of receiving yards per game. For five of the nine games he has 41 or fewer receiving yards while in the other four games he has 130 yards or more.

His recent quantum leap in production has also moved him considerably up the rankings in the ND record books. He is now 7th all time in career receptions and only 9 catches away from 6th place Tony Hunter (and only 8 catches ahead of inactive Rhema McKnight). In career receiving yards, Stovall is currently 6th all time at 1842 yards, 55 yards away from 5th place Tony Hunter. He is also tied for 3rd for career touchdown receptions with Jim Seymour. Both have 16 touchdowns, meaning Stovall equaled his previous career output in the last three games.

Another offensive player who has quietly been having an excellent year is Darius Walker. Overshadowed by the aerial attack and perhaps suffering a bit from a leg injury, Walker is still holding on to 3rd place for career average rushing yards per game. Over Walker's career, he is averaging 79.2 yards a game, which is behind Autry Denson (89.9) and Allen Pinkett (89.8) but ahead of Vagas Ferguson (73.9) and George Gipp (73.1). For the 2005 season, Walker is averaging 88.6 rushing yards/game.

And adding to his rushing contributions has been his work as a receiver. His 28 receptions not only are more than Fasano, Stovall, and Shelton had last year, but rank him 4th all-time for single season receptions by a running back. His 245 receiving yards combine with his 797 rushing yards to give him over 1000 all-purpose yards with two games remaining.

One thing about Zbikowski's recent scoring outburst that has largely gone unmentioned, at least on BGS. With his two touchdown game against Tennessee, Zbikowski stands with 5 career returns for a TD (1 fumble, 2 INTs, 2 punts). As the game notes highlight, that puts him up with some of the most famous big play players in ND history. Zibby's 5 returns place him equal with Vontez Duff (5 returns - 3 kickoffs, 1 punt, 1 INT) and just behind Tim Brown (6 returns - 3 punt, 3 kickoff), Rocket Ismail (6 returns - 1 punt, 5 kickoff), and Allen Rossum (NCAA record 9 returns - 3 punts, 3 kickoffs, 3 interceptions). With two years of eligibility left, it's highly possible that Zbikowski could move even higher on this list.

Let's switch over to defense now. A little over a month ago I took a look at when the Irish are letting teams score their points. Here's the table again, updated with current numbers. ND is still allowing the most number of points when the Irish are up by 28 or more points. And the fact that ND has allowed 41 points to be scored while the game was tied but only 14 points while the Irish trail shows that ND has done a phenomenal job so far this season responding to opponent scores with scores of their own.

Point Differential Points Allowed
28+ (+) 43
21-27 (+) 21
14-20 (+) 27
7-13 (+) 41
1-6 (+) 32
TIED
41
1-6 (-) 0
7-13 (-) 7
14-20 (-) 7
21+ (-) 0
TOTAL
219


Season Long Running Averages

Per game breakdowns of the first six games here.

Category BYU UT
Navy
1st Six
2005
2004
Yards per rush
1.9
1.4
5.7
3.6
3.5
3.32
Avg yards per PA
11.4 8.9
9.2
8.4 8.9 7.2
Avg yards per PC
14.6 14.8
12.9
13.3 13.6 13.4
Pass completion %
78%
61%
71%
63%
65%
54%
3rd downs conv.
6/11 (55%)
7/16 (44%)
8/12 (75%)
46/96 (48%)
67/135 (50%)
68/183 (37%)
Rushing yd avg 44.0
48.0
221.0
170.8
148.67 (58th)
127.4 (85th)
Passing yd avg 467.0
295.0
284.0
318.8
328.78 (5th)
218.1 (54th)
Passing Eff. (Quinn)
222.0
164.46
184.05
150.9
164.3 (5th)
125.87 (55th)
Total offense yd avg
511.0
343.0
505.0
489.7
477.44 (10th)
345.5 (81st)
Scoring Offense
49.0
41.0
42.0
36.0
38.67 (7th)
24.1 (72nd)
Time of Possession
26:21 32:12
28:25
35:12 33:08 30:50
Red Zone TDs 3/4 (75%)
1/3 (33%)
5/5 (100%)
21/27 (81%)
30/ 39 (77%)
25 / 36 (69%)

Defense

Category BYU
UT
Navy
1st Six
2005
2004
Yards per rush given up
2.2
2.8
4.1
4.4
3.9
2.7
Avg yards per PA
7.0 5.8
7.5
7.7
7.4 7.9
Avg yards per PC
12.2 14.4
18.8
14.8
14.4 13.6
Pass completion percentage
58%
41%
40%
52%
52%
58%
Quarterback sacks
4
3
0
13
20
30
Rushing yd avg. against 75.0
109.0
239.0
126.3
131.22 (40th)
88.2 (4th)
Passing yd avg. against 317.0
187.0
75.0
304.8
267.56 (100th)
281.2 (116th)
Passing Eff. def. avg.
122.73
90.39
116.00
122.24
118.74 (46th)
138.34 (98th)
Total yd offense avg. against 392.0
296.0
314.0
431.2
398.78 (77th)
369.4 (54th)
Scoring Defense
23.0
21.0
21.0
25.67
24.33 (47th)
24.08 (46th)
Red Zone Defense
3/4 (75%)
4/4 (100%)
3/3 (100%)
16/23 (70%)
26/34 (76.5%)
33/38 (87%)
Red Zone TD Def.
3/4 (75%)
2/4 (50%)
3/3 (100%)
13/23 (57%)
21/34 (62%)
19/38 (50%)

Turnovers

Category BYU
UT
Navy
1st Six
2005
2004
Interceptions by ND
2
2
1
7
12
9
Fumbles Forced / Recovered
0/0
2/1
2/1
12/7
16/ 9
27 / 12
Turnovers gained
2 3
2
14
21 21
Had Intercepted 0
0
1
5
6
10
Fumbles / Lost 3/2
2/1
0/0
9/3
14/ 6
15 / 6
Turnovers lost
2
1
1
8
12
16
Turnover Margin +0
+2
+1
+6
+9
+5

Special Teams

Category BYU
UT
Navy
1st Six
2005
2004
Kickoff return average
17.2
23.3
13.5
19.8
18.7
18.7
Kickoff return average allowed
21.7 21.4
26.5
19.1
20.7 19.9
Punt return average
7.5 39.3
12.5
16.5
18.9 10.8
Punt return average allowed
11.8
4.7
-
5.2
6.3
8.2

Tuesday, November 15, 2005

Odds and Sods, Guest Host edition | by Pat

Tangled up in blue. Because the game ended before the customary 4 hour mark, NBC didn't really know what to do with themselves so they kept the cameras rolling and told Lewis Johnson to go interview anyone with an ND logo on his shirt. The benefit of the extended post-game coverage is that it allowed the home viewer to catch Weis lead the Irish team over to the Navy band and join the Midshipmen in the singing of their alma mater. Ok, so the Irish players didn't really sing, but they did stand there, helmets by their side. For those that missed it, here is video from the field, care of IrishEyes, that captures the event as well as the customary team post-game trip to the student section.

Highway 26 revisited. Travis Thomas had his best day in a Irish uniform as he split carries with Darius Walker for 58 yards and a touchdown. However, Weis quickly cleared up any misconceptions that ND was moving to a running back by committee approach.

"It's dictated by personnel. We're not splitting time. There's one personnel where we bring in the big boys to pound them and that's with Travis [Thomas]. When we are spreading them out and playing our normal stuff it's Darius [Walker]."
It seems that not only has Thomas' hard running style earned him more carries, but he's also seeing time in situations that earlier in the season featured Rashon Powers-Neal.

Guess I'm doing fine. From the games notes, the historical perspective is added to this season's offensive fireworks display.
With 42 points in today's game, Notre Dame has now scored over 30 points in seven consecutive games. The 2005 and 1966 teams are the only other Notre Dame squads since 1913 to score 30 points in seven straight games. Overall, Notre Dame has scored 30 or more points in eight games this season. Since 1913, only the 1991 team scored 30 or more points more times, posting nine such performances.
With Syracuse and Stanford still on the docket, I think ND has an excellent chance to pass both the '66 and '91 team records.

You're gonna make me lonesome when you go. It was announced during the game when Quinn broke the records for single season passing yardage and all-time touchdown passes. And yet we're to a point where a 75% passing, four touchdown day earns a remark of "he seemed kind of quiet today" from Anthony Fasano. Eric Hansen of the South Bend Tribune reveals this nugget about Quinn's accomplishments this year.
Quinn's 27 TD passes on the season -- extending his own single-season record -- are more than the 2001, 2002 and 2003 Irish teams amassed combined (25).
As it now stands, Quinn is 3rd in the nation in touchdown passes behind Drew Olsen of UCLA and Cody Hodges of Texas Tech. Colt Brennan of Hawaii also has 27. The next closest QB's are Matt Leinart of USC and Jordan (brother of Carson) Palmer of UTEP, who both have 23. Of the quarterbacks with 27 or more TD passes, only Quinn and Brennan have two games remaining. Olsen and Hodges only have one left.

Ballad of a thin man. After watching Samardzija explode on to the scene in the first half of the year, Stovall has decided to match him with a stellar 378 yards, 8 touchdown showing in his last three games. And aside from the endzone circus catches, his superb downfield blocking has had a huge positive impact on the rest of the offense His redefined physique and sudden dominance has certainly caught the eye of NFL scouts. In fact, self-appointed NFL draft guru Mel Kiper Jr. currently has Stovall rated as the #4 senior wide receiver in the country. It seems that Stovall is a good combine away from a 2nd or 3rd round selection.

Gotta Serve Somebody. With its 42nd consecutive victory over Navy, Notre Dame also extended its Service Academy win streak to 12 with the last loss coming at the hands of Air Force in 1996. Next year, Notre Dame will play all 3 service academies for the first time since 1995. Hopefully the Irish will bring home the Commander's Cup.

Monday, November 14, 2005

the Loudest Silence | by Jay

Here's a nice piece in the Observer about the end of the game on Saturday, written by...hey, wait a second, I know that guy!

It was another Notre Dame-Navy game this past weekend, an affair that these days seems to be as fresh as Grandma's ubiquitous fruitcake. We all know the routine; these two teams face each other, Notre Dame wins, Navy loses, dance a jig, yadda yadda yadda. It's been that way for 42 years now, and Saturday's game was no different. Save a 7-7 tie in the beginning of the game, the Irish had their way with Navy, to the tune of a 42-21 final score. The weather was beautiful, the team looked great, and the home crowd at Notre Dame Stadium had plenty to cheer about on Saturday.

However, the most impressive event in that stadium was when 80,795 people did no cheering at all. No yelling, no talking, not even an odd sneeze. Dead silence. That's what the Navy band received at the end of the game while they played their alma mater.

Well, it wasn't entirely silent where I was standing for the game. Just a few rows behind me, a couple Knievelesque Navy fans had made it into the student section with the help of some erroneous ticket booklets and a Notre Dame senior. And while Navy played their alma mater, one of their fans sang along. An opposing student, singing his alma mater in our student section. Surely he must have a death wish. But on this day, no jeers, insults, or contentious voices were heard; thousands of opposing fans simply listened as a solitary voice in a crowd of thousands rang out and sang for the Navy Blue and Gold. That silence, that voice and the goose bumps on my arm after it was all said and done is what makes this rivalry special.

It's easy to overlook the annual Notre Dame-Navy game. When one team wins 42 times in a row, there's not a whole lot of drama reserved for the football field. However, this historic match-up goes far beyond anything that could happen between the sidelines. The game is more of a ritual than anything else, an opportunity for each team to show their respect for the other. Notre Dame is forever grateful to Navy for supporting the University through tough times during World War II, and the Irish pay back the Middies by playing them year in, and year out. It's our way of saying "thanks" for something done half a century ago, and playing the game is all that matters, not who wins or loses. Of course, that's easy to say when you're on the winning end of 42 years of games, but I digress.

Remember when we were looking for a football coach, seemingly eons ago? One of the things that is always listed in the job requirements is a guy who gets Notre Dame. He has to get "it." Notre Dame may not be able to describe in words what "it" is, but the coach has got to have "it." If people weren't convinced yet, the end of Saturday's game proved Charlie Weis has "it" coming out of his ears. After convincingly crushing the opponent, Charlie led the team over to Navy's corner of the field to sing their alma mater. Just minutes before, these two teams walked on that grass as dire enemies, but now they walked across as one. Hopefully next year Charlie can show Michigan State how a real team celebrates a victory.

With no time left on the clock and the outcome decided, this respectful gesture wasn't about Navy's football team; it was about Navy. It was a sobering reminder that what we just poured all of our energy into was just a game. Many times that's easy to forget at Notre Dame, where football lies in the hierarchy of priorities somewhere between inhaling and exhaling. While we can spend countless hours worrying about Sagarin rankings, passing efficiency, and Mark May, Navy has bigger fish to fry. We may claim that we must protect this house, but Navy must protect something way bigger.

Sure, the last time Navy beat us, the twinkles in our parents' eyes weren't even us, but rather a Barbie Doll or a G.I. Joe. And sure, with Charlie at the helm, a loss to Navy doesn't seem forthcoming in the near future. Lee Corso will never come to a Notre Dame-Navy game. Nonetheless, I know I'll be looking forward to this matchup for years to come. I'll look forward to being able to cheer for everybody, clap for both fight songs, and enjoy a game for what it is, a game. Thank you, Notre Dame football players, for showing respect to an opponent who rightfully deserves it. Thank you, Charlie, for leading the team in that gesture. But most of all, thank you, Navy, for nothing football-related whatsoever.

Peter Schroeder is a senior English major. He can be reached at pschroeder06@gmail.com. He hopes you're having a good day.

Sunday, November 13, 2005

Nautical Signals | by Jay

Full review, odds, sods, and everything else post-Navy in a bit. For now, here's a little something to get your day started.

Since Navy last beat ND in 1963 -- just prior to Ara taking over -- here's the average margin of victory over USNA, broken down by coach. The Navy MOV is a pretty good indicator of overall ND coaching success:

coach games avg MOV high low
Parseghian 11 30.1 49 8
Holtz 11 29.2 43 15
Devine 6 21.2 33 6
Faust 5 19.2 38 1
Davie 5 18.0 31 4
Willingham 3 9.3 18 3

Navy, by the way, was nationally-ranked only once when we played them over that span (they were #11 in 1978).

Anyway, note the three coaches who did not average at least 20 points per win. More significantly, consider this: Davie and Willingham in their 8 years combined had more single-digit wins (4) than the other four coaches in their 33 years combined (3).

Charlie's inaugural MOV over Navy, although an obviously limited statistical sample, is nevertheless an encouraging 21 points.

Saturday, November 12, 2005

Game Time | by Pat

Friday, November 11, 2005

Meet you at the Temple Bar | by Pat

It seems that 10 year extensions are all the rage at Notre Dame in the past few weeks. First Weis, then Adidas, now Navy.

With the recently announced contract extension, Navy and Notre Dame will continue to play each other until 2016. The Irish have faced the Midshipmen for 79 consecutive years, making it longest running rivlary for the ND football team.

The highlight of the new announcement is the revelation that in 2012, the Fighting Irish will battle Navy in Dublin, Ireland. In 1996 the two teams traveled to the Emerald Isle and played in Croke Park. The result was a 54-27 Irish win in Lou Holtz' final year as head coach in front of 38,651 fans.

There has been no confirmation that Croke Park will be the location for the game, but it is a likely location. Since the game in '96 the park has undergone a major renovation and now is the 4th largest stadium in Europe with capacity for over 82,000.

The only other Navy "home game" already identified is next year's game which will be played in Baltimore. The locations for the games in 2008, 2010, 2014, and 2016 are still up in the air.

Since Notre Dame has already agreed to play in the Meadowlands against a Big East opponent, it would be fun to see the location move around the country a bit more rather than just stay on the east coast. San Diego strikes me as a perfect choice as it is home to a large Naval and Irish fan contingent. This Q&A with the Navy athletic director concedes that San Diego may be an option for a future Navy game.

Q: Is there any consideration of having one of the Naval Academy football games in San Diego? With the strong military presence (Navy and Marine Corps) in the San Diego area, I believe that it would be a great success! As I look at the future schedules, I see that there has not yet been a site determined for the 2006 Navy versus Notre Dame game. There is very little doubt in my mind that a game of that magnitude would sell out and provide a very patriotic setting. I am willing to donate my time to look into the possibility, should you need any assistance. Thank you for your time! - asked by: Mike Sommers -

A: Hi, Mike. We play on the West Coast in 2007 and 2008 at Stanford and Cal/Berkeley. San Diego is a real possibility after that. Stay tuned.
He also mentions that the 2008 game against Notre Dame is in Baltimore. Given that the game location seems set for '06, '08, and '12 and that ND still tentatively has a road game at Arizona State scheduled for 2014, I'll say that if ND is going to play Navy in San Diego that 2010 is a likely candidate.

the definitive Paul Johnson | by Jay

Here's a pretty good Washington Post article from last fall about Navy's coach Paul Johnson and his triple option attack.

The offense that made Johnson's teams ultra-successful was also his biggest obstacle to landing a more lucrative job in the Division I-A ranks. Over the past 20 years, Johnson has fine-tuned the triple-option spread offense, which has become as rare in college football as two-way players. Most Division I-A schools have become enamored with the passing game, which many athletic directors believe makes for more exciting football and greater ticket sales.

"If people really believe that, I think it's really funny," Johnson said. "If you went to any school where we've been and asked the fans what they thought about our offense, they'd tell you they were pretty excited watching us play. To me, I'd think you'd just want to win games."

Johnson is getting the last laugh now. Since inheriting a Navy football program that had won one game in its two previous seasons -- the Midshipmen's 1-20 record in 2000 and 2001 was the worst two-year mark in the program's 122-year history -- Johnson has guided his teams to 14 victories. Navy was the second-most improved football team in Division I-A last year, improving from 2-10 to 8-5 and winning the Commander-In-Chief's Trophy for the first time since 1981.

War Stories | by Jay

Veteran's Day is today, and with the added bonus of us playing Navy tomorrow, we thought this would be a nice opportunity to highlight a couple of stories from the rich history between Notre Dame sports and the U.S. armed forces. (Thanks to BGS contributor Will for putting this article together.)

ND's association with the armed forces goes all the way back to 1858, when the student-organized Continental Cadets began marching across campus. Since then, thousands of domers have served in the US military.

World War I. From a ND Magazine article by John Monczunski:

The initial campus enthusiasm for military training abated following the Civil War, but in 1880 University President William Corby, CSC, the famous chaplain who gave absolution at the Battle of Gettysburg, revived the program. Father Corby believed a military regimen would offer Notre Dame students an excellent source of recreation, exercise and discipline. The new Notre Dame cadets, sporting gray uniforms, came to be known as Hoynes Light Guards, after the professor charged with overseeing the unit, "Colonel" William J. Hoynes. Two years later, academic credit was offered for the training. By 1917 it had become a required course for most Notre Dame students.

That same year, the University administration applied to the War Department to participate in the government's Student Army Training Corps (SATC), the forerunner of today's Reserve Officers' Training Corps (ROTC). With the World War I draft draining away students, administrators saw participation in SATC as essential to the economic viability of the school.

Notre Dame cadets practiced marksmanship at a firing range between Corby Hall and Old College and marched and drilled, but the training was judged inferior by the government and the bid rejected. Notre Dame President Rev. John W. Cavanaugh, CSC, was furious with the verdict. The University continued to lobby, and in autumn 1918 some 700 students were sworn into the SATC, only to be demobilized in December with the war's end. More than 2,200 Notre Dame students and alumni served in the armed forces during World War I.
Naval Reserves Come to ND. World War II: Most American companies and institutions were devoting all possible resources to the war effort, and Notre Dame was no different. Prior to the Pearl Harbor attack, the Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps became the University's first ROTC detachment. (Father Hugh O’Donnell initially offered the Army the use of University facilities, but they declined.) The Navy gradually began expanding their presence on campus, adding a Midshipmen's School and the V-12 Program, which began in 1943 and introduced the Marine Corps to campus.

By the middle of the war virtually the entire campus was military, and for all practical purposes, Notre Dame was now a naval base. The only exceptions were 250 17-year-olds who were too young for the draft, and a handful of civilians classified as 4F. Over 12,000 naval officers would end up departing the peaceful shadow of the Golden Dome for the battlefields of World War II.

Thomas J. Schlereth, historian and professor of American Studies at Notre Dame:
"The war years inextricably changed Notre Dame. Contracts came from government research. A speedup cafeteria system in the South Dining Hall replaced the form of family-style dining, feeding twice as many men in half the time, with much less than half the former intimacy and civility. The public 'caf' overflowed with military brass, WAVES, and recruits whose campus stay often extended only months rather than the usual four years. Vacation periods were abbreviated, classes accelerated, semesters shortened, and one year there was no Christmas holiday. Women appeared all over the previously all-male, semi-cloistered campus, replacing undergraduates who formerly had done part-time jobs in offices, dining halls, laboratories, and the library. Sentries patrolled the campus perimeters at night; long blue, white and khaki lines tramped the quadrangles by day."
The ’43 football team reflected the military make-up of the campus, with the roster now listing the military status of each player: Marine Reserve (14), Naval Reserve (12), Civilian (4), 17-years-old (9).

To this day, a large part of why we continue to play Navy every year in football is because during World War II, if not for the Navy, ND would have probably had to shut down.

Angelo Bertelli

The quarterback of the ’43 team, Angelo Bertelli, left the team 6 games into the season after being activated by the Marine Corps. Bertelli learned that he had won the 1943 Heisman Trophy when he was given a telegram in a boot camp in Paris Island, S.C. After boot camp, Bertelli was made a captain and saw combat on Guam and Iwo Jima.

During a battle on Iwo Jima a fellow corpsman was wounded by a mortar blast that had also landed near Bertelli. Bertelli recalled sadly that a newswire service reported the All-American’s health status without ever mentioning that a fellow corpsman was almost killed in the same combat incident. Bertelli was awarded the Bronze Star and the Purple Heart for his heroics in the war.

Leahy & Bertelli in the South Pacific

Leahy and Krause. Leahy coached the Irish to a national championship in 1943, and then spent 1944 and 1945 in the Navy as a Lieutenant before returning in 1946. He picked up right where he left off, going four seasons without a loss and winning championships in '46, '47 and '49. Many of his players from those years he had personally recruited from the armed forces, like George Connor:
Early in 1944, George's V-12 unit was called to active duty. He was commissioned an ensign and assigned to a subchaser in the Pacific, which eventually docked at Pearl Harbor. A command car pulled up to the dock and a Navy sailor approached the ship and asked where he could find Ensign Connor. Connor, who was the one he asked, said, "I am Ensign Connor." The sailor said, "Sir, I have been sent here by Commander Leahy, who requests that you meet him at Navy headquarters right away ."

Connor went below, changed uniforms, and was driven to headquarters. He explains what happened. "I met with Coach Leahy, who was very cordial and inquired as to my well-being as well as my family. Then he said, 'George, I wanted you to come to Notre Dame when you graduated from high school and I want you to come to Notre Dame after the war. If you come there, I can promise you two things: we will win the National Championship and you will be an All-American.
Leahy wasn’t the only Notre Dame coach to join the war effort. In fact it was basketball coach Moose Krause that convinced Leahy to sign up along with him. The following is compiled from stories contained in Jason Kelly's Mr. Notre Dame, the story of the life of Notre Dame's Moose Krause.

In 1943, Moose Krause was named the head coach of the men's basketball team, officially replacing the recently deceased George Keogan. In addition to his hoops duties, he was also an assistant coach on Frank Leahy's football team. However, as more and more players were being called into active service, Krause knew that enlisting in the military was the right thing to do. He also convinced Leahy to join him, reminding him that in addition to patriotic reasons, it would be hard to earn the respect of the returning veterans sure to fill the Irish rosters after the war if they did not contribute as well.

Krause joined the Marines and was sent to the island of Emirau in the South Pacific as part of the Marine Bomber Squadron 413. His official assignment was a combat intelligence officer charged with planning safe and effective air raids. He also took on the unoffical task of base morale officer. He constructed an officer's club and basketball courts on the island to keep the soldiers upbeat and fit. He also assisted as much as he could with the base chaplain, Rev. James Gannon.

Krause also befriened the native Moro who lived on the island. In return for his friendship, the Moro volunteered to spy on the nearby Japanese. Moose would regularly take a group out on a boat at night to the Japanese held island of Rabaul and retrieve them a day or two later. One night, Krause and Gannon were informed by the Moro that the unburied remains of six Marines were found on the island. Krause and Gannon then set out on a mission to provide a proper burial for their fellow soldiers. They snuck onto the island and retrieved the bodies but could not return to their boat before nightfall. The Moro people led them to a remote village with the promise the Japanese would not discover them while they slept. In the morning, Krause and Gannon found out the reason; they were staying in a leper colony the Japanese avoided. After leaving the island with the bodies and burying them in Emirau's cemetary, Krause and Gannon then sent supplies of clothing, medicine, and food to the leper colony that hosted them for the night.

The war ended shortly thereafter and Moose returned to the States and resumed his coaching jobs back at Notre Dame.

Motts Tonelli. By far the most amazing story involving a former Irish football player in WWII is that of Mario ‘Motts’ Tonelli. (You can read the entire account here.) Tonelli played on the Irish teams of the late 30’s, scoring the game winning touchdown against Southern Cal in 1937. He graduated from the University in 1939 then went on to join the Army in ’41. He was assigned to a regiment in Manilla. After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Tonelli was ordered to retreat to Bataan along with 15,000 other American military personal. Tonelli was then captured by the Japanese and forced to set off on the now infamous Bataan Death March.
On the first day of the seven-day 70-mile death march in April 1942, Japanese soldiers swept up and down the ranks, confiscating pens, jewelry or other personal possessions from the lines of struggling U.S. prisoners. One captor pointed with his bayonet at the ring on Tonelli's finger. "Give it to him, Motts. Or he'll kill you," whispered one of Tonelli's friends. Tonelli handed over the ring.



Tonelli as a fullback
Tonelli in a Japanese prison camp

Moments later, a Japanese officer confronted Tonelli. In perfect English, he asked, "Did one of my soldiers take this from you?" The officer pulled the ring from his pocket. "I went to the University of Southern California," the officer said. "I graduated the same year you did. In fact, I saw the game when you made that long run that beat us. You were a hell of a player." "He gave me my ring back and wished me good luck," Tonelli recalled many years later.
Jack Chevigny. Perhaps the strangest story of a former Fighting Irish gridiron star and WWII is that of Jack Chevigny. Chevigny was from Chicago and starred on Knute Rockne’s great teams of the late 20’s. He scored a touchdown against Army in 1928, the game in which Rockne gave his now-famous “Win one for the Gipper” speech. As Chevigny crossed the goal line he shouted “That’s one for the Gipper!”.

In 1934 he was hired to become the head football coach at Texas. During his first year he beat Notre Dame which inspired a gift from the Longhorn fans, a fountain pen with the inscription “to an old Notre Damer who beat Notre Dame.”

When WWII started, Chevigny signed up for the Marines and became an officer. Chevigny died at Iwo Jima but his fountain pen would go on to play an important role in history. When the officers of Japan and the U.S. met aboard the U.S.S. Missouri to sign the truce signifying the end of World War II, a naval officer noticed a Japanese officer signing the documents with a shiny gold fountain pen with an inscription on it.

The officer asked to see the pen, and read the words, "to an old Notre Damer who beat Notre Dame." Aware of the legacy of Chevigny, the officer put the pen in his pocket and took it back to Chicago, and found Chevigny's sister and gave her the pen, which must have been taken from Chevigny's body during the battle where so many died.

Rocky Bleier. Rocky Bleier was a 5-9, 210 lb running back on the 1966 National Championship team, and a captain during his senior year in ’67.

After leaving Notre Dame he was a 16th round draft pick of the Pittsburgh Steelers. Following his rookie season with the Steelers, Bleier was drafted and shipped off to Vietnam.



Bleier explained, “What were my options? Go to Canada? Get into the reserves? Injure myself? Ask for status as a conscientious objector? I couldn’t get into the reserves. I got drafted. I go.”

On August 20, 1969, his platoon was ambushed in a rice paddy near Chu Lai, and Bleier was wounded in his left thigh. While he was down, a grenade exploded nearby, sending pieces of shrapnel into his right leg and foot. After recovering from the injuries, Bleier showed up at the Steeler’s 1970 training camp 30 pounds under his previous playing weight and unable to walk without pain and a noticeable limp.

Even after being cut twice by Pittsburgh, Bleier never gave up. After struggling for several seasons to find a spot on the Steelers’ roster, he rushed for more than 1,000 yards in 1976 and caught the decisive touchdown pass in Super Bowl XIII. Rocky Belier would go on to play twelve seasons in the NFL, winning four Super Bowls and retiring as the fourth leading rusher in franchise history.



Again, thanks to Will for compiling these stories.

Thursday, November 10, 2005

Catching Up | by Pat

Here's a rundown on some recent ND news items.

Brady Quinn named Semifinalist For Davey O'Brien National Quarterback Award

After not being named as a pre-season nominee, Quinn is now one of the 15 semi-finalists for the prestigious award. According the press release on und.com, here are all 15 semi-finalists.

Brett Basanez, Northwestern. Brian Brohm, Louisville. Brodie Croyle, Alabama. Jay Cutler, Vanderbilt. Cody Hodges, Texas Tech. Omar Jacobs, Bowling Green. Matt Leinart, USC. Drew Olson, UCLA. Paul Pinegar, Fresno State. Brady Quinn, Notre Dame. Michael Robinson, Penn State. Brad Smith, Missouri. Drew Stanton, Michigan State. Marcus Vick, Virginia Tech. Vince Young, Texas.

The three finalists will be named on November 22nd and the winner will be announced live on December 8th on the Home Deport College Awards Show.

I feel the competition to be named a finalist will be pretty tough. Matt Leinart, Brian Brohm, and Vince Young all have very solid resumes and are 1-2-3 in the nation in passing efficiency. Then again, Quinn is the only one who was named Top 10 NFL Franchice QB.



Tom Zbikowski earns multiple Player of the Week honors

Tom Zbikowski was awarded with a "Game Ball" award by the Master's Coaches survey, which each week hands out a game ball to their choice of that week's MVP on offense, defense, and special teams. Zibby was honored for his special teams performance. Zbikowski was also nominated for Player of the Week honors by USA Today. Completing the trifecta, Zibby was nominated for, and won, the Cingular/ABC Sports All-America Player of the Week award. Here's his highlight video for those that want a refresher on ND's special teams ace.

He is the second Irish player to be nominated for these awards as Brady Quinn has twice been named Cingular/ABC All-American Player of the Week.



Hoyte named Lott Award Semi-Finalist

Brandon Hoyte joins the award nominees with his selection as a semi-finalist for the Lott Award. The Lott Award is given to the Defensive Player of the Year, as judged by performance both on and off the field.

The other semi-finalists are Ohio State Linebacker A.J. Hawk, Kentucky Cornerback Antoine Huffman, Maryland Linebacker D'Qwell Jackson, Alabama Linebacker DeMeco Ryans, Virginia Defensive End Brennan Schmidt and Virginia Tech Defensive End Darryl Tapp.



Notre Dame and Adidas sign 10-year contract extension

Equipment and uniform sponser Adidas committed to a 10 year deal worth over $60 million with the payout a mix of cash and apparel/equipment. The deal will continue a relationship that started in 1997. I'm hoping the deal bans the future experimentation with mismatched colored sleeves.



UT Pre-game and Halftime notes

In perhaps one of the best timed flyovers I've seen, four F16 jets screamed over ND Stadium as the final notes of the National Anthem sounded from the band. If you're headed to the Navy game this weekend, keep your head up as another flyover is scheduled.

And for those wondering why exactly the band played a Romanian pop song as part of their half-time routine, the inspiration is this legendary internet video.

Remember, remember the 5th of November | by Pat

After a brief hiatus, let's get back to highlighting some of the players and plays from ther previous week's game.

QB - Considering that UT only allowed 3 passing touchdowns total in their first seven games, the fact that Quinn's 3-touchdown, 0-interception day felt like an "off day" is really amazing. True, he wasn't at his best, but we should give some credit to a superb Tennessee front four. And even when his touch might have been off a bit (and that's being really nit-picky) he still made great decisions, had only a few forced passes, and stood tall against a tough pass rush. He did rifle in a few of those incomplete passes on the short slant routes on third downs, but when the option is a slower pass that could be intercepted, I'll take the former. On NBC they said that Quinn has avoided about 5 sacks a game due to his feet, and I believe it. He had a great run in the 4th quarter to evade a UT sack. With Quinn on the bench, Wolke showed fine form as always, handing the ball off in the 4th quarter. Here's hoping he gets in early enough to throw a few passes against Navy.

RB - I noticed the comments below about ND's running game, and I think there are a few things we need to point out. First, I don't think I'm surprising anyone when I say that it appears that Walker is nicked up a bit. Maybe I'm wrong, but that looks like a wrap under his pads to me, and lately he hasn't shown the burst he had earlier in the year. And yet, he was still running hard and averaging 4.6 yards a carry, right up until his final two carries when he only managed 1-yard gains against a UT defense with 8 men in the box. He also was extremely useful as a receiver on screens that took advantage of the over-aggressive UT front four. With his four receptions, Walker is now only 11 catches away from the record for most receptions by a running back in a season (Bob Gladieux - 1968). The play of the game, though, was his block in the first quarter that flipped the blitzing Volunteer linebacker and gave Quinn time to find Fasano for ND's first touchdown. Walker's pass blocking really has been getting better all year long. In-season improvement...what a concept.

Travis Thomas had a rougher time carrying the ball than Walker, but he also had a few carries where the Vols defense got to him just around the same time the ball did. He's seeing more and more carries early in the game which I think is great. He presents a different style of runner than Walker and keeps Walker from wearing down like he did in the Michigan game. Already he seems to be the de facto replacement for Rashon Powers-Neal on short yardage and red-zone situations.

Schwapp opened up some decent holes as a blocker and once again saw time at tailback at the end of the game. I think he's doing great for a freshman, but I think ND does miss the versatility of RPN, especially with the threat of screens. As in the Purdue game, ND ran a play-action pass near the goalline looking to hit Schwapp in the flat for the TD, but he was covered, so Quinn had to tuck and run. I expect Schwapp and the rest of the running back depth chart to get a lot of carries against Navy.

WR - Stovall's touchdown grab was absolutely the best of his career. Just a great play. But right up there was Mo's blocking during the game. He cleared the way for Fasano's TD, and helped to spring Samardzija for his 73-yard gallop down the sideline; you really get the feeling that he enjoys tossing around smaller defensive backs. Weis has mentioned the need for blockers to play with a defensive attitude, and I think Stovall definitely has bought into that. He has to be shooting up the draft boards right now: he's having a great season and is on pace to finish 6th on ND's all-time receiving list (or maybe 5th, if you count the bowl game).

Another game, another touchdown catch for Jeff Samardzija. Another game, and another chance to prove that he can catch anything. He also showed that he has "surprisingly good speed" as he turned the corner on his 73-yard gainer. He did have the mental lapse on the lateral pass, which is odd because in another game (Purude, I believe) he dropped a pass near the line of scrimmage and ran out and dove on it as the defenders stood around and watched. Either way, I don't think any ND receiver is going to let a ball like that bounce around again, as Charlie seems to love finding a few teaching points from each game and drilling them into the team during the next week's practice.

TE - It's hard to believe that it took Anthony Fasano 32 receptions to notch his first touchdown. And he almost didn't get it. It took a full extension to reach the ball past the pylon. Definitely a great touchdown play in a season full of great touchdown plays. And as always, he proved to be a solid blocker on the big and physical Tennessee linebackers.

John Carlson had a quiet day statistically, but was working hard as a blocking tight end. One sequence of plays in particular showcased Weis' love of calling the same play out of different formations. On the first play, Carlson lined up off the line of scrimmage on the right side. Stovall and Samardzija were split out wide. On the snap, Santucci let the defensive tackle slide by him as he released to seal off the end. As Quinn handed the ball off to Walker, Carlson shot over on a "wham" block to knock the tackle, who had a straight shot at Walker, away from the play. The result was a 4 yard gain. Next play, Schwapp came in and lined up offset right. Stovall and Samardzija both lined up on the left side. On the snap though, same play. Schwapp came over and drilled the tackle and Walker rushed up the middle again for 11 yards. ND has run this play a lot this season, but usually when a tight end is involved it is Freeman who throws the block. Nice to see Carlson getting physical.

OL - A pretty good game for the offensive line. The rushing stats weren't ideal, and any hole that opened against this good UT defensive line usually closed up in a hurry. Still, our line played a very good game against the best D-line in college football and kept the penalties to a minimum, despite numerous attempts to try and draw them offsides. One of the plays of the game was when Mark LeVoir absolutely buried Vol DB Stewart as he went up to grab Quinn's tipped screen pass to Fasano. Towards the end of the game things seemed to breakd down; the Vol defense limited ND to two field goals and got too much penetration into the ND backfield. With a much easier schedule the rest of the season, I hope ND works on that short yardage grind that'll be needed in the bowl game.

DL - I was impressed by the D-line on Saturday. A line with little depth and starting an undersized redshirt freshman at end not only held their own against a mammoth UT offensive line, but put fairly consistent pressure on Ainge. The stats only show 3 sacks, but there were many more plays where Ainge was pressured into early throws or chased from the pocket and forced to throw off the run. Sure, there were times when Ainge had all day to throw, and this is where I think ND misses the pure speed edge rusher. But the ND line, to their credit, never quits -- Landri in particular -- and a QB like Ainge who isn't a fast decision-maker found himself in trouble.

Arian Foster had a big game for Tennessee running the ball, but it seemed that a lot of his yards were the result of his own abilities rather than big holes opened up by the offense. Abiamiri hasn't had the season that some expected but he really is a disruptive force if you watch him. He was only a step away from Ainge on numerous throws, and I'm pretty sure the UT tackle still has a handful of his jersey.

It was interesting late in the game to see ND resort to the 3-man rush. I started to scan the sideline for Kent Baer, but the difference was that nearly every time they presented a 3-man rush, we blitzed either Hoyte or Mays, sometimes both. One of the few times we only rushed three and dropped everyone else back into coverage was on Wooden's interception.

LB - Hotye and Mays spent plenty of time blitzing, but Tennessee did a good job picking it up most of the day. Mays still had a few big hits and kept the Vols from having more big plays on the ground. Hoyte also had a great defensive play right before Wooden's interception where he batted down a sure first-down pass.

Mo Crum had one of his best games, I thought. Ainge did pick on him twice on the 3rd-and-long pass plays that both resulted in first and goal for the Vols, but Crum was all over the field for the rest of the game. He shot through the line for tackles for loss and finally got a pass deflection on great play near the sideline in the 4th quarter.

CB - I can't remember a game where Notre Dame brought so much pressure on blitzes from the edge. Zbikowski notched his first career sack on a blitz, Nedu almost had a sack, and Richardson blitzed numerous times from his corner slot. Granted the Tennessee offense isn't a barn burner, but the coverage was solid and both interceptions came as ND was trying to ice the game. (Note to Wooden: Don't outrun your convoy. A few steps behind them to read the blocks and you're the one handing the ball to the ref in the endzone.) Ferrine looked pretty good in the nickel with a great play on the ball near the endzone. It's fun to watch the secondary get better from game to game. They are really playing with a lot of confidence now.

Special Teams - The fact that Tennessee doesn't have a special teams coach really showed; ND had one of its best all-around games on special teams in a long time. Zbikowski shredded their punt defense for over 100 yards and a touchdown and Richardson forced a key fumble on a return early in the game. Even D.J. Hord looked good, averaging over 20 yards a kick return. Both he and Grimes have been one guy from breaking a really long kickoff return a couple of times. Hopefully they can get one before the season ends.

About the only thing that still isn't ideal are our kickoffs, which still tend to die out around the 8 yard line. Fitzpatrick reaches the endzone about once a game, so he does have the leg for it, but most of them tend to fall short. As long as the kick coverage team does a good job filling all the lanes we should be okay, but I'd much rather have the kick land a yard or three deep in the endzone and make the returner think about his options for a few seconds.

Overall, it was a big win for the Irish. Tennessee is having a rough year but they are still a very solid team filled with future NFL players. The fact that ND didn't panic when the Vols tied things up show that they are really buying into the whole "winning" thing that Weis brought to the program. The next step I'd like to see is the team put away the opponent early and not let them back into the game. With Navy, Syracuse, and Stanford coming up, I think the opportunities to work on that will be ample.

Rammer Jammer Yellow Hammer | by Jay

I mentioned the Alabama-LSU game this Saturday a couple of posts down. Well, with Alabama playing so well this year, this is a great opportunity to plug a wonderful book. If you've read our blog for a while and followed our links, you might be aware of Warren St. John, who's a writer for the New York Times, the keeper of the Fan Opticon archive, and a frequent reader of BGS.

A couple of years ago St. John, who's a Birmingham native, set out to document the culture that surrounds Crimson Tide football. He bought a clunky old RV (nicknamed "the Hawg"), and set off on a football road trip that took him all over the South, getting to know all kinds of folks for whom Alabama football is a consuming passion: diehard tailgaters, "subway" alums, local radio personalities, scalpers, well-heeled bigwigs who fly in for every game, stadium workers, and all manner of colorful personalities. The result was Rammer Jammer Yellow Hammer, "A Road Trip Into the Heart of Fan Mania."

It's a wonderful, entertaining book, and it's much more than a simple account of Alabama football during a particular year. It's really a hilarious and illuminating anthropological study, with the author as one of the chief subjects. St. John tries to get underneath the passion, asking a central question: what is it about our sports teams that has us fans so emotionally tied to their fortunes and foibles?

The answers are as diverse as the people he gets to know. There's the Reeses, who skipped their own daughter's wedding because it coincided with a Bama game. There's Ray Pradat, the Episcopal minister who watches the games on a television beside his altar while performing weddings. And there's Chip Glass, a young fan so wrapped up in Alabama football that he won't even attend the games, fearing a nervous breakdown. What's great is that through it all, St. John is clearly one of those passionate fans himself; he's no outsider, not a condescending New Yorker come to clinically study this quaint phenomeon. No, he lives it and breathes it as much as the people he interviews, and as a result the book has a refreshing, personal tone that brings you right in, sits you down, and welcomes you to the party.

In the end, RJYH isn't just a book for Alabama rooters; it's really applicable to fans of all stripes, and as an Irish fan, I recognized myself (and my mania) in the pages over and over again.

There's a Bear Bryant museum in Tuscaloosa right across from Bryant-Denny stadium, and for one game every year they host a reunion of all the people whose parents named them after the Bear. Bryant Adams Paris, Paul Bryant Mitchell; the list runs about six hundred deep. (I'm reminded of Montana Mazurkiewicz, among many others). In the book, St. John wanders through the reunion, ruminating on the ritual of passing football fandom from generation to generation.

The religious comparison is apt. In a paper titled "Meanings and Interpretations of Paul 'Bear' Bryant", a group of anthropology students at Alabama polled hardcore Crimson Tide fans and locals on their opinions of the late coach and found that fully 26 percent associated the Bear with "godlike" qualities. The default explanation for Bryant's exalted status in Alabama is that he won and gave Alabamians something to be proud about at a time when the rest of the country and world looked down on the South. He was a kind of redeemer. I suppose the theory makes sense for a certain generation, but I liked the Bear long before I was old enough to understand that people outside of Alabama held my home state in exceedingly low regard -- long before I felt a need to be redeemed. I became an Alabama fan and Bryant fan the way most people come to their teams and their heroes -- because my father liked Alabama. He went to school at Alabama -- his fraternity, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, occupies a monstrous antebellum knockoff just around the corner from Bryant Museum.

It could have easily been otherwise. My father considered going to Georgia Tech in Atlanta to study engineering, but went to Alabama to be closer to his parents, who lived nearby and were divorcing, largely because of my grandfather, a country lawyer and politician, was an alcoholic. So it's fair to say that the ultimate reason I like Alabama is because my grandfather drank too much. (It's not so grim -- he stopped drinking and remarried my grandmother twenty-five years after the divorce, but that's another story.) My granddad might have known that he was screwing up his marriage by drinking, but he couldn't possibly have imagined the effect it would have on his yet unborn grandson's autumn Saturdays fifty years later. I doubt the thought would've deterred him, but I like to think it might have caused him to pause contemplatively mid-Bourbon.

There are some practical benefits to liking the same team as your parents -- not getting disinherited, for example; or avoiding years of arguments at the dinner table -- but that's probably not why it happens so often. I imagine people follow their parents because continuity is reassuring, and because it takes a lot of energy to break with the past. It's a threatening notion to a lot of fans that we don't like our teams for all the reasons we say we do (the colors, the tradition, the fight song, the style of play) but rather because of the random process of imprinting. I find the thought liberating. It's a lot harder to hate the other side when you allow that your arguments for liking your team are just as contrived as the other guy's are for liking his. The way we find teams isn't so unlike the way we find wives or husbands -- through happy accidents -- and with sports it matters little if, as with myself, the marriages are arranged.

[later, at the game]

Arkansas snaps the ball, then, something eerie: it's the same play as the week before. Stoerner drops back, his receivers spring for the near right corner of the end zone, and he throws the ball high. There's a paralyzing sense of déjà vu, then here it comes…and arcing spiral into the end zone as the clock hits zero…another jump ball. A cluster of red and white jerseys leaps upward like bridesmaids to a bouquet. The ball disappears into a bundle of groping hands and after a moment squirts out at ankle level, falling to the turf. It's incomplete. We've won.

In such moments, a very strange image crosses my mind. I imagine that somewhere deep in my brain there is a little cheerleader, perhaps no bigger than a sea monkey, leaping and kicking ecstatically. How else to explain the percolating, giddy tickle to the psyche that follows a win? With each footfall and herkie, some pleasure-giving cocktail of serotonin, testosterone, adrenaline, and god knows what else is extruded from my brain cells, and goes trickling across my frontal lobes. In fact, it's amazing what doesn't matter after a win. Anxiety is soothed. Life's quotidian concerns become insignificant and utterly manageable. To take a simple example, I have $7,000 locked up in an RV that isn't even roadworthy-- and I don't mind at all.
It's a great read. Do yourself a favor and check out Rammer Jammer Yellow Hammer.

Wednesday, November 09, 2005

Statistically Speaking | by Pat

Following his highlight-worthy performance against Tennessee, Tom Zbikowski is now ranked 3rd in the nation in punt-return average with a 19.69 yard return average. As Mike noted below, Zbikowski is one of 3 returners in the country (along with Maurice Drew of UCLA and Wisconsin's Brandon Williams) with more than one punt returned for a touchdown. As a team, Notre Dame is ranked 4th in the nation.

The offense keeps putting up points. The game notes on und.com (which do a fantastic job highlighting comparisons between the current Irish squad and those of year's past) notes that the current Irish team have scored 30 or more points in seven games this year. This is just the 7th time since 1913 that an Irish team has accomplished this feat. The record for 30+ point games in a season is nine, set in 1991.

Quinn Record Watch. Brady Quinn only needs 107 passing yards to pass Jarious Jackson for the single season passing yardage record (2,753). Quinn needs 353 yards passing to become Notre Dame's first 3,000 yard passer. The all-time passing record (7,602) held by Ron Powlus is 538 yards away. Other records to keep an eye out for during the Navy game. Quinn is 12 pass attempts away from passing Powlus for all-time pass attempts; similarly, he is 33 completions away from the record in that category. Quinn is 3 touchdown passes away from tying Powlus for all-time TD passes.

Jeff Samardzija's 73-yard reception in the 3rd quarter was only the 9th-longest reception in the NCAA this season that didn't result in a touchdown. The longest belongs to Hawaii's Ross Dickerson who caught and ran for 87 yards without hitting paydirt.

• Against Tennesse, the Notre Dame defense struggled a bit on 3rd and long (read: 3rd and 6 or greater) by allowing the Vols to convert 6 of 14 such attempts. That mars what has been an exceptional season thusfar on 3rd and long defense. Overall, the Irish have only allowed 15 of 71 (22.5%) 3rd and long attempts to be converted. On overall 3rd down defense, Notre Dame is ranked 18th in the country, holding opponents to a 37 for 113 (32.7%) conversion rate.

What is also interesting is that there have been 71 3rd-and-long attempts out of 113 3rd-down attempts. That means that 63% of the time an ND opponent is forced to 3rd down, it is 3rd and 6 or longer.

The 94-yard drive in the first quarter was ND's third 90+ yard drive this season. Helping the Irish sustain long drives has been the impressive number of first downs acheived. After totalling only 217 first downs last season for an average of 18.1 first downs a game, the Irish have 199 so far on the season for an average of 24.8 per game.

• With the two interceptions against Tennessee, the 2005 ND Defense passed the total number of interceptions recorded by the 2004 Defense. Interestingly, all 11 interceptions this year have been by members of the ND secondary, while only 5 of the 9 last year were.

Season Long Running Averages

If you want to see the per game breakdown of the first six games, click here.

Category BYU UT
1st Six
2005
2004
Yards per rush
1.9
1.4
3.6
3.3
3.32
Avg yards per PA
11.4 8.9
8.4 8.9 7.2
Avg yards per PC
14.6 14.8
13.3 13.6 13.4
Pass completion %
78%
61%
63%
65%
54%
3rd downs conv.
6/11 (55%)
7/16 (44%)
46/96 (48%)
59/123 (48%)
68/183 (37%)
Rushing yd avg 44.0
48.0
170.8
139.63 (63rd)
127.4 (85th)
Passing yd avg 467.0
295.0
318.8
334.38 (5th)
218.1 (54th)
Passing Eff. (Quinn)
222.0
164.46
150.9
161.13 (4th)
125.87 (55th)
Total offense yd avg
511.0
343.0
489.7
474.00 (10th)
345.5 (81st)
Scoring Offense
49.0
41.0
36.0
38.25 (7th)
24.1 (72nd)
Time of Possession
26:21 32:12
35:12 33:43 30:50
Red Zone TDs 3/4 (75%)
1/3(33%)
21/27 (81%)
25/ 34 (73%)
25 / 36 (69%)

Defense

Category BYU
UT
1st Six
2005
2004
Yards per rush given up
2.2
2.8
4.4
3.8
2.7
Avg yards per PA
7.0 5.8
7.7
7.4 7.9
Avg yards per PC
12.2 14.4
14.8
14.3 13.6
Pass completion percentage
58%
41%
52%
52%
58%
Quarterback sacks
4
3
13
20
30
Rushing yd avg. against 75.0
109.0
126.3
117.75 (25th)
88.2 (4th)
Passing yd avg. against 317.0
187.0
304.8
291.63 (110th)
281.2 (116th)
Passing Eff. def. avg.
122.73
90.39
122.24
118.87 (45th)
138.34 (98th)
Total yd offense avg. against 392.0
296.0
431.2
409.38 (86th)
369.4 (54th)
Scoring Defense
23.0
21.0
25.67
24.75 (52nd)
24.08 (46th)
Red Zone Defense
3/4 (75%)
XXX
16/23 (70%)
19/27 (70%)
33/38 (87%)
Red Zone TD Def.
3/4 (75%)
XXX
13/23 (57%)
16/27 (59%)
19/38 (50%)

Turnovers

Category BYU
UT
1st Six
2005
2004
Interceptions by ND
2
2
7
11
9
Fumbles Forced / Recovered
0/0
2/1
12/7
14/ 8
27 / 12
Turnovers gained
2 3
14
19 21
Had Intercepted 0
0
5
5
10
Fumbles / Lost 3/2
2/1
9/3
14/ 6
15 / 6
Turnovers lost
2
1
8
11
16
Turnover Margin +0
+2
+6
+8
+5

Special Teams

Category BYU
UT
1st Six
2005
2004
Kickoff return average
17.2
23.3
19.8
19.7
18.7
Kickoff return average allowed
21.7 21.4
19.1
20.0 19.9
Punt return average
7.5 39.3
16.5
19.7 10.8
Punt return average allowed
11.8
4.7
5.2
6.3
8.2


Fun Fact of the Day: Notre Dame's 41 game winning streak against Navy is still the longest in NCAA history. But the 2nd longest streak, Nebraska's 36 game winning streak against Kansas ended last weekend. The 2nd longest streak still active belongs to Tennessee, who have won 22 over Vanderbilt.

Tuesday, November 08, 2005

As seen on US 31 in South Bend... | by Jay

Pix-acatto Six | by Jay

Pick Six Standings updated based on this week's BCS rankings. Big shake-up this week with the Hokies fallin' and the Tide risin'. UCLA is no longer the darling of the unranked set; Penn State jumps up into #5. Out of the original Group D (Cal, Purdue, Texas A&M, Boise State, and ASU), nobody is ranked.

And after a couple of weeks off, Wrigleyville takes back the lead with 102 points.

In the BlogPollers' division of the Pick Six, I'm rollin', in my five-point-oh (with the ragtop down so my hair can blow).

Only one really big game this week between ranked opponents: #3 Alabama at home versus #7 LSU.

Monday, November 07, 2005

BCS Bowlin' | by Jay

As of right now, we're in, at #11. (Notre Dame Football: one louder.)

In case you're wondering how the Bowl Selections work this year, here's the primer from BCSfootball.org. Virginia Tech losing made the picture a lot clearer.

And here's the nutshell version vis-à-vis the Irish:

• If Southern Cal (games versus Cal, Fresno State, and UCLA) and Texas (games versus Kansas and Texas A&M) win out, then they'll go to the Rose Bowl for the National Championship.

• The Fiesta Bowl, having lost its Big XII tie-in with Texas going to the Rose, will then get the first selection of the remaining teams. The Fiesta may pick any eligible team except the SEC champion (tied to the Sugar) and the ACC champion (tied to the Orange). Assuming the big two win the rest of their games, and assuming we win the rest of ours (and we're not assuming anything -- attention ye Fates and Furies: this is merely the idle speculation of an inconsequential website, and is not intended to influence karma in any way), then the Fiesta will probably pick the Irish.

• The Orange would pick next to fill their open slot, then the Fiesta again, followed by the Sugar.

• Our potential opponent is still very much up in the air. LSU, Alabama, Georgia and Auburn are all in the mix for the SEC championship. Florida State will most likely face Miami again for the ACC championship. Both Ohio State and Penn State could win the Big 10. About the only conference lock outside the top two is West Virginia, but even there, a South Florida team has an outside shot if they run the table and beat WVU in the last game of the season. All told, there are about fifteen or sixteen different teams who could end up in the final six slots.

• The NY Daily News floated one possibility:

The Fiesta Bowl already is salivating about the possiblity of a Notre Dame-Penn State matchup Jan.2, which could do a bigger TV number in the East than the BCS title game at the Rose Bowl two nights later.
If Penn State wins the Big 10, this would be difficult to arrange, however. One of the myriad BCS rules provides that when a bowl submits its three-team preference, it must include any non-selected automatic berth teams among its top two preferences. The Orange Bowl would therefore have to put the Big 10 champ (PSU) and the Big East champ (WVU) on its list. You can bet whom they'll list first. A PSU versus Miami (ACC champ) matchup is likely in the Orange Bowl.

Following the Orange, the Fiesta picks again to determine who plays the Irish in their other slot. Per the rule, the Fiesta must list the Big East champ in the top two slots, but I'm guessing they'll list them second after another at-large team. Therefore ND will play the other at-large selection, potentially Virginia Tech, the runner-up SEC school (Bama, LSU, or Georgia), or perhaps Ohio State.

The Sugar Bowl would then be stuck with West Virginia (or USF) against the SEC champ.


Whom do you want to play?

Sunday, November 06, 2005

Odds & Sods, 190 Proof Edition | by Mike

Rambling thoughts from the holler on yesterday's game...

40 points to freedom. In three years under Tyrone Willingham, Notre Dame topped 40 points just twice - against Rutgers in 2002 and against Stanford in 2003. Willingham's last squad failed to reach 40 points even once. Eight games into the Weis Age, the Irish have topped 40 five times - against Pitt, Michigan State, Purdue, BYU and Tennessee.

Gonna never have to die. Following the BYU game, I wrote about the ability of this year's version of the Irish to take a punch from the opposition, collect themselves, and take control of the game. We saw this yet again against Tennessee. After Tennessee tied the game at 21-21, the Irish offense found themselves in 3rd and 10 from their own 25. The best defensive line Notre Dame will face all year were free to focus exclusively on rushing the passer. Things did not look good for the Irish. Yet Quinn calmly hit a crossing Jeff Samardzija in stride, and 73 yards later the Irish had a 1st and goal from the Tennessee 2-yard-line. At this point, few can deny how thoroughly Weis's confidence and swagger have permeated the team, as he promised they would in his first press conference. For further evidence of the team embracing Weis's "hard-working, intelligent, nasty" attitude, look no further than the words of Ambrose Wooden in today's South Bend Tribune:

As did Wooden's courage to play with a banged-up hip.

"That's one thing coach Weis brought is a sense of toughness," Wooden said. "If you get hurt, you go on that sideline and you look at him, you get that feeling, 'You know I'm fine. I can go out and do anything.' He's my inspiration. He's what keeps me going.

"It starts with the seniors and the coaches and trickles down. There's a sense of toughness. You never give up."
This season has provided Irish fans with no shortage of choice quotes, but Wooden may just have uttered my favorite.

You spin me round. With his fourth quarter touchdown reception, Jeff Samardzija grabbed sole possession of the Notre Dame single-seaon touchdown receptions record. Samardzija's twelfth touchdown of the season placed him one ahead of Derrick Mayes' previous record of eleven with four games still to play. Samardzija also extended his school-record streak of consecutive games with a touchdown reception to eight - every game this season. His 73-yard reception in the third quarter bested his previous long by 18 yards. Maurice Stovall moved into fifth place on the Notre Dame career touchdown receptions list when he caught his thirteenth career TD in the first quarter. With four games remaining, he may pass Ken MacAfee (15) and Jim Seymour (16). (Derrick Mayes is first with 22, while Tom Gatewood is second with 19).

Bloc party. The downfield blocking yesterday was a thing of beauty. Or at least it appeared to be in those rare instances where NBC deigned to provide a replay of a critical block, or even give us a wide-angle shot where viewers could look for it on their own. Fasano's touchdown began with a fantastic Darius Walker block that sent a blitzing Volunteer flying. This gave Quinn the time to find Fasano, whose route to the endzone was cleared by a Stovall block. Similarly, on Samardzija's "surprisingly fast" 73-yard gallop, Stovall delivered a crushing block at the 50 that sprung Samardzija. If only NBC realized how many of their viewers appreciate these aspects of the game. I guess the royalties on the Yngwie Malmsteen riff really eat into the production budget.

Cover me. The defensive backfield continued to display improvement at playing the ball in the air. Ambrose Wooden had a key interception and Chinedum Ndukwe had a nice deflection of an Ainge pass in the fourth quarter. Leo Ferrine appeared to have solid coverage in his opportunities. Additionally, if you have an ESPN Insider account, be sure to check out Joe Schad's piece on Zbikowski's interception. Since the article is premium content, we can't reproduce Zbikowski's quotes. However, if you thought it looked like Zbikowski was sitting on that route, it's because he was, as he had been instructed to do.

Gallows Pole. After putting the final nail in BYU's coffin with his interception return last game, Zbikowski once again killed the opponent's hope. We could try and recount Zbikowski's accomplishments ourselves, but given their number, we might lose track. Instead, we'll just rely on UND.com's notes:
Junior safety Tom Zbikowski has posted at least one touchdown return in Notre Dame's last three games played. He returned a punt 60 yards against USC, an interception 83 yards against BYU, a punt 78 yards and an interception 33 yards today (63.5 yards per play). Zbikowski becomes the first Notre Dame defensive player to post four touchdown returns in a span of three games.

Zbikowski joins UCLA's Maurice Drew (three) and Wisconsin's Brandon Williams (two) as the only players in the nation to have multiple punt returns for a touchdown this season (entering today's action).

Zbikowski also becomes the first Notre Dame player to return a punt for a touchdown twice in a season since Allen Rossum (1994-97) accomplished that feat three times in 1996. Rossum returned a punt 57 yards against Air Force, then returned two against Pittsburgh (55 and 83 yards).

Zbikowski piled up 118 punt return yards this afternoon, becoming the first Notre Dame player to post 100-plus punt return yards since Carlyle Holiday had 103 against Pittsburgh last season.

Zbikowski's sack in the second quarter (for a loss of 10) was the first of his career.
November reign. In the last 20 years, Tennessee has a record of 75-6 in the month of November. However, half of those losses have come against Notre Dame. A couple more examples of Notre Dame accomplishing what Tennessee's other opponents could not: In their first seven games, the Volunteers surrendered a total of three passing touchdowns. Notre Dame equaled that number in one game. In their first seven games, Tennessee had not allowed more than 27 points. The two teams that had scored 27 - Georgia and LSU - are both ranked in the top ten. Notre Dame, of course, notched 41.

Mahalo. Tennessee defensive tackle (and preseason All-American) Jesse Mahelona offered this analysis after the game:
"I'd say Quinn is probably playing better than any quarterback in the nation right now."
I wouldn't tell him he's wrong.

Friday, November 04, 2005

Sticking the Flag on Rocky Top | by Pete

Well, I think I’ve sufficiently recovered from the USC game. It wasn’t easy, it took some time, but I’m ready to move on with Notre Dame football. I think we can all look at the BYU game as a hangover that a bottle of tequila can’t compete with. However, with the bye week, it’s time for a fresh outlook towards Notre Dame football, and working towards getting a BCS bid for the first time in school history. Yes, I realize we were listed as BCS participants in the Fiesta Bowl against Oregon State, but I refuse to acknowledge that game, because apparently the coaching staff didn’t realize we were playing in it.

With that said, the feeling on campus towards this Tennessee game is calm now, but I think, with the campus winding up for another football weekend, it’s ready to build to a pretty good pitch. I like to think that the Notre Dame student body is one of the more football-aware student bodies in the country (despite The Wave and whatnot, I blame those on SMC chicks), and the implications of this game are apparent. Win, and we seem to coast to a BCS bid, national TV exposure on New Year’s Day, and a good match-up against a marquee opponent. Lose, we fall to 5-3, and the Notre Dame administration decides to burn a cross on South Quad.

TIRADE TANGENT: Of course, we’ve all read Jason Whitlock’s piece of schlock declaring that the contract extension for Charlie Weis was racist, since he earned it with a worse record than Tyrone Willingham. I’m not going to comment on that piece of tripe, because it’s been done to death. However, what I have a greater problem with is the fact that no major media members are really willing to jump all over Whitlock for such irresponsible journalism. Of course Notre Dame isn’t racist, they hired the guy. It wasn’t like when you have a friend that nobody likes, and he hops in your car when you’re headed somewhere, and then you spend the rest of the night trying to lose him amongst the crowd. It’s not like that, we plucked him out, gave him national exposure, paid him millions of dollars, and he repaid us by losing to USC by 31 points three times in a row, recruiting in between the front and back nine, and refusing to change a coaching staff that took it’s playbook from Tecmo Bowl. I would certainly hope that sane members of the media would realize that fact, but nobody will call him on it. If I wrote a nationally published piece stating that Jerry Jones is racist because he insists on wearing white jerseys at home, I’d be declared a loon, and rightfully so. But everybody seems content to say, “The main reason for the extension was NFL interests, recruiting, etc., so we can overlook the racial aspects of this decision.” Excuse me, plain and simple, flat out, RACE had nothing to do with this decision. Debate all you want whether the decision was timely, excessive, all that stuff, but do not cry racism just to get your name in the papers. Whitlock should be ashamed of himself, but the rest of the media should be extra ashamed for allowing this absurdity to go unchecked. *huff* *huff*

One last thing, just imagine in your heads if Charlie Weis made the statements that Fisher DeBerry and Joe Paterno have recently made. I believe that Alan Grant would spurt blood from his eyes, and Jason Whitlock would bury himself inside a Hostess plant and refuse to come out. Imagine that scenario and the ensuing reaction, and then decide if the media fairly treats Notre Dame.

OK, back to the Tennessee game. This may be the most feared 3-4 team in college football history. They’ve beaten some good teams (LSU), but they’ve lost quite a few as well. But there’s a reason these guys were ranked #3 in the preseason, they’re capable of doing some very good things. On a national scale, when everybody has counted them out and the team appears in disarray, this would be the perfect time to show the world what UT can do by going out and beating Notre Dame on their own field. You couldn’t write a better build-up for the upset.

However, it won’t happen. Charlie can see the potential for the upset, and I’m sure he’s made it clear to the team that this is not just another game. I’m willing to go so far and say that this game is the biggest game of Charlie Weis’s Notre Dame tenure thus far. The Michigan game, nobody excepted us to win, the USC game, if we won, that was purely bonus. This game features a team that we should beat based on their season’s performance, but they have all the weapons to beat us. It’s up to Charlie to prepare the team mentally, and coach the team well enough to beat these guys. If he can do that, he’s ushered Notre Dame back into the era of beating teams when we should, while occasionally beating teams when we shouldn’t. And isn’t that where we all want him to be?

Everyone on campus is acting confident for this game, but we realize the weight. However, the mere fact that that confidence exists is huge for the program. No longer are we knocking our knees together in fear of Purdue or Boston College, but we expect to beat teams, no matter how talented they are. I anticipate this game to be closer than many we’ve had this year, but in the end, I think a solid victory by Notre Dame will be the result. Tennessee has just had too much going on to not make a few too many mistakes on Saturday. I expect this game to begin a real bang-up end of the season for Notre Dame, with a major head of steam going into a bowl game. This is game where we punch our BCS ticket, and if we win this game, we’re worth the hype.

I think we’re worth the hype. Charlie, enjoy your new contract, you’ve earned it. Go buy a hot tub or something.

Sweet as Sodapop | by Jay

  • Check out the Voluminous for a good wrapup of all the pregame news from the vol side of the aisle.

Finally, if you're going to the game, commit this to memory and make some new friends.

Wish that I was on ol' Rocky Top,
down in the Tennessee hills;
Ain't no smoggy smoke on Rocky Top;
Ain't no telephone bills;
Once I had a girl on Rocky Top;
Half bear, other half cat;
Wild as a mink, but sweet as soda pop,
I still dream about that;

Rocky Top, you'll always be
home sweet home to me;
Good ol' Rocky Top;
Rocky Top, Tennessee;
Rocky Top, Tennessee.

Once two strangers climbed ol' Rocky Top,
lookin' for a moonshine still;
Strangers ain't come down from Rocky Top;
Reckon they never will;
Corn won't grow at all on Rocky Top;
Dirt's too rocky by far;
That's why all the folks on Rocky Top
get their corn from a jar;
Rocky Top, you'll always be
home sweet home to me;
Good ol' Rocky Top;
Rocky Top, Tennessee;
Rocky Top, Tennessee.

I've had years of cramped-up city life
Trapped like a duck in a pen;
All I know is it's a pity life
Can't be simple again.

Rocky Top, you'll always be
home sweet home to me;
Good ol' Rocky Top;
Rocky Top, Tennessee;
Rocky Top, Tennessee.


Extension Tension | by Pat

Major Misconceptions, a new novel by Phil Taylor. Among his sage wisdom:

Weis parlayed a 5-2 record into a 10-year extension...
False. Weis had a six-year contract and received a five-year extension. Ty Willingham also started with a six-year contract, by the way.

More sagacity:
...the powers that be at Notre Dame, who haven't made a truly smart coaching decision in recent memory (with the possible exception of hiring Weis), still don't have a clue.
Again, false. The "powers that be" aren't the same "powers that be" that presided over the Davie and Willingham errors; there's been a regime change and an attitude adjustment that Taylor fails to note. (In fact, attitudes towards the football program often shift when a new prez is sworn in: Elmer Layden was gone a year after Fr. Hugh O'Donnell became president in 1940, and Frank Leahy retired a year after Fr. Hesburgh took over in 1952.) As any casual fan of ND can tell you, the energy instilled by Jenkins is striking and dramatic, and the old attitudes have been mostly swept away.



Let's approach this extension like a financial analyst would. Let's approach it like, maybe -- just pulling names out of a hat here -- Morgan Stanley CEO Phil Purcell would, or a valuation and asset-pricing-model expert like John Affleck-Graves would. Contrary to the constant refrain of "just seven games into the season...", Charlie's actually been on the job for about ten months, which is a pretty good amount of time to form an opinion about the man, his approach, and his prospects for the future. What would your typical Titan of Finance say about handing Charlie a five-year extension at this stage in the game? They might look at the following indicators...

Indicator #1: He hires great assistants.

Cutcliffe. Minter. Lewis. Latina. Ianello. Haywood. When Weis named his assistant coaching staff, the football world was impressed (you've probably heard the mall cops/SEAL team line before, presumably uttered by an NFL scout). Charlie's got a big ego, but there's nothing immodest about the way he hires assistants; Charlie's not afraid to go after the best of the best, even if it means hiring people smarter than himself. Case in point: he'd never been a head coach before, so he hired three previous head coaches to help him out. It had been a while since he was out on the recruiting trail, so he hired one of the top recruiters in the country to lead the effort. A rumor's making the circuit that he had initially foregone a larger contract, so he could spread the difference around and offer his prospective assistants a higher salary. More important than a competitive salary, however, is the sense that Charlie attracts coaching talent because of his own NFL experience and acumen. Haywood said that the top reason he returned to his alma mater was to learn at the foot of a multiple Super Bowl winner.

This bodes well for the future. When one of his coaches should leave for a job elsewhere -- and they will -- I expect Charlie to do what he did back in the spring: identify the next "best of the best" and get him on the staff. When David Cutcliffe missed spring practice due to health problems, Ron Powlus was already in position to slide from behind a desk to the practice field to help coach the quarterbacks; in June, when Cutcliffe officially resigned due to health reasons, Weis quickly named the overqualified Peter Vaas as his replacement only two days later. Cultivating his own "coaching tree" is something the very best coaches in the history of football (Lombardi, Walsh, Parcells, Belichick) have always done, and Charlie's planting the seeds right now.

Indicator #2: He recruits his ass off.

Charlie's first recruiting class was hindered by a) the awkwardness of the coaching transition and b) his pledge to finish out the season with the Patriots. Results were mixed; he lost a couple of guys that were solid under Ty and gained a few back in the final month. But after signing day, he was already onto the 2006 class, and kicked things off with a whirlwind cross-country recruiting trip that was impressive, to say the least. Early returns are nothing short of incredible; ND should have their first top-5 recruiting haul in a long time. Most importantly, Charlie just enjoys it.
"I'm going to recruit like they haven't been recruited before," Weis said. "This is no slight on any of the coaches before me. But I just love recruiting. I have a passion for recruiting."
Most coaches get a recruiting bounce during their first year: the novelty of a new coach, a new spirit, etc. Still, no one was predicting that Weis would be able to land twelve recruits before the Irish even snapped a football; the total count is already up to nineteen, and the class is almost full. The defensive backfield, much maligned in recent years, has already received committments from five defensive backs, two of whom are Army All-American cornerbacks. One of the top running backs in the country chose Weis earlier this summer, before Pete Carroll could even get a home visit. And not one, but two highly-ranked quarterbacks already committed to the Irish. If Weis could land these kids when public perception of the program was knocked down a bit, imagine what he can do with ND as a hot ticket.

Indicator #3: He knows how to coach.

What Charlie's done in the short span of seven games is almost a work of alchemy: he turned a moribund, leaden offense into a golden powerhouse, ninth-best in the country. It's worthwhile to note that he did this with only three players named to any awards watchlists (Quinn, Fasano, and Fitzpatrick), and no preseason All-Americans. (By point of comparison, Bob Davie left Ty with seven preseason All-Americans, including Jeff Faine, who was 1st-team. Ten of Ty's starters on offense in 2002 made the NFL; five of them are currently starting. But I digress.) Quinn's probably the most striking example of Charlie's coaching ability; he turned an NFL draft day afterthought into a likely top-5 pick.

The point is Charlie maximized the talent in a way that Ty couldn't; ten starters returned from the offense, but to look at last year's ineptitude, you wouldn't realize it. Would Jeff Samardzija be an All-American candidate under the old coaching staff? Hell no. Anybody with eyes can see the improvement on the field; statistics just back up what we already know. Let's look at the relative improvement between Ty's first year and Charlie's first year.

Category 2001 2002
2004 2005
Coach
Davie
Ty

Ty
Weis
Run Off. Rank 30 45
85 55
Pass Off. Rank 114 104
54 5
Total Off. Rank 110 107
81 9
Run Def. Rank 39 6
4 25
Pass Eff. D Rank 38 8
98 58
Total Def. Rank 14 10
54 96
Point Differential -1 +74
0 +88

Willingham made a good defense a little better, and failed to revive a terrible offense. Two years later, the offense was a smidge better, but the defense was terrible. Charlie, in one year, took the 81st-ranked offense and made it top 10 -- again, with all the same players. Raise an eyebrow at the 2005 defensive ranking if you like, but let's visit this number again at the end of the year. If anything, the huge increase in pass efficiency defense indicates that while we are giving up yards, we are keeping teams out of the endzone better than we did last year. I'm betting we'll see continued improvement on the defensive side of the ball.

Indicator #4: He loves ND.

This isn't a deal-clincher, because if it was, Gerry Faust would still be our coach, working under a lifetime contract. But genuine affinity for the University is a job requirement for the head coach at ND, I believe. I think to recruit at ND, deal with alumni, and steward the football program effectively, you have to exhibit some authentic Irish love. You have to see the place as a destination rather than a stepping-stone to other jobs, and to take advantage of the lore and the "mystique" -- for all that mumbo-jumbo to work, you have to believe it. You have to live it, and you have to breathe it.

Charlie legitimately breathes it.
"The week of the first bye, Kevin (White) and I sat down and I said there would be a possibility that people would start talking about things like (the NFL). I wanted to confirm to him that he never had to worry about there being any interest on my part.

The problem with that is, as the season goes on, it becomes more problematic the more it is brought up. It can have a negative effect on recruiting. It has a negative effect on the people you are around. We wanted to nip that in the bud. I told Kevin in the first bye week that we would re-visit it the week of the second bye week because I would never talk about anything like this other than if it was a bye week because I think it would be a distraction.

Between Kevin, Father Jenkins, Phil Purcell and the Board of Trustees, our lawyers and our Sports Information people, everyone worked together with my family and Bob LaMonte and we decided to get this out of the way now and erase any doubt. My intent was the same from the day I got here. I said the same thing from day one and anyone that has been around me. When I say it, I mean it. I don't just say it for idle chatter. This puts and end to any of those questions/rumors.

I am goal-oriented but I am more loyal than anything else. This isn't just any job for me. This is my alma mater. When I came here, the thought of people thinking that I was here for a short time fix - those type of things do effect me. It is very important for me to be loyal to this University.
Weis mentioned how he wants to be at Notre Dame until his son, Charlie Jr., graduates from Notre Dame. Charlie is in the 7th grade now, which means he will graduate from college in the spring of 2015, which, incidentally is the final year of Charlie's contract. I don't think that date is a conicidence.



So, that's four stand-alone indicators of future success; four pillars that show that Charlie Weis is worth having around at ND for a while. And that's before mentioning any extenuating circumstances, like the possibilty of a job opening in the NFL (the ostensible reason for signing the extension in the first place). Just because Charlie is a known and presumably wanted commodity in the NFL doesn't mean it's good to lock him up; after all, this is a league that provided employment to Jerry Glanville for long stretches. No, the reason you sign Charlie is because you've looked at his record to date, contemplated his chances for future success, and concluded that he's a good risk.

In that context, then, the contract extension itself was largely a symbolic gesture. ND didn't suddenly come to the conclusion that Weis was a good bet just last week; the idea has been silently understood for a while now. Yes, I'm sure some monetary concerns were addressed, but the larger reason this extension was vocalized was for peace of mind: peace of mind for Notre Dame fans that their head coach wanted to stay at Notre Dame for the long haul; peace of mind for recruits that the coach recruiting them is going to be there four years later for their graduation; and peace of mind for Charlie and his family, so he doesn't have to deal with pesky distractions while he gets down to the business of winning football games.

This was a pretty easy bet to place.

Thursday, November 03, 2005

Introducing... | by Jay

Introducing your 2005 All-Moniker Team Captain.

Trouble in Volville | by Jay

Clausen pulled in the top of eighth; Fulmer calls for the righty from the pen.

Rick Clausen is angry, but not because of the benching.

Tennessee’s senior captain feels the criticism and personal attacks that led Randy Sanders to resign as offensive coordinator have been unfair and extreme.

"It’s a bunch of crap that fans and media blame coaches when players can’t go out and make plays," Clausen said. "Coaches don’t fumble, throw interceptions, miss blocks or miss passes."

"You are going to use coaches as scapegoats," Clausen said. "That’s apparently what college football has come to now. You blames coaches rather than players."

Clausen feels there is plenty of blame to go around.

"It’s just disheartening that everyone claims this is a Tennessee family and Vol Nation. But at the first sign of adversity, everybody decides to blame Coach Sanders," Clausen said.

"I’m just pissed at the whole situation and everybody. I feel like I let (Sanders) down. If I don’t throw an interception against South Carolina, we probably beat them. The players have basically forced Coach Sanders to resign, and that’s an awful feeling."
Opponent in seeming disarray? Players popping off about fans, coaches firing assistants midway through the season? Things setting up nicely for the Irish, right? I'm not so sure. Personally, I think this is a classic trap game.

(Trap game: I couldn't find an official definition of "trap game" anywhere; it seems to be one of those sports idioms that appeared in the lexicon already fully-formed, direct from Jung's collective unconsciousness. If somebody wants to provide a succinct definition of a "trap game", we're all ears.)

In any case, Charlie disagrees with me. (And confound it, he doesn't provide a definition, either).
Q. How would you define a trap game?

COACH WEIS: This certainly isn't one. All you have to do is watch the tape. When I sit there and give these facts and figures right there, it isn't just trying to make myself look good to make it look like we know what we're doing here. This is the scariest 3 4 team that you're ever going to go against because they're capable of beating everybody every week and they know it. Our guys know it, too. All you got to do is put on the tape. They see it. They see these things that I just talked about because I've shown them these same things I'm telling you about. They've seen it. There's no trap. You don't have to worry about a trap in a Tennessee game.
I'm sure that's the focus Charlie instilled over the past two weeks ("don't underestimate these guys"!), but it's gotta be tough to maintain proper perspective. After all, on paper, the Vols just look pathetic: 98th-ranked rushing attack, 79th passing, 99th overall. Squeaking out a meager 16 points per game. You don't have to be Gregg Easterbrook to see that a backwoods jalopy runs better than the Vols' offense. I'll be disappointed if we give up more than a couple of touchdowns. Final score: ND 24, Tennessee 9.

(Is this the kind of mentality they're talking about when they talk about a "trap" game?)

Wednesday, November 02, 2005

Statistically Speaking | by Pat

• Tennessee is one of 10 programs that can claim a winning career record against Notre Dame. (Other 9 - Chicago, Florida State, Georgia, Great Lakes, NC State, Nebraska, Michigan, Oregon State, and Yale) So far the teams have met 7 times with the Volunteers claiming a 4-3 advantage. If Notre Dame manages to win the game -- keep in mind that ND has only won one of the three home games against the Vols - the series will be tied. There are 7 programs that have a tied series with the Irish. How many can you name? (Answers at the end).

• Breaking it down by quarter. So, do you think Notre Dame can be considered a 2nd Quarter team this year?

Score By Quarters_ _1st__2nd__3rd__4th__OT__Total_
Notre Dame4510349653265
Opponents481948566177

• So far the Notre Dame offense has set 17 offensive records. They are:
Single Game touchdown passes - 6 (Quinn vs. BYU)
Single-Game touchdown receptions - 4 (Stovall vs. BYU)
Single-Game receptions - 14 (Stovall vs. BYU)
Single-Game, 2 Players with 10 or more receptions - Stovall (14) & Samardzija (10) v. BYU
Pass Completions in a game- 33 (tied; Quinn vs. MSU)
Consecutive Games with a TD Pass - 12 (Quinn)
Consecutive Game with a TD Reception - 7 (Samardzija)
Consecutive Game with a TD Pass to start a season - 7 (Samardzija)
Consecutive 100-yd. rushing game to begin season - 4 (Walker)
Consecutive games throwing over 300 yards - 4 (Quinn)
Single-season touchdown passes - 20 (Quinn)
Single-season TD receptions - 11 (tied; Samaradzija)
Single-season 300+ yd. passing games - 4 (Quinn)
Single-season 400+ passing games - 3 (Quinn)
Career 400+ yd. passing games - 4 (Quinn)
Career games passing for 250+ yds. - 11 (Quinn)
And if that's not enough, there are another 15 records within reach, although admittedly some are closer than others. For a list, check out page 23 of the ND/UT game release notes on und.com. Considering most of the offense comes back next year, I hope they don't go to too much trouble to get the 2005 records into the record book.

Season Running Averages

I made some changes for this edition of the running averages. First, the chart was getting pretty big so I combined the stats of the first six games into the column labeled "1st Six". If you still want to see the game by game breakdown, here's the link to that chart. Second, there were some excellent comments last time concerning some insightful stats that weren't included on the chart. So, passing efficiency (for Quinn only), scoring offense, passing efficiency defense, scoring defense, red zone defense, red zone touchdown defense have been added. Enjoy.

Category BYU 1st Six
2005
2004
Yards per rush
1.9
3.6
3.5
3.32
Avg yards per PA
11.4 8.4 8.8 7.2
Avg yards per PC
14.6 13.3 13.5 13.4
Pass completion %
78%
63%
65%
54%
3rd downs conv.
6/11 (55%)
46/96 (48%)
52/107 (49%)
68/183 (37%)
Rushing yd avg 44.0
170.8
152.71 (50th)
127.4 (85th)
Passing yd avg 467.0
318.8
340.0 (4th)
218.1 (54th)
Passing Eff. (Quinn)
222.0
150.9
161.87 (9th)
125.87 (55th)
Total offense yd avg
511.0
489.7
492.71 (8th)
345.5 (81st)
Scoring Offense
49.0
36.0
37.86 (12th)
24.1 (72nd)
Time of Possession
26:21 35:12 33:56 30:50
Red Zone TDs 3/4 (75%)
21/27 (81%)
24/ 31 (77%)
25 / 36 (69%)

Defense

Category BYU
1st Six
2005
2004
Yards per rush given up
2.2
4.4
4.0
2.7
Avg yards per PA
7.0 7.7
7.6 7.9
Avg yards per PC
12.2 14.8
14.3 13.6
Pass completion percentage
58%
52%
53%
58%
Quarterback sacks
4
13
17 30
Rushing yd avg. against 75.0
126.3
119.0 (27th)
88.2 (4th)
Passing yd avg. against 317.0
304.8
306.6 (114th)
281.2 (116th)
Passing Eff. def. avg.
122.73
122.24
122.44 (54th)
138.34 (98th)
Total yd offense avg. against 392.0
431.2
425.6 (97th)
369.4 (54th)
Scoring Defense
23.0
25.67
25.29 (58th)
24.08 (46th)
Red Zone Defense
3/4 (75%)
16/23 (70%)
19/27 (70%)
33/38 (87%)
Red Zone TD Def.
3/4 (75%)
13/23 (57%)
16/27 (59%)
19/38 (50%)

Turnovers

Category BYU
1st Six
2005
2004
Interceptions by ND
2
7
9
9
Fumbles Forced / Recovered
0/0
12/7
12/ 7
27 / 12
Turnovers gained
2 14
16 21
Had Intercepted 0
5
5
10
Fumbles / Lost 3/2
9/3
10/ 5
15 / 6
Turnovers lost
2
8
10
16
Turnover Margin +0
+6
+6
+5

Special Teams

Category BYU
1st Six
2005
2004
Kickoff return average
17.2
19.8
19.1
18.7
Kickoff return average allowed
21.7 19.1
19.6 19.9
Punt return average
7.5 16.5
15.2 10.8
Punt return average allowed
11.8
5.2
6.6
8.2


Answer - ND has a tied series with Clemson, Knox, Mississippi, Missouri, Ohio State, Penn State, and Syracuse.

Pretty much everything you need to know about Jason Whitlock | by Jay

(In case you missed all the hullabaloo yesterday, you might want to read this first, and then this excellent and welcome rebuttal from an unlikely source.)

Jason Whitlock answered a lengthy and considered email from an African-American ND fan with this:

From: Ballstate68@aol.com
Date: Nov 2, 2005 9:06 AM
Subject: Re: Notre Dame and racism
To: [address withheld]

Nate

I'll let white folks know you stood up.

Although I'm quite sure you've already told them.

jason

Look, there are some debatable points in Nate's email, and some of his claims are definitely worth discussing. But instead of a) engaging him or b) ignoring him, Whitlock chose to call him an Uncle Tom.

Whitlock should be fired.

Tuesday, November 01, 2005

I'll take Greek mathematicians for $100, Alex | by Jay

If you follow baseball at all, you'