2009 Notre Dame Football Game Program - Navy

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N O T R E D A M E F I G H T I N G I R I S H v s . N AV Y M I D S H I P M E N • N O V E M B E R 7 , 2 0 0 9 • N O T R E D A M E S T A D I U M


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WELCOME TO

NOTRE DAME n behalf of all of us at the University of Notre Dame — and, in particular, the Notre Dame athletics department and its football program — welcome to the University of Notre Dame, welcome to Notre Dame Stadium, and welcome to Notre Dame football for 2009. The sport of football has held a special place at this institution for decades, and Notre Dame, in turn, has been fortunate to carve out its own niche on the national collegiate scene. From the start of football on our campus in 1887, to the glory days of Knute Rockne, George Gipp and the Four Horsemen in the 1920s, all the way through championship seasons under Frank Leahy, Ara Parseghian, Dan Devine and Lou Holtz — Notre Dame’s ongoing record of tradition, success and excellence is unparalleled. Whether measured by national championships, All-Americans, College Football Hall of Famers, or Heisman Trophy winners, Notre Dame’s pattern of consistent excellence has stood the test of time. That level of achievement has been just as impressive in the classroom, where Notre Dame football student-athletes have earned their degrees at rates that set the standard among Football Bowl Subdivision programs in America. Charlie Weis enters his fifth season as head coach here at Notre Dame intent on returning his program to the level that saw us play in Bowl Championship Series contests following both the 2005 and 2006 seasons. From the top-flight recruiting efforts by him and his staff, to his team’s record-setting performance in winning the 2008 Hawai’i Bowl, Charlie has a keen appreciation for the expectations at Notre Dame and what it takes to reach those. This marks my second year as athletics director at Notre Dame. As a mid-1970s Notre Dame graduate, I have a strong sense of the unique significance of Notre Dame football. It is central to our legacy and our identity, and it is the vehicle by which we can most easily join together to celebrate the greatness of Notre Dame. When you are on campus on a home football weekend, you understand how the Friday luncheons and pep rallies, the painting of the gold helmets, the Band of the Fighting Irish marching through campus, the “Play Like A Champion” sign and all the other elements that represent Notre Dame football combine to create a tradition and a shared experience that is unmatched.

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While football will always play a special role at Notre Dame, the leadership of this University is committed to creating the best possible experience for the more than 650 student-athletes in 26 sports who wear Fighting Irish on their uniforms. They deserve the best possible coaching, facilities and support services that we can provide. Just a year ago we opened the LaBar Practice Complex, three brand new practice fields that now benefit our football squad, as well as assist the soccer, lacrosse and RecSports programs. It complements our state-of-the art Guglielmino Athletics Complex that houses our football offices and operations. We’re in the process in 2009-10 of opening new facilities for soccer, lacrosse and track and field, and in recent years we’ve completed new homes for softball and golf. We’ll soon be completing the updating of the Joyce Center — to become Purcell Pavilion at the Joyce Center for basketball and volleyball — and improvements for hockey, fencing, tennis and rowing are right around the corner. We take great pride in the accomplishments of our student-athletes. A record five of them — Matt Besler in men’s soccer, Brittany Bock in women’s soccer, Jordan Pearce in hockey, Patrick Smyth in cross country/track and field and Lauren Buck in rowing — this past year won prestigious post-graduate scholarships from the NCAA. Our 26 sports in 2008-09 combined to produce 35 All-Americans, eight Academic All-Americans, and 10 conference championships. Two teams (women’s soccer and fencing) finished as NCAA runners-up, a third (women’s tennis) advanced to the NCAA team semifinals — while men’s soccer, hockey, and men’s and women’s lacrosse are among the other programs that enjoyed exceptional seasons. Our student-athletes combine to rank at or near the top of every listing of federal graduation rates and NCAA-authorized Graduation Success Rate (GSR) and Academic Progress Rate (APR) statistics. Our football players have combined for an unprecedented six 3.0 grade-pointaverage semesters out of eight since Charlie

Weis came on board. In addition, all of our student-athletes in 2008-09 combined to perform more than 6,300 hours of community service. For everyone involved — from the studentathletes on the field this afternoon to the fans in the stands — our mission is to make the Notre Dame football experience an extraordinary one. We hope you’ll take the time to wander our campus, enjoy all the elements that a football weekend here represents — and gain a sense of what the Notre Dame spirit is all about. God bless—and go Irish!

Jack Swarbrick Athletics Director

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FEATURES 6 TODAY’S GAME The Irish and the Midshipmen meet for the 83rd consecutive time in the longest continuous rivalry in the country.

NOTRE DAME vs. NAVY NOVEMBER 7, 2009 NOTRE DAME STADIUM

14 GETTING TO KNOW Meet junior halfback Armando Allen.

105 PLAYER PROFILE From shooting baskets to saving plays, safety Sergio Brown shines.

120 GETTING TO KNOW Meet senior offensive guard Chris Stewart.

122 THE “SHORTY” AND LONG OF IT 100 years ago, a victory at Michigan brought the first glimmer of glory to Notre Dame.

125 EIGHTY YEARS STRONG The Bengal Bouts continue to serve the weak.

130 GETTING TO KNOW Meet junior wide receiver Golden Tate.

133 CATCHING UP WITH Get reacquainted with former Irish football and basketball star Willie Townsend.

228 HELPING THE “FORGOTTEN” The efforts of charity, Hannah and Friends, are a family affair for Charlie, Maura, Charlie Jr., and Hannah Weis.

231 CATCHING UP WITH Get reacquainted with former Irish swimmer Haley Scott DeMaria

234 WORKING WITH A PASSION Jill Bodensteiner heads up Notre Dame’s compliance department.

UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME OFFICIAL SOUVENIR MAGAZINE The 2009 Program is an official publication of the University of Notre Dame. NOTRE DAME STAFF Athletics Director Jack Swarbrick Senior Associate Athletic Director John Heisler Assistant Athletic Director/ Program Editor Bernadette Cafarelli

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Director of Football Media Relations Brian Hardin Asst. Sports Information Director Michael Bertsch Asst. Sports Information Director Sean Carroll Asst. Sports Information Director Tim Connor

©2009 University of Notre Dame. All rights reserved. This publication and its contents may not be reproduced or copied in whole or in part without the express written consent of the University of Notre Dame.

Asst. Sports Information Director Alan George Asst. Sports Information Director Chris Masters Sports Information Assistant Dan Colleran Sports Information Assistant/ Program Editor Stephanie Fischer

NOTRE DAME SPORTS PROPERTIES STAFF General Manager Scott Correira Administrative Assistant Kelli Krawiec Operations Manager/ Account Executive David Brochu

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NOTRE DAME 2009 FOOTBALL

DEPARTMENTS WELCOME LETTER FROM THE ATHLETICS DIRECTOR ......... 1

KNUTE ROCKNE ........................................................... 84

STREAK BREAKERS .................................................... 168

CAMPUS LEADERS ....................................................... 17

GEORGE GIPP ............................................................. 86

NCAA STATISTICAL LEADERS ....................................... 171

HEAD COACH CHARLIE WEIS ........................................ 21

THE FOUR HORSEMEN ................................................. 88

NCAA RECORDS ......................................................... 172

ASSISTANT COACHES ................................................... 29

IRISH IN THE HALL OF FAME ......................................... 90

NOTRE DAME STADIUM RECORDS ............................... 175

NOTRE DAME STADIUM ................................................ 41

IRISH DRAFT PICKS ...................................................... 93

YEAR-BY-YEAR COACHING RECORDS ........................... 178

THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME ................................. 47

COLLEGE FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME............................... 98

IRISH FACTS & FIGURES ............................................. 185

INDICATORS OF EXCELLENCE ........................................ 53

NACDA DIRECTORS’ CUP ............................................ 100

MONOGRAM CLUB ..................................................... 205

THE ROCKNE HERITAGE FUND ...................................... 56

NOTRE DAME PLAYERS GALLERY ................................ 108

OFFICIAL FOOTBALL SIGNALS ...................................... 208

NOTRE DAME ALL-AMERICANS ...................................... 59

NAVY ........................................................................ 114

STADIUM POLICIES AND INFORMATION ........................ 211

NOTRE DAME ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICANS ...................... 60

MEET THE MIDSHIPMEN ............................................. 116

NCAA COMPLIANCE .................................................... 215

NOTRE DAME CONSENSUS ALL-AMERICANS ................... 62

2009 OPPONENTS SCOREBOARD ............................... 118

SOUTH BEND/MISHAWAKA .......................................... 219

2008-09 NOTRE DAME ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICANS ........ 65

CAMPUS SCENE ......................................................... 136

THE BAND OF THE FIGHTING IRISH .............................. 225

NOTRE DAME NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS .................... 69

GUGLIELMINO ATHLETICS COMPLEX ............................ 138

ALUMNI NEWS ........................................................... 226

NOTRE DAME WINNING SEASONS ................................. 70

ATHLETICS DIRECTOR JACK SWARBRICK ...................... 141

NOTRE DAME FOOTBALL EXPERIENCE ......................... 237

NOTRE DAME BOWL HISTORY ....................................... 72

SUPPORT STAFF ........................................................ 145

THE LAST WORD........................................................ 240

ALL-TIME BOWL APPEARANCES..................................... 74

CHEERLEADERS ......................................................... 162

HEISMAN TROPHY WINNERS AT NOTRE DAME ................ 79

LAST MINUTE WINS & LOSSES .................................... 165

ON THE COVERS The covers of the 2009 Notre Dame football gameday programs are retro versions of previous Irish program covers with “old-school” designs. The Nevada cover is a reprint of the program cover from the Notre Dame-SMU game from 1951. The Michigan State cover is taken from the Notre Dame-Georgia Tech program in 1939. The Washington cover is from the Notre Dame-Pittsburgh program from 1937. The USC cover is from the Notre Dame-USC program from 1935. The Boston College cover is from the Notre Dame-Purdue program from 1954. The Navy cover is from the Notre Dame-Minnesota program from 1938. The Connecticut cover is from the Notre Dame-Northwestern program from 1936. The posters inside the programs represent enlargements of these same program covers. We hope you enjoy these graphics from yesteryear Notre Dame seasons and publications.

Director of Sales Greg Hughes Marketing Coordinator Amanda Moor Director of Media Productions Jack Nolan Director of Digital Media Alan Wasielewski Assistant Director, Digital Media Gary Paczesny Production Assistant Kurt Sutton TEL: 574-631-8814

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PUBLISHED BY

UNIVERSITY SPORTS PUBLICATIONS CO., INC. 570 Elmont Road Elmont, NY 11003 Tel: 516.327.9500 Fax: 516.327.3099

EXECUTIVE VP - OPERATIONS Jeff Botwinick EXECUTIVE VP - BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT Martin Lewis EXECUTIVE VP - SALES Steven Farkas EXECUTIVE VP - TEAM RELATIONS David Gerschwer EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT Julie Wong

PRODUCTION MANAGER Julia Sheridan PRODUCTION ASSISTANT Allie Wassel MANAGING EDITOR Nora Santiago EDITORIAL DESIGNER Petra Vincent

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HISTORY IN THE MAKING The Irish and the Midshipmen meet for the 83rd consecutive time — making this series the longest continuous rivalry in the country. By Maura K. Sullivan

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otre Dame takes on the Naval Academy this afternoon as the longest continuous intersectional rivalry in college football meets for the 83rd consecutive time. Notre Dame leads the all-time series with a 72-10-1 record with the 72 wins representing the most over a single opponent in NCAA history. Navy’s 10 wins have been interspersed sporadically between years of Irish domination in this series. The most consecutive wins for Navy in the series have been two on three separate occasions: 1933 and 1934, 1956 and 1957, and 1960 and 1961. The first contest between these two teams was in 1927; the schools have met every year since that inaugural contest. This will mark the second meeting between the two teams on November 7 as the Midshipmen came away with a 3-0 win in 1936 against Irish coaching legend Elmer Layden’s squad. Layden was one of the famed “Four Horsemen” during his playing days as a fullback at Notre Dame and then returned to coach at his alma mater. Today marks the 31st time that these two teams will square off at Notre Dame Stadium with the Irish holding a 27-4 advantage in the series at home. A win today would bring the Irish’s record to 7-2 in 2009 and would mark the second time in head coach Charlie Weis’ coaching tenure that the Irish have produced seven victories in their first nine games. Notre Dame and Navy have met 51 times at seven different neutral sites in the United States: Baltimore, Chicago, Cleveland, East Rutherford, N.J., Orlando, Philadelphia, and Raljon, Md. The 1996 meeting between the Irish & the Midshipmen was held in Dublin, Ireland with Notre Dame claiming a 54-27 victory. In recent years, the Irish have dominated the series with a 43-year winning streak that was broken by the Midshipmen in 2007 in

Sophomore John Goodman caught his first career touchdown pass last Saturday in the 40-14 win over Washington State in San Antonio. For the season, Goodman as six catches for 104 yards.

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what was one of the longest games in Notre Dame football history as the contest was decided in the third overtime session. The ’07 loss was the first in 43 years for Notre Dame. Prior to that setback, the last time an Irish team had lost to Navy was on Nov. 2, 1963 when the Midshipmen handed them a 35-14 setback.

SERIES NOTES

THE COACHES Charlie Weis (Notre Dame, ‘78) is in his fifth season as the Notre Dame head coach in 2009. He came to Notre Dame after 15 seasons as an assistant coach in the NFL, including four Super Bowl Championships with the New England Patriots. Weis boasted an impressive record in his first two seasons with the Irish, finishing 9-3 in 2005 with an appearance in the Fiesta Bowl, and 10-3 in 2006 with a berth in the Allstate Sugar Bowl. Weis looks to lead the Irish to glory in 2009 after finishing the 2008 season on a high note with a victory in the Hawai’i Bowl. The Irish beat the University of Hawai’i, 49-21, in that game, to bring their final record to 7-6. In the ‘09 season opener in Notre Dame Stadium, the Irish recorded the first shutout of the Weis era with their 35-0 victory over Nevada. Today marks Weis’ fifth meeting with the Midshipmen. A victory in today’s game would bring his record to 4-1 against Navy. Ken Niumatalolo (Hawaii, ‘89) is in his 12th season at Navy and his second season as head coach of the Midshipmen. He has spent 12 total seasons at Navy in some coaching capacity, including six as assistant head coach and offensive line coach from 2002-2007. Prior to that, he was an assistant from 1995-1998. Niumatalolo lettered at quarterback for three years at the University of Hawai’i and was part of the Warriors’ first bowl team in 1989. He then spent three seasons after graduation as an offensive assistant at his alma mater, and also coached at UNLV from 1999-2001, calling plays in his final season there. In 2008, Niumatalolo became the first coach in Navy history to lead the Midshipmen to a bowl game in his inaugural season as head coach. Navy’s 8-5 record in ‘08 also gave him the most wins for a first-year coach at Navy since 1934. He is only the second Polynesian head coach in Football Bowl Subdivision history and is the first Samoan collegiate head coach at any level. THE MIDSHIPMEN The Midshipmen come into Notre Dame Stadium following a narrow loss to Temple last Saturday in Navy Memorial Stadium in Annapolis. They lost to the Owls, 27-24, and now have a 6-3 record on the season. The loss snapped the Midshipmen’s sixgame winning streak, the first such streak for Navy since 1979. The Midshipmen play a 13-game schedule, so they must win at least one more game to become bowl-eligible. Navy struggled on both offense and defense in the loss to Temple last week. The Owls became the first team this season to prevent the Midshipmen from scoring an offensive touchdown in the first half. The defense scored Navy’s three touchdowns after errors by the Owls: a shanked punt, a fumble and an intercep-

This is the 83rd consecutive meeting between Notre Dame and Navy making it the longest continuous intersectional rivalry in college football.

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The Irish lead the all-time series 72-10-1 (.873).

The two teams have played 51 times at seven different neutral sites. (Baltimore, Chicago, Cleveland, East Rutherford, N.J., Orlando, Philadelphia and Raljon, Md.)

This is the 31st game between to two teams to be played in Notre Dame Stadium.

Notre Dame and Navy first met in 1927 and have played each other every year since.

Charlie Weis is the last Notre Dame coach to lose to a Navy squad since Hugh Devore lost to the Midshipmen, 35-14, on Nov. 2 1963.

Notre Dame has won just over 83 percent of its games (130-24-5) versus teams from the three service academies (Army, Navy and Air Force).

The 2007 triple overtime thriller between the two teams was, at the time, the longest game in Notre Dame history (3:55). That record was broken less than a year later (364 days) when Notre Dame and Pittsburgh played a four-overtime marathon in South Bend that lasted 4 hours and 1 minute.

Notre Dame is 27-4-0 all-time against Navy inside Notre Dame Stadium.

Notre Dame has faced Navy only once on this date (Nov. 7). The previous meeting was won by Navy, 3-0, in 1936 against coach Elmer Layden’s Notre Dame squad.

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Weis is 3-1 against Navy.

Through last weekend’s game against Washington State, Clausen has thrown 124 consecutive passes without an interception.

Junior receiver Golden Tate has 11 career games with 100 yards receiving, good enough for second on the all-time Irish list. With his 117 yards against USC, Tate broke a three-way second-place tie with Derrick Mayes and Jeff Samardzija. Tom Gatewood holds the record with 13 100yard outings.

Tate also is sixth on Notre Dame’s touchdown reception list with 20 career scores. He needs two more to tie Derrick Mayes and Rhema McKnight for second. Samardzija is first with 27.

Notre Dame is 65-6 (.915) against an unranked Midshipmen squad.

Junior quarterback Jimmy Clausen is currently third on Notre Dame’s all-time career passing touchdowns list with 50. He needs two more to tie Ron Powlus’ second-place mark of 52. Brady Quinn is first on the list with 95 career passing touchdowns.

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2 0 0 9 F I GH T I N G I R I SH CONTINUED

FLAG PRESENTATION Our national colors will be presented prior to Saturday’s game by Brig. Gen. Michael Brogan, a 1980 graduate of Notre Dame and commander of the U.S. Marine Corps Systems Command. He is this year’s recipient of the Notre Dame Alumni Association’s Rev. William Corby, C.S.C., Award for distinguished military service and will be honored during halftime ceremonies. Gen. Brogan will be accompanied by Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. A 1968 graduate of Saturday’s opponent, the U.S. Naval Academy, Adm. Mullen is the 17th chairman of the joint chiefs and serves as the principal military advisor to the president, secretary of defense, the National Security Council and the Homeland Security Council.

Proctor completed two passes in four attempts for 27 yards and an interception and Dobbs went 0-for-3 in limited playing time at the end of the fourth quarter. HERE COME THE IRISH The Irish enter today’s game after a convincing victory over the Cougars of Washington State in their first off-site home game in the Alamodome at San Antonio. Notre Dame is 19th in the Associated Press poll and 21st in the ESPN/USA Today rankings. Last Saturday’s game was the first game since the Irish’s season opening victory against Nevada (35-0) that the final outcome in the contest was not decided until the fourth quarter. Notre Dame sealed its 40-14 victory early in the game and was able to give its second-string players some experience against the Cougars. Junior wide receiver Golden Tate was once again the star of an offense that scored three touchdowns in the second quarter. Tate continued his standout season as the go-to receiver for the Irish with 80 yards in four receptions, including a spectacular 50-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Jimmy Clausen on the final play of the first half. Clausen tossed the ball up to Tate, who somehow leaped up amid three Cougar defenders and grabbed the ball to get the Irish touchdown. Tate finished with 114 total yards after rushing for 61 yards on four carries, usually when the Irish offense was running the Wildcat. Running back Armando Allen usually runs the ball when the Irish use the Wildcat, a new favorite play for Notre Dame, but he watched last week’s game from the sidelines to rest a nagging right ankle sprain sustained earlier in the season. In Allen’s absence, junior Robert Hughes led the Irish with 131 yards rushing in 24 carries. He ran for a touchdown in a second quarter dominated by the Irish offense, with two other touchdowns by Tate. Clausen continues to demonstrate his reliability and consistency for the Irish despite still experiencing some pain in his right foot from turf toe. He completed 22-of-27 passes for 268 yards and two touchdowns. Clausen came out of the game with three minutes remaining in the third quarter so that he could rest his toe and backup Dayne Crist could gain some experience leading the offense. Sophomore Crist played his first significant minutes for the Irish and threw his first touchdown pass in an Irish uniform. Crist

Junior Golden Tate leads the Irish with 1,191 all-purpose yards in 2009, after totaling 155 yards rushing, 927 receiving yards, 47 yards on punt returns and 62 yards on kick returns.

tion. Junior safety Wyatt Middleton grabbed two interceptions for the Midshipmen. Temple recorded 274 rushing yards against Navy, the most since Notre Dame rushed for 280 yards against the Midshipmen in 2003. Navy’s offense relies primarily on its running game. Midshipmen fullback Vince Murray had a big game last weekend, rushing for over 100 yards for the third consecutive contest. He had 115 yards on 33 carries, bringing his season total to 523 yards in 102 attempts with three touchdowns. His 115 yards made up the bulk of the Midshipmen’s 227 rush yards against Temple. Two quarterbacks took snaps for the Midshipmen against Temple: sophomore Kriss Proctor and junior Ricky Dobbs.

Freshman Manti Te’0 (5) is fourth on the Irish squad with 36 tackles, including 14 solo stops. Junior Ian Williams (95) notched his first career interception against Washington State a week ago.

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2 0 0 9 F I GH T I N G I R I SH CONTINUED

In Memoriam

Rich O’Leary • 1946-2009 tossed a 64-yard pass to classmate John Goodman for his first touchdown reception. The last touchdown passes for both Crist and Goodman happened to be in the Alamodome during the 2007 U.S. Army All-American Bowl. Freshman kicker and Texas native Nick Tausch set a Notre Dame record last weekend. His two field goals against the Cougars brought him to 14 consecutive field goals without a miss. The previous record was held by Mike Johnston, who made 13 straight field goals during the 1982 season. The Irish defense also played a strong game, holding the Cougars to only two touchdowns, the fewest points they have allowed since their season opening shutout against Nevada. With the Irish coming off a strong performance in San Antonio and the Midshipmen looking to get back on track, today’s game is shaping up to add another chapter in the storied history of this series.

The Notre Dame community lost a dear friend and devoted staff member on July 17, 2009, when Rich O’Leary, director of intramurals and club sports, a former men’s lacrosse coach and 37-year member of the University’s athletic administration, died at the age of 62 following a cancer-related illness. O’Leary was responsible for more than 60 intramural activities as well as supervision of Notre Dame's 24 club sports teams. He worked particularly closely with the Bengal Bouts, Notre Dame's historic club boxing tournament that benefits the Bangladesh missions (the Bengal Bouts and Notre Dame's tackle football intramural program are considered unique in college recreation). He also oversaw the outdoor recreational facilities and the St. Joseph Lake Beach and Boathouse. O’Leary served as the Notre Dame men's lacrosse and men's soccer coach in the early club years. He became the first Irish varsity men's lacrosse coach, handling that

assignment for eight years from 1981 through 1988 — following 10 seasons (1971-80) as the Irish club lacrosse head coach (79-53 record). The men's team room in the new Arlotta Stadium that will open this fall and be home to the Irish men's and women's lacrosse programs had been named in O’Leary's honor, based on contributions from his former players. He received a Presidential Award from then-Notre Dame president Rev. Edward A. Malloy, C.S.C., in 1996 — and the Notre Dame Monogram Club awarded him an honorary monogram in 2002. He worked for many years in the timing booth at Notre Dame home football games at Notre Dame Stadium and on the Joyce Center scorer's table at Irish home men's and women's basketball games. Contributions can be made to the Rich O’Leary Memorial Fund that will benefit the Notre Dame men's lacrosse program and the Bengal Bouts (112 Joyce Center, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN 46556).

FAC U LT Y H IG H L IG H T S A.J. BELLIA Recalling his years in the Notre Dame Law School, a recent graduate praised its faculty for doing “a great job of encouraging the students to strive for excellence while maintaining their sanity.” He particularly remembered his first day as a law student, when Professor A.J. Bellia, “told our class that it was essential, in order to be a good lawyer and a good human being, ‘not to check yourself at the door.’” In terms of excellence, Bellia’s resume is unassailable. A much honored 1994 graduate of the Notre Dame Law School and a former editor-in-chief of the Notre Dame Law Review, he practiced in the Washington, D.C., law firm of Miller, Cassidy, Larroca & Lewin, litigating First Amendment, death penalty, contract, and employment cases in state and federal courts. He also clerked for judges on all three levels of the federal court system, including Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia. He returned to Notre Dame in 2000 to join the Law School faculty as a teacher and scholar of constitutional law, federal courts, federalism, legal history, procedure, and contracts. In addition to publishing numerous articles in these fields, Bellia engages extensively with students. This fall, he is teaching courses in contracts and federalism, and is serving as faculty advisor to the Notre Dame Law Review. He has twice (in 2003 and 2008) been voted Notre Dame Law School’s Distinguished Professor of the Year by graduating students. His luminous professional and scholarly credentials notwithstanding, Bellia’s teaching has as much to do with character as with intellect. “The legal profession is a challenging one and it imposes great demands,” he says. “I hope that as my former students pursue careers in law, they do not overlook their other primary responsibilities in life—to family, church, and community—but remember that performing those well may generate the most significant contributions they will make.” 10

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embers of the Office of Information Technologies (OIT) contribute a wide range of expertise and knowledge to keep the technology infrastructure of Notre Dame running smoothly. The skill and talent of OIT staffers was most notably tested over the past year, when, in the summer of 2008, Notre Dame was notified by the vendor of its legacy email service that it would discontinue support for a core component by the spring of 2009, forcing the OIT to identify and implement a replacement service.

existing student accounts to Gmail, which took place all at once, overnight, on the night of September 3, 2008. At the same time, other members of the Email Transition Team were investigating alternative options for faculty and staff, eventually choosing Microsoft Exchange because of its ability to integrate email and calendaring, among other features. Originally planning to implement this switch in email services in the summer of 2009, the Email Transition Team ultimately decided to “go live” with the new service on January 7, 2009, to better meet faculty and staff needs. To accomplish this deadline and to cause as little disruption as possible, members of the team worked long hours throughout the fall and over the Christmas break.

A short time earlier, in the spring of 2008, the OIT faced a growing desire among students for institutional support of Gmail and Google Apps. Forming what came to be known as the Email Transition Team, and working closely with a newly elected student government, the OIT developed a plan for the implementation of Gmail and Google Apps. Following that plan, the University signed the Google contract on April 30, 2008, and a short two weeks later the Email Transition Team had 2000 new Gmail accounts in place for all incoming freshmen. The team devoted the remainder of the summer to preparing to move 12,000

We salute these dedicated professionals today by recognizing them with a Presidential Team Irish Award, which honors exemplary service, teamwork, and commitment. The award program has been designed to provide a special and unique opportunity to publicly recognize teams that exemplify the University’s core values.

Pictured below: Front row (left-to-right): Michelle Sorensen, Scott Siler, Lisa Weinberg, Paul Russell, Susan Antonovitz, Clay Berkley, Katie Rose, Greg Matz.

Back row (left-to-right): Paul Wehner, Bob Guthrie, Kyle Sagarsee, Geoff Perks, Maureen Hogue, Tim Flanagan, Michelle Decker, Derek Owens, Sara Exum, Mike Atkins.

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GETTING TO KNOW...

HALFBACK

ARMANDO ALLEN No. 5 • 5-10 • 200 • Jr. | Opa Locka, Fla./Hialeah-Miami Lakes

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unior halfback Armando Allen continues to lead the Irish running game with his speed and ability to find the endzone. Through six games this season, the Opa Locka, Fla., native has rushed for 514 yards and three touchdowns on 104 carries. Allen also has caught 13 passes for 119 yards, and completed a touchdown pass for five yards against Michigan State. For his career, Allen has rushed for 1,447 yards and six touchdowns on 324 carries. GameDay’s Kelsey Scribner gives Irish fans a chance to get to know Armando Allen.

Scribner: What is your major and why does it interest you? Allen: I’m majoring in sociology, because I like working with kids, and I wouldn’t mind being a counselor someday. I’ve always been interested in working with kids and helping lead them in the right direction.

Scribner: What is your favorite place on campus? Allen: My favorite place on campus would be LaFortune. I live in Saint Ed’s; it’s close to the dorm and has a variety of food. Scribner: What is your earliest football memory? Allen: I remember coming off a loss when I played little league football. We actually lost in a game after the Super Bowl, and I remember I was 11 years old and crying like someone took my cookie. I think I remember that, because it was then that I realized how much football meant to me. Scribner: What is the toughest stadium you’ve played in? Allen: Beaver Stadium at Penn State during my freshman year. It was really loud and packed during the white-out game. Scribner: What is the most important thing you’ve learned while playing at Notre Dame? Allen: The most important thing I’ve learned so far at Notre Dame would be education first, football second. Scribner: What is your favorite Coach Weis saying? Allen: “Education first, football second.” Scribner: What is one thing you want to happen before you leave Notre Dame? Allen: Get a degree. Scribner: What song always get you ready to take the field? Allen: “A Star is Born” by Jay-Z

Scribner: If the Irish running backs had a theme song, what would it be? Allen: I’m not sure of the artist, but it’s a song called “Let’s Go Get ‘Em.”

Scribner: What do your fellow students always want to know? Allen: When I walk into class, they actually always ask me, “Did you do your homework, Armando?” Scribner: What TV show do you never miss? Allen: I miss TV, period. I never really get a chance to watch TV.

Scribner: If you had your own energy drink, what would it be called? Allen: A2 Scribner: When you were younger, what were you always getting in trouble for? Allen: I was always taking extra snacks when I wasn’t supposed to.

Scribner: What do you miss most about home? Allen: Besides my family, of course, I miss the weather. I’m from Miami!

Scribner: North or South Dining Hall? Allen: South Dining Hall. It has a lot more variety.

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CAMPUS LEADERS

Rev. John I. Jenkins President

Thomas G. Burish Provost

John Affleck-Graves Executive Vice President

Dick Notebaert Chair, Board of Trustees

Patricia Bellia NCAA Faculty Representative

Rev. John I. Jenkins, C.S.C.

Thomas G. Burish

PRESIDENT

PROVOST

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homas G. Burish, formerly president at Washington and Lee University in Lexington, Va., and a 1972 Notre Dame alumnus, was elected provost on July 21, 2005. As provost and second-ranking officer of the University, he exercises responsibility for all academic matters. He is the fourth person to hold the office since it was established in 1970. Burish succeeded Nathan O. Hatch, who became president of Wake Forest University. He also is a professor of psychology. Burish had been president of one of the nation’s top liberal-arts colleges since July 2002. Prior to becoming president at Washington and Lee, he was the longest-serving provost in the history of Vanderbilt University, leading academic affairs at the nationally-renowned research university from 1993 to 2002. Known as a ground-breaking researcher, award-winning teacher and gifted leader, Burish exemplifies the excellence and humanity to which Notre Dame is dedicated. Through his work, he has helped “tens of thousands of cancer patients better cope with the emotional and physical pain of this disease,” according to John R. Seffrin, chief executive officer of the American Cancer Society. Burish is a past chair of the American Cancer Society’s national board of directors. A native of Peshtigo, Wis., Burish graduated from Notre Dame, summa cum laude, with a bachelor’s degree in psychology in 1972. He earned his master’s degree in psychology from the University of Kansas in 1975 and a doctorate in clinical psychology from Kansas a year later. While at Kansas, Burish received the David Shulman Memorial Award of Excellence in Clinical Psychology. He moved in 1976 to Vanderbilt, becoming a full professor in 1986. He won Vanderbilt’s prestigious

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ev. John I. Jenkins, C.S.C, took office as the 17th president of the University of Notre Dame on July 1, 2005. He was elected by the University’s Board of Trustees to a five-year term April 30, 2004. An associate professor of philosophy and member of Notre Dame’s faculty since 1990, Father Jenkins had served from July 2000 until becoming president as a vice president and associate provost at the University. Prior to his service in the provost’s office, Father Jenkins had been religious superior of the Holy Cross priests and brothers at Notre Dame for three years. As religious superior, he was a Fellow and Trustee of the University. Father Jenkins specializes in the areas of ancient philosophy, medieval philosophy and the philosophy of religion. He is the author of Knowledge and Faith in Thomas Aquinas , published by Cambridge University Press in 1997. Father Jenkins earned degrees in philosophy from Oxford University in 1987 and 1989. He earned his master of divinity degree and licentiate in sacred theology from the Jesuit School of Theology in Berkeley, Calif., in 1988. Prior to entering the Congregation of Holy Cross, he earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees in philosophy from Notre Dame in 1976 and 1978, respectively. Father Jenkins was ordained a priest in Notre Dame’s Basilica of the Sacred Heart in 1983. He served as director of the Old College program for Notre Dame undergraduate candidates for the Congregation of Holy Cross from 1991 to 1993. A native of Omaha, Neb., Father Jenkins was born Dec. 17, 1953.

Madison Sarratt Prize for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching in 1980

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CA M PU S L E A D E R S CONTINUED

and served as chair of the department of psychology from 1984 to 1986. Burish became Vanderbilt’s provost in 1993. He is the co-author or co-editor of four books, and has contributed to more than 16 other books and written more than 60 journal articles.

OFFICERS PRESIDENT

Rev. John I. Jenkins, C.S.C. PROVOST

John Affleck-Graves

Thomas G. Burish

EXECUTIVE VICE-PRESIDENT

EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT

John Affleck-Graves

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ohn Affleck-Graves was elected the first lay executive vice president of Notre Dame in April 2004. A vice president and associate provost the previous three years, he also holds the Notre Dame Chair in Finance in the Mendoza College of Business. Affleck-Graves, the fifth person to serve as executive vice president, administers the University’s annual budget of more than $1 billion and an endowment of approximately $5 billion. He oversees humanresource activities for a work force of more than 4,000 employees—the largest in St. Joseph County—and directs the University’s construction program. A native of South Africa and a naturalized U.S. citizen, AffleckGraves specializes in the study of initial public offerings, valuation and asset pricing models, and shareholder value-added methodology. He is the author of more than 50 refereed publications and the recipient of numerous teaching awards. Affleck-Graves joined the Notre Dame faculty in 1986 after teaching and conducting research for 11 years at the University of Cape Town, where he earned bachleor’s, master’s and doctoral degrees.

VICE PRESIDENT AND ASSOCIATE PROVOST

Christine Maziar VICE PRESIDENT AND ASSOCIATE PROVOST

Don Pope-Davis VICE PRESIDENT AND ASSOCIATE PROVOST

Dennis Jacobs VICE PRESIDENT FOR STUDENT AFFAIRS

Rev. Mark L. Poorman, C.S.C. VICE PRESIDENT FOR UNIVERSITY RELATIONS

Louis M. Nanni VICE PRESIDENT FOR RESEARCH

Robert Bernhard VICE PRESIDENT AND GENERAL COUNSEL

Marianne Corr VICE PRESIDENT FOR BUSINESS OPERATIONS

Richard Notebaert

James J. Lyphout

CHAIR, BOARD OF TRUSTEES VICE PRESIDENT AND CHIEF INVESTMENT OFFICER

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ichard C. Notebaert, retired chairman and chief executive officer of Qwest Communications International, was elected the sixth chair of Notre Dame’s Board of Trustees in February 2007 and began service July 1, 2007. A member of the Notre Dame Board since 1997, Notebaert has served as chair of its University Relations and Public Affairs and Communication Committee. He also serves as a Fellow of the University. Notebaert led Qwest from 2002 to 2007. He previously served as chief executive officer of Tellabs Inc. and as chairman and chief executive officer of Ameritech Communications. A graduate of the University of Wisconsin, Notebaert is a member of the board of directors of Aon Corp. and Cardinal Health Inc. His professional activities include memberships in the Business Council and the International Advisory Council of the Executives’ Club of Chicago. In April 2003 he was appointed by President Bush to the National Security Telecommunications Advisory Committee. Notebaert and his wife, Peggy, have two children, Michelle and Nicole, and five grandchildren.

Patricia Bellia NCAA FACULTY REPRESENTATIVE

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atricia Bellia, professor of law and Notre Dame Presidential Fellow in the Notre Dame Law School,was appointed chair of the University’s Faculty Board on Athletics and its NCAA faculty athletics representative July 2009, by Rev. John I. Jenkins, C.S.C., Notre Dame’s president. Her appointment became effective Aug. 1.

Scott C. Malpass VICE PRESIDENT FOR PUBLIC AFFAIRS, COMMUNICATION

Janet M. Botz VICE PRESIDENT FOR FINANCE

John A. Sejdinaj A member of the Notre Dame faculty since 2000, Bellia teaches and conducts research in the areas of constitutional law, administrative law, cyberlaw, electronic surveillance law, and copyright law. She is a co-author of a leading cyberlaw casebook and has published several articles on Internet law and separation of powers. Bellia graduated summa cum laude from Harvard University with a bachelor’s degree in government. As a Harvard undergraduate, she played varsity tennis and served on the executive committee of the Harvard-Radcliffe Foundation for Women’s Athletics. Before attending the Yale Law School, she worked at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, serving as an editor for Foreign Policy magazine and co-authoring a book on self-determination movements. At Yale, she served as editor-in-chief of the Yale Law Journal, executive editor of the Yale Journal of International Law, and student director of the Immigration Legal Services Clinic. Upon graduation in 1995, Bellia clerked for Judge José A. Cabranes of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit and Associate Justice Sandra Day O’Connor of the Supreme Court of the United States. Before joining the Notre Dame faculty, she worked for three years as an attorney-advisor in the Office of Legal Counsel of the U.S. Department of Justice.

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HEAD COACH CHARLIE WEIS 31st YEAR COACHING • 5th YEAR AT NOTRE DAME

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record combined win total for the first two seasons of any University of Notre Dame head football coach, consecutive Bowl Championship Series appearances for the first time in Irish history, the three most accomplished passing seasons in Notre Dame football annals, and a record-setting bowl triumph to cap off the 2008 season — those are the most notable by-products of the first four seasons of the Charlie Weis era in South Bend. Weis, a 1978 Notre Dame graduate and owner of four Super Bowl-champion rings as products of a stellar 15-season career as a National Football League assistant coach, wasted no time putting his signature stamp on his alma mater’s program in his first two years as Irish head coach in 2005 and 2006. Weis and his Irish followed up a 9-3 record in ’05 and BCS appearance in the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl with a 10-3 overall mark in ’06 and a second consecutive BCS invitation, this time to the Allstate Sugar Bowl. Those 19 combined wins (including eight straight in the middle of the ’06 regular season) qualified as most in a two-year period by the Irish since they collected 21 in 1992-93. It was also the first time Notre Dame played in BCS games in successive years and the most prominent two-season bowl qualification since the Irish played in the Fiesta and Orange Bowls after the 1994 and ’95 campaigns. Notre Dame’s 10 regular-season wins in ’06 marked the ninth time that figure had been achieved in Irish history. Weis’ 19 combined wins in his first two seasons were the most by a Notre Dame head football coach in his first two years For the second straight season in ’06 Weis was one of three finalists for the George Munger Award presented by the Maxwell Football Club (of Philadelphia) to the national college coach of the year.

compared to the previous two seasons, the Irish improved their points per game by 11.5, and their total yards per game by 90.9. Offensive productivity, coupled with an opportunistic, physical defense that forced eight red-zone turnovers, and vastly-improved special teams, equated to a 9-3 mark in ’05 that was good for a number-six ranking in the BCS final regular-season standings and a guaranteed at-large BCS berth in the ’06 Tostitos Fiesta Bowl opposite Big Ten co-champion Ohio State. The Irish again picked up an at-large BCS position in ’06 after their final 11th-place standing in the BCS poll. Notre Dame’s 10 wins included two of the most dramatic comeback victories in Irish history — a 40-37 win at Michigan State after trailing by 16 points with nine minutes remaining and a 20-17 win over UCLA thanks to a three-play, 80-yard drive that resulted in the winning points with 27 seconds left. Notre Dame’s only defeats in ’06 came at the hands of fifth-rated USC thirdranked Michigan and fourth-rated LSU. Notre Dame finished ninth in the final Associated Press poll for ’05 (its first AP top 10 finish since the Irish were runners-up following the ’93 season), 11th according to USA Today. The Irish ended the ’06 season rated 17th by AP and 19th by USA Today. With an extremely youthful group that included eight starters with two or more years left of eligibility, Weis oversaw another productive offensive year in 2008 — with sophomore quarterback Jimmy Clausen producing the third-best passing season in Irish history (behind only Quinn’s efforts in ’05 and ’06). The ’08 campaign finished with a flourish, as Notre Dame defeated Hawai’i 49-21 in the ’08 Sheraton Hawai’i Bowl, with Clausen’s gaudy 22-of-26 passing effort producing 401 aerial yards and five TDs. Notre Dame’s 112.8 yards-per-game improvement for the ’08 Irish offense compared to the ’07 version marked the largest in the country. After only two seasons, Clausen already ranks second on the Notre Dame career completion percentage chart, fourth in completions, fifth in attempts, fifth in passing TDs and sixth in passing yards. He and Quinn are the only Notre Dame quarterbacks ever to throw for 3,000 yards and 25 TDs in a season (Clausen had 3,172 and 25 in 2008). The ’08 wide receiver tandem of Golden Tate and freshman Michael Floyd carried the torch left behind by Rhema McKnight, Jeff Samardzija and Maurice Stovall. Tate blossomed into one of the most improved wide receivers in the country. He ranked 28th in the NCAA FBS in receiving yards per game (83.08), punctuating his season with 177 receiving yards and three TD receptions in the Hawai’i Bowl. Tate also ranked tied for 18th in the nation with his 10 receiving TDs. Tate became the seventh Notre Dame wide-out to ever eclipse 1,000 receiving yards in a single season and tied for sixth on the Irish single-season receiving TD list. Those 1,080 yards receiving in ’08 rank fifth-best in Irish single-season history and Tate is only the fourth Irish wide receiver to ever record five 100-yard receiving games in a single season.

IRISH POST GAUDY OFFENSIVE NUMBERS The architect in ’05 and ’06 of the two most prolific passing seasons in Notre Dame football history, Weis effectively transformed the Irish offense into one of the most productive in the country, as Notre Dame scored more points in ’05 (440) than in any previous season in school history — and also qualified as the most improved offensive attack in the nation, jumping its total offense production a national-best 131.8 yards per game better than in ’04. The Irish followed that up with another strong passing attack in ’06, with Notre Dame’s average of 264.1 passing yards per contest ranking 13th nationally and second all-time in the Notre Dame record book. The Irish protected the football nearly as well as any team in the country in ’06, with their 14 overall turnovers in 13 games ranking tied for fourth of the 119 NCAA I-A teams. On a combined basis in 2005 and ’06 under Weis, Notre Dame led the nation in interception avoidance with only 1.6 percent of Irish passes picked off over those two years. The Irish, thanks in large part to the play of quarterback Brady Quinn, finished third in TD passes with 69 and sixth in passing yards per game and passing rating. In ’05 and ’06 combined,

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CHARLIE WEIS CONTINUED Floyd wasted no time making a name for himself as a rookie for the Irish. Despite missing the last three ’08 regular-season games with the exception of three plays against Navy, Floyd established Irish freshman wide receiver records in touchdowns (seven), receptions (48) and receiving yards (719). Floyd became the fourth different Irish freshman in the last 20 years whose first career catch was a touchdown, joining Raghib “Rocket” Ismail and Derek Brown in 1988, and Derrick Mayes in 1992. Notre Dame rushed for 252 yards in the 2008 rout of Washington, the most since the Irish rolled up 275 against Pittsburgh in 2005. The Irish gained 459 yards of total offense against the Huskies. The Irish surpassed the 450-yard barrier in total yards three times in a four-week stretch. In fact, Notre Dame had 430-plus total yards in four consecutive ’08 games (Purdue, Stanford, North Carolina and Washington). The Irish had not surpassed 430 yards of total offense in four straight games since 1995.

Meanwhile, Samardzija finished as runner-up for the ’05 NCAA title in TD receptions with 15. He and McKnight finished one-two on Notre Dame’s career pass reception chart, after both surpassed Tom Gatewood during the ’06 season. Meanwhile, McKnight’s 15 TD receptions in ’06 tied Samardzija’s single-season Irish mark from ’05 and ranked him tied for second nationally in that category. Samardzija’s season total of 78 receptions in ’06 broke the season mark of 77 he tied in ’05. Weis guided the ’05 Irish offense to final national rankings of fourth in passing offense, eighth in scoring and 10th in total offense. Then, in ’06, the Irish finished 13th in passing and 16th in scoring. In ’07, his pass defense ranked second in the nation in average yards allowed per game, while defensive tackle Trevor Laws led the nation in tackles by a lineman (112). On an individual basis in ’05, Quinn ranked fifth nationally in total offense and seventh in passing efficiency and Samardzija stood fourth in receiving yards per game. Quinn in ’06 ended up 11th in total offense and 19th in passing efficiency. Samardzija in ’05 broke the Notre Dame season marks for receiving yardage and TD receptions, before claiming the singleseason reception mark in ’06 and the career receiving yards record and the career TD reception mark. Quinn finished 10th all-time among NCAA I-A quarterbacks in passing yards, 11th in completions and tied for seventh in TD passes (95).

FOOTBALL WRITERS HONOR IRISH COACH His team’s ’05 success helped make Weis winner of the 2005 Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year Award, as national college coach of the year as selected by the Football Writers Association of America. He also was one of three finalists for the ’05 Munger Award, one of five finalists for the ’05 Schutt Division I-A Sports Coach of the Year (presented by American Football Monthly) and finished third in the balloting for the AP national college football coach-of-the-year award. Weis saw his Irish offense flourish right out of the gate in ’05 — as Notre Dame set a school record by scoring at least 30 points in all but two outings and tied another record by scoring 40 points on six occasions. He helped put a handful of Irish players in contention for major national awards, as Quinn was a finalist for the Walter Camp Player of the Year Award, one of three finalists for the Davey O’Brien Award presented to the top quarterback in the country — and finished fourth in the ’05 Heisman Trophy voting. In addition, consensus first-team All-America wide receiver Jeff Samardzija was one of three finalists for the Fred Biletnikoff Award as the top receiver nationally, as was tight end Anthony Fasano for the John Mackey Award as the top tight end in the country. Weis’ charges added to that list of individual accomplishments in ’06 — as Quinn won the Maxwell Award as the outstanding player in the country and the Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award (as the top senior quarterback), took third in the Heisman Trophy race (only the second time a Notre Dame player ever had finished fourth or better in consecutive seasons) and again was a finalist for the O’Brien Award and the Walter Camp Foundation Player of the Year Award. Meanwhile, Samardzija was a Biletnikoff finalist and first-team All-American for the second straight season — and tight end John Carlson was a finalist for the Mackey Award (as well as a first-team Academic All-American). Safety and kick returner Tom Zbikowski won third-team AP All-America honors in both ’05 and ’06.

WEIS’ IRISH ARE PASSING FANCIES The Irish in 2005 and ’06 were easily the two most productive passing teams in Notre Dame history, with their ’05 average of 330.25 passing yards per game shattering the previous high of 252.7 aerial yards per game from 1970 (and the ’06 mark of 264.1 easily breaking the record as well). Notre Dame set another school record by topping the 500-yard mark in total offense seven times in ’05, including a 663-yard performance against Stanford in the regular-season finale that marked the fifth-best single-game effort in the Irish record book. Notre Dame in ’05 became the first Irish team in history to boast a 3,000-yard passer, a 1,000-yard rusher and two 1,000-yard receivers. Notre Dame in ’05 set 11 singleseason offensive team records, nine career individual records, 14 season individual records, seven single-game individual records, plus six other miscellaneous records.

QUINN A STAR UNDER WEIS’ GUIDANCE Quinn, turned into a star in ’05 and ’06 under Weis’ tutelage, as he set 36 career, single-season, single-game and miscellaneous records after breaking 25 in that ’05 season alone. Quinn qualifies as the Notre Dame career and single-season leader in passing yards, pass completions and touchdown passes. He ranked third in the country in ’06 with 37 TD passes and ranked third in ’05 with 32 TD passes, while setting an Irish single-game record with his six TD passes versus BYU in ’05. During the middle of the ’06 season, Quinn threw a best-in-the-nation 226 consecutive passes without an interception.

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CHARLIE WEIS CONTINUED coordinator of the New England Patriots. He played an integral role in New England’s victories in three of the previous four Super Bowls, including a 2421 victory over Philadelphia in Super Bowl XXXIX in Jacksonville to cap the 2004 season. That run by Weis and the Patriots marked the most sustained Super Bowl success in the history of that event — matching Dallas’ three wins in a four-year period following the 1992 through ’95 seasons. Weis qualifies as the first Notre Dame graduate to hold the football head coaching position at his alma mater since Hugh Devore (a ’34 graduate) served as interim coach in 1963. Weis is the first Notre Dame graduate to serve as the Irish football coach on a full-fledged basis since ’38 graduate Joe Kuharich did it from 1959 through ’62. Now pointing for his 31st season overall in coaching in 2009, Weis spent nine seasons with the Patriots and five as the team’s offensive coordinator — plus three seasons each with the New York Giants (1990-92) and New York Jets (1997-99). In those 15 NFL seasons, his coaching contributions helped produce four Super Bowl championships, five conference titles, six division titles and a 15-3 playoff record. WEIS TUTORS BRADY TO ALL-STAR STATUS In addition to his offensive coordinator responsibilities, Weis mentored the Patriot quarterbacks both in 2001 and 2002. In ’01, Drew Bledsoe started the first two games of the season before being sidelined with a serious chest injury. By the third week of the season, Weis was preparing former sixth-round draft pick Tom Brady for his first NFL start and, over the course of the season, Brady blossomed into a Pro Bowl performer and earned the MVP award in Super Bowl XXXVI. Brady only continued to improve, leading the NFL with 28 TD passes in 2002, then turning in a second Super Bowl MVP performance in ’03. The Patriots finished 2004 with a franchise-record 20 consecutive home-field victories (regular season and postseason combined) over three seasons, the longest current streak in the NFL at that time. Meanwhile, Patriot running back Cory Dillon rushed for 1,635 yards and 12 TDs in ’04 — then added a 144-yard effort versus Indianapolis in the playoffs. New England enjoyed a 21-game unbeaten streak, including the final 15 games in 2003 (including three in the playoffs) and the first six in ’04 and had won 32 of its last 34 games overall through the end of the ’04 season.

With the season-opening Irish victories at 23rd-ranked Pittsburgh and at third-rated Michigan in ’05, Weis became the first Irish head coach to win his first two career games on the opponents’ home fields since Knute Rockne in 1918 and the first Notre Dame head football coach ever to open with two victories over ranked opponents. The Irish also won at 22ndrated Purdue in ’05 to post three wins over ranked opponents in their first five games of the campaign. Notre Dame in ’06 added a season-opening victory over a solid Georgia Tech team that eventually finished 9-5 and played in the Atlantic Coast Conference title game — as well as wins over ’06 postseason participants Penn State (9-4), Purdue (8-6), UCLA (7-6) and Navy (9-4). IRISH ACHIEVE IN CLASSROOM AS WELL Weis has impacted the Irish program off the field as well, with his football players combining to top the 3.0 grade-point average mark in a record six straight semesters. His players achieved a then-program-record 3.044 combined grade-point average during the ’05 fall semester, with 56 of 97 players earning a 3.0 average or better — and added another 3.0 semester in the spring of ’06 with a program-best 3.072 mark. Notre Dame’s team produced a third-straight 3.0 semester with a 3.041 GPA for the ’06 fall semester — including 61 of 104 players achieving a 3.0 or better average. Ten Irish players were enrolled in graduate studies during the fall of ’06 — five others graduated in December ’06 after only three and a half years of study. Notre Dame produced its first football Academic All-American in 13 years in Carlson in ’06. The fourth 3.0 semester came in spring 2007 with a combined 3.041 GPA. Notre Dame’s fifth consecutive 3.0 semester came in fall 2007, with 51 players individually achieving that level or better. Carlson and Laws both were second-team Academic All-Americans in ’07, with Carlson winning postgraduate scholarships from both the NCAA and the National Football Foundation. The 2008 spring semester marked the sixth straight semester with a team GPA over 3.0. Fifty-four members of the team recorded a GPA over 3.0 and 14 players were named to the dean’s list. In ’08, special-teams standout Mike Anello won second-team Academic All-America honors from CoSIDA and ESPN The Magazine. In addition, Notre Dame received the 2007 Academic Achievement Award (shared with Northwestern) from the American Football Coaches Association — with both schools graduating 95 percent of their freshman classes that entered in 2001.

WEIS BEGINS NFL TOUR WITH GIANTS Weis started his professional coaching career with the New York Giants in 1990. After assisting in the Giants pro personnel department while also coaching high school football in ’89, Weis was named defensive assistant and assistant special teams coach. In his first season on the Giants coaching staff, the Giants claimed the Super Bowl title with a 16-3 overall record. In 1991, Ray Handley took over as coach of the Giants and named Weis his running backs coach. After two seasons on Handley’s staff, Weis began a four-year stint in New England. In Weis’ first tenure with the Patriots from 1993-96, he assisted in the development of some of New England’s all-time best individual season performances from Coates, Martin and Terry Glenn, respectively. In 1993 and ’94, Weis served as the Patriots’ tight ends coach and, in his second season at the position, Coates set an NFL record for receptions by a tight end with 96 and earned his first trip to the Pro Bowl. In ’95, Weis coached the Patriots’ running backs and was credited with developing Martin into one of the premier running backs in the NFL. That year, Martin won league rookie-of-the-year honors and set franchise rushing records with 1,487 yards and 14 TDs. In ’96, Weis coached the New England receivers, with Glenn leading the team and setting an NFL rookie reception record with 90 catches for 1,132 yards and six TDs. From 1997 to ’99, Weis called offensive plays for the New York Jets. In his first season, the Jets improved from 1-15 in 1996 to 9-7 in ’97. The eight-game improvement ranked as the best in franchise history. In ’98, Weis was named the offensive coordinator/wide receivers coach. By season’s end, his offense ranked among the greatest in franchise history and led the Jets to their first division title. The team scored 416 points, second-highest total in franchise history (after 419 points in ’68) and averaged 357.2 yards per game. It marked the second-best total-offense season average in Jets history. Both of Weis’ starting receivers, Johnson

SUPER BOWLS MARK WEIS ERA WITH PATS A widely-respected disciple of professional coaching standouts Bill Parcells and Bill Belichick, Weis concluded his first year at Notre Dame in 2005 — after spending the previous five years as the highly-regarded offensive

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CHARLIE WEIS CONTINUED He returned to New Jersey as head coach at Franklin Township High School in ’89. That year, he directed Franklin Township to the New Jersey state championship while also assisting in the Giants’ pro personnel department. In ’90, he launched his professional coaching career with the New York Giants and celebrated the first of his four Super Bowl championships. Weis was born March 30, 1956, in Trenton, N.J. After graduation from Middlesex (N.J.) High School, he earned his bachelor’s degree in speech and drama from Notre Dame in 1978. While coaching at South Carolina, he earned his master’s degree in education in 1989. In 2003, Weis and his wife Maura established the Hannah & Friends Foundation, dedicated to children affected by developmental disorders. The foundation funds Hannah’s Helping Hands, which provides quality of life grants to families in Indiana and Rhode Island that care for children and adults with special needs. The Weis family, through Hannah & Friends, also has purchased 30 acres of land in the South Bend area and is in the process of building a farm and residential center for special needs adults age 18 and older. On June 26, 2008, Weis was sworn in as a member of the President’s Committee for People with Intellectual Disabilities. He was appointed by President George W. Bush in the spring and serves a two-year term on the committee.

and Wayne Chrebet eclipsed the 1,000-yard receiving plateau for the first time in their careers. In ’99, Weis’ offense produced the NFL’s second-leading rusher and the AFC’s fourth-ranked receiver. Martin rushed for 1,464 yards, falling only 90 yards shy of the rushing title. Johnson led the Jets and established career highs with 89 receptions for 1,170 yards, earning his second consecutive Pro Bowl nod.

OFF THE FIELD Weis is the author of a 2006 autobiography (written with Vic Carucci) titled “No Excuses: One Man’s Incredible Rise Through the NFL to Head Coach of Notre Dame.” His wife, Maura, is author of a 2008 book (written with Jessica Trobaugh Temple) titled “Miles from the Sideline” — a journey with the Weis’ special needs daughter. Weis traveled to the Middle East (Bahrain, UAE, Qatar, USS Nassau) in the spring of ’08 with a contingent of college football coaches to visit United States military troops. Charlie and Maura have two children, Charles Joseph and Hannah Margaret.

BEGINS AT SOUTH CAROLINA AND NEW JERSEY PREP LEVEL The Trenton, N.J., native began his coaching career in 1979 at Boonton High School in New Jersey, then spent the next five seasons at Morristown (N.J.) High School as a football assistant. In ’85, he was hired by head coach Joe Morrison at the University of South Carolina, where he served four seasons with the Gamecocks finishing 8-4 and playing in the Gator and Liberty Bowls, respectively, following the ’87 and ’88 seasons.

THE WEIS FILE YEARS

YEARS

SCHOOL/TEAM

ASSIGNMENT

1979 Boonton (N.J.) HS 1980-84 Morristown (N.J.) HS 1985 South Carolina

1999

New York Jets (8-8)

2000

New England Patriots

1986

2001

New England Patriots (11-5, Super Bowl champion) New England Patriots (9-7)

Offensive Coordinator/ Wide Receivers Offensive Coordinator/ Running Backs Offensive Coordinator/ Quarterbacks/Running Backs Offensive Coordinator/ Quarterbacks Offensive Coordinator

1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998

SCHOOL/TEAM

ASSIGNMENT

Assistant Coach Assistant Coach Graduate Assistant Coach/Defensive Backs South Carolina Graduate Assistant Coach/Linebackers South Carolina (8-4, Gator Bowl) Volunteer Coach/Defensive Ends South Carolina (8-4, Liberty Bowl) Assistant Recruiting Coordinator Franklin Township (N.J.) HS Head Coach New York Giants Defensive Assistant, (13-3, Super Bowl champion) Assistant Special Teams New York Giants (8-8) Running Backs New York Giants Running Backs New England Patriots Tight Ends New England Patriots Tight Ends (10-6, lost Wild Card game) New England Patriots Running Backs New England Patriots Wide Receivers (11-5, lost Super Bowl) New York Jets Wide Receivers New York Jets Offensive Coordinator/ (12-4, lost AFC title game) Wide Receivers

2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009

New England Patriots (14-2, Super Bowl champion) New England Patriots (14-2, Super Bowl champion) University of Notre Dame (9-3, Tostitos Fiesta Bowl) University of Notre Dame (10-2, Allstate Sugar Bowl) University of Notre Dame University of Notre Dame (7-6, Sheraton Hawai’i Bowl) University of Notre Dame

Notre Dame Total (4 seasons)

Offensive Coordinator Head Coach Head Coach Head Coach Head Coach Head Coach

29-21-0 (.580)

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ASSISTANT COACHES the second round with the 47th pick overall, the earliest an Irish defensive tackle had been drafted in 14 years. Safeties Tom Zbikowski and Bruton both flourished from Brown’s defensive gameplans as they each set career highs for tackles. Zbikowski left Notre Dame as just the eighth player to reach the 300-tackle plateau and is the career leader for tackles by an Irish defensive back. He was selected in the third round of the NFL draft by the Baltimore Ravens. Bruton had never started prior to the start of the ’07 season, and he started 11 games at free safety while ranking third on the team and first in the secondary with 85 tackles. Brown worked primarily with outside linebackers in ’07, focusing on the growth of then-sophomore John Ryan and then-freshmen Kerry Neal and Brian Smith. Ryan started eight games in ’07 and ranked ninth on the team with 39 tackles. Neal and Smith saw their roles increase throughout the season, as Neal started five contests and Smith started the final three games. The duo combined to record 45 tackles, including 3.5 sacks, six tackles for loss, one interception, two passes broken up, one forced fumble and two recovered fumbles. Brown was hired as Notre Dame’s defensive coordinator on Jan. 19, 2007. He moved to South Bend after coaching the defensive backs of the New York Jets for three years. In ’06, Brown was one of a few select coaches retained by first-year Jets head coach Mangini. Brown was part of a coaching staff with the Jets that generated six more wins than in ’05, tied for the second-best improvement in the 46-year history of the franchise. In ’05, Brown oversaw a secondary that allowed an average of only 172.2 passing yards per game, second best in the NFL, and recorded 18 of the team’s 21 interceptions. Hired as the assistant special teams/assistant defensive backs coach by the Jets on Feb. 17, 2004, Brown was elevated to defensive backs coach by head coach Herm Edwards prior to the start of training camp. Brown’s defensive backfield was credited with 14 of the team’s 19 interceptions, a 40 percent increase from the previous season. Brown received his first full-time coaching job on Jan. 12, 2001, as the special teams coach at the University of Virginia. He coached the Cavaliers’ special teams unit for three seasons, helping punter Mike Abrams earn allAtlantic Coast Conference honors in ’01. Brown retired in 2000 following an eight-year NFL career in which he was a safety and special teams stalwart for three teams, starting 20 of the 120 games he played. He totaled 177 tackles in his NFL career and was credited with at least 10 special teams tackles in each season except his rookie year. He was selected by the New England Patriots in the fourth round of the 1993 NFL Draft and played four seasons for the Patriots. Brown then signed with the New York Jets and played there from 1997-98. While with the Jets, he was selected as the first alternate for the 1998 Pro Bowl as a special teams player. Brown finished his career playing two seasons with the Detroit Lions. Brown got his first taste of coaching in 1996 as he served as a volunteer coach at Boston University while playing for the Patriots. A member of four Big Ten Conference championship teams at Michigan, Brown played in three Rose Bowls during his time in Ann Arbor (1989-1992). Recruited to the Wolverines by legendary head coach Bo Schembechler, Brown was a four-year letterwinner who played on teams that finished with a combined 38-7-3 record and never finished a season ranked lower than seventh in the final Associated Press poll. He was a tri-captain of the 1992 Wolverine team and also earned first-team all-Big Ten honors that season after ranking second on the squad with 82 tackles. Brown started every game as a junior and received second-team all-Big Ten accolades following a 71-tackle season. He majored in English and received his degree in 1994. A native of Chicago, Ill., Brown was an all-state football player who also lettered in track and field at Julian High School. Born April 25, 1970, he and his wife Melissa are the parents of one son, Corwin, Jr., and two daughters, Tayla and Jaedan.

CORWIN BROWN Associate Head Coach Co-Defensive Coordinator/ Defensive Backs n his two seasons as University of Notre Dame defensive coordinator, Corwin Brown oversaw two of the best defensive seasons in recent memory. He was rewarded for that this offseason when he was promoted to associate head coach and will serve as second in command to Irish head coach Charlie Weis. In 2008, Notre Dame ranked 39th in total defense, 42nd in scoring defense, 43rd in pass defense and 45th in rushing defense. It marked the first time since 2002 that an Irish defense ranked among the top-50 nationally THE BROWN FILE in all of those catYear School/Team Assignment egories. Brown’s defense 2001-03 University of Virginia Special Team allowed 329.85 2004-06 New York Jets Defensive Backs yards per game, a 2007 Notre Dame Defensive Coordinator/ 27.15-yards-perOutside Linebackers game improve2008 Notre Dame Defensive Coordinator ment over 2007, Defensive Backs and the 22.15 2009 Notre Dame Associate Head Coach/ points allowed Co-Defensive per game was 6.6 Coordinator/ points better than Defensive Backs the previous year. Notre Dame was much stingier against the run in ’08, allowing 134.15 yards per game, 61.17 fewer rushing yards per game than in ’07. While the Irish passing defense slipped some in the rankings from its second-ranked unit in ’07, the Irish still permitted just 195.69 yards per game and the passing efficiency defense ranked 22nd. Brown switched from coaching linebackers to defensive backs in ’08 and helped safeties Kyle McCarthy and David Bruton record two of the most productive seasons in school history. The duo ranked first and second on the team in tackles and combined for 207 tackles. McCarthy set the single-season school record for tackles by a defensive back as he totaled 110 tackles and ranked 54th in the country averaging 8.46 stops per game. Bruton tallied 97 tackles and led the team with four interceptions adding six pass breakups, two forced fumbles and two fumble recoveries. He was picked in the fourth round of the NFL draft by the Denver Broncos and became the fourth Irish defensive back selected in the last three years. In Brown’s first season as Irish defensive coordinator in 2007, the Irish ranked 39th in total defense, 26 places higher than when it finished 65th in 2006. The strength of that defense was its secondary, demonstrated by the second-ranked pass defense in the Football Bowl Subdivision. As a coordinator, Brown helped put defensive end Trevor Laws in position to record a breakthrough season as Laws registered 112 tackles, the second most ever by a Notre Dame defensive lineman. Laws led the nation in tackles by a defensive lineman and wound up being selected by the Philadelphia Eagles in

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ASSISTANT COACHES CONTINUED

ROB IANELLO

JON TENUTA

Assistant Head Coach (Offense)/Recruiting Coordinator/Wide Receivers

Assistant Head Coach (Defense)/Defensive Coordinator/Linebackers

ith the Irish football coaching staff since 2005, Ianello has coached five of the most prolific receiving seasons in University of Notre Dame history as well as coordinated four-straight top-15 recruiting classes. This year he adds the title assistant head coach, as he’ll lead offensive meetings when head coach Charlie Weis is not present. As the recruiting coordinator for the Irish, Ianello has directed the talent rebuilding efforts since he and Weis arrived four years ago. From 2006-08, Ianello coordinated three consecutive top-10 recruiting classes. In the last five years, Ianello is the only coach named one THE IANELLO FILE of the 25-best recruiters Year School/Team Assignment in the country each year 1987 Alabama Graduate Assistant by Rivals.com. Under 1988-89 Alabama Assistant Recruiting Ianello’s guidance, five Coordinator of the eight best receiving 1990-91 Wisconsin On-Campus Recruiting seasons in Notre Dame Coordinator history have occurred. 1992-93 Wisonsin Recruiting Coordinator In the past four seasons, four Irish receivers have 1994-96 Arizona Recruiting Coordinator caught more than 60 1997-2002 Arizona Wide Receivers/Recruiting passes in a season, Coordinator while five players have 2003 Wisconsin Tight Ends eclipsed 1,000 receiving 2004 Wisconsin Tight Ends/Recruiting yards. This past season Coordinator the Notre Dame school 2005-08 Notre Dame Wide Receivers/Recruiting records for most recepCoordinator tions, receiving yards 2009 Notre Dame Asst. Head Coach(Offense) and receiving touchdowns in a freshman Wide Receivers/Recruiting and sophomore season Coordinator were broken. Ianello has helped develop standout Irish receivers Jeff Samardzija, Maurice Stovall, Rhema McKnight, David Grimes, Duval Kamara, Golden Tate and Michael Floyd. Despite playing only two seasons under Ianello, Samardzija is Notre Dame’s career records owner with 179 receptions for 2,593 yards and 27 touchdowns. He also ranks first and tied for second in single-season receptions, first and fifth in single-season receiving yards and is tied for first and third in single-season TD receptions. McKnight ranks second in career receptions, fifth in all-time receiving yards and tied for second in career TD catches. In 2008, Tate and Floyd rewrote the Irish record book for freshman and sophomore receivers. Tate set the sophomore school record with 58 receptions for 1,080 yards and 10 TDs, while Floyd shattered the freshman marks with 48 catches for 719 yards and seven TDs despite missing almost three games. Tate tallied five games with more than 100 receiving yards, while Floyd recorded four games of at least 100 receiving yards. For his efforts, Floyd earned all-freshman second-team honors from Sporting News, CollegeFootballNews.com, Rivals.com and Phil Steele. Before coming to Notre Dame, Ianello served as Wisconsin’s recruiting coordinator in 2004 and was named Wisconsin’s tight ends coach prior to the 2003 season following nine years on the Arizona football staff – all nine seasons as recruiting coordinator (19942002) and the last six as wide receivers coach. He helped the Badgers to postseason bowl contests in 2003 and 2004 – including a 7-6 record and Music City Bowl appearance following the 2003 campaign and a 9-3 mark and Outback Bowl slot in 2004. Ianello was the on-campus recruiting coordinator at Wisconsin from 1990-91 and the recruiting coordinator for the Badgers from 1992-93. It was during those years that Wisconsin built its 1994 Rose Bowl and Big Ten Conference co-champion squad. Prior to joining Barry Alvarez’s first staff at Wisconsin, Ianello was assistant recruiting coordinator at Alabama in 1988-89. That staff signed 17 of the eventual 22 starters on Alabama’s 1992 national championship team. Ianello was a graduate assistant for the Crimson Tide in 1987 on an Alabama team that earned a Hall of Fame Bowl invitation. One of the most respected assistant coaches in the nation, Ianello was elected to the board of trustees of the AFCA in January 2003. A native of Port Chester, N.Y., Robert S. Ianello is a 1987 graduate of The Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., with a bachelor’s degree in English. He and his wife, the former Denise Dove, have one son, Zachary, and two daughters, Ashley and Courtney.

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nown as one of the top defensive coordinators in the nation, Jon Tenuta enters his second season in South Bend and returns to a familiar role within the coaching staff. Tenuta added the defensive coordinator title in February meaning he will direct the defense and call the plays on Saturdays this fall. Tenuta has served as defensive coordinator for 15 years in his career and served last year as the assistant head coach (defense) and linebackers coach with the THE TENUTA FILE Irish. He has served as defen- Year School/Team Assignment sive coordinator at six schools: 1981-82 Virginia Graduate Assistant Georgia Tech (2002-07), 1983 Maryland Graduate Assistant North Carolina (2001), Ohio 1984-85 Vanderbilt Defensive Backs State (2000), SMU (1990- 1986 Marshall Defensive Backs 94), Kansas State (1988) and 1987 Marshall Defensive Coordinator Marshall (1987). 1988 Kansas State Defensive Coordinator His aggressive and attack- 1989 SMU Defensive Backs ing defensive schemes helped 1990 SMU Defensive Coordinator/ improve Notre Dame’s defense Linebackers in 2008. The Irish rush defense 1991-94 SMU Defensive Coordinator was much improved com- 1995 Oklahoma Defensive Backs pared to 2007, which in turn 1996-99 Ohio State Defensive Backs helped the overall statistics of 2000 Ohio State Defensive Coordinator the defense. In Tenuta’s first 2001 North Carolina Defensive Coordinator year on the staff, Notre Dame 2002 Georgia Tech Defensive Coordinator allowed 61.27 fewer rushing 2003-07 Georgia Tech Defensive Coordinator/ yards per game and improved Defensive Backs its ranking from 96th nation- 2008 Notre Dame Asst. Head Coach ally against the run in ’07 to (Defense)/Linebackers 45th in ’08. The Irish main- 2009 Notre Dame Asst. Head Coach tained their 39th place ranking (Defense)/Linebackers in total defense from ’07 to ’08 but the ’08 defense allowed 27.15 fewer yards per game. Notre Dame’s scoring defense also improved in ’08 as the Irish allowed 22.15 points per game, 6.6 points less than the ’07 defense. In 2008, Tenuta’s linebackers combined to make 220 tackles including 22 tackles for loss and 12.5 sacks. The group added 10 pass breakups, four forced fumbles and two fumble recoveries including one returned for a touchdown. Three of the top five tacklers on the team came from Tenuta’s linebacking corps. Fifth-year senior and two-time team captain Maurice Crum Jr. paced the linebackers with 65 tackles and added 5.5 tackles for loss, three sacks, two forced fumbles and a pass breakup. Tenuta developed sophomore Harrison Smith into one of Notre Dame’s top defenders in space. The converted safety had never played linebacker and in his first season of playing college football, Smith led the Irish with 8.5 tackles for loss and tied for team-high honors with 3.5 sacks. His 57 tackles ranked fourth on the team and his seven pass breakups were the second-most in ’08. The future leader of the Irish defense, Brian Smith moved to middle linebacker in ’08 and recorded career-highs under Tenuta with 54 tackles, four tackles for loss, two sacks, two fumbles recovered, two pass breakups and one forced fumble. In the six years prior to Notre Dame, Tenuta served as Georgia Tech’s defensive coordinator and helped Tech win at least seven games in every season while playing in bowl games following all six regular seasons. In 2006, Tenuta was promoted to associate head coach — and he also coached the Yellow Jackets’ defensive backs. In his six seasons in Atlanta, 18 Yellow Jacket defenders earned first- or second-team all-Atlantic Coast Conference recognition, and 18 players from his first four units were either drafted or signed NFL free-agent contracts. Tenuta came to Tech in 2002 after one season at North Carolina, which he guided the top-rated defense, statistically, in the ACC in 2001. Under Tenuta, the Tar Heels led the ACC in total defense and pass defense while ranking third in run defense and scoring defense. From 1996-2000, Tenuta helped develop several Ohio State defensive backs into NFL players, including first-round draft picks Shawn Springs, Antoine Winfield, Ahmed Plummer and Nate Clements. Tenuta began his coaching career as a graduate assistant at Virginia and Maryland, and then served as an assistant coach at Vanderbilt, Marshall, Kansas State, SMU and Oklahoma. A native of Columbus, Ohio, Tenuta is a graduate of Virginia. He lettered three years as a defensive back for the Cavaliers and earned the team’s John Acree Memorial Football Trophy and Kevin Bowie Award. Born Feb. 25, 1957, he and his wife, Dori, are the parents of three sons: Zach, Matt and Luke.

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TONY ALFORD

RANDY HART

Running Backs

Defensive Line

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ony Alford, former running backs coach at the University of Louisville, was named running backs coach at the University of Notre Dame on Jan. 19, 2009. Alford has spent his entire 14-year coaching career working with running backs at five different schools and has produced a 1,000-yard rusher seven times. During the 2008 season, one of Alford’s pupils, redshirt freshman Victor Anderson, rushed for 1,047 yards with eight touchdowns and became the first Louisville running back to eclipse 1,000 rushing yards since 2005. Anderson was rewarded for his efforts as he was named the BIG EAST Conference Rookie of the Year and second-team all-BIG EAST. He was also placed on Sporting News’ Freshman All-America squad. Louisville averaged 164.5 THE ALFORD FILE yards rushing in 2008 and Year School/Team Assignment scored 18 rushing TDs. 1995 Mount Union Running Backs Alford spent nine years dur1996 Kent State Running Backs ing two stints as running backs coach at Iowa State where he 1997-2000 Iowa State Running Backs developed three of the school’s 2001 Washington Running Backs 2002-06 Iowa State Asst. Head Coach top six career rushing leaders. Darren Davis, Ennis Haywood Running Backs and Stevie Hicks combined for 2007-08 Louisville Running Backs five 1,000-yard seasons with 2009 Notre Dame Running Backs Alford as their position coach. Iowa State was one of only three FBS (Football Bowl Subdivision) schools that produced a 1,000-yard rusher annually from 1995-2001. Haywood continued the tradition in 2000, as he led the Big 12 Conference and ranked 10th nationally with 1,237 rushing yards. Alford helped make Haywood a first-team all-Big 12 running back as the Cyclones’ rushing attack averaged 209.0 yards per game and totaled 27 rushing TDs. When Haywood was sidelined due to injury for a game versus Oklahoma State in 2000, Alford prepared freshman Michael Wagner and helped him rush for a freshman schoolrecord 170 yards and two TDs against the Cowboys. Alford also assisted the Cyclones in making school history by finishing their 9-3 season with the school’s first bowl victory at the 2000 Insight.com Bowl (37-20 over Pittsburgh). During Alford’s initial four years in Ames (1997-2000), Iowa State improved from 103rd to 17th nationally in rushing. A driving force behind that was Alford’s coaching of Davis. Under Alford’s guidance, Davis produced three consecutive seasons over 1,000 yards en route to becoming the second-most prolific rusher in school history. Sandwiched between Alford’s stints at Iowa State was a year as Washington’s running backs coach in 2001. Under Alford, Husky tailback Willie Hurst became the ninth back in school history to rush for more than 2,000 career yards. Washington finished 9-4 and played in the Holiday Bowl. Alford started his collegiate coaching career with stops at Kent State in 1996 and Mount Union in 1995. With the Golden Flashes, he helped make Astron Whatley a first-team all-Mid-American Conference player as Whatley rushed for a career-best 1,132 yards, fifth most in school history. In Alford’s first college job, Mount Union rushed for 214.5 yards per game, as the Purple Raiders made it to the ’95 Division III semifinals and finished with a 12-1 record. Alford was a first-team all-Western Athletic Conference running back as a player for Colorado State in 1989 and was an honorable mention selection on USA Today’s All-America team. Alford played for the Rams from 1987-90 and was a 1989 Doak Walker Award nominee. His 1,035 rushing yards in 1989 were the sixth most in school history at the time, and he set the school record that still stands when he dashed for 310 yards versus Colorado. Following college, Alford was in the Denver Broncos training camp in 1991 and played for the World League of American Football’s Birmingham Fire in 1992. Alford earned his bachelor’s degree from Colorado State in 1992 and coached high school football in Fort Collins, Colo., and Lake Wales, Fla., in 1993-94. A native of Colorado Springs, Colo., Anthony J. Alford was born Nov. 27, 1968, in Akron, Ohio. He was raised in Akron and moved to Colorado Springs while in high school and graduated from Doherty High School in 1987. Alford and his wife, Trina, have three sons: Rylan, Kyler and Braydon.

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andy Hart, defensive line coach the past 21 seasons at the University of Washington, was named to the same post at the University of Notre Dame on Feb. 19, 2009. A 39-year coaching veteran, Hart has coached at five other schools in his career and returns to the Midwest where he coached for 17 of his first 18 years. Prior to Washington (1988-2008), Hart coached at Ohio State (1970-71, 1982-87), Purdue, (1977-81), Iowa State (1973-76) and Tampa (1972). Hart has been part of 22 bowl teams in his coaching career, including six Rose Bowls. At Washington he helped guide the Huskies to 12 bowl appearances, including three-straight Rose Bowl games. THE HART FILE His 1991 defensive unit allowed Year School/Team Assignment only 101 points and 1,191 1970-71 Ohio State Graduate Assistant rushing yards in 11 regular sea- 1972 Tampa Offensive Line son games en route to winning 1973-76 Iowa State Defensive Line the school’s first national cham1977-80 Purdue Defensive Line pionship. That unit still holds Purdue Defensive Line/Admin. six Washington defensive team 1981 Asst. to Head Coach records. Ohio State Defensive Line Four of the eight best sin- 1982-87 gle-season defensive rushing 1988-94 Washington Defensive Line averages in school history oc- 1995-98 Washington Asst. Head Coach/ curred under Hart’s watch, and Defensive Coordinator/ six times the Huskies allowed Defensive Line 120.2 rushing yards or less in 1999-2008 Washington Defensive Line a season. The 1990 defense 2009 Notre Dame Defensive Line owns the school record for fewest rushing yards allowed in an 11-game season (735 yards), while the 2002 unit permitted 1,270 rushing yards to set the standard for a 13-game schedule. With the Huskies, Hart coached 14 first-team all-Pacific-10 players and 11 NFL draft selections. Hart developed four All-Americans, three winners of the Morris Trophy (awarded to the Pac-10’s top offensive or defensive lineman) and two players who were named Pac10 Player of the Year. Hart’s prized pupil was Steve Emtman, the 1991 recipient of the Lombardi Award and Outland Trophy. Emtman was a first-team All-American, two-time winner of the Morris Trophy and the first overall selection in the 1992 NFL draft by the Indianapolis Colts. In 2007, Emtman was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame. D’Marco Farr also was a member of the 1991 national championship team and became the top defensive player in the Pac-10 under Hart’s guidance in 1992 and 1993. He was the recipient of the Morris Trophy in 1993 when he totaled 66 tackles and 19 tackles for loss. Hart produced the Pac-10 Defensive Player of the Year in 1996 when Jason Chorak paced the conference with a school-record 14.5 sacks and 22 tackles for loss. He was named first-team All-America that season and followed that by being placed on the AllAmerica second team in 1997. Prior to his tenure at Washington, Hart was the defensive line coach at Ohio State, his alma mater, from 1982-87. His return to Columbus marked his second coaching stint with the Buckeyes and the third time he coached under Earle Bruce. Hart went to five bowl games in his six years at Ohio State, including the 1983 Fiesta Bowl, 1985 Rose Bowl and 1987 Cotton Bowl. Hart coached the defensive line at Purdue from 1977-81 under head coach Jim Young and broke into the coaching industry with his first full-time job at the University of Tampa in 1972 under Bruce. Hart served as the offensive line coach in his only season at Tampa before following Bruce to Iowa State where he switched sides and started his defensive line coaching career with the Cyclones from 1973-76. He worked as a graduate assistant, focusing on the offensive line, with Ohio State in 1970-71. Hart was a three-time letterwinner for the Ohio State football team as an offensive guard. He was a member of the 1969 Rose Bowl championship team that defeated USC 27-16, to cap a perfect 10-0 season en route to being named national champion. Hart was also a member of the Ohio State wrestling team for the 1966 season. A native of Cleveland, Ohio, Hart was born March 9, 1948 and graduated from South High School in Willoughby, Ohio. He earned his bachelor’s degree in education from Ohio State in 1970 and a mster’s degree in higher education in 1974, also from Ohio State. He and his wife Linda have two sons, Jay and John.

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BERNIE PARMALEE

BRIAN POLIAN

Tight Ends

Special Teams Coordinator

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hroughout Brian Polian’s tenure as special teams coordinator, the Irish special teams units have been some of the best in the nation and recorded some of the top marks in recent history. Over the last four seasons under Polian, the Irish special teams have blocked or tipped 22 kicks, tallied seven touchdowns and registered six takeaways. Notre Dame has blocked or deflected 10 punts, 10 field goals and two PATs since 2005. The Irish have returned three punts and one kick for TDs as well as scored on returns off of a blocked punt and blocked field goal and also on a fake field goal. Four times in the last four years Notre Dame’s kickoff coverage team has forced a turnover and the Irish have recovered two fumbles on punt coverage.

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ver the last four seasons, arguably no position at Notre Dame has flourished as much as the tight end position. Bernie Parmalee has coached the group since Charlie Weis became head coach and has helped the Irish become “Tight End U.” Under Parmalee’s watch, four of the eight-best singleseason reception totals by a tight end have occurred and two of the top-three career totals by Irish tight ends have been tallied. Anthony Fasano, John Carlson and Kyle Rudolph have all etched their names in the program’s record book and have helped establish Notre Dame as the premier destination for top-flight tight ends. THE PARMALEE FILE Over the last three NaYear School/Team Assignment tional Football League 2002 Miami Dolphins Asst. Special Teams drafts, 11 tight ends have been selected in the first or 2003 Miami Dolphins Asst. Special Teams second round. Notre Dame Offensive Asst. is the only school to have 2004 Miami Dolphins Tight Ends multiple selections of the 2005-06 Notre Dame Tight Ends/Special 11 as Carlson was taken by Teams Asst. the Seattle Seahawks with 2007-09 Notre Dame Tight Ends the 38th pick overall in the 2008 draft and Fasano was drafted with the 53rd selection of the 2006 draft by the Dallas Cowboys. Carlson was drafted after recording 100 career receptions for 1,093 yards at Notre Dame. He ranks second all-time in receptions by a tight end at Notre Dame and third in career receiving yards by an Irish tight end. Fasano preceded Carlson and registered 92 career catches for 1,102 yards, ranking third and second, respectively, on the school’s receptions and receiving yards by a tight end lists. In 2008, the torch was passed to Rudolph as a true freshman. His efforts and the coaching of Parmalee not only led Rudolph to the most productive season by a freshman tight end in school history but helped earn multiple national postseason honors. Rudolph started all 13 games, becoming the first Notre Dame rookie tight end to ever start a season opener. He ranked fifth on the team with 29 receptions and his 340 receiving yards was fourth most last year. He set school records for receptions and receiving yards by an Irish freshman tight end and the 29 catches were the eighth most in a season by a Notre Dame tight end. Rudolph tallied two touchdown catches, one TD shy of tying Derek Brown’s freshman tight end record. Following the season, Rudolph was named a first-team all-freshman player by Sporting News, CollegeFootballNews. com and Phil Steele. Parmalee’s past role on special teams helped Notre Dame produce a consistent opportunistic unit that produced two TDs (both on punt returns), three blocked punts and two blocked field goals from 2005-06. Parmalee embarked on his NFL coaching career in 2002 as Miami’s assistant special teams coach after a nine-year playing career, including the first seven (1992-98) with the Dolphins and the final two (1999-2000) with the New York Jets. A featured running back, starting fullback, third-down back and special teams stalwart at different times during his professional career, Parmalee played in 134 NFL games, starting 26 of them. He rushed for 2,179 career yards and 17 TDs on 567 carries, caught 168 career passes for 1,485 yards and three TDs and returned 16 career kickoffs for an 18.1-yard average. He led the team in rushing two straight years – with 868 yards (216 attempts, six TDs) in 1994, then with 878 yards in 1995. He served as Dolphins special teams captain in 1997 and 1998. Parmalee was a four-year starter (1987-90) as a running back at Ball State where he remains the Cardinals’ all-time leading rusher with 3,483 yards and 26 TDs. He earned second-team all-Mid-American Conference honors as a senior in 1990 when he rushed for 1,010 yards and caught 30 passes. Parmalee also rushed for 1,064 yards and 13 TDs as a freshman when he was named the MAC Freshman of the Year. He earned his degree in business administration from the Muncie, Ind., school in 1991. A native of Jersey City, N.J., Bernard Parmalee lettered in football and baseball at Lincoln (N.J.) High School. Born Sept. 16, 1967, he and his wife, Angela, are parents of a daughter, Nakia Marie, and two sons, Tre Bernard and Torian.

THE POLIAN FILE Year

School/Team Assignment

1997

Michigan State Graduate Assistant (Offense)/Tight Ends, Offensive Line 1998 Buffalo Tight Ends/Assistant Offensive Line 1999-2000 Baylor Graduate Assistant 2001-03 Buffalo Running Backs/Special Teams Coordinator 2004 Central Florida Running Backs/Recruiting Coordinator 2005 Notre Dame Head Special Teams Coach/Defensive Backs Asst. 2006 Notre Dame Head Special Teams Coach/Linebackers Assit. 2007 Notre Dame Inside Linebackers/Special Teams 2008-09 Notre Dame Special Teams Coordinator Under Polian’s guidance, Notre Dame has averaged 10.0 yards per punt return while allowing only 7.6 yards per punt return. On kickoffs, the Irish coverage unit has limited opponents to 19.9 yards per return while the Irish return teams have averaged 20.5 yards per return. Polian has also proven to be a solid recruiter for the Irish. He signed four players in southern California and Hawaii in 2009 and was rewarded for his efforts by Rivals.com as he was named one of the top-25 recruiters in the country this year. In 2008, Polian helped the Irish lead the nation in kickoff coverage, allowing only 16.5 yards per return. On the other side, the Irish averaged 21.6 yards per kickoff return, the best by a Notre Dame squad since 2002. Polian’s special teams unit were also strong in ’07, as the Irish ranked 13th in the nation in net punting at 37.9 yards, marking the second-straight season in which they finished in the top 15 in that category. Polian also coached the inside linebackers in ’07 and aided the growth of Joe Brockington and Maurice Crum Jr. as well as helped develop Toryan Smith and Scott Smith. In 2006, Polian’s special teams were highlighted by the play of punter Geoff Price. He ranked fifth in the nation, averaging 45.4 yards per punt to set the Notre Dame single-season record for best punting average. The punt coverage unit, under Polian’s guidance, ranked 11th in the country at 37.8 yards per punt and helped Price land 12 punts inside the 20-yard line. Polian also assisted in the coaching of linebackers in 2006. He aided in accelerating the learning curves of Travis Thomas, who was playing defense for the first time since high school, and Brockington who started for the first time in his Notre Dame career. In 2005, Polian assisted in coaching the Notre Dame defensive backs. That unit produced 19 turnovers while contributing to Notre Dame’s plus-10 turnover margin. The Irish defense limited opponents to a 35 percent success rate on third downs while Notre Dame foes scored touchdowns on only 56 percent of red zone opportunities. Before coming to Notre Dame, Polian spent time at Central Florida (running backs/ recruiting coordinator), the University of Buffalo (running backs/special teams; tight ends/assistant offensive line), Baylor (strongside linebackers/defensive graduate assistant) and Michigan State (offensive graduate assistant). Polian graduated from John Carroll University in 1997 and earned a masters from Baylor in 2000. He lettered three years at linebacker at John Carroll and was named to the all-Ohio Athletic Conference team in 1996, twice helping his team to top-10 finishes in Division III. Born Brian Stewart Polian on Dec. 22, 1974, in the Bronx, N.Y., he’s married to the former Laura Maggiotto of Buffalo, N.Y. His father, Bill, is the current president of the Indianapolis Colts. Brian also was a contributing author to the AFCA book “A Complete Guide to Special Teams.”

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RON POWLUS

FRANK VERDUCCI

Quarterbacks

Running Game Coordinator/Offensive Line

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rank Verducci, a veteran offensive coach with 27 years of coaching experience at the NFL and collegiate levels, was named offensive line coach and running game coordinator at Notre Dame on Jan. 14, 2009. Verducci joins the Irish after working eight of the past 10 years in the NFL with Cleveland, Buffalo, Dallas and Cincinnati. Prior to moving to professional football, he spent 19 seasons in the college ranks at Iowa, Northwestern, Northern Illinois, Maryland and Colorado State. The past two years Verducci served as an offen- THE VERDUCCI FILE sive assistant coach with Year School/Team Assignment the Cleveland Browns. He 1980 Colorado State Graduate Assistant assisted the play caller 1981-83 Maryland Tight Ends on game days with situNorthern Illinois Running Backs/Strength ational offense and was 1984 & Conditioning Coach responsible for clock 1985-86 Iowa Graduate Assistant management. Wide Receivers In 2007, the Browns 1987-88 Northwestern won 10 games behind 1989-91 Iowa Assistant Offensive Line an offense that was one Recruiting Coordinator of the best in the NFL. 1992-94 Iowa Offensive Line The 10 victories were the 1995-98 Iowa Offensive Line/Running most by the Browns since Game Coordinator 1994 and the offense ranked eighth in the NFL, 1999-00 Cincinnati Bengals Tight Ends Cincinnati Bengals Tight Ends/Asst. best by Cleveland since 2001 Offensive Line 1981. Verducci assisted Dallas Cowboys Offensive Line with an offense that sent 2002 four players to the Pro 2004 Buffalo Bills Assistant Offensive Line Bowl: Derek Anderson, Tight Ends Braylon Edwards, Joe 2005 Buffalo Bills Offensive Line Thomas and Kellen Win- 2007-08 Cleveland Browns Offensive Asst. Coach slow Jr. Verducci also as2009 Notre Dame Offensive Line/Running sisted a Cleveland offense Game Coordinator that resurrected the career of running back Jamal Lewis, helping him become the first Brown in 27 years to post consecutive 1,000 yard seasons. Prior to joining the Browns’ staff, Verducci spent two years with Buffalo as an assistant offensive line and tight ends coach in 2004 before being promoted to offensive line coach in 2005. He worked closely with tackle Jason Peters , a 2007 Pro Bowler. Verducci joined the Dallas Cowboys as offensive line coach in 2002 after being the tight ends coach of the Cincinnati Bengals from 1999-2001. With the Cowboys, Verducci worked with three Pro Bowl offensive linemen: guard Larry Allen, guard Andre Gurode and left tackle Flozell Adams. Ten years of working with the offensive line at Iowa preceded Verducci’s NFL coaching career. From 1989-98 he worked for Hayden Fry as the Hawkeye offense averaged 171.5 rushing yards per game during his decade in Iowa City. From 1989-91 Verducci served as the assistant offensive line coach and recruiting coordinator before becoming the offensive line coach in 1992. In 1995 he added run game coordinator to his title. Twelve of his offensive lineman at Iowa went on to make NFL rosters and six players were named first-team all-Big Ten performers. In 1992, center Mike Devlin was selected the Big Ten Lineman of the Year and was a first-team All-American. Verducci was part of the coaching staff that helped guide the Hawkeyes to six bowl games during his decade in Iowa City, in addition to helping Iowa to the Holiday and Rose Bowls from 1985-86 as a graduate assistant. Iowa won the Big Ten Conference title in 1990, and the rushing attack was a major contributor to the Hawkeyes’ success. Iowa averaged 224.9 rushing yards per game that year, the most by an Iowa team since 1968. Sandwiched between his stints at Iowa was a stop in Northwestern where Verducci coached wide receivers from 1987-88. He started his coaching career in 1980 as a graduate assistant at Colorado State before working with Maryland’s tight ends as a part-time coach from 1981-83. In 1984, Verducci was the running backs and strength coach at Northern Illinois. A native of Glen Ridge, N.J., Frank James Verducci was born March 17, 1957 in East Orange, N.J., and graduated from Seton Hall Preparatory School. He played fullback and tight end at the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy – Kings Point and received his bachelor’s degree from Seton Hall in 1980. He and his wife, Noel, have a son, Jack, and a daughter, Cameron.

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ver the past two seasons, Ron Powlus has helped develop Irish quarterback Jimmy Clausen from a freshman forced to start the second game of his freshman season to one of the most prolific passers in school history. Clausen’s improvement from his freshman year to sophomore season can be traced to the attention Powlus gave him during his first two seasons as Notre Dame’s quarterbacks coach. Guiding Clausen through his 22 starts for the Irish, Powlus helped Clausen climb the career passing charts. Clausen ranks fourth at Notre Dame in career passes completed, fifth in passes attempted and sixth in all-time passing yards. THE POWLUS FILE Clausen also ranks second in career Year School/Team Assignment completion percentage and passing yards per game, fifth in all-time pass2007-09 Notre Dame Quarterbacks ing touchdowns and sixth in lowest interception percentage for a career. In 2008, Powlus coached Clausen to the third-best passing season in school history. The sophomore completed 60.9 percent of his passes for 3,172 yards with 25 TDs and 17 interceptions while posting an efficiency rating of 132.49. The highlight was the Sheraton Hawaii Bowl, during which Clausen set Notre Dame bowl records for completion percentage, passing yards and passing touchdowns. As a true freshman in 2007, Clausen played in the season opener and started the following week at Penn State, the earliest any Notre Dame freshman quarterback had made his first start under center. The growth Clausen made during the season was readily apparent in the final three contests of the ’07 slate as he completed 57 of 104 passes for 636 yards with six touchdowns and one interception in those contests. Clausen set records for most starts by a freshman quarterback and ranked on the freshman quarterback single-season lists for passing yards, completions, attempts and completion percentage. After working for two years as the director of personnel development for the Notre Dame football team, Powlus was named quarterbacks coach in 2007. One of the more decorated quarterbacks in school history, Powlus has been able to impart the knowledge he gained as a four-year starter at Notre Dame and his three-year stint in professional football to a talented, young crop of Irish signal-callers. Formerly Notre Dame’s career leader in football passing yardage, pass attempts, completions and TD passes, Powlus rejoined the University in his previous position in March 2005. He worked closely with recruiting coordinator Rob Ianello as he helped direct the administrative aspects of Irish recruiting. A native of Berwick, Pa., Powlus was a two-time Irish captain and four-year starter who set 20 school records at Notre Dame. He started all 44 regular-season games (plus two bowl games) in which he played for the Irish and finished with 558 career completions on 969 attempts for 7,602 yards and 52 TDs. He set the Irish single-game mark for TD passes in a game with four (three times) and at one point completed 14 straight passes. Powlus signed as an NFL free agent in 1998 with Tennessee and then was on the Lions’ preseason roster in ’99 and the Eagles’ roster in 2000. He played with the NFL Europe Amsterdam Admirals in the spring of 2000. A high school standout at Berwick High School, Powlus was the Parade prep player of the year in ’92 and the USA Today offensive prep player of the year. Born July 16, 1974, Powlus received his Notre Dame degree from the Mendoza College of Business Administration in 1997 with a major in marketing. Powlus and his wife, the former Sara Ivanina, are parents of two sons, Ronnie and Tommy. They were married prior to his final season at Notre Dame in 1997.

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The Heisman Trophy Breakdown…

WINNERS BY POSITION When University of Chicago running back Jay Berwanger won the first Heisman Trophy in 1935 he started a trend that continues to this day. Out of the 74 college football players who have won the coveted Heisman Trophy, 41 of them have been running backs, by far the most of any position. Of those 41 running backs, three players have been fullbacks, most recently Oklahoma’s Steve Owens in 1969. Only one defensive player, Michigan cornerback Charles Woodson in 1997, has won the award. Quarterbacks have the second-most amount of Heisman wins at 28 and last year’s winner, the extremely accurate Sam Bradford of Oklahoma, became just the second sophomore ever to win the award. In 1987, Notre Dame’s Tim Brown became the first of only two wide receivers to grab the Trophy (Michigan’s Desmond Howard in 1991 is the other). Two ends have won the award, the last being Notre Dame’s Leon Hart in 1949. A look at the recipients by position…

1993 1996 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2006 2007 2008

Charlie Ward Danny Wuerffel Chris Weinke Eric Crouch Carson Palmer Jason White Matt Leinart Troy Smith Tim Tebow Sam Bradford

Florida State Florida Florida State Nebraska USC Oklahoma USC Ohio State Florida Oklahoma

1985 1988 1994 1995 1998 1999 2005

Bo Jackson Auburn Barry Sanders Oklahoma State Rashaan Salaam Colorado Eddie George Ohio State Ricky Williams Texas Ron Dayne Wisconsin Reggie Bush USC

RUNNING BACK

TIM BROWN IN 1987

QUARTERBACK 1937 1938 1943 1944 1947 1956 1962 1963 1964 1966 1967 1970 1971 1984 1986 1989 1990 1992

Clint Frank Yale Davey O’Brien TCU Angelo Bertelli Notre Dame Les Horvath Ohio State John Lujack Notre Dame Paul Hornung Notre Dame Terry Baker Oregon State Roger Staubach Navy John Huarte Notre Dame Steve Spurrier Florida Gary Beban UCLA Jim Plunkett Stanford Pat Sullivan Auburn Doug Flutie Boston College Vinny Testaverde Miami (Fla) Andre Ware Houston Ty Detmer Brigham Young Gino Torretta Miami (Fla)

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1935 1939 1940 1941 1942 1945 1946 1948 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1965 1968 1969 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983

Jay Berwanger Chicago Nile Kinnick Iowa Tom Harmon Michigan Bruce Smith Minnesota Frank Sinkwich Georgia Doc Blanchard Army (FB) Glenn Davis Army Doak Walker Southern Methodist Vic Janowicz Ohio State Dick Kazmaier Princeton Billy Vessels Oklahoma John Lattner Notre Dame Alan Ameche Wisconsin (FB) Howard Cassady Ohio State John David Crow Texas A&M Pete Dawkins Army Billy Cannon Louisiana State Joe Bellino Navy Ernie Davis Syracuse Mike Garrett USC O.J. Simpson USC Steve Owens Oklahoma (FB) Johnny Rodgers Nebraska John Cappelletti Penn State Archie Griffin Ohio State Archie Griffin Ohio State Tony Dorsett Pittsburgh Earl Campbell Texas Billy Sims Oklahoma Charles White USC George Rogers South Carolina Marcus Allen USC Herschel Walker Georgia Mike Rozier Nebraska

RICKY WILLIAMS IN 1998

END 1936 1949

Larry Kelley Leon Hart

Yale Notre Dame

WIDE RECEIVER 1987 1991

Tim Brown Notre Dame Desmond Howard Michigan

CORNER BACK 1997

Charles Woodson

Michigan

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NOTRE DAME STADIUM College Football Tradition At Its Finest

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otre Dame Stadium, maybe the most renowned college football facility in the nation, now qualifies as one of the most up-to-date as well, thanks to a major addition and renovations that boosted its capacity to more than 80,000 beginning with the 1997 campaign. The 1996 season proved to be the final one in which the customary 59,075 fans gathered for Irish home games. Nearly two years work of additions and improvements to the yellow-bricked arena were part of a $50 million expansion project that added nearly 21,000 seats beginning in 1997. The current capacity of Notre Dame Stadium stands at 80,795, a figure that was modified in 2001 from 80,232. In 1997, the figure was 80,225, which was based on computerized seating projections made prior to the completion of the construction of the new seating area. Notre Dame’s football team completed its 1995 home schedule on Nov. 4 against Navy and, by the following Monday, groundbreaking ceremonies had been held and work had begun on the 21-month construction project, which was completed on Aug. 1, 1997.

The construction included the following elements: • All field seating and the first three rows in the permanent stands were eliminated to improve sight lines. • A new natural-grass field and new drainage system were put in place. • Two new scoreboards were erected on the north and south ends of the Stadium. • The Jim and Marilyn Fitzgerald Family Sports and Communications Center, a three-tier press box with views of both the field and the campus, was constructed on the west side – with seating for 330 media in the main portion of the press box, three television broadcast booths, five radio broadcast booths and an overall increase in square footage almost four times the original space. • New landscaping created a park-like setting on the periphery of the Stadium. • The locker rooms for both Notre Dame and the visiting team more than doubled in size. In addition, a new expanded training room was constructed adjacent to the locker room. 41

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N O T R E D A M E S TA D I U M CONTINUED

• Lights were installed in each corner of the Stadium bowl and on top of the press box for use in the final month of the 1996 season. • Material for the project included 240,000 concrete blocks, 700,000 new bricks, 500 cubic yards of mortar, 25,000 cubic yards of cast-in-place concrete, five miles of handrails and guardrails and eightand-a-half miles of redwood seating. • More than 3,500 sheets of drawings were used to build the project. • Eleven new openings, for a total of 31, were cut into the old Stadium brick exterior to allow fans to connect the old and new lower concourse areas. • The lettering at the north and south canopy as well as the interlocking ND logo at the top of the press box’s west face are gold laminate. • Within the design of the entry gates, fans may notice the diagonal stripes of the end zone, hash marks and a football. • All existing urinals were refinished as part of the renovation and there are approximately two-and-a-half times more new women’s toilets. • Each of the approximately 44,000 old seating brackets was sandblasted and recoated with an epoxy primer. • Glazed brick was salvaged and reused in the expanded varsity locker area. • Notre Dame players continue to enter the field down a set of stairs past the “Play Like A Champion’’ sign, but stairs to the visiting locker room have been eliminated, with the top of the processional tunnel ramp now serving as the visiting team entrance. Casteel Construction Corp., of South Bend was the general contractor on the project. Ellerbe Becket, Inc., of Kansas City, Mo., was the architect. The expanded Notre Dame Stadium was dedicated on the weekend of Notre Dame’s 1997 season-opening game against Georgia Tech, with events including a threeday open house, a first-ever pep rally in the Stadium the evening prior to the game (with more than 35,000 fans in attendance) and a Saturday morning rededication breakfast followed by a ceremonial ribbon-cutting. Every former Notre Dame football player was offered the chance to purchase tickets for the Georgia Tech game and, prior to the game, the 1997 team ran through a tunnel

of those former players in attendance (those practices continue for the first game of every season). The Board of Trustees of the University of Notre Dame approved the plan to expand the facility on May 6, 1994. The project was financed primarily by the November 1994 issuance of $53 million in tax-exempt, fixedrate bonds. The bonds were sold in 26 states and the District of Columbia, with more than 20 percent sold to retail buyers and almost 80 percent to institutional buyers. The incremental revenues from the expansion will exceed the debt service on the bonds by $47 million over the next 30 years, allowing the project to not only pay for itself, but also generate $47 million for academic and student-life needs. Notre Dame Stadium, at 59,075, previously ranked 44th in seating capacity among the 107 Division I-A football facilities. With capacity increased to 80,795 – it now ranks 17th – Notre Dame ranked eighth nationally in attendance in 1997, 11th in 1998, 10th in 1999, 13th in 2000, 14th in 2001, 12th in 2002, 14th in 2003, 15th in both 2004 and 2005 and 16th in 2006. Notre Dame’s average per-game increase of 21,150 fans in 1997 ranked second nationally and helped contribute to record attendance figures of 36.9 million in ’97 for all of college football, including 27.5 million for Division I-A games. Alumni are the major beneficiaries of the 1997 expansion, as about 16,000 of the 20,000 additional seats are allocated to Notre Dame graduates, with access primarily through a ticket lottery. Increased access to tickets also is in place for Notre Dame benefactors, the parents of Notre Dame students and University employees. Full-time University support staff now enjoys the same access to tickets as faculty and administrators. The most requested game in school history occurred in 2006, when the Notre Dame-Penn State contest generated 66,670 ticket requests for a lottery pool of approximately 30,000-plus, while the 2007 USC game ranks second all-time with 61,685 requests. With the seven home sellouts for the 2009 season, Notre Dame has sold out 212 consecutive games at Notre Dame Stadium, dating back to 1979, and 260 of the last 261 contests.

LEGENDS ABOUND IN NOTRE DAME STADIUM

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or all the legendary players and memorable moments it has hosted on its bluegrass turf the past 405 games, Notre Dame has unquestionably developed a lore all its own. Celebrating its 75th anniversary of service in 2005, the Stadium continues to be one of the most recognizable and revered structures in the world of sport. It was the success of Knute Rockne’s Notre Dame football teams – plus the legendary coach’s own personal blueprint – that prompted the addition of the original Notre Dame Stadium to the University’s athletic plant back in 1930. The spirit that was imbued by the Rockne Era – sustained by seven Heisman Trophy winners and dozens of All-Americans who have competed on that turf – has changed little in the 79 seasons in Notre Dame Stadium. The Irish first played their games on Cartier Field, which was then located just north of the current stadium site. But as the University’s national football reputation expanded, thanks to the coaching of Rockne, the need for a new home for the Irish was voiced since no more than 30,000 fans could squeeze into the Cartier facility. Architectural blueprints and bids were received from prominent contractors throughout the nation once plans became more specific by 1929. The Osborn Engineering Company, which has designed more than 50 stadiums across the country – including Yankee Stadium and the Polo Grounds in -continued

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N O T R E D A M E S TA D I U M CONTINUED

New York City, the original Comiskey Park in Chicago and facilities at Michigan, Indiana, Purdue and Minnesota – was awarded the contract and excavation began that summer. Actual labor on the foundations of the Stadium did not commence until April 1930, but four months later, Notre Dame Stadium opened its 18 gates. The Stadium measured a half-mile in circumference, stood 45 feet high and featured a glass-enclosed press box rising 60 feet above ground level, which originally accommodated 264 writers plus facilities for photographers and radio and television broadcasters. There were more than two million bricks in the original edifice, 400 tons of steel, and 15,000 cubic yards of concrete. The total cost of construction exceeded $750,000 and, architecturally, Notre Dame Stadium was patterned – on a smaller scale – after the University of Michigan’s mammoth stadium. Though Rockne only had a chance to coach in the new facility in its initial year of use, he took a personal hand in its design. The sod from Cartier Field was transplanted in the new Stadium, but Rockne insisted on its use for football only. He kept the area between the field and the stands small – to keep sideline guests, as he called them, to a minimum – and he personally supervised the parking and traffic system that remained much the same until the 21,720-seat addition in 1997.

With a crowd on hand of far less than the 54,000 capacity, the Irish opened the facility by defeating SMU, 20-14, on Oct. 4, 1930. Official dedication ceremonies came a week later versus traditional foe Navy. This time, more than 40,000 fans cheered a 26-2 triumph. Frank E. Herring, captain of the 1898 team and the first Notre Dame coach as well as president of the Alumni Association, delivered the major speech during the ceremonies. It took another year before the Irish played in front of their first capacity crowd (50,731 for the 1931 USC game), but full houses and Notre Dame victories have been the rule rather than the exception. Since that 1930 opening, the Irish have compiled an impressive 302-98-5 (.752) mark in Notre Dame Stadium, while an average of 62,137 fans have watched. During 25 of those seasons the Irish did not lose at home. Beginning with a 27-20 win over Northwestern on Nov. 21, 1942, and ending with a 28-14 loss to Purdue on Oct. 7, 1950, Notre Dame won 28 straight games at the Stadium. The largest crowd ever to witness a game in the Stadium prior to expansion was 61,296 in a 24-6 loss to Purdue on Oct. 6, 1962. However, attendance figures since 1966 have been based on paid admissions rather than total in the house, thus accounting for

the familiar 59,075 figure every week prior to ’97. Since that ’66 season, every Irish home game has been a sellout with the exception of a Thanksgiving Day matchup with Air Force in 1973. That game, won by the Irish, 48-15, had been changed to the holiday to accommodate national television and was played with the students absent from campus. Navy was again the opponent in 1979 when the Irish celebrated the 50th season at Notre Dame Stadium. Commemorative edition tickets, which were authentic reproductions of the 1930 dedication game, were used. The final home game of 1991 against Tennessee saw two more Stadium milestones reached. The 100th-straight sellout crowd entered the Stadium, which was hosting its 300th game since the 1930 opening. On the road, the Irish have played before 271 capacity crowds among 443 games (.611). Notre Dame has played to sellout crowds in 187 of its previous 221 games, including 69 of its last 79 contests. On Sept. 13, 2003, at Michigan, the Irish and Wolverines helped bring in the largest crowd in NCAA history at the time (111,726), marking the third time in the history of that series that an NCAA attendance record had been set. It also represented the sixth time in four seasons that Notre Dame had been a part of establishing a new stadium attendance record.

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Get Ready to Play! Webkinz pets are loveable plush pets that come with a unique Secret Code and are available at the College Football Hall of Fame, ND Warren Shop or any ND satellite Warren Shop while supplies last. For more information call 574-256-0600.

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UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME

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accepted. Nor were admissions limited by religious preference. Father Sorin’s mission and inspiration were thoroughly and indisputably Catholic, but from the beginning he made it clear that would-be students of any religious persuasion were welcome; indeed, the fact that Notre Dame’s student body eventually would become overwhelmingly Catholic was more a reflection of American culture than of parochialism on the University’s part. Sorin was equally flexible when it came to his University’s academic offerings. While a classical collegiate curriculum was established early on, so too were elementary and preparatory programs as well as a manual-labor school, and for several decades the collegiate program never attracted more than a dozen students in any year. As Notre Dame’s chronicler, Father Arthur Hope, C.S.C., has written, “If (Sorin) was to begin at all, the head of this new college had to be mightily concerned about frostbite and empty stomachs. The more elusive problems of intellectual development would have to wait.” If Notre Dame in its infancy was the child of Sorin’s vision and will, its subsequent growth and development were the products of large and powerful social and historical forces. Just as the University was being established, the first waves of European immigrants, overwhelmingly Catholic, were reaching America’s shores, and Notre Dame’s location—though seemingly remote— in fact put it within easy reach of cities like Chicago, Detroit and St. Louis, all of which soon would have large immigrant Catholic populations. The immigrant experience and the growth of the University of Notre Dame would be inextricably linked.

otre Dame’s founding can perhaps best be characterized as an outburst of missionary zeal. How else can one describe the action of Father Edward Sorin, the 28-year-old French priest of the Congregation of Holy Cross who—with $310 and three log buildings in various stages of disrepair in the middle of the northern Indiana frontier—had the temerity to christen his enterprise the University of Notre Dame du Lac? Notre Dame at its founding was a name in search of, or perhaps in anticipation of, a university. The wonder is not so much what the University has become more than 165 years later, but that it survived at all in those early years of beginning almost literally from nothing. In his book, The University of Notre Dame: A Portrait of Its History and Campus, historian Thomas Schlereth of the American studies department has described the odds the University was up against: “Only nine other Catholic colleges existed when Notre Dame was founded, but that number had grown to 51 by 1861. Presently only seven of these antebellum institutions still exist. One historian estimates a mortality rate of approximately 80 percent among Notre Dame’s contemporary secular institutions. Yet Notre Dame survived ...” The University’s survival of those early years is a tribute not only to the faith of Father Sorin, but also to his pragmatism and wit. In the beginning, his institution’s only admissions requirement was the ability to pay—some payment, at least, and not necessarily in currency or coin; livestock or the services of a tradesman or some other “in-kind” payment also were cheerfully

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UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME C O N T I N U E D A number of forces were at work in this relationship. The “American Dream” was coming into being, and with it the hope and expectation that, through hard work and education, children would enjoy greater opportunities than their parents. At the same time, anti-immigrant and anti-Catholic sentiments were open and pervasive in American society, creating barriers to immigrant Catholic students. Equally strong sentiments among many Catholics regarded public schools at any level as dangerous places where young people might lose their faith. For all these reasons, education—primary, secondary and higher education— became a centerpiece of American Catholicism. Though it may not have seemed so at the time, this great historical movement of peoples and the creation of the American melting pot enhanced the odds of Notre Dame’s survival dramatically. What still had to be decided, however, was precisely the type of institution Notre Dame would become. How could this small Midwestern school without endowment and without ranks of well-to-do alumni hope to compete with firmly-established private universities and public-supported state institutions? As in Sorin’s day, the fact that the University pursued this lofty and ambitious vision of its future was a testimony to the faith of its leaders—men such as Father John Zahm, C.S.C. As Schlereth describes it: “Zahm ... envisioned Notre Dame as potentially ‘the intellectual center of the American West’; an institution with large undergraduate, graduate, and professional schools equipped with laboratories, libraries, and research facilities. Notre Dame should strive to become the University that its charter claimed it was.” Zahm was not without evidence to support his faith in Notre Dame’s potential. On this campus in 1899, a young Notre Dame scientist by the name of Jerome Green became the first American to transmit a wireless message. At about the same time, Albert Zahm, Father John’s younger brother, was designing the first successful helicopter and first wind tunnel while also launching the first man-carrying glider from the roof of a campus building. The University also had established the nation’s first architecture, law and engineering schools under Catholic auspices. The debate over Notre Dame’s future effectively was ended in the two decades following the First World War. In 1919, the University installed its first president to have earned a Ph.D., Father James Burns, C.S.C., and the changes he initiated were as dramatic as they were far-reaching. The elementary, preparatory and manual-labor programs were scrapped; the University’s first board of lay advisors was established with the goal of creating a $1 million endowment, with a national campaign conducted to achieve that goal; and the first annual giving program for alumni was launched. With this impetus established, the period between 1919 and 1933 would see the

University erect 15 new buildings and triple the numbers of both its students and its faculty. A new and utterly unanticipated element was added to the ethos of Notre Dame during this period, and the University forever after would be a national institution. That new element was, of course, the game of football. But for Notre Dame and for its legions of ethnic American loyalists—most, but not all, Catholic—the cliché was true: football was more than a game. Through its academic program, Notre Dame already was part of the striving of ethnic Americans to earn a place in the American mainstream. But in this golden era, even for those who had never and would never attend Notre Dame, the University became a symbol, so much so that its attraction persists literally to this day. The national recognition that football brought to Notre Dame was a mixed blessing at those times when it tended to overshadow the University’s growing academic distinction, but overall it has been an almost incalculable boon to public awareness of, interest in, and support of Notre Dame. It may be amusing to speculate how the University’s history might have been different without the phenomenon of football, but the University is happy to accept this legacy as is. If the post-World War I era saw Notre Dame’s first flowering as a true University, the seven decades since the Second World War have seen the vision of John Zahm reach full fruition. Father John Cavanaugh, C.S.C., began the process after the war by toughening Notre Dame’s entrance requirements, increasing faculty hiring and establishing the Notre Dame Foundation to expand the University’s development capabilities. Then, during the 35-year tenure of Father Theodore Hesburgh, C.S.C., Notre Dame’s enrollment, faculty and degrees awarded all doubled; library volumes increased five-fold; endowment catapulted from less than $10 million to more than $400 million; campus physical facilities grew from 48 to 88 buildings; faculty compensation increased ten-fold; and research funding grew more than twenty-fold. In addition, two defining moments occurred during this period: the transference of University governance in 1967 from the Congregation of Holy Cross to a two-tiered, mixed board of lay and

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UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME C O N T I N U E D

religious trustees and fellows and the admission of women to undergraduate studies in 1972. During the 18-year presidency of Father Edward Malloy, C.S.C., the University continued to grow in stature. Endowed faculty positions rose to more than 190, the student body became—and remains—one of the most selective in the nation (with one-third of entering freshmen ranking among the top five students in their high school graduating classes) and the graduation rate annually is in the top five in the nation. The University’s endowment of some $5 billion is among the top 20 in American higher education, and campus additions during the Malloy years included new research laboratories, a graduate student housing complex, residence halls for undergraduate women (who now compose 47 percent of the student body), the 84-classroom DeBartolo Hall, the Mendoza College of Business, the DeBartolo Center for the Performing Arts and the new Jordan Hall of Science. Father John I. Jenkins, C.S.C., who became Notre Dame’s 17th president in July of 2005, has challenged his administration and the faculty, students, alumni and friends of the University to, in the words from his inaugural speech, “build a Notre Dame that is bigger and better than ever—a great Catholic university for the 21st century, one of the pre-eminent research institutions in the world, a center for learning whose intellectucal and religious traditions converge to make it a healing, unifying, enlightening force for a world deeply in need. This is our goal. Let no one ever again say that we dream too small.” Some goals are self-evident. The University must strive at all times to bring new vigor to its teaching and to enhance both the breadth and the depth of the education it offers students. At the same time, it must strengthen significantly its graduate programs and faculty research to make ever-greater contributions in the quest for new knowledge. But the institutional mission of Notre Dame reaches beyond these goals. The higher aspiration of the University of Notre Dame is to seek out and assume leadership roles through which students and alumni, faculty, interdisciplinary institutes and professional programs can bring their accomplishments to bear on the most basic and pressing needs of humanity—for peace and social justice, for human rights and dignity, for ethical conduct in business, science

U.S. NEWS & WORLD REPORT 2009 TOP 20 RANKINGS OF NATIONAL UNIVERSITIES 1. 2. 3. 4.

Harvard Princeton Yale MIT Stanford 6. Cal Tech Penn

8. Columbia Duke Chicago 11. Dartmouth 12. Northwestern Washington Univ. 14. Cornell

15. Johns Hopkins 16. Brown 17. Rice 18. NOTRE DAME Emory Vanderbilt 21. Berkeley

and the professions, for a renewal of values in interpersonal and societal relationships and for a more-enlightened stewardship of the environment, to name but a few of the challenges. This aspiration is incumbent upon Notre Dame as a Catholic university. Today, as throughout its history, Notre Dame’s position in American culture mirrors that of the Catholic Church. The world is very different from the one encountered by Father Sorin on his arrival in this country. The tangible barriers faced then by Catholic students and scholars have largely been removed, and today one may find such students and scholars at Harvard and Stanford and Duke, as well as at Notre Dame. American Catholics are firmly implanted in the American mainstream. At the same time, the secularization of contemporary American society is an undisputed fact, and with that transformation has come a weakening of common values, an antipathy to belief and a resistance to the very notion of underlying truths. One expression of this viewpoint is the contention that a Catholic university is a contradiction in terms, that reason and belief are somehow mutually exclusive. The Catholic intellectual tradition and the Western university tradition itself stand in opposition to this contention, as does Notre Dame. It is a telling act that throughout Notre Dame’s history, and increasingly in recent years, many eminent scholars of various faith traditions have made the University their home simply because they have preferred to work in a community of learning where belief is not merely tolerated, but in fact is celebrated. Father Sorin’s dream was predicated on his conviction that a university would be a powerful force for good in this land that he embraced as his own. For the University of Notre Dame, Sorin’s conviction remains the inspiration, the mission and the driving force.

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INDICATORS OF EXCELLENCE RANKINGS

• The Department of Energy’s Argonne National Laboratory and Notre Dame have collaborated to create a new Institute for Theoretical Sciences.

• Notre Dame is rated among the nation’s top 25 institutions of higher learning in surveys conducted by U.S. News and World Report, Princeton Review, Time, Kiplinger’s, and Kaplan/Newsweek.

• Notre Dame is part of a consortium of universities that operates the world’s largest telescope in Arizona.

• The Wall Street Journal has cited Notre Dame as one of the “New Ivies” in American higher education, along with Duke, Northwestern, Johns Hopkins and others.

• Two Notre Dame theologians are members of the official translation team of the Dead Sea Scrolls.

• Notre Dame ranks fifth in a listing of “dream schools” in a survey of parents by the Princeton Review. Others include Harvard, Stanford, Princeton and New York University. • Hispanic Magazine ranks Notre Dame 13th on its list of the top 25 colleges for Latinos. • The Mendoza College of Business at Notre Dame is rated second nationally by BusinessWeek magazine in its annual survey of undergraduate business programs.

FACULTY & PROGRAMS • Chemist Dennis Jacobs was selected the 2002-03 U.S. Professor of the Year for research and doctoral universities by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching and the Council for the Advancement and Support of Education. • The Department of Philosophy is ranked 14th in the United States in a survey of nearly 200 philosophers, and Notre Dame and Yale are cited as the nation’s top two programs for the study of the philosophy of religion. • Faculty in the College of Arts and Letters have earned 37 fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities during the past 10 years, more than any other university in the nation. • The School of Architecture is ranked ninth by the National Architectural Accrediting Board. • The National Science Foundation has joined with Notre Dame and two other universities to establish the Joint Institute for Nuclear Astrophysics. • Notre Dame established the first programs in law, engineering and architecture at an American Catholic institution of higher learning. • Notre Dame’s Institute for Medieval Studies was the first in the United States, and the University also founded the first publication series dedicated specifically to medieval topics. • According to the National Science Foundation, Notre Dame is one of the top three U.S. universities in low-energy nuclear physics research. • Notre Dame’s Department of Accountancy consistently ranks among the top 10 in the country in an annual nationwide survey of accountancy department chairs. • The Department of Mathematics ranks in the top quarter among all universities that grant a doctorate in the field. • U.S. News & World Report and Entrepreneur Magazine rank the University of Notre Dame’s Gigot Center for Entrepreneurial Studies among the top 25 in the nation.

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I N D I C AT O R S O F E X C E L L E N C E CONTINUED

RESEARCH MILESTONES

• Notre Dame’s Keough-Naughton Institute for Irish Studies is the nation’s foremost Irish studies program, and Notre Dame has the most prominent presence in Ireland of any American university. The Keough-Naughton Notre Dame Study Centre-Ireland, housed in historic Newman House in Dublin, engages in extensive cooperative agreements with Trinity College, Dublin, and University College Dublin (UCD).

For more than 100 years, Notre Dame researchers have been at the forefront of numerous pioneering developments: • In 1893, 10 years before the Wright brothers’ first flight, Notre Dame engineering professor Albert Zahm organized the first International Aeronautic Congress in Chicago. Based upon experiments on campus, he presented a paper that proposed the first modern method for launching airplanes and manually controlling them in flight by using rotating wing parts to balance the aircraft laterally and a double tail to control pitching and side-to-side movement.

• At the request of Pope Paul VI, Notre Dame helped found the Ecumenical Institute for Theological Studies at Tantur, located on a hilltop on the road from Jerusalem to Bethlehem.

• Jerome J. Green, a member of Notre Dame’s engineering faculty from 1895-1914, was a pioneer of wireless communication. Guided by the findings of Guglielmo Marconi, Green became the first American to transmit a wireless message-from Notre Dame to neighboring Saint Mary’s College.

SERVICE • Community service is a hallmark of Notre Dame. About 80 percent of Notre Dame students, through the University’s Center for Social Concerns, are active in social service, and at least 10 percent of each year’s baccalaureate graduating class spends a year or more in volunteer service, prompting UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan to say, “Notre Dame represents much that is best and most generous in the American tradition.”

• Beginning in 1907, Notre Dame priest and professor Rev. Julius Nieuwland, C.S.C., conducted research that 25 years later led to the discovery of the formulae for synthetic rubber. Produced commercially by the DuPont Company under the brand name Neoprene, the highly-elastic material is used for products ranging from waterfaucet washers to gasoline-pump hoses to the adhesive strips on disposable diapers.

• Notre Dame’s Social Concerns Seminars, in which undergraduates spend fall and spring breaks offering assistance in Appalachia and other impoverished areas, is one of the most comprehensive servicelearning programs in higher education.

• Germ-free technology developed by professors James Reyniers and Morris Pollard at Notre Dame’s LOBUND Laboratory has played a significant role in bone-marrow treatment for leukemia and Hodgkins disease, the prevention of colon cancer, the use of nutrition in preventing prostate cancer and the development of “statin” cholesterollowering drugs.

• The University’s Alliance for Catholic Education (ACE) sends 135 recent graduates to teach in some 90 understaffed Catholic schools in the Southern, Southeastern and Southwestern United States and in South Bend. A national model, ACE has received the Higher Education Award from the Corporation for National Service for leadership in using national service resources through AmeriCorps.

• The late biologist George B. Craig Jr. was one of the world’s foremost experts on mosquitoes and their disease-carrying capabilities. For two decades he studied the genetics of Aedes aegypti, the Yellow Fever mosquito, using it to better understand disease transmission and to experiment with genetic control techniques. His later work included study of LaCrosse encephalitis in the Midwest and the Asian Tiger mosquito’s migration from Southeast Asia to the United States.

ALUMNI • The University’s network of 270 alumni clubs—including 60 international clubs—is the most extensive in higher education. • With graduates renowned for their loyalty and generosity, Notre Dame annually ranks among the top five universities in percentage of alumni who contribute. • In alumni satisfaction surveys, Notre Dame ranks among the top three nationally.

STUDENTS • Notre Dame’s graduation rate of 95 percent is exceeded by only Harvard and Princeton.

RESOURCES & FACILITIES • Notre Dame ranks in the top 20 among all American colleges and universities in size of endowment (approximately $5 billion) and in annual voluntary support. Since 1984-85, the University has ranked first in the amount of money contributed annually by parents. It has the largest endowment and yearly gift total of any Catholic institution of higher learning in the world.

• Notre Dame graduates are accepted into medical schools at a rate of about 75 percent, almost twice the national average. • Notre Dame has one of the highest undergraduate residential concentrations of any national university, with 80 percent of its students living in 29 residence halls. Some 40 Holy Cross religious continue to live and provide a pastoral presence in the halls.

• Notre Dame is one of just 10 major private universities to receive a rating of Aaa from Moody’s Investors Service.

• Fighting Irish athletics programs have produced the second most Academic All-Americans among Division I-A colleges and universities.

• The most recent report puts Notre Dame’s economic impact on the local marketplace at more than $873 million annually.

• The Notre Dame marching band was founded in 1843 and is the oldest college marching band still in existence.

• The DeBartolo Center for the Performing Arts—a $63.6 million, 150,000-square foot complex with five distinct performance venues—opened in the summer of 2004.

INTERNATIONAL & OFF-CAMPUS STUDIES

• The University’s new Jordan Hall of Science, a 202,000-square-foot facility, opened for the fall 2006 semester. The $70 million facility is the largest building on campus devoted solely to undergraduate education.

• Notre Dame ranks seventh in the percentage of students studying abroad among major research universities. • Notre Dame offers 27 international study programs in 17 countries. The two newest programs are in Bologna, Italy, and Beijing. 54

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GIVE A GIFT and LEAVE A LEGACY

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VER STUDENT ATHLETES ON VARSITY TEAMS EXCELLING IN ACADEMICS SPIRITUALITY COMMUNITY SERVICE AND ATHLETICS ALL MADE POSSIBLE COURTESY of the generous alumni, parents and friends who support Notre Dame’s ďŹ rst athletics annual fund – the Rockne Heritage Fund. 4HE CULMINATION OF THESE GIFTS ASSISTS THE 5NIVERSITY IN UNDERWRITING ATHLETICS SCHOLARSHIPS THAT ARE THE LIFEBLOOD OF EVERY PROGRAM THAT WANTS TO RECRUIT THE best and the brightest and compete for national championships. /UR WORK HAS JUST BEGUN 3CHOLARSHIPS ARE ONE OF THE LARGEST LINE ITEMS IN THE DEPARTMENT OF ATHLETICS OPERATING BUDGET ACCOUNTING FOR ROUGHLY MILLION ANNUALLY

Director’s Circle Members donating to the Rockne Heritage Fund at the $1,500, $5,000, $10,000 and $25,000 levels, receive a corresponding beneďŹ ts package. For more information on the attractive football ticket beneďŹ t, visit our website: und.com/rockneheritagefund.

Make a Gift Today s 3END A CHECK PAYABLE TO THE 2OCKNE (ERITAGE &UND 0 / "OX Notre Dame, IN 46556. s 6ISIT ONLINE SUPPORTING ND EDU AND INCLUDE h2OCKNE (ERITAGE &UNDv IN the comments section. s 3PECIFY IF YOUR EMPLOYER HAS A MATCHING GIFT PROGRAM s .OTRE $AME EMPLOYEES MAY REQUEST A PAYROLL DEDUCTION FORM s !LL CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE 2OCKNE (ERITAGE &UND ARE CREDITED TOWARD ELIGIBILITY IN THE FOOTBALL TICKET LOTTERY

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SPIRIT OF NOTRE DAME

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HONORS

ALL-AMERICANS

A Proud Tradtion of Irish Success, 96 Years Strong

NOTRE DAME’S CONSENSUS ALL-AMERICANS Quarterbacks Angelo Bertelli (1943) Frank Carideo (1929-30) Gus Dorais (1913) Ralph Guglielmi (1954) Terry Hanratty (1968) John Huarte (1964) John Lujack (1946-47) Harry Stuhldreher (1924) Bob Williams (1949) Guard Dick Arrington (1965)

Quarterback Terry Hanratty (1968)

Running Backs Jim Crowley (1924) Nick Eddy (1966) Vagas Ferguson (1979) George Gipp (1920) Paul Hornung (1955) John Lattner (1952-53) Elmer Layden (1924) Creighton Miller (1943) Marchy Schwartz (1930-31) Emil Sitko (1948-49)

Notre Dame has produced at least one consensus All-American in 27 of the last 46 seasons, including 18 straight years, from 1964 to ’81.

Defensive Secondary Luther Bradley (1977) Jeff Burris (1993) Clarence Ellis (1971) Todd Lyght (1989-90) Nick Rassas (1965) Tom Schoen (1967) Bobby Taylor (1994) Mike Townsend (1973) Shane Walton (2002) Receiver Jeff Samardzija (2005)

Defensive tackle Chris Zorich (1989-90)

Ends Eddie Anderson (1921) Dave Casper (1973) Pete Demmerle (1974) Bob Dove (1941-42) Tom Gatewood (1970) Leon Hart (1948-49) Ken MacAfee (1976-77) Wayne Millner (1935) Jack Snow (1964) Monty Stickles (1959) Chuck Sweeney (1937) John Yonakor (1943)

S

ince Gus Dorais became Notre Dame’s initial first-team All-America pick in 1913, Irish players have been honored as first-team All-America selections on 175 occasions. Recognition on at least one All-America second team has been received by Notre Dame players 73 other times. The NCAA recognizes members of a consensus All-America team each season, and 95 of those selections have worn an Irish uniform. Notre Dame has had 79 different players earn the consensus designation, more than any other university. The NCAA also recognizes first-team All-Americans chosen on a unanimous basis. Notre Dame has had 30 unanimous choices, more than any other university.

Offensive Linemen Dick Arrington (1965) Ed Beinor (1938) Art Boeringer (1926) Jack Cannon (1929) George Connor (1946-47) Gerry DiNardo (1974) Larry DiNardo (1970) Al Ecuyer (1957) Pat Filley (1943) Bill Fischer (1947-48) Jerry Groom (1950) Dave Huffman (1978) Art Hunter (1953) Mirko Jurkovic (1991) George Kunz (1968) Joe Kurth (1932) Tom Regner (1966) Jack Robinson (1934) Frank Rydzewski (1917) John Scully (1980) John Smith (1927) Aaron Taylor (1992-93) Jim White (1943) Tommy Yarr (1931) Linebackers Bob Crable (1980-81) Bob Golic (1978) Jim Lynch (1966) Frank Stams (1988) Michael Stonebreaker (1988, 1990) Defensive Linemen Ross Browner (1976-77) Greg Marx (1972) Mike McCoy (1969) Steve Niehaus (1975) Alan Page (1966) Walt Patulski (1971) Chris Zorich (1989-90) Receivers Tim Brown (1987) Raghib Ismail (1990) Jeff Samardzija (2005)

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ESPN THE MAGAZINE

ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICANS & COSIDA HALL OF FAME Academic All-America CoSIDA (College Sports Information Directors of America) and ESPN The Magazine each year honor an Academic All-America football team made up of top scholar-athletes from universities around the country. A 3.3 minimum cumulative grade-point average is required for nomination. A total of 38 Notre Dame football players have been first-team selections including two-time honorees Tom Gatewood, Greg Marx, Joe Restic, Greg Dingens and Tim Ruddy and three-time selection Joe Heap, while 13 others have received second-team recognition. Ruddy was named team member of the year in 1993.

ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICANS FIRST TEAM 1952 HB 1953 HB 1954 HB 1954 TE 1955 FB 1958 E 1959 G 1963 OG 1966 OG 1966 LB 1967 DHB 1968 OT 1969 OT 1970 QB 1970 OG 1970 SE 1971 SE 1971 DT 1972 DT 1973 TE 1973 K 1973 LB 1974 SE 1974 CB 1977 TE 1977 OG 1977 FS 1978 FS

Joe Heap Joe Heap Joe Heap Dan Shannon Don Schaefer Bob Wetoska Ken Adamson Bob Lehmann Tom Regner Jim Lynch Jim Smithberger George Kunz Jim Reilly Joe Theismann Larry DiNardo Tom Gatewood Tom Gatewood Greg Marx Greg Marx Dave Casper Bob Thomas Gary Potempa Pete Demmerle Reggie Barnett Ken MacAfee Dave Vinson Joe Restic Joe Restic

1980 1980 1981 1984 1985 1987 1987 1992 1993 2006

OG FS CB DT DT P K C C TE

SECOND TEAM 1972 TE 1972 TE 1974 C 1978 FS 1979 FS 1979 OT 1984 DT 1988 K 1994 C 2002 SN 2007 TE 2007 DL 2008 DB

Bob Burger Tom Gibbons John Krimm Greg Dingens Greg Dingens Vince Phelan Ted Gradel Tim Ruddy Tim Ruddy John Carlson

Dave Casper Mike Creaney Mark Brenneman Tom Gibbons Tom Gibbons Rob Martinovich Greg Dingens Reggie Ho Mark Zataveski John Crowther John Carlson Trevor Laws Mike Anello

HONORABLE MENTION 1963 SE Tom Talaga

Defensive back Mike Anello became Notre Dame’s most recent ESPN The Magazine/CoSIDA Academic All-America honoree as a second-team selection in 2008.

Academic All-America Hall of Fame The CoSIDA Academic All-America Hall of Fame recognizes former Academic All-Americans who graduated 10 or more years ago and have community service accomplishments. To be nominated, the candidate must have been an Academic AllAmerican with a cumulative grade-point average of at least 3.0 on a 4.0 scale. The inductees are selected by a committee made up of officers of CoSIDA and members of the media. The first class of inductees was in 1988 and since then four former Notre Dame football players have been honored.

ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICA HALL OF FAME 1990

QB

1993

TE

Joe Theismann Dave Casper

1996

PK

Bob Thomas

2006

OG

Bob Burger

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CONSENSUS ALL-AMERICANS Players accorded the majority of votes at their positions by selectors are designated consensus All-Americans. Current teams utilized in designation of consensus selections are those chosen by the Associated Press, American Football Coaches Association, the Football Writers Association of America, Walter Camp Foundation and The Sporting News. In previous years, different combinations of agencies and magazines have been used to select the consensus All-Americans.

Anderson, Eddie (Mason City, IA)

1921

Miller, Creighton (Wilmington, DE)*

1943

Arrington, Dick (Erie, PA)

1965

Millner, Wayne (Salem, MA)*

1935

Beinor, Ed (Harvey, IL)

1938

Niehaus, Steve (Cincinnati, OH)

1975

Bertelli, Angelo (Springfield, MA)*

1943

Page, Alan (Canton, OH)*

1966

Boeringer, Art (Bud) (St. Paul, MN)

1926

Patulski, Walt (Liverpool, NY)

1971

Bradley, Luther (Muncie, IN)

1977

Rassas, Nick (Winnetka, IL)

1965

1987

Regner, Tom (Kenosha, WI)

1966

Robinson, Jack (Huntington, NY)

1934

Brown, Tim (Dallas, TX)* Browner, Ross (Warren, OH)*

Alan Page

1976-77

Burris, Jeff (Rock Hill, SC)

1993

Rydzewski, Frank (Chicago, IL)

1917

Cannon, Jack (Columbus, OH)*

1929

Samardzija, Jeff (Valparaiso, IN)

2005

Carideo, Frank (Vernon, NY)* Casper, Dave (Chilton, WI)

1929-30

Schoen, Tom (Euclid, OH)

1973

Schwartz, Marchy*

1967 1930-31

Connor, George (Chicago, IL)*

1946-47

Crable, Bob (Cincinnati, OH)

1980-81

Scully, John (Huntington, NY)

1980

Crowley, Jim (Green Bay, WI)*

1924

Sitko, Emil (Fort Wayne, IN)*

1948-49

Demmerle, Pete (New Canaan, CT)

1974

Smith, John (Hartford, CT)*

1927

DiNardo, Gerry (Howard Beach, NY)

1974

Snow, Jack (Long Beach, CA)

1964

DiNardo, Larry (Howard Beach, NY)

1970

Stams, Frank (Akron, OH)

1988

1913

Stickles, Monty (Poughkeepsie, NY)

Dorais, Gus (Chippewa Falls, WI) Dove, Bob (Youngstown, OH)*

(Bay St. Louis, MS)

1941-42

Stonebreaker, Michael

Ecuyer, Al (New Orleans, LA)

1957

Eddy, Nick (Lafayette, CA)

1966

Stuhldreher, Harry (Massillon, OH)*

Ellis, Clarence (Grand Rapids, MI)

1971

Sweeney, Chuck (Bloomington, IL)

Ferguson, Vagas (Richmond, IN)

1979

Taylor, Aaron (Concord, CA)

Filley, Pat (South Bend, IN)

1943

Fischer, Bill (Chicago, IL)*

1947-48

Gatewood, Tom (Baltimore, MD)

1970

Gipp, George (Laurium, MI)*

1920

Golic, Bob (Willowick, OH)

1978

Groom, Jerry (Des Moines, IA)*

1950

Guglielmi, Ralph (Columbus, OH)*

1954

Hanratty, Terry (Butler, PA)

1968

Hart, Leon (Turtle Creek, PA)*

1948-49

Hornung, Paul (Louisville, KY)*

1955

Huarte, John (Anaheim, CA)

1964

Huffman, Dave (Dallas, TX)

1978

Hunter, Art (Akron, OH)

1953

1959 1988, 90

(River Ridge, LA)

Ismail, Raghib (Wilkes-Barre, PA)

1990

Jurkovic, Mirko (Calumet City, IL)

1991

Kunz, George (Arcadia, CA)

1968

Kurth, Joe (Madison, WI) Lattner, John (Chicago, IL)* Layden, Elmer (Davenport, IA)* Lujack, John (Connellsville, PA)* Lyght, Todd (Flint, MI)

1932 1952-53 1924 1946-47 1989-90

Lynch, Jim (Lima, OH)* MacAfee, Ken (Brockton, MA)*

1924 1937 1992-93

Taylor, Bobby (Longview, TX)

1994

Townsend, Mike (Hamilton, OH)

1973

Walton, Shane (San Diego, CA)

2002

White, Jim (Edgewater, NJ)

1943

Williams, Bob (Baltimore, MD)*

1949

Yarr, Tommy (Dabob, WA)*

1931

Yonakor, John (Dorchester, MA) Zorich, Chris (Chicago, IL)*

1943 1989-90

1966 1976-77

Marx, Greg (Redford, MI)

1972

McCoy, Mike (Erie, PA)

1969

* elected to National Football Foundation Hall of Fame

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2008-09

ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICANS ith eight ESPN The Magazine Academic All-Americans during the 2008-09 school year, Notre Dame continues to stand second all-time in the number of Academic All-Americans is has produced. Academic All-Americans are annually selected by the College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA). Since 1952, Notre Dame has had 210 Academic All-Americans and ranks second behind Nebraska’s total of 268. Notre Dame is first in the number of Academic All-Americans (84) it has had since 2000. The Irish rank in the top five in five different categories, including men’s at-large, baseball, football, women’s soccer and men’s track and field/cross country. The University of Notre Dame tops the list in both baseball (29) and women’s soccer (14). The Irish football team ranks third on the alltime list with 52 selections, behind Nebraska (98) and Penn State (53). In the men’s at-large category, the Irish rank third overall with 31 selections, while the men’s track and field/cross country team ranks fourth all-time with 12. The women’s softball team is also represented well as they rank seventh overall with 17 total selections, tied with both DePaul and Northern Illinois. Notre Dame’s Academic AllAmericans in ’08-09 included: women’s soccer players Brittany Bock (first team) and Elise Weber (second team); football player Mike Anello (second team); men’s soccer player Matt Besler (first team); hockey players Jordan Pearce (at-large first team) and Erik Condra (at-large second team); distance runner Patrick Smyth (first team) and women’s rower Lauren Buck (at-large third team). To be eligible, a student-athlete must be a varsity starter or key reserve, maintain a cumulative grade point average of 3.30 on a 4.00 scale, have reached sophomore athletic and academic standing at his/her current institution and be nominated by his/ her sports information director. Since the program’s inception in 1952, CoSIDA has bestowed Academic All-America honors on more than 14,000 student-athletes in Divisions I, II, III and NAIA covering all NCAA championship sports.

W

Lauren Buck

Mike Anello

Matt Besler

Brittany Bock

Football

Men’s Soccer

Women’s Soccer

Rowing

Second Team 3.93, Finance Orland Park, Ill.

First Team 3.52, Psych./Pre-professional Overland Park, Kan.

First Team 3.36, Marketing Naperville, Ill.

Third Team 3.87, Biological Science/MBA Flint, Mich.

Erik Condra

Jordan Pearce

Patrick Smyth

Elise Weber

Hockey

Hockey

Women’s Soccer

Second Team 3.55, Psychology/Pre-med Livonia, Mich.

First Team 3.75, Anthropology/Pre-med Anchorage, Alaska

Men’s Cross Country/ Track & Field First Team 3.75, History Salt Lake City, Utah

Second Team 3.73, Political Science Elk Grove, Ill.

Total Academic All-America Selections

Most Academic All-America Selections (Baseball)

1. Nebraska

268

1. Notre Dame

29

1. Notre Dame

14

2. Notre Dame

210

3. Penn State 4. MIT 5. Stanford 6. Augustana College (Ill.) 7. Bucknell 8. Texas 9. Emory 10. UCLA Illinois Wesleyan

157 155 136 130 117 115 114 111 111

2. Bucknell 3. Wichita State 4. Illinois Wesleyan 5. Delta State 6. Johns Hopkins 7. Mississippi State 8. Western Michigan 9. Arizona 10. Nebraska

28 26 25 22 21 20 19 18 17

2. Penn State North Carolina 4. Charlotte 5. Portland Navy Rose-Hulman

11 11 8 7 7 7

Most Academic All-America Selections (Football)

Most Academic All-America Selection Since 2000 1. Notre Dame

84

2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8.

82 73 63 62 59 50 49 49

Nebraska Emory Penn State RPI MIT North Dakota State Calvin College Gustavus Adolphus

Most Academic All-America Selections (Women’s Soccer)

1. Nebraska 2. Penn State

98 53

3. Notre Dame

52

4. Dayton Ohio State 6. Oklahoma 7. Stanford 8. Carnegie Mellon 9. Air Force 10. Texas

48 48 47 37 36 34 33

Other Academic All-America Selections Where Notre Dame Ranks Among The Top 10 3. Men’s At-Large 4. Men’s Track & Field/ Cross Country 7. Softball 10. Women’s At-Large

31 12 17 23

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NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS

T

he national championship team in college football generally is considered to be the top-rated squad in the final polls issued each year by the poll of sportswriters and broadcasters (Associated Press) and the poll of coaches (United Press International through 1990, ESPN/USA Today since 1991). Since the AP began certifying the winner of its national crown in 1936, Notre Dame has won more national championships than any other team in the country. The Irish have won eight titles (1943, ’46, ’47, ’49, ’66, ’73, ’77 and ’88) – with Oklahoma second on the list at seven. The coaches’ poll has voted a national champion since 1950. Notre Dame has won three UPI titles (1966, ’77, and ’88) during that period. Only USC (six) and Oklahoma (five) have won more. The UPI poll was taken following the end of the regular season each year until the 1974 season, when the coaches first waited until the bowl games had been played to issue their final poll. In addition, the NCAA also recognizes national championships

NOTRE DAME’S NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS Here are Notre Dame’s 11 consensus national championship seasons: Year 1924

Team Notre Dame

Record 10-0

1929

Pennsylvania Notre Dame

9-1-1 9-0

Pittsburgh USC Notre Dame Alabama Notre Dame Notre Dame

9-1 10-2 10-0 10-0 9-1 8-0-1

Army

9-0-1

Georgia Notre Dame Michigan

11-0 9-0 10-0

Notre Dame Oklahoma Notre Dame

10-0 11-0 9-0-1

1930 1943 1946

1947

1949 1966

1973

1977 1988

Michigan State 9-0-1 Notre Dame 11-0 Alabama 10-1 Oklahoma 10-0-1 Notre Dame 11-1 Alabama 11-1 Notre Dame 12-0

Coach Knute Rockne

Selector DS, Helms, Boand, FR, Houl., NCF, Poling Lou Young Davis Knute Rockne DS, Dunkel, Boand, Helms, FR, NCF, Poling Jock Sutherland Davis Howard Jones Houl. Knute Rockne All but FR, tie for Davis Wallace Wade Davis (tie), FR Frank Leahy Unanimous Frank Leahy AP, Dunkel, Devold, Poling (tie), Helms (tie), Boand (tie), LS, NCF Red Blaik Houl., FR, Boand (tie), Helms (tie), Poling (tie) Wally Butts WS Frank Leahy AP, WS, Helms (tie) Fritz Crisler Dunkel, LS, Houl., Helms (tie), Boand, FR, Devold, NCF, Poling Frank Leahy All but FR Bud Wilkinson FR Ara Parseghian AP, UPI, FWAA, Dunkel, LS, Devold, FN, Matthews, NFFHF (tie), Helms (tie) Duffy Daugherty FR, Helms (tie), NFFHF (tie) Ara Parseghian AP, FWAA, NFFHF, Helms, FN Paul “Bear” Bryant UPI Barry Switzer Dunkel, FR, Devold Dan Devine All but FR (tie) Paul “Bear” Bryant FR (tie) Lou Holtz All but Berry, Sag.

awarded by the Football Writers Association of America (FWAA) and by the National Football Foundation and College Hall of Fame. The FWAA has presented the Grantland Rice Award since 1954, with Notre Dame teams earning the trophy in 1966, ’73, ’77 and ’88. The National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame has presented the MacArthur Bowl to its national champion since 1959. Notre Dame has won it on five occasions – 1964, ’66 (tie with Michigan), ’73, ’77 and ’88. A variety of other rating systems have been recognized through the years in attempting to determine the nation’s top college football team each season. Notre Dame generally is considered to have earned 11 consensus national titles (1924, ’29, ’30, ’43, ’46, ’47, ’49, ’66, ’73, ’77 and ’88). But there have been 19 seasons in which Notre Dame has qualified as a national champion from at least one legitimate poll, with all teams receiving national championship mention and their individual selectors noted in the chart to the left.

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SUPER SEASONS Winning is Part of the Notre Dame Tradition

The Fighting Irish have had 12 unbeaten, untied seasons, 10 others in which they were unbeaten but suffered one or more ties—and 28 seasons in which only a single loss spoiled an unbeaten record.

In 120 seasons of football beginning in 1887, Notre Dame has had 102 winning years, only 13 seasons with a losing record (1887, ’88, 1933, ’56, ’60, ’63, ’81, ’85, ’86, ’99, 2001, ’03, ’07) and only five others with a .500 mark (1950, ’59, ’61, ’62 and 2004).

Here is a compilation of Notre Dame’s outstanding seasons in its football history: UNBEATEN Year ....Record ................................ Tie 1892 .... 1-0-1 ................Hillsdale (10-10) 1903 .... 8-0-1 ..............Northwestern (0-0) 1907 .... 6-0-1 ......................Indiana (0-0) 1909 .... 7-0-1 .................. Marquette (0-0) 1911 .... 6-0-2 .................. Pittsburgh (0-0) ......................................... Marquette (0-0) 1941 .... 8-0-1 ......................... Army (0-0) 1946 .... 8-0-1 ......................... Army (0-0) 1948 .... 9-0-1 ...................... USC (14-14) 1953 .... 9-0-1 ..................... Iowa (14-14) 1966 .... 9-0-1 ....... Michigan State (10-10)

UNBEATEN, UNTIED Year ....Record .........................Coach 1889 .... 1-0......................................None 1912 .... 7-0......................... John L. Marks 1913 .... 7-0...........................Jesse Harper 1919 .... 9-0..........................Knute Rockne 1920 .... 9-0..........................Knute Rockne 1924 .... 10-0........................Knute Rockne 1929 .... 9-0..........................Knute Rockne 1930 .... 10-0........................Knute Rockne 1947 .... 9-0............................ Frank Leahy 1949 .... 10-0.......................... Frank Leahy 1973 .... 11-0......................Ara Parseghian 1988 .... 12-0..............................Lou Holtz

IRISH NEAR TOP OF WINNING PERCENTAGE LIST Notre Dame ranks as one of the winningest teams in college football history based on its .7364 winning percentage over 120 seasons of football and a 831-284-42 record during that period. Notre Dame is third in overall wins behind only Michigan (872) and Texas (832). The NCAA Top 20 teams in terms of winning percentage entering the 2009 season:

1.

Team Michigan

Years W 129 872

L 295

T 36

Bowl Games Pct. W L T .7398 16 20 0

2.

NOTRE DAME

120

831

284

42

.7364 14

15

0

3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 9. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 17. 19. 20.

Texas Oklahoma Ohio State Alabama Penn State USC Nebraska Boise State Tennessee Florida State Georgia LSU Miami (Florida) Auburn Miami (Ohio) South Florida Arizona State Washington

116 114 119 114 122 116 119 41 112 62 115 115 82 116 121 12 96 119

832 791 807 799 800 766 817 339 775 459 723 700 544 681 649 87 545 650

317 297 306 316 308 303 337 144 327 221 384 383 310 395 379 52 334 400

33 53 53 53 41 54 40 2 53 17 54 47 19 47 44 0 24 50

.7179 .7164 .7148 .7085 .7067 .7061 .7010 .7010 .6939 .6707 .6460 .6403 .6340 .6273 .6259 .6259 .6168 .6136

16 16 21 14 11 16 16 4 12 9 12 18 15 13 3 1 11 14

0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 1 0 2 0 0 1 0

15 24 13 19 22 31 20 4 19 20 17 21 19 19 6 2 12 15

ONE LOSS Year ....Record ..............................Loss 1887 .... 0-1....................... Michigan (8-0) 1893 .... 4-1.........................Chicago (8-0) 1894 .... 3-1-1 ................... Albion (19-12) 1895 .... 3-1............ Indiana Artillary (18-0) 1897 .... 4-1-1 ...................Chicago (34-5) 1901 .... 8-1-1 ..............Northwestern (2-0) 1906 .... 6-1........................Indiana (12-0) 1908 .... 8-1..................... Michigan (12-6) 1910 .... 4-1-1 ......... Michigan State (17-0) 1915 .... 7-1...................Nebraska (20-19) 1916 .... 8-1.........................Army (30-10) 1917 .... 6-1-1 ...................Nebraska (7-0) 1918 .... 3-1-2 ......... Michigan State (13-7) 1921 .... 10-1......................... Iowa (10-7) 1922 .... 8-1-1 .................Nebraska (14-6) 1923 .... 9-1.....................Nebraska (14-7) 1926 .... 9-1.............. Carnegie Tech (19-0) 1927 .... 7-1-1 ....................... Army (18-0) 1935 .... 7-1-1 ............Northwestern (14-7) 1938 .... 8-1............................ USC (13-0) 1943 .... 9-1............... Great Lakes (19-14) 1954 .... 9-1...................... Purdue (27-14) 1964 .... 9-1.......................... USC (20-17) 1970 .... 10-1........................ USC (38-28) 1977 .... 11-1.............. Mississippi (20-13) 1989 .... 12-1..................... Miami (27-10) 1992 .... 10-1-1 ...............Stanford (33-16) 1993 .... 11-1.........Boston College (41-39)

THE NCAA’S TOP 20 TEAMS IN VICTORIES HEADING INTO 2009: 1.

Michigan

872

11. Georgia

2.

Texas

832

12. LSU

700

3.

NOTRE DAME

831

13. Auburn

681

4.

Nebraska

817

14. Syracuse

674

5.

Ohio State

807

15. West Virginia

672

6.

Penn State

800

16. Colorado

663

7.

Alabama

799

17. Georgia Tech

662

8.

Oklahoma

791

18. Texas A&M

659

9.

Tennessee

775

19. Washington

650

766

20. Miami (Ohio)

649

10. USC

723

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POSTSEASON

GOING BOWLING Notre Dame Football and Bowl Games Go Hand in Hand

IRISH BOWL RECORD (14-15)

W

hen it comes to bowl games, the University of Notre Dame has one of the country’s richest traditions in postseason matchups. The Irish have an overall record of 14-15 in bowl competition and have appeared in New Year’s Day bowls in 10 of the last 22 years. Notre Dame made its bowl debut in 1925 when it defeated Stanford, 27-10, in the Rose Bowl. School policy kept the Irish out of the bowl scene for 45 years, but revision of that policy was made in November 1969 by Rev. Edmund P. Joyce, C.S.C., who was then Notre Dame’s executive vice president. He noted that many Notre Dame athletes had engaged in NCAA postseason playoffs in other sports, and that there was a need to finance minority student academic programs and scholarships, so the Irish began playing in bowl games again.

Notre Dame is one of only four schools to play in each of the following New Year’s Day bowls: Rose, Cotton, Sugar, and Fiesta.

SEASON 1924 1969 1970 1972 1973 1974 1976 1977 1978 1980 1983 1984 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1997 1998 2000 2002 2004 2005 2006 2008

BOWL WINS SCHOOL 1. Penn State 2. Nebraska Florida State 4. Tennessee Alabama 6. USC Georgia 8. Oklahoma 9. Notre Dame Miami Michigan

WINS 22 20 20 19 19 17 17 15 14 14 14

BOWL (DATE) Rose (Jan. 1, 1925) Cotton (Jan. 1, 1970) Cotton (Jan. 1, 1971) Orange (Jan. 1, 1973) Sugar (Dec. 31, 1973) Orange (Jan. 1, 1975) Gator (Dec. 27, 1976) Cotton (Jan. 1, 1978) Cotton (Jan. 1, 1979) Sugar (Jan. 1, 1981) Liberty (Dec. 29, 1983) Aloha (Dec. 29, 1984) Cotton (Jan. 1, 1988) Fiesta (Jan. 2, 1989) Orange (Jan. 1, 1990) Orange (Jan. 1, 1991) Sugar (Jan. 1, 1992) Cotton (Jan. 1, 1993) Cotton (Jan. 1, 1994) Fiesta (Jan. 2, 1995) Orange (Jan. 1, 1996) Independence (Dec. 28, 1997) Gator (Jan. 1, 1999) Fiesta (Jan. 1, 2001) Gator (Jan. 1, 2003) Insight (Dec. 28, 2004) Fiesta (Jan. 2, 2006) Sugar (Jan. 3, 2007) Hawai’i (Dec. 24, 2008)

OPPONENT Stanford Texas Texas Nebraska Alabama Alabama Penn State Texas Houston Georgia Boston College SMU Texas A&M West Virginia Colorado Colorado Florida Texas A&M Texas A&M Colorado Florida State LSU Georgia Tech Oregon State North Carolina State Oregon State Ohio State LSU Hawai’i

SCORE W, 27-10 L, 17-21 W, 24-11 L, 6-40 W, 24-23 W, 13-11 W, 20-9 W, 38-10 W, 35-34 L, 10-17 W, 19-18 L, 20-27 L, 10-35 W, 34-21 W, 21-6 L, 9-10 W, 39-28 W, 28-3 W, 24-21 L, 24-41 L, 26-31 L, 9-27 L, 28-35 L, 9-41 L, 6-28 L, 21-38 L, 20-34 L, 14-41 W, 49-21

Italics indicate Notre Dame victories.

Jimmy Clausen and Golden Tate hold the 2008 Sheraton Hawai’i Bowl Championship and Most Valuable Player trophies. Clausen and Tate shared MVP honors as the Irish defeated Hawai’i 49-21 on Christmas Eve 2008 in Honolulu.

BOWL APPEARANCES 1. 2. 3. 5. 6. 7. 9. 10.

SCHOOL Nebraska Alabama Ohio State Michigan Penn State Tennessee Texas Georgia Florida State Notre Dame

NO. 36 34 34 34 33 31 31 31 30 29

W-L-T (20-16) (19-14-1) (13-21) (15-19) (22-11) (19-12) (15-16) (17-12-2) (20-9-1) (14-15)

*NOTE: The Bowl Appearances and Bowl Wins boxes represent how Notre Dame and other schools have fared in postseason bowl competition during the past 39 years (beginning in 1969, the first season the Irish began playing in bowl games on a regular basis).

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BOWL APPEARANCES 1984 ALOHA BOWL

1991 ORANGE BOWL

SMU 27, Notre Dame 20 December 29, 1984 SMU came in ranked 10th according to both the Associated Press and United Press International with a 9-2 record. Notre Dame came in ranked 17th by AP and 18th by UPI with a 7-4 record. The SMU victory boosted the Mustangs to eighth in both final wire service polls, while Notre Dame dropped out of both polls.

Colorado 10, Notre Dame 9 January 1, 1991 Colorado came in ranked first in both the Associated Press and United Press International polls with its 10-1-1 record. Notre Dame came in ranked fifth by AP and sixth by UPI with a 9-2 record. The Colorado victory left the Buffs first according to AP and second by UPI. Notre Dame finished sixth in both polls.

1988 COTTON BOWL

1992 SUGAR BOWL

Texas A&M 35, Notre Dame 10 January 1, 1988 Texas A&M came in ranked 13th according to both the Associated Press and United Press International with a 9-2 record. Notre Dame came in ranked 12th by AP and 14th by UPI with an 8-3 record. The Texas A&M victory boosted the Aggies to ninth in the final UPI polls and 10th according to AP. Notre Dame fell to 17th in the final AP poll and dropped out of the UPI rankings completely.

Notre Dame 39, Florida 28 January 1, 1992 Florida came in ranked third according to the Associated Press and fourth according to USA Today/CNN with a 10-1 record. Notre Dame came in ranked 18th in both polls with a 9-3 record. The Notre Dame victory left the Gators seventh according to AP and eighth by USA Today/CNN. The Irish finished 12th according to USA Today/CNN and 13th by AP.

1989 FIESTA BOWL

1993 COTTON BOWL

Notre Dame 34, West Virginia 21 January 2, 1989 West Virginia came in ranked third according to both the Associated Press and United Press International with an 11-0 record. Notre Dame came in ranked first by both AP and UPI with an 11-0 record. The Notre Dame victory left the Irish atop both polls in the final rankings. West Virginia dropped to fifth in both final polls.

Notre Dame 28, Texas A&M 3 January 1, 1993 Texas A&M came in ranked third by USA Today/CNN and fourth by the Associated Press with a 12-0 record. Notre Dame came in ranked fifth in both polls with a 9-1-1 mark. The Irish victory put them fourth in the final polls and placed the Aggies sixth according to USA Today/ CNN and seventh by AP.

1990 ORANGE BOWL

1994 COTTON BOWL

Notre Dame 21, Colorado 6 January 1, 1990 Colorado came in ranked first in both the Associated Press and United Press International polls with its perfect 11-0 record. Notre Dame came in ranked fourth in both polls with an 11-1 record. The Notre Dame victory boosted the Irish to second in the final AP poll and third according to UPI. Colorado dropped to fourth in both polls.

Notre Dame 24, Texas A&M 21 January 1, 1994 Texas A&M came in ranked sixth by USA Today/CNN and seventh by the Associated Press with a 10-1 record. Notre Dame came in rated fourth by both Associated Press and USA Today/CNN with a 10-1 mark. The Notre Dame victory pushed the Irish to second in both polls. The Aggies dropped to eighth in both polls.

Rodney Culver finds the endzone on a 5-yard run against West Virginia in the 1989 Fiesta Bowl.

Tom Clements operates out of the back of his own endzone to help lead the Irish to a 13-11 upset victory over number one Alabama in the 1975 Orange Bowl. The win gave head coach Ara Parseghian a fitting finale to his storied coaching career.

Jerome Bettis dives into the endzone for his third TD against Texas A&M during the 1993 Cotton Bowl. 74

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BOWL APPEARANCES CONTINUED

1995 FIESTA BOWL Colorado 41, Notre Dame 24 January 2, 1995 Colorado came in ranked fourth by the Associated Press and fifth by USA Today/CNN with a 10-1 record. Notre Dame came in unranked with a 6-4-1 record. The Colorado victory left the Buffs third in both polls, while Notre Dame remained unranked.

1996 ORANGE BOWL Florida State 31, Notre Dame 26 January 1, 1996 Florida State came in ranked eighth by both the Associated Press and USA Today/CNN with a 9-2 record. Notre Dame came in with a 9-2 mark and was ranked sixth by AP and ninth in USA Today/CNN. The victory by Florida State put the Seminoles fourth in the final AP poll and fifth in USA Today/CNN. Notre Dame finished 11th in AP and 13th in the USA Today/CNN.

1997 INDEPENDENCE BOWL LSU 27, Notre Dame 9 December 28, 1997 LSU came in ranked 15th by both the Associated Press and USA Today/ ESPN with an 8-3 record. Notre Dame came into the contest with a 7-5 mark and was unranked. The victory by LSU gave the Tigers a final ranking of 13th in both the AP and USA Today/ESPN poll.

Armando Allen crosses the goal line on an 18-yard pass from Jimmy Clausen in the third quarter of the 2008 Hawai’i Bowl.

1999 GATOR BOWL Georgia Tech 35, Notre Dame 28 January 1, 1999 Georgia Tech came in ranked 12th by the Associated Press and 14th by USA Today/ESPN with a 9-2 record. Notre Dame came into the contest with a 9-2 mark and was ranked 17th by the Associated Press and 14th by USA Today/ESPN. The victory by Georgia Tech gave the Yellow Jackets a final ranking of ninth in the AP and 11th in the USA Today/ESPN. Notre Dame was ranked 22nd in both final polls.

the dismissal of Tyrone Willingham. Neither team appeared in the national rankings after the game.

2006 FIESTA BOWL Ohio State 34, Notre Dame 20 January 2, 2006 Notre Dame entered the game ranked fifth in the Associated Press and Harris polls, sixth in the USA Today and BCS standings. Ohio State entered the game ranked fourth in the AP, Harris, USA Today and BCS standings. Ohio State’s victory ended up ranking the Buckeyes fourth in both the AP and USA Today top 25. The Irish fell to ninth in the final AP voting and 11th in the USA Today listing.

2001 TOSTITOS FIESTA BOWL Oregon State 41, Notre Dame 9 January 1, 2001 Oregon State came in ranked fifth by the Associated Press and sixth by USA Today/ESPN with a 10-1 record. Notre Dame came into the contest with a 9-2 mark and was ranked 10th by both the Associated Press and USA Today/ESPN. The victory by Oregon State gave the Beavers a final ranking of fourth in the AP and fifth in the USA Today/ ESPN poll. Notre Dame was ranked 15th in the AP poll and 16th in the final USA Today/ESPN poll.

2007 SUGAR BOWL LSU 41, Notre Dame 14 January 3, 2007 Notre Dame entered the game ranked 10th in the Harris Poll and BCS Standings, as well as 11th in the Associated Press and USA Today polls. LSU entered the game ranked fourth in the AP, Harris, USA Today and BCS standings. The Tigers’ victory ended up ranking LSU third in both the AP and USA Today top 25. The Irish fell to 17th in the final AP voting and 19th in the USA Today listing.

2003 GATOR BOWL North Carolina State 28, Notre Dame 6 January 1, 2003 North Carolina State came in ranked 17th by both the Associated Press and USA Today/ESPN with a 10-3 record. Notre Dame came into the contest with a 10-2 mark and was ranked 11th by the Associated Press and 12th by USA Today/ESPN. The victory by North Carolina State boosted the Wolfpack to a final ranking of 12th in the AP and 11th in the USA Today/ESPN poll. Notre Dame was ranked 17th in both the AP poll and final USA Today/ESPN poll.

2008 HAWAI’I BOWL Notre Dame 49, Hawai’i 17 December 24, 2008 Both teams entered the Christmas Eve match-up at Aloha Stadium unranked, but the Irish prevailed, ending a nine-game bowl losing streak. QB Jimmy Clausen set Notre Dame bowl records for passing yards and touchdowns while Armando Allen returned a kickoff 96 yards for a touchdown as the Irish rolled to victory. Neither team finished ranked nationally.

2004 INSIGHT BOWL Oregon State 38, Notre Dame 21 December 28, 2004 Both teams entered the contest unranked by both national polls. The Irish were under the direction of interim head coach Kent Baer after 76

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NOTRE DAME 2009 FOOTBALL

HEISMAN TROPHY An Enduring Legacy Among The Fighting Irish

T

he John W. Heisman Memorial Trophy Award is presented each year to the top college football player by the Downtown Athletic Club of New York. First known as the D.A.C. Trophy, the award was renamed in 1936 for John W. Heisman, the first athletic director of the Downtown Athletic Club, a football player at Pennsylvania and Brown, and a coach for 36 years. Heisman coached teams at Auburn, Oberlin, Clemson, Akron, Pennsylvania, Rice, Washington and Jefferson and Georgia Tech. The bronze trophy was sculpted by Frank Eliscu, with the help of Notre Dame “Four Horseman” Jim Crowley, whose Fordham players posed as models. Since the inception of the Heisman Trophy in 1935, seven Notre Dame players have won the award (no school has captured more). The seven Notre Dame players to win the Heisman are: Angelo Bertelli (1943), John Lujack (1947), Leon Hart (1949), John Lattner (1953), Paul Hornung (1956), John Huarte (1964) and Notre Dame’s most recent winner, Tim Brown (1987). Notre Dame has had a player finish among the Top 10 in the Heisman voting in 35 of the 73 years the award has been presented. In addition to the seven winners, Notre Dame has had three players finish second (Bertelli in ’41, Joe Theismann in ’70 and Raghib Ismail in ’90), six finish third (Bill Shakespeare in ’35, Lujack in ’46, Nick Eddy in ’66, Terry Hanratty in ’68, Ken MacAfee in ’77 and Brady Quinn in ’06), five finish fourth (Creighton Miller in ’43, Ralph Guglielmi in ’54, Tom Clements in ’74, Tony Rice in ’89 and Quinn in ’05), seven finish fifth (Bob Williams

All seven of Notre Dame’s Heisman Trophy winners were together at Tim Brown’s induction in 1987. From left to right: John Lujack (1947), Angelo Bertelli (1943), Leon Hart (1949), Tim Brown (1987), Paul Hornung (1956), John Huarte (1964) and John Lattner (1953). in ’49, Lattner in ’52, Hornung in ’55, Jack Snow in ’64, Ross Browner in ’77, Vagas Ferguson in ’79 and Reggie Brooks in ’92) and six finish sixth (Bertelli in ’42, Bob Kelly in ’44, Frank Dancewicz in ’45, Williams in ’50, Hanratty in ’66 and Mike McCoy in ’69).

A N G EL O BER T EL L I , 1 9 4 3 Frank Leahy’s switch to the T-formation starting in 1942 made a star of Bertelli, a Springfield, Mass., quarterback. Despite playing in just six of 10 games during the 1943 campaign, Bertelli played well enough to enable Notre Dame to average 43.5 points per game during the first six games of 1943 (before the Marine Corps called him into service). He threw 10 touchdown passes in those six games and helped the Irish to the national title despite a final game loss to Great Lakes while Bertelli was already at boot camp. In his senior year, he was 25-of-36 in the air for 511 yards, while his career numbers were 169-of-324 for 2,582 yards and 29 touchdowns. He joined the National Football Foundation Hall of Fame in 1972. Bertelli passed away on June 26, 1999.

J O H N L UJ A C K, 1 9 4 7 When Angelo Bertelli was called to duty by the Marine Corps, this Connellsville, Pa., native stepped in and helped lead the Irish to three national titles and established himself as one of the great T-formation quarterbacks in college football history. Lujack spent nearly three years in the Navy, but returned in time to earn consensus All-America honors as a junior and senior on Notre Dame teams in 1946 and ’47 that went undefeated. He was 61-of-109 in the air his senior year for 777 yards and nine touchdowns, while his career numbers were 144-of-280 for 2,080 yards and 19 touchdowns. As a senior, Lujack earned the Associated Press Male Athlete of the Year award.

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HEISMAN TROPHY CONTINUED

L EO N H A R T , 1 9 4 9 Hart is one of just two linemen ever to win the Heisman Trophy, joining Larry Kelly of Yale in 1936. The Turtle Creek, Pa., native was one of the last of the two-way players with the advent of two-platoon football. Hart earned the reputation as an outstanding blocker and superb rusher on defense, in addition to his strong receiving skills. A four-time letter-winner, he never played on the losing side during his career in an Irish uniform. The Notre Dame teams of 1946, ’47, ’48 and ’49 combined to go an incredible 36-0-2 and claim three national championships. Hart made 49 pass receptions in his career for 751 yards and 13 touchdowns. He was elected to the National Football Foundation Hall of Fame in 1973. Hart died on Sept. 25, 2002.

Since the inception of the Heisman Trophy in 1935, seven Notre Dame players have won the award.

J O H N L A T T N ER , 1 9 5 3 Lattner claimed the Trophy in the second-closest balloting in Heisman history—despite not leading the Irish in rushing, passing, receiving or scoring. The Chicago native nosed out Minnesota’s Paul Geil for the award, benefitting from helping the Irish to a 9-0-1 record and to national title recognition from all but two wire services. He made his mark by running, catching and punting, while also returning punts and kickoffs and intercepting 13 passes in his career. He established a Notre Dame record for all-purpose yards—from rushing, receiving and runbacks—a mark that stood until Vagas Ferguson broke it in 1979. Lattner was elected to the National Football Foundation Hall of Fame in 1979.

P A UL H O R N UN G , 1 9 5 6 An outstanding all-around athlete who played quarterback, left halfback, fullback and safety, this Louisville, Ky., native remains the only player to win the Heisman Trophy and play for a losing team—the Irish went 2-8 in 1956. As a junior, he ran for one score, threw for another and intercepted two passes in a victory over fourth-ranked Navy. He also rallied the Irish to a come-from-behind victory against Iowa with a touchdown pass and game-winning field goal in the final minutes. In a loss to USC, he threw and ran for 354 yards, an NCAA high that year. As a senior, he ranked third nationally in total offense (1,337) and accounted for more than half of the Irish scoring. Hornung was elected to the National Football Foundation Hall of Fame in 1985 and the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1986.

J O H N H UA R T E, 1 9 6 4 The Heisman Trophy victory of this Santa Ana, Calif., product ranks as one of the biggest upsets in the award’s history, considering the recipient missed much of his sophomore season due to injury and didn’t play enough as a junior to win a monogram. Behind the aerial efforts of Huarte and end Jack Snow (60 receptions for 1,114 yards and a record nine touchdowns in 1964), first-year coach Ara Parseghian turned the Irish from a 2-7 team in 1963 to a 9-1 squad that almost won the national title in 1964. Huarte set 12 Irish records that year with a 114-for-205 effort in the air for 2,062 yards and 16 touchdowns. He ended the year ranked third nationally in total offense. Huarte was enshrined in the College Football Hall of Fame in 2006.

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HEISMAN TROPHY CONTINUED

In addition to the seven winners, Notre Dame has had three players finish second, six players finish third, five players finish fourth and seven players finish fifth.

T I M BR O WN , 1 9 8 7 The Dallas, Texas, native burst onto the scene as a junior with a scintillating season-ending performance in a come-from-behind upset of USC, then used back-to-back punt returns for touchdowns in an early season game in 1987 against Michigan State to cement his Heisman bid. Brown ranked third nationally in all-purpose yardage as a junior and sixth as a senior. He finished his career as Notre Dame’s all-time leader in receiving yards (2,493) and returned a remarkable six kicks for touchdowns (three punts, three kickoffs). Brown has gone on to a stellar professional career with the Oakland Raiders, being selected to play in the NFL Pro Bowl 11 times. Recently retired, Brown played 16 of his 17 years with the Raiders. He ranks second all-time in career receiving yards (14,934) and third in career touchdowns (100) and catches (1,094). Brown played in the 2003 Super Bowl as well. He is a member of the College Football Hall of Fame’s Class of 2009.

HEISMAN WINNERS Here is a year-by-year listing of Heisman Trophy winners and Irish players who placed in the voting: 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943

Jay Berwanger, Chicago Larry Kelly, Yale Clint Frank, Yale Davey O’Brien, TCU Nile Kinnick, Iowa Tom Harmon, Michigan Bruce Smith, Minnesota Frank Sinkwich, Georgia Angelo Bertelli, Notre Dame

1944 1945 1946 1947 1948 1949

Les Horvath, Ohio State Doc Blanchard, Army Glenn Davis, Army John Lujack, Notre Dame Doak Walker, SMU Leon Hart, Notre Dame

1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966

Vic Janowicz, Ohio State Dick Kazmaier, Princeton Billy Vessels, Oklahoma John Lattner, Notre Dame Alan Ameche, Wisconsin Hopalong Cassidy, Ohio State Paul Hornung, Notre Dame John David Crow, Texas A&M Pete Dawkins, Army Billy Cannon, LSU Joe Bellino, Navy Ernie Davis, Syracuse Terry Baker, Oregon State Roger Staubach, Navy John Huarte, Notre Dame Mike Garrett, USC Steve Spurrier, Florida

1967 1968 1969 1970

Gary Beban, UCLA O.J. Simpson, USC Steve Owens, Oklahoma Jim Plunkett, Stanford

Bill Shakespeare (3rd) None None Whitey Beinor (9th) None None Angelo Bertelli (2nd) Angelo Bertelli (6th) Creighton Miller (4th) Jim White (9th) Bob Kelly (6th) Frank Dancewicz (6th) John Lujack (3rd) No others None Bob Williams (5th) Emil Sitko (8th) Bob Williams (6th) None John Lattner (5th) No others Ralph Guglielmi (4th) Paul Hornung (5th) No others None Nick Pietrosante (10th) Monty Stickles (9th) None None None None Jack Snow (5th) Bill Wolski (11th) Nick Eddy (3rd) Terry Hanratty (6th) Terry Hanratty (9th) Terry Hanratty (3rd) Mike McCoy (6th) Joe Theismann (2nd)

1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977

Pat Sullivan, Auburn Johnny Rodgers, Nebraska John Cappelletti, Penn State Archie Griffin, Ohio State Archie Griffin, Ohio State Tony Dorsett, Pittsburgh Earl Campbell, Texas

1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989

Billy Sims, Oklahoma Charles White, USC George Rogers, South Carolina Marcus Allen, USC Herschel Walker, Georgia Mike Rozier, Nebraska Doug Flutie, Boston College Bo Jackson, Auburn Vinny Testaverde, Miami (Florida) Tim Brown, Notre Dame Barry Sanders, Oklahoma State Andre Ware, Houston

1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008

Ty Detmer, BYU Desmond Howard, Michigan Gino Torretta, Miami (Florida) Charlie Ward, Florida State Rashaan Salaam, Colorado Eddie George, Ohio State Danny Wuerffel, Florida Charles Woodson, Michigan Ricky Williams, Texas Ron Dayne, Wisconsin Chris Weinke, Florida State Eric Crouch, Nebraska Carson Palmer, USC Jason White, Oklahoma Matt Leinart, USC Reggie Bush, USC Troy Smith, Ohio State Tim Tebow, Florida Sam Bradford, Oklahoma

Walt Patulski (9th) None None Tom Clements (4th) Steve Niehaus (12th) None Ken MacAfee (3rd) Ross Browner (5th) None Vagas Ferguson (5th) None None None Allen Pinkett (16th) None Allen Pinkett (8th) None No others None Tony Rice (4th) Raghib Ismail (10th) Raghib Ismail (2nd) None Reggie Brooks (5th) None None None None None None None None None None None None Brady Quinn (4th) Brady Quinn (3rd) None None

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KNUTE ROCKNE Rockne, who was inducted into the National Football Foundation Hall of Fame in 1951 — the first year of inductions — revolutionized the game of football with his wide-ranging ideas and innovations. Rockne was the first football coach to take his team all over the country and initiate intersectional rivalries. The Irish competed in a national arena. He challenged the best football teams in the land and almost always won. Using his medical and anatomical knowledge, Rockne designed his own equipment and uniforms. He reduced the amount of bulk and weight of the equipment, while increasing its protectiveness. He also introduced the gold satin and silk pants that cut down on wind resistance. Rockne foresaw the day of the two-platoon system and often used his “shock troops,” a full team of second stringers, at the start of most games. Inspired by the precision and timing of a chorus line, Rockne added the Notre Dame shift to his playbook. In the shift, all four backs were still in motion at the snap. Opponents were so dumbfounded by the shift that they couldn’t find a consistent way to handle it. The rules board finally enacted a law against the shift. Rockne also attempted to outsmart his coaching peers by downplaying his squads’ talent. He never boasted about his team or its strengths; rather, he lamented his squad’s lack of skill every chance he got. Rockne believed that half of football strategy was passing, while most of his counterparts kept the ball on the ground. But football was never enough for Rockne. He also served as Notre Dame’s athletic director, business manager, ticket distributor, track coach and equipment manager; he wrote a newspaper column once a week; he authored three books, including a volume of juvenile fiction; Rockne was principle designer of Notre Dame Stadium; he opened a stock brokerage firm in South Bend during his last season; he was a dedicated family man to his wife Bonnie and their four children and for years raised much of the family’s food in his garden. Rockne also made several public speeches a year and served as a public spokesman for Studebaker. For all of his contributions to the game of football, Rockne was recognized as the 76th most powerful person in sports for the 20th century by The Sporting News. After the championship season of 1930, Rockne tried to get away for a much-needed rest and vacation. But he was needed in Los Angeles to make a football demonstration movie An enthusiastic flier and never one to waste time, Rockne boarded Transcontinental-Western’s Flight 599 from Kansas City to Los Angeles on March 31, 1931. Shortly after takeoff, the plane flew into a storm, became covered with ice and fell into a wheat field near Bazaar, Kan. There were no survivors.

K

nute Rockne received a rude introduction to football. As a young Norwegian immigrant to the Logan Square district of Chicago, Rockne first played the game with his immigrant neighbors on the sandlots. A slender and swift ballcarrier, Rockne broke away from his pursuers for a long run, a sure touchdown. But a rowdy group of fans for the opponents stepped in, stripped the ball away from his cradled arms and mistook his body for a punching bag. When he finally arrived home, his parents took one look at his tattered body and announced that his football career was over. But a few bumps and bruises would not keep Rockne away from the game he loved for long. With his parents’ blessing, he returned to the gridiron in high school and later emerged as the country’s most respected, innovative and successful college football coach of all time. After Rockne finished high school, he worked as a mail dispatcher with the Chicago Post Office for four years and continued his athletic endeavors at the Irving Park Athletic Club, the Central YMCA and the Illinois Athletic Club. By then he had saved enough money to continue his education and boarded the train for South Bend and Notre Dame. After a difficult first year as a scrub with the varsity, Rockne turned his attention to track where he earned a monogram and later set a school record (12-4) in the indoor pole vault. Those accomplishments gave him incentive to give football another try. This time he succeeded and eventually was named to Walter Camp’s All-America football squad as a third-string end. During his senior season (1913) when he served as captain, Rockne and his roommate, quarterback Gus Dorais, stunned Army with their deadly pass combination and handed the high-ranking Cadets a 35-13 setback. But Rockne — who also fought semi-professionally in South Bend, wrote for the student newspaper and yearbook, played flute in the school orchestra, took a major role in every student play and reached the finals of the Notre Dame marbles tournament — considered himself primarily a student. He worked his way through school, first as a janitor and then as a chemistry research assistant to Professor Julius A. Nieuwland, whose discoveries led to synthetic rubber. Rockne graduated magna cum laude with a 90.52 (on a scale of 100) grade average. Upon graduation Rockne was offered a post at Notre Dame as a graduate assistant in chemistry. He accepted that position on the condition that he be allowed to help Jesse Harper coach the football team. When Harper retired after the 1917 season, Rockne was named his successor. Under Rockne’s tutelage, Notre Dame skyrocketed to national prominence and became America’s team. With their penchant for upsetting the stronger, more established football powers throughout the land, the Irish captured the hearts of millions of Americans who viewed Notre Dame’s victories as hope for their own battles. During Rockne’s 13-year coaching tenure, Notre Dame beat Stanford in the ‘25 Rose Bowl and put together five unbeaten and untied seasons. Rockne produced 20 first-team All-Americans. His lifetime winning percentage of .881 (105-12-5) still ranks at the top of the list for both college and professional football. Rockne won the last 19 games he coached.

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WHEN THE TEAM IS AWAY, BRING THE TAILGATE HOME!

速 速

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GEORGE GIPP G

eorge Gipp, perhaps the greatest all-around player in college football history, would have become a legend even if he had overcome the streptococcic throat infection that led to his untimely death at the

age of 25. But ironically, his death on Dec. 14, 1920 — coming just two weeks after he was selected by Walter Camp as Notre Dame’s first All-American — assured Gipp’s place in Notre Dame’s history books. While on his deathbed, Gipp, who had contracted the strep throat while helping the Irish defeat Northwestern late in his senior season, made this often-repeated plea to his coach, Knute Rockne. “I’ve got to go, Rock. It’s all right. I’m not afraid. Some time, Rock, when the team is up against it, when things are wrong and the breaks are beating the boys — tell them to go in there with all they’ve got and win just one for the Gipper. I don’t know where I’ll be then, Rock. But I’ll know about it, and I’ll be happy.” Rockne waited eight years to relay Gipp’s parting request. On Nov. 10, 1928, after losing two of its first six games, an injury-riddled Notre Dame team traveled to Yankee Stadium to face unbeaten Army. According to Francis Wallace of the New York News, Rockne made this pregame speech to his under-dog Irish. “The day before he died, George Gipp asked me to wait until the situation seemed hopeless — then ask a Notre Dame team to go out and beat Army for him. This is the day, and you are the team.” Notre Dame won the game 12-6 on a pair of second-half touchdowns. Jack Chevigny scored the first on a one-yard run and, after reaching the end zone, said, “That’s one for the Gipper.” Football experts who witnessed it said the game was the greatest demonstration of inspired football ever played anywhere. Even now, more than 80 years later, every aspiring football player, or anyone facing insurmountable odds, hears the tale of the Gipper. But George Gipp should be remembered for much more than his tragic death and dying wish. Gipp left his home in Laurium, Mich., in 1916 and headed to Notre Dame with ambitions of playing baseball. But one fall afternoon Rockne spotted Gipp, who had never played football in high school, drop kicking the football 60 and 70 yards just for the fun of it. The persuasive coach, sensing Gipp’s natural athletic ability, eventually convinced Gipp to go out for the team. Gipp experienced nothing but success on the gridiron.

A four-year member of the varsity, Gipp proved to be the most versatile player Rockne ever had. He could run, he could pass and he could punt. Still holder of a handful of Notre Dame records in a variety of categories, Gipp led the Irish in rushing and passing each of his last three seasons (1918, 1919 and 1920). His career mark of 2,341 rushing yards lasted more than 50 years until Jerome Heavens broke it in 1978. Gipp did not allow a pass completion in his territory. Walter Camp named him the outstanding college player in America in 1920. Gipp was voted into the National Football Hall of Fame in 1951. During Gipp’s career, Notre Dame compiled a 27-2-3 record, including a 19-0-1 mark in his last 20 games. With Gipp’s help the Irish outscored their opponents 506 to 97 in those contests. Notre Dame was undefeated in 1919 and 1920 and the Irish were declared Champions of the West. Despite his football achievements, Gipp’s first love remained baseball. He played centerfield for the Irish and had planned to join the Chicago Cubs after graduation.

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THE FOUR HORSEMEN It was 85 years ago that a dramatic nickname coined by a poetic sportswriter and the quick-thinking actions of a clever student publicity aide transformed the Notre Dame backfield of Stuhldreher, Crowley, Miller and Layden into the most fabled quartet in college football history.

Q

uarterback Harry Stuhldreher, left halfback Jim Crowley, right halfback Don Miller and fullback Elmer Layden had run rampant through Irish opponents’ defenses since coach Knute Rockne devised the lineup in 1922 during their sophomore season. But the foursome needed some help from Grantland Rice, a sportswriter for the New York Herald-Tribune, to achieve football immortality. After Notre Dame’s 13-7 victory over Army on Oct. 18, 1924, Rice penned the most famous passage in the history of sports journalism. “Outlined against a blue, gray October sky the Four Horsemen rode again. In dramatic lore they are known as famine, pestilence, destruction and death. These are only aliases. Their real names are: Stuhldreher, Miller, Crowley and Layden. They formed the crest of the South Bend cyclone before which another fighting Army team was swept over the precipice at the Polo Grounds this afternoon as 55,000 spectators peered down upon the bewildering panorama spread out upon the green plain below.“ George Strickler, then Rockne’s student publicity aide and later sports editor of the Chicago Tribune, made sure the name stuck. After the team arrived back in South Bend, he posed the four players, dressed in their uniforms, on the backs of four horses from a livery stable in town. The wire services picked up the now-famous photo, and the legendary status of the Four Horsemen was insured. The 1999 season marked the 75th anniversary of the Four Horsemen’s senior year and decendents of each member of that group were honored at the Notre Dame vs. Navy game on Oct. 30, 1999. “At the time, I didn’t realize the impact it would have,” Crowley said later. “But the thing just kind of mushroomed. After the splurge in the press, the sports fans of the nation got interested in us along with other sportswriters. Our record helped, too. If we’d lost a couple, I don’t think we would have been remembered.” After that win over Army, Notre Dame’s third straight victory of the young season, the Irish were rarely threatened the rest of the year. A 27-10 win over Stanford in the 1925 Rose Bowl gave Rockne and Notre Dame the national championship and a perfect 10-0 record. As it usually is with legends, the Four Horsemen earned their spot in gridiron history. Although none of the four stood taller than six feet and none of the four weighed more than 162 pounds, the Four Horsemen might comprise the greatest backfield ever. As a unit, Stuhldreher, Crowley, Miller and Layden played 30 games and only lost to one team, Nebraska, twice. Stuhldreher, a 5-7, 151-pounder from Massillon, Ohio, was a self-assured leader who not only could throw accurately but also

returned punts and proved a solid blocker. He emerged as the starting signalcaller four games into his sophomore season in 1922. He was often labeled cocky, feisty and ambitious, but his field generalship was unmatched. Crowley, who came to Notre Dame in 1921 from Green Bay, Wis., stood 5-11 and weighed 162 pounds. Known as “Sleepy Jim” for his drowsy-eyed appearance, Crowley outmaneuvered many a defender with his clever, shifty ballcarrying. Miller, a native of Defiance, Ohio, followed his three brothers to Notre Dame. At 5-11, 160 pounds, Miller proved to be the team’s breakaway threat. According to Rockne, Miller was the greatest openfield runner he ever coached. Layden, the fastest of the quartet, became the Irish defensive star with his timely interceptions and also handled the punting chores. The 6-0, 162-pounder from Davenport, Iowa, boasted 10-second speed in the 100-yard dash. After graduation, the lives of the Four Horsemen took similar paths. All began coaching careers with three of the four occupying top positions. Layden coached at his alma mater for seven years and compiled a 47-13-3 record. He also served as athletic director at Notre Dame. After a business career in Chicago, Layden died in 1973 at the age of 70. Crowley coached Vince Lombardi at Fordham before entering business in Cleveland. He died in 1986 at the age of 83. Stuhldreher, who died in 1965 at the age of 63, became athletic director and football coach at Wisconsin. Miller left coaching after four years at Georgia Tech and began practicing law in Cleveland. He was appointed U.S. District Attorney for Northern Ohio by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Miller died in 1979 at the age of 77. All four players eventually were elected to the National Football Foundation Hall of Fame — Layden in 1951, Stuhldreher in 1958, Crowley in 1966 and Miller in 1970. 88

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HONORS

IRISH IN THE HALL

The College Football Hall of Fame Recognizes 49 Notre Dame Players and Coaches 1974

Lou Holtz was a 2008 College Football Hall of Fame Inductee.

1979 1982 1983 1983 1984 1985 1985 1987 1988 1990 1992 1993 1994 1995 1997 1999

Heartley (Hunk) Anderson John (Clipper) Smith Creighton Miller Zygmont (Ziggy) Czarobski Frank (Nordy) Hoffmann John Lattner Bert Metzger Bill (Moose) Fischer Bill Shakespeare Emil (Red) Sitko Paul Hornung Fred Miller Tommy Yarr Bob Williams Wayne Millner Jim Lynch Alan Page Jerry Groom Jim Martin Ken MacAfee Ross Browner

HB OG OG HB HB QB T C QB E LB DE C/LB E/T TE DE

2000 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009

Bob Dove Ralph Guglielmi Joe Theismann John Huarte Chris Zorich Tim Brown

E QB QB QB NT WR

1975 1976 1977 1978

COACHES Year 1951 1970

Coach Knute Rockne Frank Leahy

Record 105-12-5 87-11-9

1971 1980 1985 2008

Jesse Harper Ara Parseghian Dan Devine Lou Holtz

34-5-1 95-17-4 53-16-1 100-30-2

Years Coached 1918-30 1941-43, 1946-53 1913-17 1964-74 1975-80 1986-96

PLAYERS Year 1951 1951 1954 1958 1960

Player George Gipp Elmer Layden Frank Carideo Harry Stuhldreher John Lujack

1963 1965 1966 1966 1968 1970 1971 1972 1972 1973 1974

George Connor Jack Cannon Edgar (Rip) Miller Jim Crowley Adam Walsh Don Miller Louis (Red) Salmon Angelo Bertelli Ray Eichenlaub Leon Hart Marchy Schwartz

Position HB FB QB QB QB OT G OT HB C HB FB QB FB TE HB

Years Played 1917-20 1922-24 1928-30 1922-24 1943, 1946-47 1946-47 1927-29 1922-24 1922-24 1922-24 1922-24 1900-03 1941-43 1911-14 1946-49 1929-31

OG

1918-21

OG HB OT

1925-27 1941-43 1942-43, 1946-47 1930-31

OG

1951-53 1928-30 1945-48 1933-35 1946-49 1954-56 1926-28 1929-31 1948-50 1933-35 1964-66 1964-66 1948-50 1946-49 1974-77 1973, 1975-77 1940-42 1951-54 1968-70 1962-64 1988-90 1984-87

Heisman Trophy Trophy Winner Winner Tim Tim Heisman Brown is is aa member member of of the the Brown College Football Football Hall Hall of of Fame Fame College Class of of 2009. 2009. Class

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IRISH DRAFT PICKS Since the National Football League began drafting players in 1936 – starting with the initial draft on February 8, 1936, at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Philadelphia – 462 Notre Dame football players have been chosen by NFL teams, according to the NFL. Based on the statistics provided by the NFL, Notre Dame has had 61 first-round draft picks, beginning with Bill Shakespeare by Pittsburgh in 1936. Overall, the Irish have had five players (tied with USC for most) chosen as the first pick in the entire draft – QB Angelo Bertelli by Boston in 1944, QB Frank Dancewicz by Boston in 1946, E Leon Hart by Detroit in 1950, B Paul Hornung by Green Bay in 1957 and DT Walt Patulski by Buffalo in 1972.

Here’s a listing of first-round selections by NFL teams with the overall pick in parentheses:

1936

B Bill Shakespeare, Pittsburgh (3)

1944

QB Angelo Bertelli, Boston (1) B Creighton Miller, Brooklyn (3)

1945

B Frank Szymanski, Detroit (6) E John Yonakor, Philadelphia (9)

1946

QB Frank Dancewicz, Boston (1) QB John Lujack, Chicago (4) T George Connor, New York Giants (5) B Emil Sitko, Los Angeles Rams (10)

1949

QB Frank Tripucka, Philadelphia (9) G Bill Fischer, Phoenix (10)

1950

E Leon Hart, Detroit (1)

1951

B Bob Williams, Chicago (2) C Jerry Groom, Phoenix (6)

Notre Dame’s first No. 1 overall selection, Angelo Bertelli was taken by Boston in the 1944 draft.

1954

T Art Hunter, Green Bay (2) B John Lattner, Pittsburgh (7) B Neil Worden, Philadelphia (9)

1955

QB Ralph Guglielmi, Washington (3) T Frank Varrichione, Pittsburgh (6) B Joe Heap, New York Giants (8)

1957

B Paul Hornung, Green Bay (1)

1959

B Nick Pietrosante, Detroit (6)

1960

QB George Izo, New York Jets, Phoenix (2) E Monty Stickles, San Diego, San Francisco (11)

1965

WR Jack Snow, Minnesota (8)

1967

DT Alan Page, Minnesota (15) G Tom Regner, Houston (23) G Tom Seiler, New York Jets (12)

1968

DE Kevin Hardy, New Orleans (7)

1969

T George Kunz, Atlanta (2) E Jim Seymour, Los Angeles Rams (10)

Selected by Detroit, Leon Hart was the No. 1 overall draft pick in the 1950 NFL draft.

1970

DT Mike McCoy, Green Bay (2)

1972

DE Walt Patulski, Buffalo (1)

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IRISH DRAFT PICKS CONTINUED DB Clarence Ellis, Atlanta (15) DT Mike Kadish, Miami (25) 1975

DT Mike Fanning, Los Angeles Rams (9)

1976

DT Steve Niehaus, Seattle (2)

1978

TE Ken MacAfee, San Francisco (7) DE Ross Browner, Cincinnati (8) DB Luther Bradley, Detroit (11)

Quarterback John Lujack was selected as the fourth overall pick in the ’46 draft by the Chicago Bears.

1980

RB Vagas Ferguson, New England (25)

1982

LB Bob Crable, New York Jets (23)

1983

TE Tony Hunter, Buffalo (12)

1984

RB Greg Bell, Buffalo (26)

1986

DT Eric Dorsey, New York Giants (19)

1988

WR Tim Brown, Los Angeles Raiders (6)

1989

OT Andy Heck, Seattle (15)

1991

CB Todd Lyght, Los Angeles Rams (5)

1992

TE Derek Brown, New York Giants (14)

1993

QB Rick Mirer, Seattle (2) FB Jerome Bettis, Los Angeles Rams (10) CB Tom Carter, Washington (17) TE Irv Smith, New Orleans (20)

1994

DT Bryant Young, San Francisco (7) OG Aaron Taylor, Green Bay (16) FS Jeff Burris, Buffalo (27)

1997

DE Renaldo Wynn, Jacksonville (21)

1999

OT Luke Petitgout, New York Giants (19)

2003

C Jeff Faine, Cleveland (21)

2007

QB Brady Quinn, Cleveland (22)

Defensive tackle Bryant Young was chosen by the San Francisco 49ers as the seventh overall pick in the 1994 NFL draft.

The Cleveland Browns chose center Jeff Faine as the 21st overall pick in the 2003 NFL Draft.

Quarterback Brady Quinn was selected as the 22nd overall pick in the 2007 NFL Draft by the Cleveland Browns.

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COURTESY GUIDELINES Notre Dame Encourages: t &OUIVTJBTUJD TVQQPSU PG ZPVS UFBN t (PPE TQPSUTNBOTIJQ t 'BNJMZ GSJFOEMZ BUNPTQIFSF t $PNNJUNFOU UP TBGFUZ t 8FMDPNJOH BUUJUVEF UP BMM GBOT BOE WJTJUPST

Unacceptable Behaviors: t %JTSVQUJWF VOSVMZ PS JOUPYJDBUFE CFIBWJPS t 'PVM PS BCVTJWF MBOHVBHF PS PCTDFOF HFTUVSFT t 3VEFOFTT UP GFMMPX GBOT PS TUBEJVN QFSTPOOFM t 1PTTFTTJPO PG BMDPIPMJD CFWFSBHFT JO /PUSF %BNF 4UBEJVN t 7JTJCMZ JOUPYJDBUFE PS EJTSVQUJWF GBOT Fans who display unacceptable behaviors will be subject to sanctions, including refusal of admittance, removal, and arrest. 17

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COLLEGE FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME Tradition and History of Amateur Football Come Alive

T

he National Football Foundation’s College Football Hall of Fame represents the highest level of achievement for players and coaches, a shrine for amateur football. Through exhibits, programs and events, the Hall lends its visitors a vivid look into the rich tradition, pageantry and excitement of the game. The 58,000 squarefoot facility is regarded as one of the most exciting and interactive museums in the world. Upon entering the Hall, a downward spiraling 100-yard ramp leads to the core of exhibits and the heart of the College Football Hall of Fame, the Stadium Theater. The Stadium Theater’s powerful presentation educates the audience on the history and origin of the game by cleverly weaving pictures and video from the past and present, meshing images together to recreate the thrill of a college football Saturday from tailgating parties to the post-game embraces of game-day rivals. Decorated with priceless artifacts, the Hall of Champions combines impressive multimedia capabilities with football memorabilia honoring the accomplishments of each inductee while chronicling special moments in the history of the game. From the football mastermind to the professional tailgater, all visitors have a place in the Strategy Theater and Pigskin Pageantry. Kids and adults can test their basic physical skills in the Training Room and Practice Field. The Hall of Fame’s Press Box and Gridiron Plaza create the perfect setting for any occasion. The Press Box is ideal for receptions, parties, luncheons and business meetings of up to 300 guests. The Gridiron Plaza, the Hall’s 45-yard, newly renovated Sprinturf football field, has hosted alumni receptions of up to 1,500 people. In addition to the museum itself, the KeyBank Gridiron Legends Luncheon Series and the annual Enshrinement Festival bring some of college football’s greatest names to the Hall and rank among the best events in the sports hall of fame industry. One of the most anticipated programs of the year, the luncheon series has entertained audiences over the past 12 years with dozens of superstar players, legendary coaches and famous celebrities. Past KeyBank Gridiron Legends Luncheons guests include Peyton and Eli Manning, Jerome Bettis and Mike Ditka. The College Football Hall of Fame’s signature event is its annual Enshrinement Festival. The 2010 Enshrinement Festival will take place on July 16-17 and features Tim Brown, Gino Torreta and Chris Spielman among many others. Fans have a variety of opportunities to meet and mingle with the Enshrinees during this spectacular two-day event. From FanFest to the Celebrity Golf Scramble, Youth Football Clinic and Enshrinement Dinner and Show, the Enshrinement Festival offers unparalleled access to some of the greatest names in the history of college football. For more information on the College Football Hall of Fame, contact the Hall at 1-800-440-FAME (3263) or visit www.collegefootball.org.

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NACDA DIRECTORS’ CUP F

in 2001, 13th in ’02 and ’03, 19th in ’04, 16th in’05, 6th in ’06, 22nd in ’07, and 21st in ’08 and ’09. The other schools with that distinction include six from the Pacific-10 Conference (Stanford, UCLA, California, Arizona State, Arizona and USC), three from the Big Ten (Ohio State, Michigan, and Penn State) and three from the Southeastern Conference (Florida, Georgia, and LSU), plus Texas (Big 12) and North Carolina (Atlantic Coast Conference).

FALL

HISTORICAL PERFORMANCE

Fall NCAA competition earned the Irish 237 points – 90 points from their national runner-up finish in women’s soccer, 50 from a second-round appearance in NCAA men’s soccer, 52 more based on their 19th-place finish in men’s cross country (36 points) and their 29th-place finish in women’s cross country (16 points) – and 45 from Notre Dame’s postseason football victory in the Sheraton Hawai’i Bowl.

In previous years in which the Directors’ Cup competition has been held, Notre Dame has finished 11th in 1993-94, 30th in ’95, 12th in ’96, 14th in ’97, 31st in ’98, 25th in ’99, 21st in 2000, 11th in ’01, 13th in ’02 and ’03, 19th in ’04, 16th in’05, 6th in ’06, 22nd in ’07, and 21st in ’08 and ’09. All but one of Notre Dame’s 26 varsity sports have scored points for the Irish in the NACDA Cup. Teams leading the way have included the men’s and women’s fencing programs, which have used 15 consecutive top-four finishes at the NCAAs to contribute 1,066 points since fencing was added to the NCADA Cup in 1995-96. Women’s soccer has contributed 1,087.5 points, highlighted by 10 national semifinal appearances and a pair of titles (’95, ’04). It also stands as the only team to have scored points in the NACDA Cup all 15 years. Eleven of Notre Dame’s sports have contributed points on 10 or more occasions while 16 have scored in at least eight of the NACDA Cup competitions. The Directors’ Cup competition honors institutions for maintaining athletic programs that seek to achieve success in many sports, both men’s and women’s. Begun in 1993-94 for Division I by NACDA and USA Today, the program was expanded in 1995-96 to include Division II, III and the NAIA. The scoring format – which has undergone yearly minor adjustments – awards the overall champion to the institution that records the highest number of points in their division’s Directors’ Cup standings.

or the 11th straight year in 2008-09, Notre Dame posted a top-25 finish (21st) in the United States Sports Academy Division I Directors’ Cup all-sports competition sponsored by the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics (formerly known as Sears Directors’ Cup). Notre Dame is among 14 schools to earn a top-25 finish in each of the past 10 years (2000-2009), as Irish programs finished 11th

WINTER Winter NCAA competition earned Notre Dame 205.63 points - 90 points from a national runner-up finish in men’s and women’s fencing (combined championship), 43 from a 31st-place finish in women’s swimming, 25 from a first-round appearance in women’s basketball, 25 from a regional semifinal appearance in hockey, 12 from a 60th-place finish in women’s indoor track and field and 10.63 from a 59th-place finish in men’s indoor track and field.

SPRING Notre Dame earned 344.50 points from its spring programs via NCAA competition - 83 from its national semifinal appearance in women’s tennis, 60 from a women’s lacrosse quarterfinal appearance, 50 from softball’s NCAA regional appearance, 50 from a 24thplace women’s track and field finish, 27 from a 46th-place finish in women’s golf, 25 each from first-round appearances in both men’s lacrosse and men’s tennis and 24.5 from men’s track and field’s 48th-place finish.

ALL-TIME NACDA CUP FINISHES 1993-94 1994-95 1995-96 1996-97 1997-98 1998-99 1999-00 2000-01

-

11th 30th 12th 14th 31st (tie) 25th(tie) 21st 11th

2001-02 2002-03 2003-04 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09

-

13th 13th (tie) 19th 16th 6th 22nd 21st 21st

2008-09 FINAL STANDINGS 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.

Stanford North Carolina Florida USC Michigan Texas California Virginia LSU Ohio State Washington Arizona State Texas A&M Minnesota Florida State UCLA Duke Georgia Penn State Illinois Notre Dame Oregon Tennessee Arizona Arkansas

1,455 1,184.25 1,172.75 1,137.75 1,131.80 1,105.50 1,072 1,059 1,029 1,015.80 1,010.25 1,001.75 976 975.75 945 909.25 891.80 866.50 813.10 808.75 775.13 757.25 746.25 738.50 730

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8/25/09 10:44:31 AM


ICI Paints in NA.indd 1

7/1/09 2:04:11 PM


Team- Lake Michigan Mailers.indd 1

8/18/09 2:52:54 PM


SERGIO BROWN IN THE SPOTLIGHT From shooting baskets to saving plays, this safety shines. By Kelly Taylor

Through the first seven games of 2009, Sergio Brown accounted for 21 tackles, including one for loss, and two pass breakups.

As the last line of defense, the position of safety is of the utmost importance. Unmatched focus and effective tackling prove vital for reading the play and acting on it. Senior safety Sergio Brown aims to be a source of explosiveness for the Fighting Irish defense. Since his freshman year, Brown has been making appearances on special teams before blasting onto the scene as a defensive player in 2008. This season, he earned his first start at safety against Boston College and has been continually gaining attention. Interestingly enough, Brown’s exciting life on the field warrants a flourishing life off of it as well. Born and raised in Maywood, Ill., Brown has solid roots in the Chicago area. Perhaps he remains loyal to his hometown due to the boundless success he had at Proviso East High School, where he was a three-year starter. After football, he hopes to return to Chicago and get involved in clothing design. “If I could do something with a clothing line or work with designing clothes, that would be great,” says Brown, a marketing major in the Mendoza College of Business.

Brown is able to experience the comforts of home right on campus, with his cousin, Jonathan Peoples, who plays on the Irish men’s basketball team. Peoples, a senior guard from Bellwood, Ill., maintains a close relationship with Brown, as they often go to dinner or the movies and play basketball together. “I’m really close with my cousin,” Brown says, “and it’s nice to have him as an outlet where we can talk and feel comfortable.” According to Brown, attending the same school with a family member of the same age provides a unique comfort that is difficult to find elsewhere. “It’s nice to know that we can share what we’re going through at the same school,” Brown says. Moreover, as a further connection, Brown covets basketball. “I play a lot of pickup games in the offseason and in the summer, and I’m really into Bookstore Basketball.” Bookstore Basketball, the largest outdoor five-on-five basketball tournament in the world, draws in dozens of Notre Dame athletes. Brown claims that in high school, he actually paid greater attention to basketball as opposed to football. It is evident that basketball is, and will always be, his first love.

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BROWN IN THE SPOTLIGHT CONTINUED

Brown believes that the defense works to push each other collectively and always strives to be competitive amidst one another. Holding each other accountable remains a necessity. “We’ve been playing together for a while so we’re able to pick up on our strengths and weaknesses,” Brown says. Upon reflection, Brown recalls a particular defining moment inside Notre Dame Stadium. In 2008, he made his first career start as a junior against San Diego State. “Being that opening player was just a great moment,” Brown says. With Notre Dame Stadium encompassing all that lies at the heart of college football, Brown expands upon the greatest aspect, through his eyes. “I love going over to the student section after a win,” Brown says. “I just start screaming and it’s crazy.” Brown’s presence on the Irish field seems to heighten with each passing season. Making the transition from an occasional special teams player to a sought after safety has taken hours upon hours of growth. Whether fans remember him as a playmaker or as a charismatic leader, he surely has left his mark on Notre Dame football.

During his Irish career, Brown has seen action in 40 games, notching 60 total tackles, including 45 solo stops.

Relating to family ties, Brown’s father happened to be the first black basketball player at Texas A&M, setting an athletic precedent that Brown followed through on. On the field, Brown assumes a leadership role in terms of motivating his teammates. He was the established co-founder of the “Crank Me Up” cheer that originated during the 2008 football season. “I was really just looking for a way to motivate us and get us hyped up for the game, so I started yelling ‘Crank Me Up’ from the sidelines when the defense made a big play,” Brown says. From there, the chant trickled through the entire team, and sooner or later, every member on the Fighting Irish bench was yelling out in unison. Many students and alumni alike recognize Brown as a distinguished spirit that is always energized and ready to show it. Brown makes it clear that he is very close with all of the defensive backs, with the defense constantly coming together in order to make big plays. “We’re always looking to eliminate explosives and come up with interceptions,” Brown says. The Irish defense seems to continually set their sights high. Not only do they want the stop, they want the ball, too. “I always do what I can to help the team out and just keep working hard.”

After his football career ends, Brown hopes to put his marketing degree to use in the world of clothing design.

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Š Marc Ecko Enterprises MARC ECKO TM is used under license from Ecko.Complex, LLC. All rights reserved.

TM

is used under license from Ecko.Complex, LLC. All rights reserved.


2009 FIGHTING IRISH 34 James Aldridge Fullback • Senior Psychology

37 Mike Anello Cornerback • Senior Graduate Studies

38 Chris Bathon Safety • Senior Economics

31 Sergio Brown Safety • Senior Marketing

86 Bobby Burger Fullback/Tight End • Senior Economics

64 Tom Burke Linebacker • Senior Finance/Economics

39 Ryan Burkhart Kicker • Senior Management Consulting/ Psychology

24 Brian Coughlin Wide Receiver • Senior Accounting

72 Paul Duncan Offensive Tackle • Senior Graduate Studies

42 Dan Franco Wide Receiver • Senior Psychology

21 Barry Gallup, Jr. Wide Receiver • Senior Graduate Studies

24 Leonard Gordon Safety • Senior Political Science/ Pre-Professional

6 Ray Herring Safety • Senior Graduate Studies

43 Eric Maust Punter • Senior Finance

28 Kyle McCarthy Safety • Senior Graduate Studies

8 Raeshon McNeil Cornerback • Senior Design

93 Paddy Mullen Nose Tackle • Senior Sociology

47 Mike Narvaez Fullback • Senior Science Pre-Professional/ Anthropology

55 Eric Olsen Center • Senior Industrial Design

82 Robby Parris Wide Receiver • Senior Finance

61 Martin Quintana Defensive Line • Senior Finance

53 Morrice Richardson Defensive End • Senior Management Consulting

90 John Ryan Defensive End • Senior Finance/History

13 Evan Sharpley Quarterback • Senior History

41 Scott Smith Linebacker • Senior Graduate Studies

49 Toryan Smith Linebacker • Senior Sociology/Computer Applications

59 Chris Stewart Offensive Guard • Senior Graduate Studies

43 Joshua Stull Cornerback • Senior Theology/History

85 Sam Vos Wide Receiver • Senior Management Entrepreneurship

97 Kallen Wade Defensive End • Senior Psychology/Computer Applications

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2 Darrin Walls Cornerback • Senior Sociology/Psychology

51 Dan Wenger Center • Senior Sociology

19 George West Wide Receiver • Senior Finance

74 Sam Young Offensive Tackle • Senior Management Entrepreneurship

5 Armando Allen Halfback • Junior Sociology

15 Brian Castello Quarterback • Junior Aerospace Engeneering

7 Jimmy Clausen Quarterback • Junior Sociology

75 Taylor Dever Offensive Tackle • Junior Marketing

62 Bill Flavin Long Snapper • Junior Biochemistry

29 Michael Garcia Cornerback • Junior Marketing

4 Gary Gray Cornerback • Junior Graduate Studies

38 Christopher Gurries Wide Receiver • Junior Chemical Engineering

33 Robert Hughes Halfback • Junior Sociology

18 Duval Kamara Wide Receiver • Junior Sociology

42 Nick Lezynski Cornerback • Junior Marketing

56 Kerry Neal Linebacker • Junior Sociology

76 Andrew Nuss Offensive Guard • Junior Finance

91 Emeka Nwankwo Defensive End • Junior Psychology

30 Steve Paskorz Fullback • Junior Marketing

83 Mike Ragone Tight End • Junior Sociology

77 Matt Romine Offensive Tackle • Junior Marketing

48 David Ruffer Kicker • Junior Economics

39 Ryan Sheehan Cornerback • Junior Accounting

62 Christopher Skubis Defensive End • Junior Accounting/Economics

58 Brian Smith Linebacker • Junior Anthropology

22 Harrison Smith Safety • Junior Management Entrepreneurship

40 Thomas Smith Safety • Junior Marketing

23 Golden Tate Wide Receiver • Junior Sociology

14 Brandon Walker Kicker • Junior Finance

95 Ian Williams Nose Tackle • Junior Film, Television & Theatre

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2 0 0 9 F I GH T I N G I R I SH CONTINUED

12 Robert Blanton Cornerback • Sophomore Mendoza College of Business

52 Braxston Cave Offensive Guard • Sophomore College of Arts & Letters

45 Darius Fleming Linebacker • Sophomore Mendoza College of Business

3 Michael Floyd Wide Receiver • Sophomore College of Arts & Letters

9 Ethan Johnson Defensive Tackle • Sophomore Mendoza College of Business

50 Ryan Kavanagh Long Snapper • Sophomore Civil Engineering

89 Kapron Lewis-Moore Defensive End • Sophomore Mendoza College of Business

17 Matthew Mulvey Quarterback • Sophomore Mendoza College of Business

99 Brandon Newman Nose Tackle • Sophomore College of Arts & Letters

36 David Posluszny Linebacker • Sophomore Mendoza College of Business

78 Trevor Robinson Offensive Guard • Sophomore Marketing

9 Kyle Rudolph Tight End • Sophomore Mendoza College of Business

26 Jamoris Slaughter Cornerback • Sophomore College of Arts & Letters

73 Lane Clelland Offensive Tackle • Sophomore Mendoza College of Business

10 Dayne Crist Quarterback • Sophomore Mendoza College of Business

81 John Goodman Wide Receiver • Sophomore College of Arts & Letters

57 Mike Golic, Jr. Center • Sophomore College of Arts & Letters

71 Dennis Mahoney Offensive Line • Sophomore College of Arts & Letters

98 Sean Cwynar Defensive Tackle • Sophomore Mgmt. Consulting

25 Jonas Gray Halfback • Sophomore College of Arts & Letters

15 Dan McCarthy Safety • Sophomore Mendoza College of Business

46 Steve Filer Linebacker • Sophomore Mendoza College of Business

65 Mike Hernandez Offensive Guard • Sophomore College of Arts & Letters

54 Anthony McDonald Linebacker • Sophomore College of Arts & Letters

Senior safety Sergio Brown has 21 tackles this season, including 17 solo stops.

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Castrol:Layout 1

8/27/09

2:27 PM

Page 1


2 0 0 9 F I GH T I N G I R I SH CONTINUED

1 Deion Walker Wide Receiver • Sophomore Mendoza College of Business

79 Hafis Williams Defensive Tackle • Sophomore College of Arts & Letters

47 Kael Anderson Cornerback • Freshman First Year of Studies

60 Jordan Cowart Long Snapper • Freshman First Year of Studies

80 Tyler Eifert Tight End • Freshman First Year of Studies

11 Shaquelle Evans Wide Receiver • Freshman First Year of Studies

17 Zeke Motta Safety • Freshman First Year of Studies

32 Theo Riddick Halfback • Freshman First Year of Studies

92 Tyler Stockton Nose Tackle • Freshman First Year of Studies

40 Nick Tausch Kicker • Freshman First Year of Studies

5 Manti Te’o Linebacker • Freshman First Year of Studies

84 Roby Toma Wide Receiver • Freshman First Year of Studies

35 Ben Turk Punter • Freshman First Year of Studies

66 Chris Watt Offensive Guard • Freshman First Year of Studies

20 Cierre Wood Halfback • Freshman First Year of Studies

27 E.J. Banks Cornerback • Freshman First Year of Studies

48 Dan Fox Linebacker • Freshman First Year of Studies

68 Alex Bullard Offensive Guard • Freshman First Year of Studies

88 Jake Golic Tight End • Freshman First Year of Studies

44 Carlo Calabrese Linebacker • Freshman First Year of Studies

70 Zach Martin Offensive Tackle • Freshman First Year of Studies

Sophomore Jamoris Slaughter recorded eight tackles in the first seven games of 2009.

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Team - Valero.indd 1

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THE UNITED STATES NAVAL ACADEMY About USNA The Naval Academy was founded in 1845 by the Secretary of the Navy, George Bancroft, in what is now historic Annapolis, Md. The history of the Academy has often reflected the history of the United States itself. As the U.S. Navy has moved from a fleet of sail and steam-powered ships to a high tech fleet of nuclear-powered submarines and surface ships as well as supersonic aircraft, the Academy has changed also. The Naval Academy gives young men and women the up-to-date academic and professional training needed to be effective naval and marine officers in their assignments after graduation. Every day, as the undergraduate college of the naval service, the United States Naval Academy strives to accomplish its mission to develop midshipmen “morally, mentally, and physically.” Moral Education Moral and ethical development is a fundamental element of all aspects of the Naval Academy experience. As future officers in the Navy or Marine Corps, midshipmen will someday be responsible for the priceless lives of many men and women and multi-million dollar equipment. From Plebe Summer through graduation, the Naval Academy’s Officer Development Program is a four-year integrated continuum that focuses on the attributes of integrity, honor, and mutual respect. One of the goals of this program is to develop midshipmen who possess a clearer sense of their own moral beliefs and the ability to articulate them. Honor is emphasized through the Honor Concept of the Brigade of Midshipmen. These Naval Academy “words to live by” are based on the moral values of respect for human dignity, respect for honesty and respect for the property of others. Brigade Honor Committees composed of elected upper-class midshipmen are responsible for the education and training of the Honor Concept. Midshipmen found in violation of the Honor Concept by their peers may be separated from the Naval Academy. Academic and Professional Education Every midshipman’s academic program begins with a core curriculum that includes courses in engineering, science, mathematics, humanities and social science. This is designed to provide a broad-based education that will qualify the midshipmen for practically any career field in the

Navy or Marine Corps. At the same time, our majors program gives them the opportunity to develop a particular area of academic interest. For especially capable and highlymotivated students, we offer challenging honors programs and opportunities to start work on postgraduate degrees while still at the Academy. The Academy also provides professional and leadership training. We don’t just teach the students about life in the Navy and Marine Corps. After four years at the Naval Academy, the life and customs of the naval service become second nature. First, the midshipmen learn to take orders from practically everyone, but before long, they acquire the responsibility for making decisions that can affect hundreds of other midshipmen. The professional classroom studies are backed by many hours of practical experience in leadership and naval operations, including assignments with Navy and Marine Corps units.

Vice Admiral Jeffrey L. Fowler, USN Superintendent United States Navy

Chet Gladchuk Director of Athletics

Physical Education Just as the Naval Academy promotes the moral and mental development of midshipmen, so also must it fulfill its responsibility for each midshipman’s physical development. The Naval Academy athletic program, as part of the mission, receives a priority much different than at civilian schools. The athletic teams are an integral part of the overall education of the midshipmen. Athletics provide leadership opportunities and the experiences of team play, cooperative effort, commitment and individual sacrifice. In the academy’s program everyone has a wide variety of athletic choices, as well as the required physical education curriculum. The primary goal of the physical education curriculum is fitness, which is so vital for midshipman health, personal appearance and well-being.

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(1-2) Memorial Untitled-4 1 Health System.indd 1

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MEET THE MIDSHIPMEN 1 Blake Carter Cornerback

2 Kriss Proctor Quarterback

4 Ricky Dobbs Quarterback

7 Emmett Merchant Safety

8 Wyatt Middleton Safety

15 Kevin Edwards Cornerback

16 Joe Buckley Kicker

28 Marcus Curry Slot Back

33 Bobby Doyle Slot Back

34 Ram Vela Linebacker

35 Kyle Delahooke Punter

44 Clint Sovie Linebacker

47 Vince Murray Fullback

50 Tony Haberer Linebacker

51 Ross Pospisil Linebacker

59 Matt Nechak Defensive End

61 Jeff Battipaglia Offensive Tackle

63 David Hong Offensive Guard

66 Curtis Bass Center/Guard

70 Matt Molloy Offensive Tackle

79 Osei Asante Offensive Guard

80 Mike Schupp Wide Receiver

84 Greg Jones Wide Receiver

93 Chase Burge Nose Guard

98 Jabaree Tuani Defensive End

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Coach Ken Niumatalolo

11/2/09 8:32 PM


Team- Steiner 2.indd 1

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2009 OPPONENT SCHEDULES MICHIGAN

MICHIGAN STATE

PURDUE

Sept. 5

at Notre Dame

L, 0-35

Sept. 5

WESTERN MICHIGAN W, 31-7

Sept. 19 Sept. 25 Oct. 3 Oct. 9 Oct. 17 Oct. 24 Oct. 31 Nov. 8 Nov. 14 Nov. 21 Nov. 27

at Colorado State MISSOURI UNLV LOUISIANA TECH at Utah State IDAHO HAWAI’I SAN JOSE STATE FRESNO STATE at New Mexico State at Boise State

L, 20-35 L, 21-31 W, 63-28 W, 37-14 W, 35-32 W, 70-45 W, 31-21

Sept. 12

NOTRE DAME

W, 38-34

Sept. 5 Sept. 12

MONTANA STATE W, 44-3 CENTRAL MICHIGAN L, 27-29

Sept. 19 Sept. 26 Oct. 3 Oct. 10 Oct. 17 Oct. 24 Oct. 31 Nov. 14 Nov. 21

EASTERN MICHIGAN INDIANA at Michigan State at Iowa DELAWARE STATE PENN STATE at Illinois at Wisconsin OHIO STATE

W, 45-17 W, 36-33 L, 20-26 L, 28-30 W, 63-6 L, 10-35 L, 13-38

Sept. 19

at Notre Dame

Sept. 5 Sept. 12 Sept. 19

TOLEDO W, 52-31 at Oregon L, 36-38 NORTHERN ILLINOIS L, 21-28

Sept. 26 Oct. 3 Oct. 10 Oct. 17 Oct. 24 Oct. 31 Nov. 7 Nov. 14 Nov. 21

at Wisconsin L, 30-38 MICHIGAN W, 26-20 at Illinois W, 24-14 NORTHWESTERN W, 24-14 IOWA L, 13-15 at Minnesota L, 34-42 WESTERN MICHIGAN at Purdue PENN STATE

Sept. 26

NOTRE DAME

L, 21-24

Oct. 3 Oct. 10 Oct. 17 Oct. 24 Oct. 31 Nov. 7 Nov. 14 Nov. 21

NORTHWESTERN at Minnesota OHIO STATE ILLINOIS at Wisconsin at Michigan MICHIGAN STATE at Indiana

L, 21-27 L, 20-35 W, 26-18 W, 24-14 L, 0-37

NEVADA

WASHINGTON Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept.

5 12 19 26

LSU IDAHO USC at Stanford

USC L, 23-31 W, 42-23 W, 16-13 L, 14-34

Oct. 3

at Notre Dame

L, 30-37 (OT)

Oct. 10 Oct. 17 Oct. 24 Nov. 7 Nov. 14 Nov. 28 Dec. 5

ARIZONA at Arizona State OREGON at UCLA at Oregon State WASHINGTON ST. CALIFORNIA

W, 36-33 L, 17-24 L. 19-43

Sept. 5 Sept. 12 Sept. 19 Sept. 26 Oct. 3

L, 30-33

BOSTON COLLEGE SAN JOSE STATE at Ohio State at Washington WASHINGTON STATE at California

W, 56-3 W, 18-15 L, 13-16 W, 27-6 W, 30-3

Oct. 17

at Notre Dame

W, 34-27

Oct. 24 Oct. 31 Nov. 7 Nov. 14 Nov. 28 Dec. 5

OREGON STATE at Oregon at Arizona State STANFORD UCLA ARIZONA

W, 42-36 L, 20-47

Sept. 5 Sept. 12 Sept. 19 Sept. 26 Oct. 3 Oct. 10 Oct. 17

NORTHEASTERN KENT STATE at Clemson WAKE FOREST FLORIDA STATE at Virginia Tech NC STATE

WASHINGTON STATE W, 54-0 W, 34-7 L, 7-25 W, 27-24 (OT) W, 28-21 L, 14-48 W, 52-20

Oct. 24

at Notre Dame L, 16-20

Oct. 31 Nov. 14 Nov. 21 Nov. 28

CENTRAL MICHIGAN W, 31-10 at Virginia NORTH CAROLINA at Maryland

NAVY

Sept. 5 Sept. 12 Sept. 19 Sept. 26 Oct. 3 Oct. 10 Oct. 24

STANFORD HAWAI’I S. METHODIST at USC at Oregon ARIZONA STATE at California

Oct. 31

vs. Notre Dame L, 14-40 (San Antonio)

Nov. Nov. Nov. Nov.

at Arizona UCLA OREGON STATE at Washington

7 14 21 28

L, 13-39 L, 20-38 W, 30-27 (OT) L, 6-27 L, 6-52 L, 14-27 L, 17-49

PITTSBURGH

Sept. 5 Sept. 12 Sept. 19 Sept. 26 Oct. 3 Oct. 10 Oct. 17 Oct. 24 Oct. 31

at Ohio State LOUISIANA TECH at Pittsburgh W. KENTUCKY AIR FORCE at Rice at SMU WAKE FOREST TEMPLE

Nov. 7

Nov. 14 Nov. 28 Dec. 12

L, 27-31 W, 32-14 L, 14-27 W, 38-22 W, 16-13 (OT) W, 63-14 W, 38-35 W, 13-10 L, 24-27

Sept. 5 Sept. 12 Sept. 19 Sept. 26 Oct. 2 Oct. 10 Oct. 16 Oct. 24 Nov. 7

YOUNGSTOWN STATE at Buffalo NAVY at N.C. State at Louisville CONNECTICUT at Rutgers USF SYRACUSE

at Notre Dame

Nov. 14

NOTRE DAME

DELAWARE at Hawai’i ARMY

Nov. 27 Dec. 5

at West Virginia CINCINNATI

CONNECTICUT Sept. 5 Sept. 12 Sept. 19 Sept. 26 Oct. 10 Oct. 17 Oct. 24 Oct. 31 Nov. 7

at Ohio NORTH CAROLINA at Baylor RHODE ISLAND at Pittsburgh LOUISVILLE at West Virginia RUTGERS at Cincinnati

Nov. 21

at Notre Dame

Nov. 28 Dec. 5

SYRACUSE USF

W, 38-3 W, 54-27 W, 27-14 L, 31-38 W, 35-10 W, 24-21 W, 24-17 W, 41-14

STANFORD W, 23-16 L, 10-12 W, 30-22 W, 52-10 L, 21-24 W, 38-25 L, 24-28 L, 24-28

Sept. 5 Sept. 12 Sept. 19 Sept. 26 Oct. 3 Oct. 10 Oct. 17 Oct. 24 Nov. 7 Nov. 14 Nov. 21

at Washington State at Wake Forest SAN JOSE STATE WASHINGTON UCLA at Oregon State at Arizona ARIZONA STATE OREGON at USC CALIFORNIA

Nov. 28

NOTRE DAME

W, 39-13 L, 17-24 W, 42-17 W, 34-14 W, 24-16 L, 28-38 L, 38-43 W, 33-14

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US Department of the Army.indd 1

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GETTING TO KNOW...

OFFENSIVE GUARD

CHRIS STEWART No. 59 • 6-5 • 330 • Sr. | Spring, Texas/Klein

S

enior offensive guard Chris Stewart has made a name for himself both on and off the field during his career with the Irish. The Spring, Texas native has started every game this season, after starting 10 a year ago. He entered the 2009 campaign ranked by Phil Steele as the 13th-best offensive guard in the country. Off the field, Stewart graduated in May 2009 in just three and a half years with a degree in history, while carrying a 3.536 cumulative grade-point average. GameDay’s Amy Stuhldreher gives Irish fans a chance to get to know Chris Stewart.

Stuhldreher: What is your major and why does it interest you? Stewart: I graduated as a history major and

Stuhldreher: What do you see yourself doing after football? Stewart: I plan on going to law school and

an international peace studies minor in May. I majored in it because I’m a History Channel buff.

business school to get my J.D. and MBA and doing some sort of community work also.

Stuhldreher: What is your favorite Coach Weis saying? Stewart: I like when he says “yous guys;” it’s a little New Jersey thing. Kind of like we say “y’all” in Texas. Stuhldreher: What attracted you to Notre Dame? Stewart: The football and academics, but definitely not the weather.

Stuhldreher: What one stadium would you like to play in but haven’t? Stewart: Kyle Field at Texas A&M; playing in Aggieland would be nice.

Stuhldreher: What is your favorite Frank Verducci saying? Stewart: “We have to be professional.” Stuhldreher: What song always gets you ready to take the field? Stewart: “Moonlight Sonata” by Ludwig van Beethoven

Stuhldreher: If the offensive line had a theme song, what would it be? Stewart: “She-Wolf” by Shakira. I’m not even joking; they are in love with Shakira. I don’t get it. She doesn’t even turn into a werewolf at the end of the music video.

Stuhldreher: If you could change one thing about Notre Dame Stadium, what would it be? Stewart: I would definitely add a jumbotron, so we can see the replays.

Stuhldreher: If you were stranded on an island, what three things would you have to have with you? Stewart: I’d have a GPS locator and a fishing rod with an unlimited supply of tackle. I’d just relax and then when I’m ready to leave, I’d just call someone on my GPS locator.

Stuhldreher: What is your ringtone right now? Stewart: I have multiple ring tones, but one is “Paper Planes” by MIA. Stuhldreher: What song on your iPod would surprise people? Stewart: Probably “Moonlight Sonata” by Beethoven Stuhldreher: Other than playing in the NFL, what is your dream job? Stewart: To be a judge, a Supreme Court Justice actually.

Stuhldreher: North or South Dining Hall? Stewart: Definitely South. I even lived in Keenan, and I’d still say South.

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Team- Ivy Quad.indd 1

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THE “SHORTY” AND LONG OF IT BY LOU SOMOGYI, BLUE & GOLD ILLUSTRATED

100 YEARS AGO, A VICTORY AT MICHIGAN BROUGHT THE FIRST GLIMMER OF GLORY TO NOTRE DAME

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n virtually every discussion about the first watershed moment in Notre Dame football history, the attention automatically centers on the 35-13 victory at Army on Nov. 1, 1913. That was the day Notre Dame electrified the Eastern football establishment and stole the sports headlines in that section of the country with a heretofore unrivaled passing attack led by quarterback Gus Dorais and wide receiver Knute Rockne. Plans to commemorate the 100th anniversary of that monumental event were put into motion this summer by Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick with the aspiration to play Army at New York in 2013. The Irish already are scheduled to play the Black Knights at Yankee Stadium in 2010. Yet there is a 100th anniversary in 2009 that has been somewhat overshadowed. Too often, the events that led to the dramatic upset of Army are forgotten — none more so than the 11-3 victory at Michigan’s Ferry Field on Nov. 6, 1909. It was on that day that “Notre Dame mounted the dizziest heights in its football history,” according to the Chicago Inter-Ocean. If the game at Army in 1913 served as the main course that set up Notre Dame’s football feast in the 1920s under head coach Rockne, then the contest at Michigan in 1909 was the appetizer and cocktail hour.

another, Indiana (11-0), after failing to defeat the Hoosiers each of the previous three years. Moreover, in 1908 Notre Dame lost to Michigan by only a 12-6 margin, the lone setback during its 8-1 campaign. According to John Kryk, author of the 1994 book “Natural Enemies” that chronicles the history of the Notre Dame-Michigan rivalry, the wily Yost convinced Notre Dame head coach Victor Place to reduce the requisite 70-minute game back then — with 35-minute halves — to 50 minutes, with two 25-minute halves. Several Michigan starters had been lost to injury or academics, and Yost believed he didn’t have the players or depth to emerge victorious if another 20 minutes were played.

EAST VS. WEST College football at the turn of the 20th century had two demarcations. There was football in the East, where the sport was borne and dominated by the Ivy League contingent of Yale, Harvard, Princeton and Penn, known as “The Big Four.” There was also football in the West, which at the time was confined mainly to the Midwest, considered a second-tier area for football by the East. Under the direction of head coach Fielding “Hurry Up” Yost, hired by Michigan in 1901, the Wolverines became a superpower that was on the precipice of cracking the “old boys network” of Ivy League supremacy in the East. There were other powers in the Midwest too, notably the University of Chicago with head coach Amos Alonzo Stagg, Ohio State, Minnesota or Wisconsin, but Michigan was in a class of its own in the West, prompting the words to Michigan’s fight song: Irish head coach Frank “Shorty” Longman played on Fielding Yost’s Michigan teams from 1903-05 that outscored their opposition 565-6, 567-22 and 485-2.

Hail to the Victors Valiant, Hail to the Conquering Heroes, Hail, hail to Michigan, the Champions of the West. Even prior to the 20th century, Michigan was a preeminent power in the West. It had traveled down to Notre Dame in 1887 to introduce the game of football, and from then through 1908, the Wolverines held an 8-0 advantage in the series. However, Yost, who possessed the powerful oration and motivation skills that would make Rockne an exalted figure in the 1920s, elevated the program to a higher level. In their debut season under Yost (1901), the Wolverines finished 11-0, outscored their opponents 550-0 and demolished Stanford, 49-0, in the first Rose Bowl. From 1901 until the Notre Dame game in 1909, Yost’s “Point-A-Minute” squads recorded a 73-5-3 mark (.920) — and outscored the opposition by an average of 53-1. Remarkably, Yost’s won-lost ledger was similar to the record Notre Dame head coach Frank Leahy recorded from 1939-40 at Boston College and 1941-43 and 1946-49 at Notre Dame (he was overseas in 1944-45 during World War II) — 80-5-3. WHAT THO’ THE ODDS During this period of Michigan’s dominance, the small Catholic school based in South Bend, Ind. was attempting to achieve its own football identity by wanting to join the elite Western Conference comprised of top state institutions such as Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Purdue, Indiana, Illinois and Iowa, plus schools such as Chicago and Northwestern (Ohio State wouldn’t join until 1912, and Michigan State would be added in 1953). But after Notre Dame’s humiliating defeats to Purdue (36-0) and Wisconsin (58-0) during the 1904 season, it was akin to the proverbial 98-pound weakling vying for competition on Muscle Beach. The conference committeemen ridiculed Notre Dame’s desire of competing against the muscle programs and told the small school to “get a reputation.” By 1908, Notre Dame was beginning to forge a name as a viable competitor. In 1907, it defeated one state school, Purdue (17-0), and in 1908 it defeated

Place agreed to the cutback in time, much to his regret later. Nevertheless, inspired by the way Notre Dame was battling the odds on the gridiron, Rev. Michael Shea and his brother, John, two former Notre Dame students, composed the Victory March in 1908 and introduced it at school functions in 1909. Included in the march was the verse that would become the school’s theme:

What tho’ the odds be great or small? Ol’ Notre Dame will win over all … 1909 SHOWDOWN In 1909, Michigan football began to scale new heights. Not only did the Wolverines pound hated rival Ohio State, 33-6, but also the week before the Notre Dame clash they destroyed eastern power Syracuse, 44-0. Moreover, later that same year, the Wolverines traveled to Philadelphia and knocked off powerful Penn, 12-6. It was the first time a western team had vanquished one of the Big Four. Like Michigan, Notre Dame entered the Nov. 6 showdown in front of 6,000 spectators at Ferry Field with a 4-0 record, highlighted by a 6-0 triumph at Pitt the same week Michigan clobbered Syracuse. So impressive were the Catholics (Notre Dame’s nickname during that time) against the Panthers that Walter Camp, known as the “Father of American Football” and Walter Eckersall, an esteemed writer for the Chicago Tribune and a premier football authority, traveled to Ann Arbor for the Nov. 6 game to see if the triumph at Pitt wasn’t merely a fluke for Notre Dame. Billed as the battle for the right to be hailed as “Champions of the West,” it featured the undisputed king versus the up-and-coming challenger. The crucial X-factor in the game was Notre Dame first-year head coach Frank “Shorty” Longman, who played on Yost’s teams from 1903-05 that outscored their opposition 565-6, 567-22 and 485-2. Longman not only knew Yost’s system inside and out, but he learned Yost’s tactics of psychological warfare and subterfuge.

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Notre Dame ended the 1909 season with a 7-0-1 record after a scoreless tie with Marquette.

Aware that Yost had a Michigan scout at the Pitt game, Longman didn’t use most of his pet plays and limited the work of All-America halfback Harry “Red” Miller — whose brother Don was one of Rockne’s “Four Horsemen” for the 1924 national champs, and whose son Creighton led the nation in rushing while helping the 1943 Irish win another national title. In another psychological ruse, Longman told the South Bend Tribune how listless and banged up his players were. Two days before the game, the Tribune wrote: “The last two days have convinced the coaches the men have grown stale. The men were on edge for the Pitt game and now are having a relapse. Yesterday’s workout was the worst the men have had this year.” “I am afraid conditions will beat us,” added Longman, who noted that three of his top 11 players, including team captain Howard “Cap” Edwards were listed as disabled for the game. A NEW POWER On game day, the entire Notre Dame student body of about 500 congregated at Notre Dame’s Cartier Field to hear the wire returns from Ann Arbor. Eighteen minutes into the contest, Michigan’s vaunted kicking game drew first blood with a 20-yard field goal to provide a 3-0 cushion. Notre Dame then turned to Miller to lead a drive that culminated with fullback Pete Vaughan bulling over from a yard out to push the Catholics ahead 5-3 (this was the last year TDs were worth five points), after a missed extra point. That was the halftime score, and the unofficial statistics had Notre Dame with about 200 yards of offense compared to Michigan’s 45. “Notre Dame maintained a brilliant, irresistible chain of banging, rushing drives against the Michigan forwards, resorting to the forward pass in pinches and always getting away for long gains in the medium,” wrote the South Bend Tribune. Legend has it that it was also at halftime of this game that the “Fighting Irish” moniker came into play. Several writers and photographers eavesdropped on the conversation in the days when locker rooms weren’t yet the norm and heard one Notre Dame player yell not at Miller but other players named Dolan, Ryan, Kelly, Duffy and Glynn, “What’s the matter with you guys? You’re all Irish and you’re not fighting worth a lick!” According to Kryk, Detroit Free Press writer E.A. Batchelor then used the term “fighting Irishmen” in his review of the game. In the second half, with about six minutes left in the contest, Michigan recovered a Notre Dame fumble at the “Irish” 15. On third-and-1, though, much to Yost’s anger, Michigan halfback Dave Allerdice called for a field goal — he was virtually automatic from such a short distance — and quarterback Billy Wasmund agreed and set up as the holder. Notre Dame’s front wall broke through to block the kick and one of the Irishmen, Rosey Dolan, fell on the loose ball to give Notre Dame possession at its 40. In the closing minute, Billy Ryan scored from 30 yards out and added the extra point to culminate the stunning 11-3 victory. When the final score was read back at Notre Dame’s Cartier Field, a bonfire was set on campus and the normally conservative students — and priests — danced through the night. “With the defeat went Michigan’s chance for copping the western championship, for Notre Dame now is rated one of the most powerful machines ever assembled in the western country,” wrote the Tribune.

Notre Dame blocked a Michigan field goal attempt and Rosey Dolan recovered the ball to give the Irish possession at their own 40. In the closing minute, Billy Ryan scored from 30 yards out and added the extra point to culminate the stunning 11-3 victory.

Edwards, the wounded captain who made the trip to Ann Arbor, was asked how Notre Dame accomplished the astonishing upset. “Every one of the men fought like demons through the game,” he replied. While some news organizations recognized Notre Dame as the new champion of the west, many others still sided with Michigan, including Camp, who took the stance that the Wolverines had played a much tougher overall schedule, including the victory at Penn, while Notre Dame ended the season 7-0-1 after a scoreless tie at Marquette. The Chicago Tribune compromised by choosing the 7-0-1 Missouri Aggies. Aiding the lean toward Michigan was Yost’s accusation of Notre Dame using several ineligible players, notably tackle Ralph Dimmick and guard George Philbrook. Investigations cleared Notre Dame of wrongdoing and Michigan seemed to grant amnesty when it signed for a return match in 1910, again in Ann Arbor. However, Yost’s shock and bitterness never did subside. When Notre Dame traveled to Michigan the next year, the game was cancelled by Wolverine officials 24 hours before it was to be played on Nov. 5, and Yost claimed it would have been no more than “a practice game” anyway. It wouldn’t be until 1942 when the two programs would meet again. Notre Dame continued applying for membership into the Western Conference, but antipathy toward the Catholic school played a significant role in its repeated rejections. “That Yost had a healthy fear of Notre Dame’s emerging football strength and wished to shut out the Fighting Irish in the Midwest was no secret,” wrote Ken Rappaport in “Wake Up The Echoes,” released in 1975. Consequently, under new Notre Dame head coach Jesse Harper in 1913, the program began scheduling games throughout the nation and continued to hone its reputation of overcoming the odds. In November of 1913, it traveled to Texas, St, Louis, Penn State and Army — and won all four games en route to an unbeaten, untied season. However, the genesis of its ascent truly began in 1909. On that day in Ann Arbor, the proverbial neighborhood whipping boy — with a head coach nicknamed “Shorty,” no less — arose from years of degradation and mockery, and knocked out the bully to signify its destiny with unparalleled prominence.

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EIGHTY YEARS STRONG, THE BENGAL BOUTS CONTINUE TO SERVE THE WEAK By Amy Stuhldreher

Bengal Bouts was started in 1931 as a boxing tournament to raise money for the Holy Cross Missions in Bangladesh.

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nute Rockne saw boxing as a way to keep his famous football players in peak condition during the off-season. In 1923, Rockne introduced the boxing program to Notre Dame for this very reason. Dominic “Nappy” Napolitano, however, saw another avenue for the boxing program, and he would make Notre Dame boxing famous. Napolitano, who devoted 55 years to the program, started the official Bengal Bouts in 1931 as a boxing tournament sponsored by men’s boxing at Notre Dame, which raises funds for the Holy Cross Missions in Bangladesh. Originally, Neil C. Hurlew and Hunk Anderson decided to coordinate a non-intercollegiate boxing tournament for Irish boxers from which all the proceeds would go to missions in eastern Pakistan. The funds helped a specific province, Bengal, which inspired the name “Bengal Bouts” for the tournament. Napolitano took this idea and made it so much more. In fact, his phrase is now the motto for the Bengal Bouts: “Strong bodies fight, that weak bodies may be nourished.” According to Terry Johnson,

a former participant in the Bengal Bouts, “It was a humbling experience to see the depth of this man’s [Napolitano’s] dedication to the plight of the poor.” In its first year alone under Napolitano, the Bengal Bouts raised $301.25 for the missions in Bangladesh. It makes sense that Notre Dame would support these missions as many of the Holy Cross priests at the time were Notre Dame alumni. More than that though, the Notre Dame community has always been committed to service. Mark Weber, co-producer of the documentary Strong Bodies Fight, states, “Such other-centered thinking was reflective of Notre Dame’s Catholic identity, and it is that same identity that keeps the spirit of service vibrant in the Bengal Bouts today.” The boxing tournament continues to remain one of the largest boxing events in the country with Notre Dame men participating from first-year undergraduate to graduate-school levels. More importantly, however, this tournament continues to remain a great fund raiser for the people of Bangladesh. Thanks to the Bengal

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BENGAL BOUTS STILL STRONG CONTINUED

Bengal Bouts documentary about more than boxing By Ted Fox

A reunion is being held this weekend that will kick off the celebration of the 80th anniversary of the Bengal Bouts that continues through the 2010 tournament in the spring.

Bouts, the Holy Cross Missionaries have been able to open multiple schools and provide basic training and instruction in literacy among other programs. “It is rare that what we do here today can tangibly help feed, educate and treat the poorest of the poor half a world away. It is an empowering and a humbling mission,” Johnson says. Anyone who has been involved with this program has been touched by its unique sense of service found through boxing. This year is the 80th anniversary of the Bengal Bouts, and a reunion is being hosted for all former boxers and other supporters of the program along with their families and friends. According to Weber, every class since 1949 should be represented at the reunion. The planning for this reunion started in the spring of 2009. Due to the joint effort of the Alumni Association, RecSports and the department of Film, Television and Theater along with other volunteers such as event coordinators Karen Weber and Patrick Ryan, the first part of the reunion will be held this weekend and will start the celebration of the Bengal Bouts’ 80th anniversary which will continue through the 2010 Bengal Bouts tournament this spring. One special aspect of this reunion weekend will be the premiere of the documentary, independently produced by Weber and Professor William Donaruma, Strong Bodies Fight. Boxing at Notre Dame began as a way to keep football players in shape during the spring. However, boxing is more than just conditioning for athletes. Rockne and Napolitano both saw boxing as a way for the competitors to build character, as a way to prepare those men for any fights that they might be faced with in life and as a way for those men to keep their hearts and minds conditioned as well as their bodies. “The lessons our novice boxers will learn this year will stay with them forever, whether it be in the operating room, the board room or in any room where they’re up against a challenge as they work to help someone in need,” Johnson says. The 2010 Bengal Bouts will take place in the Joyce Center this February. A new group of Fighting Irish will continue this unique tradition showcasing Notre Dame’s boxing talent while they fulfill their desire to serve others.

Mark Weber describes Notre Dame’s annual Bengal Bouts boxing tournament not in terms of rings and gloves but as “a great tradition of young men giving their blood and sweat in the fight against global poverty.” If you’re thinking this sounds like a film just waiting to be made, then you’re thinking like Weber. A 2009 Notre Dame graduate with a double major in film, television and theatre (FTT) and the Program of Liberal Studies – as well as the 2008–09 Bengal Bouts president – Weber has teamed with FTT faculty member William Donaruma to produce Strong Bodies Fight, a documentary about the distinctive program. The title is inspired by the bouts’ longtime mantra: “Strong bodies fight, that weak bodies may be nourished.” “It is not about fighting each other,” says Donaruma, who also is the film’s director. “It is about fighting for a cause and helping each other.” Starting with the first tournament 79 years ago, all proceeds from Bengal Bouts ticket sales – more than $50,000 in 2009 – have been directed to the Holy Cross Missions in what was once called East Bengal and today is Bangladesh. Part of the work of the Congregation of Holy Cross, Notre Dame’s founding religious community, the missions spearhead a variety of educational and outreach initiatives in the impoverished country. Weber thought a film about the tie that binds Notre Dame’s student boxers to the missions would raise awareness of the Holy Cross programs and how to support them. His original intent was to go to Bangladesh by himself with a small handheld camera and shoot footage for a “mini-documentary,” but that plan grew to include four of his teammates. “As a student, I saw the potential to provide a tremendous educational experience for our boxers,” Weber says. “As the president of Bengal Bouts, I saw the opportunity to transform our connection with Bangladesh from a mere check into a real relationship.” Fellow boxers weren’t the only people interested in adding their names to the lineup. Weber approached Donaruma about the project around the same time he began discussing it with his peers, and Notre Dame alumnus John Klein later joined the crew as cinematographer. The group traveled to Bangladesh in May 2008 with three high-definition cameras in tow, the filmmakers capturing the boxers’ journey as they met those who work in the missions and the people they serve. Back at Notre Dame, Donaruma guided the transformation from raw footage to finished film, as he and Weber combined elements of the trip and the bouts themselves to create what is now a feature-length documentary. “The most rewarding part of the project,” Donaruma says, “has been the experience of visiting that region of the world and that we seemed to really capture an essence of hope, pride and beauty of the country and not just the idea of despair.” Largely financed by Bengal Bouts alumni organized by executive producer/ head coach Tom Suddes, “Strong Bodies Fight” (www.strongbodiesfight.org) will premiere this weekend as apart of the Bengal Bouts reunion. For more information on the Bengal Bouts, visit nd.edu and look for the “What Would You Fight For?” video. 126

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GETTING TO KNOW...

WIDE RECEIVER

GOLDEN TATE No. 23 • 5-11 • 195 • Jr. | Hendersonville, Tenn./Hendersonville

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unior wide receiver Golden Tate has been a dominating presence for the Irish offense and continues that trend this season. One of the nation’s top receivers, Tate leads the Irish with 52 receptions for 847 yards and eight touchdowns through seven games in 2009. The Hendersonville, Tenn., native has played in 31 career games for the Irish, hauling in 116 passes for 2,058 yards and 19 touchdowns. GameDay’s Amy Stuhldreher gives Irish fans a chance to get to know Golden Tate.

Stuhldreher: What is your major and why does it interest you? Tate: My major is sociology. I really enjoy the whole area of study, but I’m particularly interested in the criminology side of it.

Stuhldreher: What one word would your teammates use to describe you? Tate: Outgoing Stuhldreher: What do you see yourself doing after football? Tate: Hopefully, I’ll be working, perhaps as

Stuhldreher: What is your favorite Coach Weis saying? Tate: I really don’t have one.

a social worker or something that deals with criminal investigations.

Stuhldreher: What attracted you to Notre Dame? Tate: The tradition, the alumni, the athletic

Stuhldreher: What one stadium would you like to play in but haven’t? Tate: I’d like to play in The Swamp at Florida.

program and the fact that the University is one of the top academic colleges in the nation. I felt that if I came here I would succeed. If football doesn’t work out, I will still leave with a degree from here.

Stuhldreher: What is your favorite Rob Ianello saying? Tate: I don’t have a favorite one, but the one I hear the most is “don’t care” whenever I have an excuse about a ball I dropped.

Stuhldreher: What song always gets you ready to take the field? Tate: “Make it Funky” by Will.i.am Stuhldreher: If the Irish wide receivers had a theme song, what would it be? Tate: That’s a tough one. We have a lot of different personalities, so it could be anything.

Stuhldreher: If you could change one thing about Notre Dame Stadium, what would it be? Tate: I would put up a jumbotron and maybe add more seats. Stuhldreher: If you were stranded on an island, what three tings would you have to have with you? Tate: My fishing pole, crab legs and my little brother

Stuhldreher: What is your ringtone right now? Tate: Just the standard ring. Stuhldreher: What song on your iPod would surprise people? Tate: “A Whole New World” from Aladdin Stuhldreher: Other than playing in the NFL, what is your dream job? Tate: I would say managing a team, maybe the L.A. Dodgers or another team in California where it’s warmer.

Stuhldreher: North or South Dining Hall? Tate: That’s a tough one because I’ve lived on both sides of campus. I’d have to say North. The pasta stir-fry is really good there, and you can make your own pizza or scrambled eggs.

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CATCHING UP WITH...

WILLIE TOWNSEND By Craig Chval

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ormer Notre Dame basketball coach Digger Phelps could be a tough guy to refuse. Willie Townsend pulled off the feat once, but couldn’t manage it a second time. As a two-sport star growing up in Ohio, Townsend was recruited by dozens of colleges to play football and basketball. One of his suitors was Phelps, then the head basketball coach at Fordham University. But Ara Parseghian’s recruiting pitch won out over a field that included Ohio State’s Woody Hayes and Michigan’s Bo Schembechler, however, and Townsend enrolled at Notre Dame to play football for the Fighting Irish. After a spectacular first season as Fordham’s head coach in 1970-71, however, Phelps was hired to succeed Johnny Dee as Notre Dame’s head coach. Once on campus, Phelps found himself short on bodies and once again set his sights on Townsend. “Ara’s rule was that if your grades were OK, you could play (another sport),” says Townsend. So Townsend, who earned three monograms as a wide receiver and led the Irish in receiving in 1972, agreed to join the basketball team in 1972-73. “It’s a small, small world,” laughs Townsend about Phelps second, more successful, recruitment of him. “Basketball’s been in my life since third grade,” Townsend says. “I started playing football in ninth grade because that was the first year our parents let us play. “Football was kind of an interesting twist because I really got into it as a way to get tougher on the basketball court.” As if playing both football and basketball at Notre Dame wasn’t enough, Townsend was pursuing a degree in electrical engineering, hardly a lightweight major. “School-wise, I took my books with me when I went on trips,” he says. “If you want the degree, you have to pay the price.” There was never any question in Townsend’s mind about being willing to pay the price academically, and it played a key role in his decision to attend Notre Dame. “One, I wanted a great education,” he says. “Another thing was that I didn’t want to go to a large school.” Notre Dame got even a little bit smaller after Townsend’s freshman year, when his younger brother Mike joined him on the Notre Dame football and basketball squads. Willie was a standout receiver for the Irish, while Mike earned All-America honors in the defensive backfield, leading the nation in interceptions in 1972. “I recruited Michael; I was his host,” recalls Townsend. “I didn’t care if he went to Notre Dame, but I felt that he should see Notre Dame. I felt that he had a lot to offer Notre Dame and that Notre Dame had a lot to offer him. “Notre Dame recruited personalities and people to fit, and I think they liked me,” he chuckles. “I felt that Michael’s personality would fit.” After helping Notre Dame to the 1973 national championship, Townsend was drafted by the Los Angeles Rams. Rather than accept a trade, however, Townsend decided to begin his engineering career.

Townsend was a two-sport standout at Notre Dame, playing both football and basketball.

“I actually would have been paid less in the NFL than I would be earning as an engineer,” says Townsend with at least a hint of incredulity, given today’s NFL salaries. Townsend went to work for Corning Glass Works, helping to develop pneumatic control robots, before moving to Corning’s corporate headquarters. As his career progressed into mechanical design and then human resources and management, Townsend also worked for Ford, GM, Whirlpool and Dayton Power and Light. Eventually, Townsend formed his own business, providing independent consulting services in areas such as operational efficiencies and human resources. As his career took him from Michigan to Ohio to Kentucky to California, Townsend spent much of his time away from work coaching youth sports. Eventually, Townsend began his own training academy, helping young athletes improve their physical skills in a wide range of sports. Even a quarter-century after his Notre Dame career, Townsend is able to keep up with his young charges. “One kid told me, ‘I never had a coach who could do drills with me,’” says Townsend. “They had to beat my time; if they couldn’t beat my time, they had to do the drill again.” About five years ago, Townsend began working as a substitute teacher; today he teaches science and math full-time and coaches.

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WILLIE TOWNSEND CONTINUED “I tell my players, ‘Your game is only going to last 48 minutes, but you practice days and days to play on Friday, and you’re supposed to be honing your skills.’ “And it’s the same thing in class, I tell the students, ‘Every day we’re honing our skills to get to Friday, and then on Friday we’ll have a quiz or something to measure our progress.” Seeing a young student enjoy a breakthrough in the classroom is a great thrill for Townsend. “That the fun part of the job,” he says. “That’s the part of the job I really enjoy, seeing the light that comes on for a kid. It’s a real motivator for me.” In the final analysis, the distinction between teaching and coaching is often non-existent. “That’s another thing I learned from Ara,” says Townsend. “You’re a coach, but you’re really a teacher. “And just like he did for us, I try to teach the kids not only how to be an athlete, but how to be a person.” When he’s not teaching or coaching, much of Townsend’s free time is spent attending the sporting events that Bryan and Bernadette are participating in, along with his wife, Margaret. “She’s a stabilizer for me,” explains Townsend, before going on to share how Margaret had to put her foot down when he dressed Bernadette in nothing but football or basketball clothes. Away from the athletic venues, the Townsends enjoy traveling throughout the United States. “I love to see different parts of the country,” he says. “There are so many beautiful places.” Townsend also follows the Notre Dame football and basketball programs closely. “I try to stay in touch because I want to be a part of the Notre Dame family,” says Townsend, who is active in the Notre Dame Alumni Association and Monogram Club. “It’s the relationships you make. When you go away to college, the friendships you make there are the ones you’re going to remember. Following the Irish while living in Rancho Cucamonga, Calif. does have its occasional drawbacks, as Townsend has learned. Fortunately, he always has a trump card to play, thanks to Notre Dame’s thrilling 23-14 victory over Southern California during the 1973 national championship season. “Some of the USC fans like to make sure and remind me that they’re having a lot of success,” he relates. “And I tell them, ‘Yes, they are. But you know something, I have my national championship ring. And you know how I got it? By beating USC.’” After helping Notre Dame to the 1973 national championship, Townsend was drafted by the Los Angeles Rams. “As I looked back and evaluated my life, I realized that coaching is what I enjoy most,” he says. Among the hundreds of youngsters that Townsend has coached are his two children, Bryan and Bernadette. Bryan earned a football scholarship to the Air Force Academy, where he is a freshman offensive lineman, while Bernadette is a junior in high school, excelling in track and basketball. She also carries a grade-point average of over 3.8. As a coach, Townsend borrows heavily from both Parseghian and Phelps. “Digger would do anything for his players,” says Townsend. “The biggest thing I take away from Ara is the way he made us all feel like we were part of the team,” he says. “He had a knack for unifying people. “He was also a heck of a motivator,” Townsend remembers. “His speeches were never long, but he could get you up and you were ready to go.” Townsend also draws upon Parseghian’s legendary focus on preparation, as both a coach and a teacher.

Townsend and his wife, Margaret, have two children, Bryan, who plays football at the Air Force Academy, and Bernadette, a standout track and basketball star in high school.

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CAMPUS SCENE STUDENTS EMBRACE RARE EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH OPPORTUNITY IN INDIA By Shannon Chapla Four Notre Dame undergraduate students had the rare opportunity to conduct research side-by-side over the summer with the famous Irish nun Sister Cyril Mooney, known as “the Mother Teresa of education,” who has turned an elite Catholic school for girls in Kolkata, India, into an education center that welcomes the city’s street children and allows them to become advocates for social change. The students are now readying reports on the education research they conducted through an academic partnership with 74-year-old Sister Cyril, the principal of Loreto Day School Sealdah, and recipient of one of India’s highest civilian honors. They worked, researched and served in the community and at the school, which invites children in from poorer households, including those in the slums, to learn free-of-charge alongside wealthier fee-paying students. The Loreto students serve as teachers to the Rainbows, or former street children, who now study and live at the school. The trip was a precursor to the course this semester titled “Undergraduate Action Research Seminar in India,” offered by Notre Dame’s Institute for Educational Initiatives (IEI) and Education, Schooling and Society (ESS) minor. It was led by Tamo Chattopadhay, a native of Kolkata (formerly Calcutta), post-doctoral teaching scholar and IEI fellow. “I began to collaborate with Sister Cyril in 2001,” said Chattopadhay, who came to Notre Dame last year and maintains friendships with the nun and her Loreto teachers. “She is leading a remarkable social experiment in education that unites children from all social, financial and religious backgrounds. Sister Cyril touches tens of thousands of children with her programs of outreach and partnership.” The Notre Dame students spent four weeks examining Sister Cyril’s innovative educational and social justice interventions, which include weekly visits by Loreto students to village schools where they become the “teachers” for their counterparts in these schools, targeting the root causes of poverty and marginalization. “We spent mornings and evenings helping Loreto’s Rainbow girls who once lived on the streets but now live on the upper floor of the school,” senior Emily Keebler said. “Naps and homework in multiple languages occurred simultaneously. In the late mornings we focused on our research.” They examined relationship dynamics between Loreto’s 600 wealthy or middle-class students and 600 low-income kids from the city’s sprawling slums, motivation and aspirations of the Loreto students who tutor Rainbow kids, and the school’s cost-effective and innovative learning strategies. “I really wanted my students to have a unique and powerful experience and they surpassed my expectations in every way,” Chattopadhay said.

“They were warm, genuine, caring and engaged. They didn’t hesitate to hug the street kids who were probably not wearing the cleanest clothes and didn’t smell so pleasant. They did everything with a great spirit.” Outreach included working with community organizations in Kolkata to experience a wide variety of social programs in diverse spatial contexts of the global city. They visited slum schools, toured prestigious English schools and questioned representatives from Catholic Relief Services and the U.S. consulate. “Everywhere you turn there is another challenge that is blocking the idea of quality education for all,” said junior psychology major Carolyn Leary, who is planning a career in special education. “Dreams are limited by extreme poverty, societal expectations and government roadblocks, but I was inspired by Sister Cyril’s perseverance. For every hurdle, she has created an outreach program to address the issue and affected population.” The Notre Dame students spent three days a week in Loreto schools, one day at an off-site organization, and another divided between reflective seminars and workshops with local educators and policy makers. “Some of the visits were emotionally trying,” Leary said. “Because the issues are so complex and the children so young, but we were fortunate to see an overall view of education in India.” Sister Cyril has been honored for her work by UNESCO and the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and has spoken before the United Nations and on The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer, among many others. And, although she often plays host to volunteers, interns and faculty researchers from around the world, this was the first time she has worked directly with students conducting research as part of a course. The experiences all were new for the Notre Dame group. “My problems were quickly shoved into perspective when I met girls who have been trafficked and who deal with issues that I cannot even imagine,” Leary said. “I admire their strength and am inspired by their hope.” On campus next month, the students will submit their research papers and will participate in an undergraduate research panel in the spring. Chattopadhay is offering the course again for four weeks next summer. The 2009 trip was supported by seed money from a Center for Social Concerns’ (CSC) community-based course development grant, and Rachel Tomas Morgan, director of the CSC’s International Summer Service Learning Program, provided technical support. Additional support for the course was provided by the College of Arts and Letters’ ESS minor; Kellogg Institute for International Studies; and Arts and Letters Office of Undergraduate fellowships.

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GUGLIELMINO

ATHLETICS COMPLEX Home of the Fighting Irish

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he Guglielmino Athletics Complex, one of the more recent additions to the Notre Dame campus, opened its doors in August 2005. Located on the east side of campus, just northeast of the Joyce Center and adjacent to the Loftus Center and the LaBar Practice Fields, the 96,000-square foot facility is home for the Notre Dame football program. “The Gug” is the gift of the late Don F. Guglielmino and his wife Flora and provides the Irish with one of the finest facilities in the nation The building features a players’ lounge with a 52-inch television, Gatorade station and kitchen in addition to several study lounges and the Morse Recruiting Lounge. The Romano Locker Room and the adjacent Allen Equipment Room feature 125 lockers, 22 showers and equipment storage. In preparation for practice and games, the Irish football team and the 25 other varsity sports at Notre Dame use the

150-seat Isban Auditorium, the 25,000-square foot Haggar Fitness Center (featuring a 50-yard Mondo track and a 45x18-yard Prestige Turf field) and the Loftus Sports Medicine and Rehabilitation Center (which houses two exercise pools, one with a treadmill on the bottom, and an on-site x-ray machine). The building also houses positionspecific meeting rooms and offices for the entire football coaching and support staffs. The Guglielmino Athletics Complex places Notre Dame at the cutting edge of collegiate athletics facilities. The Gug sits next to an even more recent addition to campus, the LaBar Practice Complex, which opened in 2008. The $2.5 million gift of John R. “Rees” LaBar and his wife Carol funded the three practice fields, two of which are artificial turf. All three fields are lit and provide football, lacrosse, soccer and RecSports with a facility that can meet a high demand for use year-round.

The LaBar Practice Complex is used year-round by football, lacrosse, soccer and Rec Sports.

The mural at the entrance to the Guglielmino Athletics Complex portrays the unique and storied tradition of Notre Dame football.

The Morse Recruiting Lounge houses a bust of legendary coach Knute Rockne. Banners representing Notre Dame’s 11 national championships hang from the ceiling.

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The 3,800-square-foot Isban Auditorium features 150 large chair back seats specially designed for size and comfort. The room will be used for meetings for all 26 of Notre Dame’s varsity athletic teams.

The Haggar Fitness Center (pictured here and right) measures 25,000-square feet and houses state-of-the-art strength and conditioning weight equipment, a 50-yard Mondo track for speed training, a 45-yard by 18-yard Prestige Turf for team workouts and an updated sound and lighting system that includes six plasma television screens.

The Allen Equipment Room is located adjacent to the practice locker room. The players’ lounge is equipped with a 52-inch plasma television, a Gatorade station and a kitchen. Also available are study lounges.

The Loftus Sports Medicine and Rehabilitation Center includes two new exercise pools (one with a treadmill on the bottom), new office space for the athletic training staff, increased rehabilitation space and an on-site x-ray room.

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NOTRE DAME 2009 FOOTBALL

JACK SWARBRICK Director of Athletics

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ohn B. “Jack” Swarbrick Jr., a University of Notre Dame graduate who has risen to national prominence as a lawyer, consultant and executive in the collegiate and Olympic sports industries, is in his second year as director of athletics at his alma mater. His first year on campus in 2008-09 featured the announcement of plans for a new, freestanding ice hockey arena; creation of an athletic administrative division to enhance athletic performance — plus the individual accomplishments of 35 All-Americans, eight Academic All-Americans and a record four NCAA Post-Graduate Scholarship winners. Notre Dame’s most heralded teams in ’08-‘09 finished as the NCAA runner-up in both women’s soccer (26-1, led by Hermann Trophy winner Kerri Hanks) and fencing (men 33-0, women 32-2), while the women’s tennis squad advanced to the NCAA semifinals. The Irish men’s soccer squad was seeded 14th in the NCAA bracket, while the hockey team ranked fourth in the final poll after winning Central Collegiate Hockey Association regular-season and postseason crowns. Men’s lacrosse

finished unbeaten in the regular season (and second in the final poll) — and women’s lacrosse won its first BIG EAST title. Overall, the Irish claimed 2008-09 BIG EAST championship honors in women’s soccer, men’s swimming, women’s swimming (for a record 13th straight year), women’s lacrosse, rowing, softball, women’s tennis and men’s outdoor track and field – added a BIG EAST regular-season division crown in men’s soccer – plus the CCHA hockey and Great Western Lacrosse League men’s lacrosse titles. Notre Dame also ranked number one in the country (among Football Bowl Subdivision schools) in the most recent Graduation Success Rate (GSR) numbers in 2008 with a 98 for all student-athletes – including 19 programs with a perfect 100 score. The 2009 Academic Progress Rate (APR) statistics included more perfect 1,000 scores by Irish teams (nine) than by any other FBS institution. Using the federal graduation rate criteria, nine programs produced 100 percent rates – and 11 ranked first in their respective sports. Another highlight of the 2008-09 school year was the year-long Notre Dame Monogram Club program “Celebrating Over 60 Years of Success by Black Student-Athletes at Notre Dame.” Meanwhile, Irish studentathletes volunteered 6,302 hours of their time in community service and outreach programs. Born in Yonkers, N.Y., and raised in Yonkers and Bloomington, Ind., Swarbrick is a 1976 magna cum laude graduate of Notre Dame with a bachelor’s degree in economics. Upon graduating from Stanford University Law School in 1980, he returned to Indiana to accept a position as an associate in the Indianapolis law firm Baker & Daniels, one

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J A C K S WA R B R I C K CONTINUED of the largest in the state. He was made partner in 1987 and spent 28 years overall with the firm. At the same time that Swarbrick began his career, the city of Indianapolis was beginning its effort to become a world-class center for amateur and professional athletics. Swarbrick quickly became an instrumental figure in that initiative. As a member of the Indiana Sports Corporation, including the chairmanship from 1992 to 2001, Swarbrick led most of the city’s successful proposals to a wide array of athletics organizations – from the National Football League (NFL) to the United States Olympic Committee (USOC) to the Big Ten Conference.

His leadership efforts have resulted in the city: • Earning the right to play host to the 2012 Super Bowl in Indianapolis at Lucas Oil Stadium. As vice president of the Indianapolis 2012 Super Bowl Committee, Swarbrick served as the architect of the city’s bid and the presentation to the NFL owners. • Becoming the home of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) national headquarters in 1999. He coordinated the city’s efforts by assembling an incentive package, building community support and presenting Indianapolis in the bid process. His persistence helped deliver an extraordinary corporate partner for the community – the NCAA employs 400 people, creates an annual local operating impact of $63.5 million and offers direct impact to the community on a quadrennial basis of at least $100 million through its events.

years beginning in 2008 (Indianapolis now has played host to every women’s Big Ten basketball tournament except one since 1995). Creative elements of the bid included a large job fair and endowed student-athlete scholarships. He served as sports commissioner of the 1982 U.S. Olympic Festival in Indianapolis, competition director of the ’87 Pan American Games, chairman of the ’91 World Gymnastics Championships and an executive committee member for the 1994 World Rowing Championships in Indianapolis. He also served as a consultant to other communities playing host to or interested in attracting athletic events.

Swarbrick’s practice at Baker & Daniels focused on the representation of owners of sports teams and organizations which sanction or conduct athletic competitions. He served as general counsel for numerous national governing bodies of Olympic sports, including USA Gymnastics and USRowing, and as a consultant to the 1996 Summer Olympic Games in Atlanta. In his work as an advisor to the NCAA, Swarbrick: • Coordinated the men’s College Basketball Partnership, an NCAA-led group that addresses the opportunities and challenges in the sport. • Developed the business plan for the new NBA/NCAA youth basketball enterprise. • Worked with the NCAA’s Corporate Partners and Champions Program.

• Hosting the 1987 Pan American Games, where Swarbrick served as the director of competition.

• Served as a member of the NCAA Division I Women’s Basketball Discussion Group.

• Hosting the 1991 World Gymnastics Championships. • Hosting NCAA Men’s Basketball Final Fours and other college championship competitions and a wide array of national and world championships in the Olympic sports. Indianapolis has played host to the NCAA Men’s Basketball Final Four five times since 1991 (and will again in 2010) – and Swarbrick engineered an agreement in which the men’s Final Four will be played in Indianapolis on an average of once every five years through 2039. The economic impact of that agreement may reach $1 billion. • Securing rights to host the Big Ten Conference men’s and women’s basketball tournaments at Conseco Fieldhouse for five consecutive

• Chaired the NCAA/USOC task force dedicated to developing proposals to expand sponsorship of Olympic sports among NCAA member institutions. He participated for two years as a midfielder with Notre Dame’s club lacrosse team during his undergraduate years. Born March 19, 1954, Swarbrick was named Notre Dame’s 12th athletics director on July 16, 2008. He and his wife, Kimberly, are the parents of four children: Kate, a senior at St. Louis University; Connor, a junior at Wake Forest University; Cal, a senior in high school; and Christopher, a high school junior.

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SUPPORT STAFF BRIAN WHITE Offensive Graduate Assistant

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rian White is in his first season at Notre Dame as the graduate assistant for the Irish offense. White came to Notre Dame from the University of Maryland where he had worked with the football program since 2006. This past season White served as a staff intern with the Terrapins before serving as the interim special teams and tight ends coach during the month

BRYANT YOUNG Defensive Graduate Assistant

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ryant Young, a 1994 University of Notre Dame graduate and four-time NFL Pro Bowl defensive lineman, is in his first season as the graduate assistant for defense at Notre Dame. Young earned four monograms at Notre Dame from 1990-93 and helped the Irish to a 40-8-1 record during his four years. A first-team All-America selection in 1993 as a senior captain and defensive tackle, Young started 30 of the 41 games he played at Notre Dame and totaled 176 tackles, 22.5 tackles for loss and 18 sacks during his collegiate career. He also played in four bowl games while at Notre Dame (started three of four bowl games but postseason statistics did not count toward individual totals). Young played all 14 NFL seasons with the San Francisco 49ers and only four 49ers have ever been with the franchise longer. From 1994-2007, he played in and started 208 games, trailing only Jerry Rice’s 224 starts and tied for third in all-time games played in 49ers history.

CHAD KLUNDER Director of Football Operations

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had Klunder is in his fifth year as director of football operations at Notre Dame. In his role, Klunder coordinates and oversees all day-to-day administrative and operational details including team travel, budgets, pre-season camp arrangements, the annual coaches clinic and summer camps. A former graduate assistant coach at Notre Dame in 2003-04, Klunder worked with the Irish offense for two seasons. He previously served as running backs coach and coordinator of football operations at Harvard from 1998 through 2002. During his tenure at Harvard,

of December and for the Humanitarian Bowl. White’s special teams unit featured a 99-yard kickoff return for touchdown, setting a bowl record, and helped Maryland defeat Nevada, 42-35. White was a graduate assistant during the 2006 and 2007 seasons when he worked closely with the scout teams and was a member of the offensive coaching staff, focusing on the offensive line and running backs. Prior to his stint at Maryland, White spent two seasons at Hargrave Military Academy, a college prep academy in Chatham, Va., serving as offensive line coach and recruiting coordinator. White recruited the East Coast and organized an annual college showcase combine that attracted over 300 coaches. A native of Oakland, N.J., White was born June 29, 1982, and is a 2004 graduate of Juniata College where he earned a bachelor of arts degree in history. He received a Master’s degree in special education from Maryland in 2008.

Selected to the Pro Bowl in 1996, 1999, 2001 and 2002, Young finished his career with 89.5 sacks, good for third all-time in team history. He helped the 49ers make the playoffs in each of his first five seasons and at the conclusion of his final home game, Young was carried off the field on the shoulders of his teammates. Drafted with the seventh overall selection in 1994 draft, Young was named the NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year in 1994 after leading all 49ers defensive linemen with 49 tackles and totaled six sacks. He started all 16 games and helped San Francisco claim its fifth Super Bowl championship. Young suffered devastating fractures to his tibia and fibula in 1998, ending his season after the 12th week of action with Young leading all defensive tackles in the NFL in sacks that season. Undeterred, he regained his previous form in 1999 and tallied 11 sacks en route to his second Pro Bowl selection. Young was honored for his efforts when he was named NFL Comeback Player of the Year for 1999. His excellence was not just limited to on the field performance as Young was recipient of the team’s Len Eshmont Award, symbolic of the player who best exemplifies courage and leadership, an astonishing eight times including each of his final four seasons. Prior to Young, no other member of the 49ers had ever won the honor more than twice. A native of Chicago Heights, Ill., Bryant Colby Young was born Jan. 27, 1972, and graduated from Bloom Township High School. He graduated in 1994 with a marketing degree from Notre Dame. Young’s wife, Kristen, also graduated from Notre Dame in 1994 and the couple have four children: Kai, Colby, Kennedy and Bryce.

his running backs led the Ivy League in rushing on three occasions. He coached three all-Ivy League players, including Chris Menick, Harvard’s all-time leading rusher. Harvard in 2001 finished 9-0 in the Ivy League and became the first Harvard team to go unbeaten or untied in conference play since 1913. Klunder also served as a graduate assistant strength and conditioning coach at Minnesota – and worked as a graduate assistant football coach at St. Cloud State. At St. Cloud, he coached Randy Martin, who was a finalist in 1995 and ‘96 for the Harlon Hill Trophy that goes to the NCAA Division II player of the year. The Waverly, Iowa, native played defensive back at Wartburg College in Waverly. He earned four letters, was twice a unanimous all-league pick and gained honorable mention All-America recognition. He served as a Wartburg co-captain in 1994 when his team advanced to the NCAA Division III quarterfinals. Born Aug. 28, 1972, Klunder received a degree in sports management from Wartburg in 1995 and has done master’s degree coursework at St. Cloud State, Minnesota and Notre Dame. He is married to the former Lisa Malin who is executive director of the College Football Hall of Fame.

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S U P P O R T S TA F F CONTINUED

TIM MCDONNELL Director of Football Personnel

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im McDonnell is in his fifth season with the Irish football office and third year as director of football personnel. In this capacity, McDonnell covers a variety of football-related matters, serving as a liaison between the team and NFL personnel, assisting with recruiting efforts, and helping to coordinate the walk-on program. Prior to his promotion, McDonnell served as the coordinator of quality control under

DAVID PELOQUIN Director of Football Development

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he 2009 football season will be Dave Peloquin’s sixth season with the Notre Dame football program, and his third year as director of football development. In this role, Peloquin’s responsibilities deal primarily with the administration of Irish recruiting efforts. He works closely with recruiting coordinator Rob Ianello and has played an integral role as the Irish have secured top-10

KEVIN GREEN Director of Head Football Coach Relations

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evin Green is in his second season with the Notre Dame football office and serves as the director of head football coach relations. In this capacity, Green works directly with head football coach Charlie Weis and manages his daily schedule as well as organizing daily meetings, appointments, appearances and speaking engagements. Green acts on behalf of Weis

BRENDAN DONOVAN Coordinator of Quality Control

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rendan Donovan is in his third season working in the Notre Dame football office and second year as the coordinator of quality control. In his role, Donovan assists the head football coach in all football-related matters, handles special

head coach Charlie Weis. In this role, McDonnell assisted the head football coach in all football-related matters, handled special projects for the coaching staff and assisted with personnel development and recruiting. A 2005 graduate of the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Mass., and a three-year football letterman as a receiver, McDonnell was the inaugural recipient of the Daniel Allen Sportsmanship Award in 2005, presented to the Holy Cross varsity athlete who best exemplifies the qualities of sportsmanship that coach Daniel Allen exhibited throughout his life. He also received the 2004 Unsung Hero Award as the player who supported the team spiritually, emotionally and physically for the good of the team. A native of Harrison, N.Y., McDonnell graduated from Iona Prep before starting his collegiate career at Holy Cross. Born April 15, 1983, he is the grandson of the late Wellington Mara, former president of the New York Giants who was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1997. recruiting classes two of the last three seasons. Prior to being promoted to director of football development, Peloquin served as coordinator of player personnel development where he assisted Ron Powlus (then the director of player personnel development) for two seasons in numerous administrative duties regarding Notre Dame’s recruiting. In 2004, Peloquin served in a similar capacity as a recruiting assistant, a role in which he worked with the entire coaching staff assisting in all recruiting aspects. Before rejoining the Irish, Peloquin worked as a sales representative for State Farm Insurance and Financial Services in the Chicago area. A 2003 Notre Dame graduate with a bachelor’s degree in business marketing from the Mendoza College of Business, Peloquin served as a student manager from 2000 to 2002 and was named head senior manager for the 2002 season. He is a native of Blue Island, Ill. by coordinating all University appearances, sponsorship, benefactor, alumni club, community and media requests and obligations. He schedules, plans, prepares and travels with Weis on speaking engagements and handles special projects and other personal matters. Prior to joining Notre Dame, Green worked seven years in health care consulting, most recently as a manager for Accenture LLP in Chicago. While with Accenture, he coordinated financial and operational due diligence for mergers and acquisitions of health care providers. A South Bend, Ind., native, Green attended LaSalle High School and later Notre Dame. He graduated in 2001 with a bachelor’s degree in finance from the Mendoza College of Business and had a concentration in computer applications. Green is married to the former Sharon Bui (executive director of Hannah & Friends).

projects for the coaching staff and assists with personnel development and recruiting. Donovan started at Notre Dame in 2007 as a senior staff assistant for the football team. His duties primarily centered on serving as the main contact for all general communication within the Notre Dame football office. He also helped with other projects assigned within the office. A native of Piscataway, N.J., Donovan graduated in the fall of 2006 from Seton Hall University with a degree in history. He is a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon and was the 2005 Greek Man of the Year at Seton Hall.

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S U P P O R T S TA F F CONTINUED

KINNON TATUM Defensive Quality Control

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innon Tatum is in his second season with the Notre Dame football program, serving as the intern for the defensive coaching staff. His primary duty is assisting the defensive coaches with all aspects of the football program. Tatum is responsible for film breakdowns, scouting reports, playbooks and other duties assigned by coach Charlie Weis and the defensive staff. Tatum played four years at inside linebacker for Notre Dame (199396), starting 24 contests, and recorded 188 tackles with 3.5 sacks, 12 tackles for loss, two interceptions, four passes broken up, two forced fumbles and one fumble recovery. He led the Irish in tackles in 1996

DAVID HANNA Intern (Offense)

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avid Hanna is in his first season with the Irish football staff. His primary duty is assisting the offensive coaches in a variety of areas. He is responsible for film breakdowns, scouting reports, playbooks and other duties assigned by head coach Charlie Weis and the offensive staff. Prior to coming to Notre Dame, Hanna was an assistant football coach and assistant professor of physical education at Washington and Lee University in Lexington, Va., for two seasons. Hanna served as the Generals defensive

DREW McKENNA Intern (Defense)

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rew McKenna is in his third season working with the Notre Dame football team but his first year as an intern for the coaching staff. McKenna was a junior student manager for the 2007 football team and one of three senior managers in 2008. His primary duty is assisting the defensive coaches

with 77 stops and was selected to play in the Hula Bowl all-star game following the season. Following his senior year, Tatum was drafted by the Carolina Panthers with the 27th selection in the third round of the 1997 National Football League draft. He played in 31 games from 1997-98 for the Panthers and spent the 1999 training camp with the club before being released due to injury on the final cut. Tatum signed with Tampa Bay in 2000 and went to training camp with the Buccaneers before being cut at the end of training camp. Tatum entered the business world following his stint in the NFL and worked for Allstate as a claims adjuster from 2004-07. He was based out of New Orleans in 2004-05 but transferred to Charlotte, N.C., following Hurricane Katrina. While in Charlotte, Tatum returned to football as the linebackers coach at Providence High School from 2006-07. Tatum was an all-state safety in high school who set the North Carolina state record with 12 interceptions as a junior. Born July 19, 1975, Tatum was raised in Fayetteville, N.C.

backs coach and special teams coordinator and helped guide Washington and Lee to a 10-9 record. From 2005-06 Hanna coached the wide receivers at Johns Hopkins University, helping the Blue Jays to the 2005 Centennial Conference title and the school’s first NCAA tournament berth. He studied in the doctoral clinical psychology program at the University of Albany from 1999-2003 and later served as a community investment specialist in the City of Baltimore’s mayor’s office. Hanna was a four-year letterwinner and two-time all-conference selection at free safety for Kalamazoo College. His senior season, Hanna tied for team-high honors with three interceptions and ranked second on the squad with 59 tackles in nine games. Hanna graduated from Kalamazoo College in 1999 with a bachelor of arts in psychology and a minor in sociology. A Michigan native, Hanna graduated from Okemos High School in 1995, where he was an all-area and all-state running back and an all-area wrestler.

in a variety of areas including film breakdowns, scouting reports, playbooks and other duties assigned by head coach Charlie Weis and the defensive staff. Kinnon Tatum also provides direction for McKenna. A 2009 graduate of the University of Notre Dame, McKenna earned a bachelor’s degree in finance from the Mendoza School of Business. As the head manager for administration in 2008, McKenna worked closely with Weis both at practice and around the Guglielmino Athletics Complex. Originally from the Lincoln Park neighborhood of Chicago, Ill., McKenna graduated from Saint Ignatius College Prep in 2005.

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ATHLETIC TRAINERS

ATHLETIC TRAINERS

[ABOVE]

Front Row: Jim Russ, LeQuita Beaton, Mandy Merritt, Anne Marquez, Chantal Porter and Mike Bean Back Row: Nikki Sperger, Dave Ludwig, Kevin Ricks, Scott Stansbury, Bill Agnew, Skip Meyer, Tony Sutton and Nicole Alexander

STUDENT ATHLETIC TRAINERS [RIGHT] Kneeling (R to L): Becky Tisak, Ted Lee and Amber Herkey Middle row (R to L): Megan DeAmbrosio, Analisia Stewart, Lindsey McAlarnen and Andy Tran Back row (R to L): Amber Rosenberg, Erin McDonnell, Patrick Rushford, Kurt Nowak and Dan Cooper

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SUPPORT GROUPS STRENGTH & CONDITIONING

Front Row (L-R): Erika Whitman, Chris Sandeen, Tony Rolinski, Craig Cheek and Irele Oderinde. Back Row (L-R): Eric Overland, James Seacord, Ruben Mendoza and Rick Perry.

FOOTBALL EQUIPMENT

(L-R): (L-R): John Palmer and Henry Scroope.

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SUPPORT GROUPS CONTINUED

SENIOR MANAGERS

(L-R): Pat McDowell, Aileen Villarreal and Bryan Hayes

JUNIOR MANAGERS

Front Row (L-R): Stephen Clarke, Aaron Gutierrez, Jeremy Kramer, Joey Sweeney, Sean Kearns, Stephen Lauria, Matthew McManus, Sean Rober and Tanner Ryan. Middle Row (L-R): Kristin Rhoa, Erin Hurley, Elizabeth Dillon, Sarah Slomski, Aryelle Emison and Sara Crandall. Back Row (L-R): Michael Quinn, Thomas Haddad, Brian Monson, Patrick O’Hearn, Ryan Bahniuk and Xavier Murphy.

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SUPPORT GROUPS CONTINUED

ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF

Front Row (L-R): Mary Rattenbury, Cathy Brown, Dawn Mayes, Karen Wesolek, Cynthia Stokes, Carol Copley, Donnetta McClellan, Kathryn Schuessler, Ann Karwoski, Rachel Hoover and Heather Turnbull. Second Row (L-R): Sandy Young, Anna Whitesel, Bev Frecker, Cyndi Sykes, Tinia Scott, Mary Jane Elias, Patty Herrity and Deb Jessup. Third Row (L-R): Stephanie Reed, Rachel Jones, Susan Molnar, Darlene Borlik and Jeanne Checkley. Back Row (L-R): Sue Halasz, Joy Schosker, Julie DeBuysser and Susan McGonigal

VIDEO STAFF

Front Row (L-R): Steve Horvath and Reuel Joaquin. Back Row (L-R): Tim Collins, Dan Maloof and Matthew Corcoran.

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SUPPORT GROUPS CONTINUED

ATHLETIC SOUND DEPARTMENT

(L-R): Paco Bayer, Andrew Drake and Will Pedersen

STADIUM MANAGEMENT

Front Row (L-R): Dale Rader, Cappy Gagnon, Jim Halasz, Jim Smith and Chuck Graves. Midde Row (L-R): Donna Major, Mack Smigielski, John Arndt, Bob Budney, Mike Rospopo, Chuck Brown and Bill Powell. Back Row (L-R): Mike Amodei, Tom Angelo, Ajax Arvin, Paul Miller, John Cutter and Nick DeLucenay.

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Team- Knollwood.indd 1

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SUPPORT GROUPS CONTINUED

JOYCE CENTER STAFF

(L-R): Bill Harvey, Amir Dedic, Julie Kennedy, Billie Blackston, Stephanie Gray and Tim Rosbrugh.

GROUNDS CREW

Front Row (L-R): Sean Bryant, Yul Hubbard, Robert Thomas and Jimmy Zannino Back Row (L-R): Dan Brazo, Jerome Whitaker, Dennis Dixon, JoAnn Wiegand, Jeff Duval, Tom Gammage and Steve Gibson.

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IRISH CHEERLEADERS

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Front Row (L to R): Lauren Fussner, Meghan McMahon, Kelly Jenko, Madeleine Genereux, Jessica Schott, Leprechaun David Zimmer, Courtney Sippo, Colleen Valencia, Molly Smith and Ann-Marie Krishnan. Back Row (L to R): Nicholas Nowotarski, Dave Wilkerson, Joe Livingston, John Flatley, Joe Mendoza, Patrick Gleason, Sean McCullough, Dylan PH Fernandez, Adam Mathews and Devin Blankinship.

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LAST MINUTE

WINS & LOSSES M

emorable finishes and heart-breaking losses have been part of Notre Dame football lore for more than 100 years. Nine Irish victories since 1961 have occurred on the game’s final play; seven of those wins as time expired were produced by Notre Dame placekickers. Among the most famous of those kicks were Harry Oliver’s 51-yard field goal against Michigan on Sept. 20, 1980, which propelled the Irish to a 29-27 victory and former walk-on Pat Dillingham’s slant pattern to Arnaz Battle in which Battle ran 60 yards for the game-winning score against Michigan State in 2002. In its long and storied history, 25 wins have come with under a minute to play in the game. Darius Walker’s six-yard run off a direct snap with 55 seconds to play propelled the Irish to a 38-31 win at Stanford in 2005 clinched a Fiesta Bowl berth for the Irish and capped a clutch 80-yard drive in the final 1:46 of the game. Brady Quinn threw a 45-yard touchdown pass to Jeff Samardzija with 27 seconds left to give Notre Dame an improbable 20-17 comeback victory over UCLA in 2006. Below is a listing of the Notre Dame victories and some losses decided with under five minutes to play.

Memorable Finishes Resulting in Wins or Ties...

OT OT 0:00 0:00 0:00 0:00 0:00 0:00 0:00 0:05 0:06 0:11 0:11 0:14 0:20

0:27 0:31 0:32 0:34 0:35 0:36 0:42

0:55 0:55 0:57 1:03

Nicholas Setta 40-yard field goal vs. Washington State, 29-26 (2003) Joey Getherall nine-yard run vs. Air Force, 34-31 (2000) D.J. Fitzpatrick 40-yard field goal vs. Navy, 27-24 (2003) Nicholas Setta 38-yard field goal vs. Purdue, 23-21 (2000) Jim Sanson 39-yard field goal vs. Texas, 27-24 (1996) John Carney 19-yard field goal vs. USC, 38-37 (1986) Harry Oliver 51-yard field goal vs. Michigan, 29-27 (1980) Joe Unis extra point following Joe Montana eight-yard pass to Kris Haines in Cotton Bowl vs. Houston, 35-34 (1979) Joe Perkowski 41-yard field goal vs. Syracuse, 17-15 (1961) Scott Cengia 20-yard field goal vs. Hawaii, 23-22 (1997) Don Schaefer extra point following Ralph Guglielmi nine-yard pass to Dan Shannon vs. Iowa, 14-14 (1953) Mike Johnston 32-yard field goal vs. Miami, 16-14 (1982) Mike Johnston 35-yard field goal vs. Oregon, 13-13 (1982) John Carney 44-yard field goal vs. Navy, 18-17 (1984) Rick Mirer two-point conversion to Reggie Brooks following three-yard pass from Mirer to Jerome Bettis vs. Penn State, 17-16 (1992) Brady Quinn 45-yard pass to Jeff Samardzija vs. UCLA, 20-17 (2006) Bill Shakespeare 19-yard pass to Wayne Millner vs. Ohio State, 18-13 (1935) Monty Stickles 43-yard field goal vs. Navy, 25-22 (1959) Rodney Culver one-yard run vs. Michigan State, 20-19 (1990) Steve Oracko extra point following Red Sitko one-yard run vs. USC, 14-14 (1948) Jarious Jackson 16-yard pass to Jay Johnson vs. Navy, 28-24 (1999) Rusty Lisch two-point conversion to Pete Holohan following 14-yard pass from Lisch to Dean Masztak vs. South Carolina, 18-17 (1979) Bob Joseph extra point following John Lattner one-yard run vs. Iowa, 20-20 (1951) Darius Walker six-yard run vs. Stanford, 38-31 (2005) Jim Sanson 17-yard field goal vs. Purdue, 31-30 (1998) Joe Montana 80-yard pass to Ted Burgmeier vs. North Carolina, 21-14 (1975)

1:06 1:13 1:15 1:16 1:24

1:27 1:39 1:40 2:00 2:00 2:08 2:15 2:22 2:30 2:37 2:40 2:40 2:49 2:53 2:54 2:58

3:08 3:23

Jim Sanson 48-yard field goal vs. Army, 20-17 (1998) Reggie Ho 26-yard field goal vs. Michigan, 19-17 (1988) Pat Dillingham 60-yard pass to Arnaz Battle vs. Michigan State, 21-17 (2002) Paul Hornung one-yard run vs. North Carolina, 21-14 (1956) Ron Powlus two-point conversion to Derrick Mayes after an Autry Denson seven-yard run followed by an Allen Rossum 76-yard interception return with 0:28 remaining vs. Washington, 29-21 (1995) Jarious Jackson 10-yard pass to Raki Nelson followed by an intentional safety with 0:03 remaining vs. LSU, 39-36 (1998) David Mitchell five-yard run vs. Purdue 31-24 (1977) Rick Mirer 18-yard pass to Adrian Jarrell vs. Michigan, 28-24 (1990) Chuck Sweeney safety of Alan McFarland in end zone vs. Navy, 9-7 (1937) Art Parisien 23-yard pass to Johnny Niemiec vs. USC, 13-12 (1926) Carlyle Holiday 67-yard pass to Omar Jenkins vs. Navy, 3023, (2002) Paul Hornung 25-yard field goal vs. Iowa, 17-14 (1955) Kevin Pendergast 31-yard field goal in Cotton Bowl vs Texas A&M, 24-21 (1994) Butch Niemiec 32-pass to Johnny O’Brien vs. Army, 12-6 (1928) Autry Denson one-yard run vs. Georgia Tech, 17-13 (1997) Jabari Halloway recovers Jarious Jackson fumble in the end zone vs. USC, 25-24 (1999) Bob Williams 30-yard pass to Jim Mutscheller vs. North Carolina, 14-7 (1950) Tom Clements three-yard run vs. Pittsburgh, 14-10 (1974) Terrail Lambert 19-yard interception return vs. Michigan State (2006) Scott Hempel 24-yard field goal vs. LSU, 3-0 (1970) Pat Steenberge two-point conversion to Mike Creaney after Fred Swendsen’s fumble recovery in end zone vs. Purdue, 8-7 (1971) Wayne Bullock two-yard run vs. Rice, 10-3 (1974) Jerome Heavens one-yard run vs. Air Force, 31-30 (1975)

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LAST MINUTE WINS & LOSSES CONTINUED 3:25 3:50 4:26 4:44 4:56 4:59 OT OT OT OT OT 0:00 0:00 0:00 0:01

0:02 0:02 0:03 0:04 0:11 0:19 0:19 0:33 0:36 0:38 0:42 0:48 0:54 1:00 1:05 1:07 1:08 1:08 1:25 1:33

George Izo 44-yard pass to George Sefcik vs. Iowa, 20-19 (1959) Dick Lynch three-yard run vs. Oklahoma, 7-0 (1957) Bob Thomas 19-yard field goal in Sugar Bowl vs. Alabama, 24-23 (1973) Harry Oliver 47-yard field goal vs. Georgia Tech, 3-3 (1980) Ron Powlus 11-yard pass to Bobby Brown vs. West Virginia, 21-14 (1997) Marc Edwards three-yard run vs. Vanderbilt, 14-7 (1996) Brad Otten five-yard pass to Rodney Sermons for USC, 27-20 (1996) Dallas Thompson 27-yard field goal for Air Force, 20-17 (1996) Eric Crouch seven-yard run for Nebraska, 27-24 (2000) Jason Teague 19-yard run for Michigan State, 44-41 (2005) Travis Thomas five-yard run for Notre Dame, But failed tw point conversion vs. Navy, 46-44 (2007) Mike Biselli 22-yard field goal for Stanford, 40-37 (1999) Max Zendejas 48-yard field goal for Arizona, 6-13 (1982) David Gordon 41-yard field goal for Boston College, 41-39 (1993) Josh Cummings 32-yard field goal for Pittsburgh, 41-38 (2004) Remy Hamilton 42-yard field goal for Michigan, 26-24 (1994) Frank Jordan 37-yard field goal for USC, 27-25 (1978) Matt Leinart one-yard run for USC, 34-31 (2005) Craig Fayak 34-yard field goal for Penn State, 24-21 (1990) Bill Kaliden five-yard run for Pittsburgh, 29-26 (1958) Doug Strang eight-yard run for Penn State, 34-30 (1983) Scott Campbell seven-yard pass to Steve Bryant for Purdue, 15-14 (1981) Steve Lach five-yard pass to Paul Anderson for Great Lakes, 19-14 (1943) Tommy Vardell one-yard run for Stanford, 36-31 (1990) Sandro Sciortino 26-yard field goal for Boston College, 27-25 (2003) Cameron Dantley 11-yard pass to Donte Davis for Syracuse, 24-23 (2008) Michael Harper one-yard run for USC, 17-13 (1982) Paul Peterson 30-yard pass to Tony Gonzalez for Boston College, 24-23 (2004) Johnny Baker 23-yard field goal for USC, 16-14 (1931) Adam Abrams 37-yard field goal for USC, 20-17 (1997) Ralph Kurek one-yard run for Wisconsin, 14-9 (1963) Kenneth Toulon one-yard run for Stanford, 17-13 (2001) Billy Dale one-yard run for Texas in Cotton Bowl, 21-17 (1970) Jeff VanHorne 29-yard field goal for Pittsburgh, 10-9 (1986) Craig Fertig 15-yard pass to Rod Sherman for USC, 20-17 (1964)

1:35 1:38 1:48 1:50 2:53 3:26 3:28 3:28 3:48 3:50 4:03 4:27 4:52

Sean Pavlich extra point following John Kerschner’s one-yard run for Air Force, 23-22 (1983) Anthony Thomas one-yard run for Michigan, 26-22 (1999) Jeff Smoker 68-yard pass to Herb Haygood for Michigan State, 27-21 (2000) Charlie Arnold 31-yard pass to Lon Slaughter for SMU, 19-13 (1956) Warrick Dunn five-yard run for Florida State, 23-16 (1985) Garry James two-yard run for LSU, 10-7 (1985) Richard King 35-yard pass to Michael Koski for Syracuse, 14-7 (1963) Jim Ellis 10-yard pass to Jim Story for Mississippi, 20-13 (1977) Todd Blackledge one-yard run for Penn State, 24-21 (1981) Levi Jackson four-yard run for Michigan State, 10-3 (1975) John Becksvoort extra point following Andy Kelly 26-yard pass to Aaron Hayden for Tennessee, 35-34 (1991) Marvin Tibbetts six-yard run for Georgia Tech, 13-10 (1959) Todd Spencer 26-yard run for USC, 14-7 (1981)

Brady Quinn threw a 45-yard touchdown pass to Jeff Samardzija with 27 seconds left to give 10th-ranked Notre Dame an improbable 20-17 comeback victory over UCLA on Oct. 21, 2006. (Photo by Matt Cashore)

Overtime History (2-6)... WINS... 2000 2003

Joey Getherall nine-yard run after Air Force field goal, 34-31 Nicholas Setta 40-yard field goal after Washington State missed field goal attempt, 29-26

LOSSES... 1996 1996 2000 2005 2007 2008

Brad Otten five-yard pass to Rodney Sermons for USC, 27-20 Dallas Thompson 27-yard field goal for Air Force, 20-17 Eric Crouch seven-yard run for Nebraska after Notre Dame field goal, 27-24 Jason Teague 19-yard run for Michigan State, 44-41 Travis Thomas five-yard run for Notre Dame, but failed twopoint conversion vs. Navy, 46-44 (2007) Conor Lee 22-yard field goal for Pittsburgh in fourth overtime, 36-33

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STREAK BREAKERS N

otre Dame has helped build its football tradition with impressive records against top-ranked opponents and against teams entering with lengthy winning streaks. The Fighting Irish own eight victories over number-oneranked teams (most recently over unbeaten Florida State in 1993) — with five of those coming in bowl games beginning with the 1971 Cotton Bowl. Notre Dame also has played the spoiler role on numerous occasions — eight times coming up with a victory or tie in an opponent’s final game of the season to end a potential perfect season (Michigan State ’66, Texas in ’71 Cotton Bowl, Alabama in ’73 Sugar Bowl, Alabama in ’75 Orange Bowl, Texas in ’78 Cotton Bowl, West Virginia in ’89 Fiesta Bowl, Colorado in ’90 Orange Bowl, Texas A&M in ‘93 Cotton Bowl). Here is a listing of games in which the Irish have put an end to an especially impressive winning streak maintained by an opponent:

NOTRE DAME 0, ARMY 0 November 9, 1946 • Yankee Stadium The Irish snapped the Cadets’ 25-game victory string with this tie before 74,000 fans at Yankee Stadium in New York. Notre Dame defenders were the heroes — in particular Johnny Lujack on a late solo tackle of Doc Blanchard — as they successfully contained Blanchard and Glenn Davis. Each team barely eclipsed the 200-yard mark in total offense. The Irish avenged 59-0 and 48-0 defeats to Army the previous two years and thwarted the Cadets’ chances for a third straight national title. At the time there had been only 10 longer winning streaks in the history of college football. NOTRE DAME 27, GEORGIA TECH 14 October 24, 1953 • Notre Dame Stadium Heisman Trophy winner John Lattner and fullback Neil Worden keyed a dominating Notre Dame ground attack that helped the top-ranked Irish end fourth-rated Georgia Tech’s 31-game unbeaten streak, then the longest current streak in college football. The Irish finished with a 323-131 edge in rushing yardage — led by Lattner’s 96 yards and 101 by Worden. Notre Dame’s four touchdowns marked the most by a Tech opponent during the streak — and a third-period Ralph Guglielmi TD pass marked

the first against Tech in 22 games. The win came despite the loss of Irish coach Frank Leahy, who fainted due to a lower chest muscle spasm while walking into the dressing room at halftime. NOTRE DAME 7, OKLAHOMA 0 November 16, 1957 • Owen Field Notre Dame halfback Dick Lynch scored the only touchdown of the day as the unranked and twice-beaten Irish ended the second-ranked and defending national champion Sooners’ 47-game winning streak, still the longest in college football history, and OU’s 48-game unbeaten streak (fourth-longest in college football history). The Irish had been the last team to defeat Oklahoma before that contest, as they had been victorious on September 26, 1953, by a 28-21 count. Lynch’s score came on a fourth-down pitch from the three-yard line with just 3:50 left on the clock. The Sooners drove to the Irish 13 on their first possession but never got closer. NOTRE DAME 24, TEXAS 11 January 1, 1971 • Cotton Bowl Joe Theismann paced the sixth-rated Irish to victory in the Cotton Bowl that ended the topranked Longhorns’ 30-game winning streak and their bid for a second straight perfect season. Theismann accounted for three scores in the first 16 minutes of the game — throwing once to Tom Gatewood for a score and running twice for TDs himself — to give Notre Dame a 24-11 lead at halftime. The Irish defense, led by Walt Patulski and Mike Kadish, shut out the potent Texas offense in the second half, forcing nine fumbles, five of them recovered by Notre Dame. NOTRE DAME 23, USC 14 October 27, 1973 • Notre Dame Stadium Eric Penick’s 85-yard burst early in the third quarter keyed eighth-ranked Notre Dame’s triumph that ended the sixth-rated Trojans’ 23-game unbeaten string. The victory in Notre Dame Stadium was the pivotal triumph in Notre Dame’s 1973 national championship season. The Irish held USC’s Anthony Davis to 55 rushing yards, got field goals from Bob

The Notre Dame defense forced seven turnovers to help the fourth-ranked Irish end top-rated Miami’s 36-game regular-season winning streak. Irish safety Pat Terrell made the deciding play, batting down a two-point conversion pass attempt with 45 seconds to play.

Thomas in each of the first three periods — then watched Penick deliver the deciding blow. NOTRE DAME 31, MIAMI 30 October 15, 1988 • Notre Dame Stadium Despite giving up a record 424 passing yards to Miami’s Steve Walsh, the Notre Dame defense forced seven turnovers to help the fourth-ranked Irish end the top-rated Hurricanes’ 36-game regular-season winning streak. Miami also came into the game having won 20 straight road games and 16 games overall. The Hurricanes had not lost in an opponent’s stadium since traveling to Michigan in 1984. Irish safety Pat Terrell made the deciding play, batting down a two-point conversion pass attempt by Walsh with 45 seconds to play. NOTRE DAME 31, FLORIDA STATE 24 November 13, 1993 • Notre Dame Stadium Second-ranked Notre Dame rolled to a 21-7 halftime lead, then held on down the stretch until Shawn Wooden knocked down a Charlie Ward pass attempt as time ran out to ensure the 31-24 triumph over unbeaten Florida State. The Irish victory ended the longest winning streak in the country at 16 (Notre Dame also had won 16 straight coming in), with the Seminoles having lost only once to a team outside the state of Florida since 1989. Notre Dame rushed for 239 yards and scored four rushing touchdowns, two more than Florida State had allowed in its first nine games combined.

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Team- Power Plate.indd 1

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NCAA STATISTICAL LEADERS Since the NCAA began producing its annual statistical rankings in 1937, individual Notre Dame players have finished in the final top 10 on 84 occasions. From 1937 through 1969, all individual rankings were by season totals. Beginning in 1970, most season individual rankings were by per game averages. In total offense, rushing and scoring, it is yards or points per game; in receiving and interceptions, it is catches per

game; in punt and kickoff returns, it is yards per return-and in field goals, field goals per game. Punting always has been by average. Beginning in 1970, passers were ranked on completions per game, and starting in 1979, were ranked on efficiency rating points. The all-purpose running rankings have been compiled only since 1970. The field-goal rankings began when the goal posts were widened in 1959. Kick scoring is no longer an active category.

Here’s a complete listing of all those Irish players finishing among the top 10 in any individual statistical category: Total Offense 1944 4 1949 6 1954 6 1955 4 1956 2 1964 3 1970 2 2005 5

Frank Dancewicz Bob Williams Ralph Guglielmi Paul Hornung Paul Hornung John Huarte Joe Theismann Brady Quinn

1120 1437 1257 1215 1337 2069 281.3 334.1

Rushing 1943 1943 1944 1953 1979 1983 1992

1 7 10 5 5 5 7

Creighton Miller Jim Mello Bob Kelly Neil Worden Vagas Ferguson Allen Pinkett Reggie Brooks

911 704 681 859 130.6 126.4 122.1

Passing 1941 1942 1944 1950 1954 1990 1991 2005

3 6 2 10 10 10 8 7

Angelo Bertelli Angelo Bertelli Frank Dancewicz Bob Williams Ralph Guglielimi Rick Mirer Rick Mirer Brady Quinn

70 72 68 99 68 138.8 149.2 158.4

Brady Quinn Brady Quinn

Receiving 1964 2 1970 2

Jack Snow Tom Gatewood

Punting 1944 1973 1975 2006

Bob Kelly Brian Doherty Joe Restic Geoff Price

10 6 7 5

Interceptions 1955 t5 1961 t8 1962 t2 1963 t6 1964 1

Paul Hornung Angelo Dabiero Tom MacDonald Tom MacDonald Tony Carey

t8 t7 1 t5 t8

Nick Rassas Tom Schoen Mike Townsend Dave Duerson Todd Lyght

6 7 10 7 0.67

Punt Returns 1965 1 1967 6 1988 4 1996 1 2000 8

Nick Rassas Tom Schoen Ricky Watters Allen Rossum Joey Getherall

459 447 13.32 22.93 16.33

Kickoff Returns 1953 4 1956 2 1961 8 1975 7 1979 6 1982 9 1986 3 1988 1 1995 5 1997 6 2000 4 2002 8

John Lattner Paul Hornung Paul Costa Terry Eurick Jim Stone Allen Pinkett Tim Brown Raghib Ismail Emmett Mosley Allen Rossum Julius Jones Vontez Duff

331 496 359 26.7 25.9 25.3 27.9 36.1 27.9 28.50 28.47 27.68

All-Purpose Running (first compiled in 1970) 1976 9 Al Hunter 135.4 1983 6 Allen Pinkett 152.9

1986 1987 1990

3 6 9

Tim Brown Tim Brown Raghib Ismail

176.1 167.9 156.91

Scoring 1941 1943 1944 1947 1979 1983 1984 1991

10 t4 t2 t5 4 2 2 4

Fred Evans Creighton Miller Bob Kelly Terry Brennan Vagas Ferguson Allen Pinkett Allen Pinkett Jerome Bettis

67 78 84 66 9.3 10.0 9.8 10.0

Kick Scoring 1953 1 1958 t8 1965 7 1967 5 1968 t8 1966 t9 1973 t3

Menil Mavraides Monty Stickles Ken Ivan Joe Azzaro Scott Hemple Joe Azzaro Bob Thomas

27 18 48 61 60 47 7.0

Field Goals 1955 t3 1959 t9 1961 t8 1980 3 1982 8 1986 4

Paul Hornung Monty Stickles Joe Perkowski Harry Oliver Mike Johnston John Carney

2 3 5 1.64 1.73 1.91

3919 3426 PHOTO BY LIGHTHOUSE IMAGING

Passing Yards 2005 3 2006 10

1965 1966 1972 1982 1989

60 7.7

37.8 42.7 43.7 45.44

5 5 9 5 8 Allen Rossum led the nation in punt returns in 1996 at 22.93 yards per attempt and was sixth in kickoff returns in 1997 at 28.50 yards per attempt. (Photo by Lighthouse Imaging)

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NCAA RECORDS

A number of Notre Dame players and teams occupy places in the NCAA’s all-time collegiate football record book: Tim Brown, 1987 vs. Michigan State (2) Allen Rossum, 1996 vs. Pittsburgh (2) (held by many others)

Records

Most Single-Game Touchdowns Scored on Kickoff Returns Raghib Ismail, 1988 vs. Rice (2), 1989 vs. Michigan (2) (with seven others, though Ismail is the only player in history to score twice in two games) Bob Williams led the nation in passing efficiency in 1949 with an astounding rating of 159.1.

INDIVIDUAL Annual Champions Rushing Creighton Miller, 1943 (151 for 911 yards) Passing Efficiency Bob Williams, 1949 (159.1 - min. 11 attempts/game) Punt Returns Nick Rassas, 1965 (24 for 459 yards) Allen Rossum, 1996 (15 for 344 yards) Interceptions Tony Carey, 1964 (8 for 121 yards) Mike Townsend, 1972 (10 for 39 yards)

Season Total Offense – Most Plays Per Game 92.4, 1970 (924 in 10 games)

Most Career Touchdowns on Interceptions, Punt Returns and Kickoff Returns (Must have at Least One Touchdown in Each Category) Allen Rossum, 1994-97 (9) (3 interceptions, 3 punt returns, 3 kickoff returns)

Season Pass Defense – Lowest Completion Percentage Allowed (min. 200 attempts) .333, 1967 (102 of 306 attempts)

TEAM Annual Champions

Season Pass Defense – Fewest Yards Allowed Per Attempt (min. 300 attempts) 3.78, 1967 (306 for 1,158 attempts)

Total Offense 1943, 418.0 yards per game 1946, 441.3 yards per game 1949, 434.8 yards per game

Season Pass Defense – Fewest Yards Allowed Per Completion (min. 150 completions) 9.5, 1993 (263 for 2,502 yards)

Rushing Offense 1943, 313.7 yards per game 1946, 340.1 yards per game

Season Punt Return Defense – Fewest Returns Allowed 5, 1968 (52 yards) (tied with Nebraska 1995)

Scoring Offense 1966, 36.2 points per game

Season Fewest Turnovers Lost 8, 2000 (tied with Clemson 1940 and Miami, Ohio 1966)

Punt Returns 1958, 17.6 yards per return

Kickoff Returns Raghib Ismail, 1988 (36.1 average - 12 for 433 yards)

Kickoff Returns 1957, 27.6 yards per return 1966, 29.6 yards per return 1988, 24.2 yards per return

Highest Season Percentage of Field Goals Made 40 Yards or More John Carney, 1984 (.909 – 10 of 11)

Total Defense 1946, 141.7 yards per game 1974, 195.2 yards per game

Highest Season Percentage of Field Goals Made 40-49 Yards John Carney, 1984 (1.000 – 10 of 10)

Rushing Defense 1974, 102.8 yards per game

Most Consecutive Career Field Goals Made 40-49 Yards John Carney, 1984-85 (12) Most Single-Game Touchdowns Scored on Punt Returns

Single-Game Touchdowns Scored on Punt Returns 3, vs. Pittsburgh, 1996 (with six other teams) Single-Game – Most Defensive Extra Point Attempts Against 2, vs. Rice 1988 (2 returns, 1 scored)

Most Single-Game Touchdowns Scored on Fumble Returns Tony Driver, 2000 vs. Navy (2) (with Tyrone Carter of Minnesota, 1996)

Kick Scoring Menil Mavraides, 1953 (27 points)

Records

Single-Game Touchdowns Scored on Kickoff Returns 2, vs. Rice 1988, vs. Michigan 1989 (held by many teams)

Most Consecutive Winning Seasons (All Time) 42 from 1839 to 1932 (no teams in 1890-91) Season Fewest Turnovers Per Game 0.73, 2000 (8 in 11 games)

Scoring Defense 1946, 2.7 points per game In addition to leading the nation in kickoff returns in 1988, Raghib Ismail became the only player in NCAA history to return two kickoffs for touchdowns in two different games, doing that against Rice in 1988 and Michigan in 1989.

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U of Notre Dame FB 09:Layout 1

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STADIUM RECORDS SINGLE GAME Most Points: 73 vs. Haskell, 1932 Most Opponent Points: 51 by Purdue, 1960 Most Combined Points: 90 vs. Navy, 2007 (Navy 46, Notre Dame 44 - 3OT) 90 vs. SMU, 1986 (Notre Dame 61, SMU 29) Widest Margin of Victory: 73 vs. Haskell, 1932 (Notre Dame 73, Haskell 0) Widest Margin of Defeat: 40 vs. Oklahoma, 1956 (Oklahoma 40, Notre Dame 0) SEASON Most Wins: 7, 1988 Most Losses: 6, 2007 Most Points: 260, 1988 (seven games) Fewest Points: 0, 1933 (four games) Most Opponent Points: 223, 2007 (seven games) Fewest Opponent Points: 0, 1932 (four games) MISCELLANEOUS Won-Lost Record: 298-96-5 (.747) Last Tie Game: vs. Michigan, 1992 (Notre Dame 17, Michigan 17) Last Overtime Game: Pittsburgh, 2008 (Pittsburgh 36, Notre Dame 33 - 4OT) Consecutive Wins: 28 (from 11-21-42 vs. Northwestern through 9-30-50 vs. North Carolina; Purdue ended streak with 28-14 win on 10-7-50) Consecutive Losses: 6 (from 9-1-07 vs. Georgia Tech through 11-10-07 vs. Air Force)

LARGEST NOTRE DAME STADIUM CROWDS (PRIOR TO 1997) ATTENDANCE 61,296 60,564 60,128 60,116 59,955

DATE Oct. 6, 1962 Oct. 11, 1958 Oct. 27, 1956 Oct. 20, 1962 Nov. 19, 1955

OPPONENT Purdue Army Oklahoma Michigan State Iowa

SCORE ND-OPP. 6-24 2-14 0-40 7-31 17-14

COACHING RECORDS YEARS 1930 1931-33 1934-40 1941-43;46-53 1944 1945;1963 1954-58 1959-62 1964-74 1975-80 1981-85 1986-96 1997-01 2002-04 2005-present TOTALS

COACH Knute Rockne Heartley (Hunk) Anderson Elmer Layden Frank Leahy Ed McKeever Hugh Devore Terry Brennan Joe Kuharich Ara Parseghian Dan Devine Gerry Faust Lou Holtz Bob Davie Tyrone Willingham Charlie Weis (79 seasons)

WON 5 7 25 37 4 5 16 10 51 25 16 51 24 11 15 302

LOST 0 4 5 6 0 3 8 10 6 7 11 13 7 7 11 98

TIED 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 5

PCT. 1.000 .625 .833 .844 1.000 .625 .667 .500 .888 .781 .593 .792 .774 .611 .577 .752

Note: From 1966-96, home attendance was based on paid admissions, maximum capacity of 59,075

175

23 Stadium Records.indd 175

8/18/09 2:49:14 PM


STADIUM RECORDS CONTINUED

ALL-TIME RECORDS VS. OPPONENTS AT NOTRE DAME STADIUM OPPONENT

FIRST GAME

LAST GAME

W

L

T

SCORING ND OPP.

Air Force Alabama Arizona Arizona State Army Baylor

1964 1976 1941 1999 1947 1998

2007 1987 1982 1999 2006 1998

10 2 1 1 8 1

4 0 1 0 1 0

0 0 0 0 0 0

447 58 51 48 278 27

240 24 23 17 70 3

Boston College

1987

2007

5

5

0

298

215

BYU California Carnegie Tech Clemson Colorado Dartmouth Drake Duke Florida State Georgia Tech Great Lakes Haskell Illinois Indiana Iowa Iowa Pre-Flight Kansas LSU Miami (Fla.) Michigan

1992 1960 1930 1979 1984 1945 1930 1958 1981 1939 1944 1932 1938 1941 1940 1942 1933 1970 1972 1942

2005 1967 1940 1979 1984 1945 1937 2007 2003 2007 1944 1932 1968 1991 1967 1943 1999 1998 1990 2008

3 2 6 0 1 1 4 3 1 11 1 1 5 9 7 2 3 3 8 8

1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 3 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 1 1 5

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 1

138 62 165 10 55 34 174 101 44 354 28 73 175 275 288 42 128 76 239 342

74 15 13 16 0 0 7 14 80 180 7 0 28 51 129 13 20 55 160 339

Michigan State

1948

2007

15

13

0

585

501

Minnesota Mississippi Missouri

1938 1985 1972

1938 1985 1978

1 1 0

0 0 2

0 0 0

19 37 26

0 14 33

Navy

1937

2007

26

4

0

944

383

Nebraska

1947

2000

1

1

0

55

27

OPPONENT

FIRST GAME

LAST GAME

W

L

T

SCORING ND OPP.

North Carolina Northwestern Ohio State Oklahoma Oregon Pacific Penn State Pennsylvania Pittsburgh Purdue Rice Rutgers San Diego State South Carolina SMU Stanford Syracuse Tennessee Texas Texas A&M TCU Tulane UCLA

1950 1932 1936 1952 1976 1940 1982 1931 1931 1933 1974 1996 2008 1979 1930 1942 1961 1978 1934 2000 1972 1944 1963

2006 1995 1996 1999 1976 1940 2006 1931 2008 2008 1988 2002 2008 1984 1989 2008 2008 2005 1995 2000 1972 1971 2006

11 14 1 4 1 1 4 1 19 24 2 2 1 1 6 10 2 2 2 1 1 4 3

0 4 1 1 0 0 3 0 10 10 0 0 0 1 1 2 1 2 1 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

304 449 23 125 41 25 205 49 768 913 64 106 21 44 237 346 74 124 82 24 21 152 71

113 156 31 118 0 7 115 0 408 495 14 0 13 49 109 188 49 98 34 10 0 20 29

USC

1931

2007

23

12

1

786

608

Vanderbilt

1995

1995

1

0

0

41

0

Washington

1948

2004

3

0

0

138

23

Washington (St. Louis) 1936 Washington State 2003 West Virginia 1997 Wisconsin 1934 Totals

1936 2003 2001 1963

1 1 2 3 302

0 0 0 1 98

0 0 0 0 5

14 29 55 83 11026

6 26 38 27 5419

2009 visitors to Notre Dame Stadium in bold type

176

23 Stadium Records.indd 176

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Team- Team ND.indd 1

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YEAR-BY-YEAR

COACHING RECORDS YEAR-BY-YEAR COACHING RECORDS YEAR 1887 1888 1889 1892 1893 1894 1895 1896 1897 1898 1899 1900 1901 1902 1903 1904 1905 1906 1907 1908 1909 1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 1915 1916 1917 1918 1919 1920 1921 1922 1923

COACH None None None None None J. L. Morison H. G. Hadden Frank E. Hering Frank E. Hering Frank E. Hering James McWeeney Patrick O’Dea Patrick O’Dea James Faragher James Faragher Louis Salmon Henry J. McGlew Thomas Barry Thomas Barry Victor M. Place Frank C. Longman Frank C. Longman John L. Marks John L. Marks Jesse Harper Jesse Harper Jesse Harper Jesse Harper Jesse Harper Knute Rockne Knute Rockne Knute Rockne Knute Rockne Knute Rockne Knute Rockne

CAPTAINS RH Henry Luhn RB Edward Prudhomme RH Edward Prudhomme QB Pat Coady RH Frank Keough RH Frank Keough RG Dan Casey QB Frank Herin RE Jack Mullen RE Jack Mullen RE Jack Mullen FB John Farley RT Al Fortin FB Louis (Red) Salmon FB Louis (Red) Salmon RE Frank Shaughnessy LG Pat Beacom QB Bob Bracken RH Dom Callicrate LH Harry (Red) Miller LT Howard (Cap) Edwards RT Ralph Dimmick RT Luke Kelly QB Charles (Gus) Dorais LE Knute Rockne LT Keith (Deak) Jones RG Freeman Fitzgerald LH Stan Cofall QB Jim Phelan RH Leonard (Pete) Bahan QB Leonard (Pete) Bahan LT Frank Coughlin RE Eddie Anderson LE Glenn (Judge) Carberry LG Harvey Brown

W 0 1 1 1 4 3 3 4 4 4 6 6 8 6 8 5 5 6 6 8 7 4 6 7 7 6 7 8 6 3 9 9 10 8 9

L 1 2 0 0 1 1 1 3 1 2 3 3 1 2 0 3 4 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 2 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 1 1

T 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 1 0

1924

Knute Rockne

C Adam Walsh

10

0

0

1925 1926

Knute Rockne Knute Rockne

7 9

2 1

1 0

1927 1928

Knute Rockne Knute Rockne

LE Clem Crowe QB Gene (Red) Edwards RH Tom Hearden LG John (Clipper) Smith LT Fred Miller

7 5

1 4

1 0

1929

Knute Rockne

RG John Law

9

0

0

1930

Knute Rockne

RE Tom Conley

10

0

0

1931 1932 1933

Hunk Anderson Hunk Anderson Hunk Anderson

C Tommy Yarr RE Paul Host C Tom (Kitty) Gorman RE Hugh Devore

6 7 3

2 2 5

1 0 1

AP

C

YEAR 1934 1935 1936

COACH Elmer Layden Elmer Layden Elmer Layden

1937 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942

Elmer Layden Elmer Layden Elmer Layden Elmer Layden Frank Leahy Frank Leahy

CAPTAINS DE Dom Vairo LT Joe Sullivan RG Bill Smith LG John Lautar RE Joe Zwers LG Jim McGoldrick RE Johnny Kely FB Milt Piepul RT Paul Lillis RE George Murphy

W 6 7 6

L 3 1 2

T 0 1 1

AP

6 8 7 7 8 7

2 1 2 2 0 2

1 0 0 0 1 2

9 5 13

C

8

3 6

1943

Frank Leahy

LG Pat Filley

9

1

0

1

1944 1945

Ed McKeever Hugh Devore

LG Pat Filley QB Frank Dancewicz

8 7

2 2

0 1

9 9

1946

Frank Leahy

Game captains

8

0

1

1

1947

Frank Leahy

LT George Connor

9

0

0

1

1948

Frank Leahy

LG Bill Fischer

9

0

1

2

1949

Frank Leahy

RE Leon Hart

10

0

0

1

4 7 7 9 9

4 2 2 0 1

1 1 1 1 0

3 2 4

13 3 2 4

8 2 7

2 8 3

0 0 0

9

10

10

9

6

4

0

17 14

5 2 5

5 8 5

0 0 0

17

5 2 9 7

5 7 1 2

0 0 0 1

LT Jim Martin

1950 1951 1952 1953 1954

Frank Leahy Frank Leahy Frank Leahy Frank Leahy Terry Brennan

1955 1956 1957

Terry Brennan Terry Brennan Terry Brennan

1958

Terry Brennan

1959 1960 1961

Joe Kuharich Joe Kuharich Joe Kuharich

1962 1963 1964 1965

Joe Kuharich Hugh Devore Ara Parseghian Ara Parseghian

C/MLB Jerry Groom RE Jim Mutscheller RG/MLB Jack Alessandrini RE Don Penza LE Dan Shannon RE Paul Matz RT Ray Lemek RH Jim Morse LE Dick Prendergast C Ed Sullivan RG Al Ecuyer RT Chuck Puntillo RG Ken Adamson LG Myron Pottios LG Nick Buoniconti RG Norb Roy FB Mike Lind LG Bob Lehmann ILB Jim Carroll RE Phil Sheridan

3 9

3 8

1966

Ara Parseghian

ILB Jim Lynch

9

0

1

1

1

1967 1968

Ara Parseghian Ara Parseghian

8 7

2 2

0 1

5 5

4 8

1969

Ara Parseghian

8

2

1

5

9

1970

Ara Parseghian

LH Bob (Rocky) Bleier RT George Kunz LILB Bob Olson C Mike Oriard RILB Bob Olson LG Larry DiNardo LOLB Tim Kelly

10

1

0

2

5

178

25 YBY Coaching Records.indd 178

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U of Notre Dame FB 09:Layout 1

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YEAR-BY-YEAR COACHING RECORDS CONTINUED

YEAR-BY-YEAR COACHING RECORDS YEAR 1971

COACH Ara Parseghian

1972

Ara Parseghian

1973

Ara Parseghian

CAPTAINS SE Tom Gatewood LE Walt Patulski RT John Dampeer RT Greg Marx

W 8

L 2

T 0

AP C 13 15

YEAR 1993

8

3

0

14 12

1994

LG Frank Pomarico

11

0

0

1

4

WB Tom Clements OLB Greg Collins LT Ed Bauer OLB Jim Stock RH Mark McLane RE Willie Fry

10

2

0

6

4

8

3

0

17

9

3

0

12 12

LE Ross Browner

11

1

0

TE Dave Casper

1995

FS Mike Townsend

1974

Ara Parseghian

1975

Dan Devine

1976

Dan Devine

1977

Dan Devine

1

1996

1

1997

RB Steve Orsini RE Willie Fry LH Terry Eurick

1978

Dan Devine

1979

Dan Devine

1980

Dan Devine

1981

Gerry Faust

1982

Gerry Faust

1983

Gerry Faust

1984

Gerry Faust

1985

Gerry Faust

1986 1987

Lou Holtz Lou Holtz

1988

Lou Holtz

QB Joe Montana FB Jerome Heavens MLB Bob Golic RT Tim Foley HB Vagas Ferguson LCB Dave Waymer C John Scully MLB Bob Crable FS Tom Gibbons TB Phil Carter MLB Bob Crable TB Phil Carter MLB Mark Zavagnin FS Dave Duerson QB Blair Kiel SCB Stacey Toran SG Larry Williams OLB Mike Golic SS Joe Johnson QG Tim Scannell TB Allen Pinkett OLB Mike Larkin MLB Tony Furjanic ILB Mike Kovaleski C Chuck Lanza RT Byron Spruell TT Andy Heck

9

3

0

7

4

0

9

2

1

5

6

0

6

4

1

7

6

1998

1999 2000 9

10 2001

2002 7

5

0

7

5

0

5

6

0

2003

2004 5 8

6 4

0 0

17

12

0

0

1

2005 1

2006

TB Mark Green ELB Ned Bolcar

1989

1990

Lou Holtz

Lou Holtz

1991 1992

Lou Holtz Lou Holtz

1993

Lou Holtz

QB Tony Rice FB Anthony Johnson MLB Ned Bolcar C Mike Heldt TB Ricky Watters NT Chris Zorich FCB Todd Lyght TB Rodney Culver QB Rick Mirer LB Demetrius DuBose OT Aaron Taylor Tim Ruddy

12

1

0

2

3 2007

9

3

0

6

6 2008

10 10

3 1

0 1

13 12 4 4

11

1

0

2

2

Totals

COACH

CAPTAINS DT Bryant Young FS Jeff Burris Lou Holtz TB Lee Becton ILB Justin Goheen DE Brian Hamilton OG Ryan Leahy Lou Holtz NG Paul Grasmanis OG Ryan Leahy SE Derrick Mayes CB Sean Wooden OG Dusty Zeigler Lou Holtz ILB Lyron Cobbins FB Marc Edwards QB Ron Powlus Bob Davie DE Melvin Dansby QB Ron Powlus CB Allen Rossum Bob Davie ILB Bobbie Howard OLB Kory Minor OT Mike Rosenthal Bob Davie QB Jarious Jackson Bob Davie ILB Anthony Denman TE Dan O’Leary TE Jabari Holloway DE Grant Irons Bob Davie OLB Rocky Boiman FL David Givens DE Grant Irons DE Anthony Weaver Tyrone Willingham WR Arnaz Battle OG Sean Mahan SS Gerome Sapp CB Shane Walton Tyrone Willingham OT Jim Molinaro DT Darrell Campbell CB Vontez Duff WR Omar Jenkins Tyrone Willingham LB Mike Goolsby RB Ryan Grant WR Carlyle Holiday DE Justin Tuck Charlie Weis QB Brady Quinn LB Brandon Hoyte Charlie Weis QB Brady Quinn DB Tom Zbikowski LB Travis Thomas Charlie Weis DB Tom Zbikowski TE John Carlson HB Travis Thomas LB Maurice Crum Jr. Charlie Weis LB Maurice Crum Jr. SS David Bruton WR David Grimes

W

L

T

AP

C

6

5

1

9

3

0

11 13

8

3

0

19 21

7

6

0

9

3

0

22 22

5 9

7 3

0 0

15 16

5

6

0

10

3

0

5

7

0

6

6

0

9

3

0

9

10

3

0

17 19

3

9

0

7

6

0

17 17

11

831 284 42

Consensus national championship seasons in bold. The coaches poll was switched from United Press International to USA Today/CNN in 1991, then to USA Today/ESPN in 1997.

180

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IRISH

FACTS & FIGURES ALL-PRO – Notre Dame has produced more than its share of talented players who have gone on to stellar careers in the National Football League. In fact, 60 former Irish greats have been selected to the NFL Pro Bowl, with the most recent including New York Giants defensive end Justin Tuck (years at Notre Dame – 2001-04) and New York Giants kicker John Carney (years at Notre Dame – 198386) in 2009. Hall of Fame defensive end Alan Page (Minnesota Vikings) and 1987 Heisman-Trophy winning wide receiver Tim Brown (Oakland Raiders) share the record for most All-Pro selections by a former Irish player, with both selected to the Pro Bowl nine times in their storied careers. ALMA MATER – Composed by Joseph J. Casasanta (a 1923 Notre Dame graduate), “Notre Dame, Our Mother” has been the alma mater of the University since it was written for the 1930 dedication of Notre Dame Stadium. Written in honor of the University’s patron, Blessed Virgin Mary, the song is part of the postgame show of the Band of the Fighting Irish and is the traditional conclusion to Notre Dame pep rallies and home athletic contests. Notre Dame, Our Mother, Tender, strong and true, Proudly in the heavens, Gleams the Gold and Blue, Glory’s mantle cloaks thee, Golden is thy fame, And our hearts forever, Praise thee, Notre Dame. And our hearts forever, Love thee, Notre Dame

1913-1917 1920-1930 1931-1933 1934-1940 1945 1947-1948 1949-1981 1981-1987 1987-1995 1995-2000 2000-2008 2008-present

Jesse Harper Knute Rockne Jesse Harper Elmer Layden Hugh Devore Frank Leahy Edward “Moose” Krause Gene Corrigan Dick Rosenthal Mike Wadsworth Kevin White Jack Swarbrick

For the record, here’s a look at the individuals who have served as sports information directors at the University of Notre Dame: Joe Petritz (1929-43), J. Walter Kennedy (1943-46), Charlie Callahan (194666), Roger Valdiserri (1966-88), John Heisler (1988-2003, now senior associate athletics director for media relations) and Bernie Cafarelli (2003-present). BAND – Notre Dame’s marching band, appropriately called The Band of the Fighting Irish, is the oldest university band in continual existence and has been on hand for every home game (all 405, heading into 2009) since football started at Notre Dame in 1887. Notre Dame’s band, born in 1845, celebrated its 150th season in ‘95 and held a reunion at the Northwestern game. The band was among the first in the nation to include pageantry, precision drill and now-famous picture formations. It first accepted women from neighboring Saint Mary’s College in 1970 before Notre Dame became coeducational in ‘72. The band was declared a “landmark of American Music” in 1976 by the National Music Council. Ken Dye, now in his eighth year as director of the band, holds degrees from the University of Houston, Long Beach State and USC. He has directed bands at Rice and Houston and arranged music performed at the 2000 Olympic Games in Sydney, Australia.

ANNOUNCERS – Mike Collins is a 1967 Notre Dame graduate and serves as the voice of Notre Dame Stadium. He’s in his 28th season as public address announcer and was made an honorary member of the Notre Dame Monogram Club during the 2006 football season. Collins followed Frank Crosiar as announcer, who held the job from 1948-81 without missing any of the 170 home games in that period. Calling the action inside the press box for the 44th consecutive year is John H. “Jack” Lloyd, a 1958 Notre Dame graduate who also was the longtime former public address announcer at the Joyce Center for men’s basketball games. Lloyd gave up his basketball duties at the end of the 1995-96 season and was made an honorary member of the Notre Dame Monogram Club in ceremonies at halftime of the Notre DameVillanova basketball game on Jan. 14, 1997. ATHLETIC DIRECTORS – Here’s a look at the 12 individuals who have served as the director of athletics at the University of Notre Dame:

185

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I R I S H FA C T S & F I G U R E S CONTINUED BAZAAR, KANSAS – On March 31, 1931, Transcontinental-Western flight 599 traveling from Kansas City to Los Angeles crashed into a cornfield in Bazaar, Kan. All occupants of the plane were killed, including Notre Dame football coach Knute Rockne. The 70th anniversary of Rockne’s death was commemorated during a one-hour ESPN Classic program in 2001, entitled “SportsCenter Flashback: The Death Of Knute Rockne.” Friday, March 31, 2006, marked the 75th anniversary of the plane crash and the anniversary was marked – from Kansas to the Notre Dame campus to Norway – in a handful of ways, past, present and future: • Near Bazaar, Kan., where Rockne’s plane went down, the Wichita (Kan.) Rockne Memorial Club hosted a special memorial service at the crash site. Family members of the eight men who were killed in the crash were on hand. The memorial service included a program on Rockne’s life and legacy presented by former executive director of the College Football Hall of Fame Bernie Kish, films on Rockne and the plane crash and pictures and artifacts relating to the day. Among those sharing their recollections of the crash was the late Easter Heathman, caretaker of the memorial marker and crash site for 76 years. Heathman was made an honorary member of the Notre Dame Monogram Club in ceremonies at the pep rally of the Notre Dame-Michigan football game on Sept. 15, 2006. • In Voss, Norway, Rockne’s birthplace, a statue of Rockne was dedicated at the exact time Rockne’s plane crashed into the Kansas hillside 75 years earlier. • The statue, sculpted by 1962 Notre Dame graduate Jerry McKenna, is identical to the one that was dedicated in March 2005 in front of the College Football Hall of Fame in South Bend. The molten bronze McKenna used to create the statue contained three particular elements - steel parts from Voss from a carriage made by Rockne’s father in 1888 (representing Knute Rockne’s birth), gold leaf from the golden dome at Notre Dame (representing Knute’s life at Notre Dame) and scraps of aluminum from the plane that crashed and carried Rockne to his death. • On the Notre Dame campus, there were multiple showings of a 52-minute video documentary on Rockne, titled “Knute Rockne and His Fighting Irish,” to recognize the anniversary of the Hall of Fame coach’s passing. • The video originally was shown on the PBS show “The American Experience.” • McKenna also created a life-size bust of Rockne that was dedicated March 4 (Rockne’s birthdate) in Rockne, an unincorporated Central

Texas town of about 400 residents a dozen miles southwest of Bastrop, in a ceremony in the front yard of the Rockne Historical Association Museum. Marian Nelson, president of the RHA, said she hopes the $20,000 bust lures visitors to the museum, which includes exhibits on the life of the German-Catholic community founded in 1846 and its namesake coach. At the time, Rockne (the town) was called Hilbigville, after W.M. Hilbig, the owner of the town’s general store. Before that, it had been called Walnut Creek and Lehman. The community never had an official name, so in 1931 the parish priest at the only school in town, Sacred Heart Catholic, decided that the town’s children should vote on one. The choice for the town’s name was between two national icons, Rockne and poet Joyce Kilmer. The vote was a tie, so the priest sent the children home to think about it. The next day, a student named Edith Ayers changed her vote. Ayers was very close to her father, and he was a big admirer of Rockne’s, so she changed her vote because it was something she could do to please her dad. • From May 27, 2006, through Jan. 7, 2007, the Center for History in South Bend offered the exhibit “Rockne: Crossing the Last Chalk Line.” The exhibit included a variety of Rockne artifacts and photos, an electronic field trip for students, an exhibit catalog and audio tour and a lecture series. Among the artifacts on display were a sweater and whistle used and worn by Rockne, a Rockne automobile developed by the Studebaker Corporation, a wristwatch worn by Rockne at the time of the crash –- and a telegram from Rockne to his wife sent just before the plane that sent him to his death took off. • Rockne is one of Notre Dame’s two representatives on the list of “100 Most Influential NCAA Student-Athletes” announced in March 2006 in conjunction with the NCAA Centennial celebration in 2006. The NCAA defines the 100 Most Influential Student-Athletes as those who have made a significant impact or major contributions to society. A special panel that included college presidents, athletics directors, faculty representatives, student-athletes and conference representatives chose the list. Rockne was a receiver for the Notre Dame football team in 1912 and ‘13, earning third-team All-America honors as a senior. He majored in chemistry, graduating magna cum laude with a grade average of 90.52 on a scale of 100. As an undergraduate, Rockne worked as a chemistry research assistant in the laboratory of Rev. Julius A. Nieuwland, the renowned chemist who discovered the formula for synthetic rubber. Upon graduating, Rockne was offered a position at the University as a graduate assistant

186

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I R I S H FA C T S & F I G U R E S CONTINUED in chemistry, which he accepted on the condition that he be allowed to work as an assistant to football coach Jesse Harper. When Harper retired after the 1917 season, Rockne was appointed head coach and Notre Dame’s football program soared to national prominence. He coached from 1918 through 1930, finishing with a 10512-5 (.881) career record that still ranks as the best winning percentage in the history of college football. His teams won consensus national championships in 1924, 1929 and 1930, and he was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame with the inaugural class in 1951. Rockne’s memory was honored by two different organizations during the spring of 2004. The Kansas Turnpike Authority unveiled a new memorial at the Matfield Green Service Area, not far from where Rockne died. The dedication came exactly 73 years after Rockne’s death, with the new memorial occupying 175 square feet inside the new Matfield Green Service Area at milepost 97 on the Kansas Turnpike. The memorial features large photographic panels describing various aspects of Rockne’s life, plus a life-sized cutout of Rockne and audio clips from some of his famous motivational speeches. The College Football Hall of Fame also had Rockne memorabilia on display in its state-of-the-art RV Road Show traveling museum throughout 2004. Three weeks after the Kansas Turnpike ceremony, Rockne was one of six distinguished Americans honored with the Ellis Island Family Heritage Award in a ceremony at the Statue of Liberty. The award was presented to members of Rockne’s family, including his only surviving offspring, son John Rockne of South Bend. The award celebrates Ellis Island as the door to America for the 17 million immigrants who first set foot on United States soil there. Annually, a select number of Ellis Island immigrants or their descendants are chosen to be honored by the Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Foundation. Rockne came from Norway to the United States through Ellis Island in 1893 as a five-year-old with his mother and sisters (his father, a carriage maker, earlier had come to Chicago for the 1893 World’s Fair). The award included the presentation of a copy of the original ship’s passenger manifest documenting Rockne’s arrival at Ellis Island. A memorial to Rockne also stands in his birthplace of Voss, Norway, and he was knighted posthumously by King Haakov. BLUE-GOLD GAME – It’s a rite of spring at Notre Dame, a game that marks the end of spring practice. It took a new twist in 1996 and ‘97 as two games were played each year in Moose Krause Stadium (behind the Joyce Center) because of the renovation to Notre Dame Stadium. The game dates back to 1929, when it began as a contest between present Notre Dame players and former players (then known as the “Varsity vs. Old Timers” game). The varsity dominated play as it won 29 of 36 games versus the alumni, the last three by shutout scores of 72-0, 33-0 and 39-0. In 1968, coach Ara Parseghian made the game a scrimmage between the current team under game conditions and the “Blue-Gold” game was born. Interest always has been high, with a record crowd of 51,852 attending the Blue-Gold game on April 21, 2007, when the Gold defeated the Blue 10-6. The previous record of 41,279 fans was set in 2006, while other top crowds included 35,675 (‘81), 32,071 (‘86), 31,104 (‘09), 30,286

(‘08), 29,541 (‘90), 27,327 (‘94) and 26,537 (‘95). The game is sponsored by the Notre Dame Club of St. Joseph Valley and benefits the group’s scholarship fund. The Blue-Gold game has drawn 18,000-plus for 17 of the past 18 played in Notre Dame Stadium.

CAPTAINS – After naming captains on a game-by-game basis, then naming full-year captains at the end of the season from 2002-04, Notre Dame has returned to the tradition of naming captains before the season (began in 2006). The 2009 captains will be determined by a team vote in August. During the 2005 season, the Notre Dame coaching staff named a game-by-game special teams captain. All previous Notre Dame captains were honored at the Sept 6, 2003, Washington State game – receiving ceremonial pins that feature the interlocking ND monogram, with the words “Notre Dame Football Captain” and the year the player served in that role. Representatives from seven decades of Irish football teams were back on campus to celebrate their special place in the program’s history. The first set of pins actually was presented at the 2002 Notre Dame Football Awards Banquet to the ‘02 captains while the banquet’s keynote speaker – former Irish defensive end, 1984 captain and 2006 Blue-Gold game honorary coach Mike Golic – also received his ceremonial pin at the 2002 banquet. FORWARD PASS – Notre Dame’s 1913 team often is credited with “inventing” the forward pass, a statement that is not accurate. Passing had been a legal weapon for several seasons before quarterback Gus Dorais and end Knute Rockne used the passing game in 1913 to upset a heavily-favored Army team, 35-13. The game helped popularize the aerial attack and showed how it could be integrated with rushing into a complete offense. Previous games had been won with kicking, brute strength and defense, but Notre Dame helped shift the emphasis to a balanced offense, where it has remained ever since.

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I R I S H FA C T S & F I G U R E S CONTINUED GIPPER – Former Notre Dame football great George Gipp was born Feb. 18, 1895, in Laurium, Mich., and gained fame as the school’s first Walter Camp AllAmerican in 1920 before dying of strep throat weeks after his final season ended. Eight years later, Knute Rockne made his famed “Win One for the Gipper” speech at halftime of an eventual 12-6 Notre Dame win over Army. The legend emerged again in 1940, when future United States President Ronald Reagan portrayed Gipp in the motion picture “Knute Rockne All-American” (starring Pat O’Brien in the title role). O’Brien and Reagan were reunited at Notre Dame’s 1981 commencement, with Reagan providing the commencement address and O’Brien receiving an honorary degree. A 15-foot Lake Superior stone memorial to George Gipp was erected in his hometown of Laurium, located on Michigan’s northern peninsula. The memorial was reconstructed in 1999 and features a brick walkway constructed in the shape of a football. GOLD DUST – The Golden Dome, which tops the University’s Administration Building, is replicated in the gold helmets that are worn by the Notre Dame football team. The paint for these helmets is mixed on campus by student managers and features actual gold dust bought from the O’Brien Paint Company. The dust then is mixed with lacquer and lacquer thinner and applied to the helmet of each player dressing for Saturday’s game, up to 120 in all. The game helmets are painted on Monday prior to gameday.

HALL OF FAME, ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICA – Notre Dame football has four honorees in the prestigious Hall, including 2006 inductee Bob Burger, ‘96 inductee Bob Thomas, ‘93 inductee Dave Casper and ‘90 inductee Joe Theismann. The Hall of Fame is administered by the College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA), which also selects the annual Academic All-America teams. To be eligible for the Hall of Fame, a candidate must have been an Academic All-American

with a grade-point average of 3.0-plus on a 4.0 scale and that person’s class must have graduated 10 years ago. Sports information directors from around the country nominate candidates and inductees are selected on an annual basis. Burger was a first-team Academic All-America selection as a starting offensive guard for the Irish in 1980. Burger walked on to the team in 1977 to be a part of that season’s national championship, before monogramming from 1978-80 and receiving a scholarship his junior and senior years. Thomas graduated from Notre Dame in 1973 with a 3.6 GPA in government. As a senior, he booted the game-winning field goal in the Sugar Bowl against top-ranked Alabama (24-23) to give the Irish the national championship. He went on to a 12-year career in the National Football League, including 10 seasons with the Chicago Bears, and he still is the team’s third all-time leading scorer. As a pro player, Thomas earned a law degree from Loyola University in 1981. He was elected a DuPage (Ill.) County Circuit Court Judge in 1988 and was elected Appellate Court Justice for the state of Illinois in ‘94. He currently serves as Chief Justice of the Illinois Supreme Court. Thomas is involved in numerous charitable organizations, including the Brian Piccolo Cancer Research Fund. Casper, a consensus All-America tight end and Academic All-American in 1973, went on to an 11-year career in the NFL with the Oakland and Los Angeles Raiders, Houston and Minnesota, earning a place in the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2002. Casper now works for Northwestern Mutual Financial Network in Walnut Creek, Calif., and is actively involved in the Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) Society’s fight to find a cure for the condition commonly known as Lou Gehrig’s Disease. He also is a member of the board of directors for a Ronald McDonald House and chairman of the 100 Men Committee fundraising group for the University of Minnesota women’s athletic department. Theismann, a 1970 Academic All-American, enjoyed a successful pro career with the Washington Redskins and served as an analyst on ESPN’s coverage of NFL football. In 2003, he was chosen for induction into both the College Football Hall of Fame and the Cotton Bowl Hall of Fame. Former Notre Dame defensive lineman Alan Page, now a Minnesota Supreme Court justice, also was honored with the 2001 Dick Enberg Award, recognizing those whose “commitments have furthered the meaning and reach of the Academic All-America programs and/ or the student-athlete while promoting the values of education and academics.” In 2005, Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C., Notre Dame’s president emeritus, was given the Dick Enberg Award at the CoSIDA Academic Hall of Fame ceremony. Mike Anello was named ESPN The Magazine Second-Team Academic All-American last year. He gives the Irish football program 52 academic All-American nominees in program history, which ranks third best in the nation. Notre Dame has had 38 first-team selections, 13 second-team honorees and one honorable mention choice. Anello, a finance major in Notre Dame’s Mendoza College of Business, owned a 3.93 cumulative grade point average (GPA). He earned dean’s list recognition every semester at Notre Dame and graduated in 3 1/2 years. Anello owned a 4.0 GPA in his major courses and was a member of Beta Gamma Sigma, the business honors society. After joining the squad as a walk-on in 2007 and making six tackles on special teams in eight games, Anello was awarded a scholarship last fall and made quite a name for himself. He was 14th on the Irish in tackles with 23, including 15 solo stops, remarkable when you consider he plays exclusively on special teams. Anello not only recorded eight multi-tackle games, but Notre Dame’s opponents have a total of 78 punt (29) or kickoff (59) returns in 2008 and Anello has registered a tackle on 23 of those 78 opportunities.

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I R I S H FA C T S & F I G U R E S CONTINUED HALL OF FAME, COLLEGE FOOTBALL – The city of South Bend is the site for the College Football Hall of Fame, which is administered by the National Football Foundation and opened in August of ‘95. The Hall of Fame is located directly west of the Century Center in downtown South Bend at the corner of Washington and St. Joseph streets – just a few minutes from the Notre Dame campus. It is connected to the Century Center by an underground concourse and the Hall itself includes 55,000 square feet on two levels, plus a mezzanine. The building reflects the look of a traditional football stadium with the “Gridiron Plaza” just west of the Hall of Fame. The plaza gives visitors an opportunity to experience the feel of an actual football field and hosts a variety of special events, including annual enshrinement activities held each summer. Inside the lower level of the Hall of Fame, visitors enjoy a 360-degree theater which gives them the feeling that they are part of a college football crowd. Following that exhibit, visitors can see the Hall of Champions, where all enshrinees are honored with a bas-relief image, plus activity areas and topical exhibits. Displays dedicated to bands, cheerleaders, mascots and the feel of a locker room also are included in the Hall and fans are able to test their knowledge at a “Training Camp,” where they can gauge their own physical and football strategy against the greats of college football. The Pantheon recognizes the history and winners of college football awards, including the Heisman Trophy, and the Hall of Honor features the accomplishments, contributions and sacrifices of individuals and organizations integral to college football. Since its early beginning in 1951, the College Football Hall of Fame has grown to become one of the world’s major sports shrines. There are 993 players and coaches who have been elected to the Hall, including 43 Notre Dame players (the most of any school) and six coaches. The six most recent Irish additions to the Hall were quarterback Ralph Guglielmi (2002), quarterback Joe Theismann (2003), quarterback John Huarte (2005), defensive tackle Chris Zorich (2007), Lou Holtz (2008) and Tim Brown (2009). HALL OF FAME, PRO FOOTBALL – Former Notre Dame tight end Dave Casper, named All-Pro and All-AFC four consecutive years (197679) and played 10 years in the NFL for the Oakland/Los Angeles Raiders (1974-80), Houston Oilers (1980-83) and Minnesota Vikings (1983), became the ninth former Irish player to be inducted into the National Professional Football Hall of Fame, as a member of the class of 2002. Curly Lambeau, who lettered as a fullback at Notre Dame in 1918, was a charter member of the Hall in 1963, when he was inducted in recognition of his multiple roles as a founder, player and coach for the Green Bay Packers from 1919-49. The seven other former Notre Dame players in the Pro Football Hall of Fame include: 1964 inductee George Trafton (C, Chicago Bears, ’20-’22), 1968 inductee Wayne Millner (E, Boston Patriots and Washington Redskins, ’36-’41, ’45), 1975 inductee George Connor (T/LB, Chicago Bears, ’48-’55), 1986 inductee Paul Hornung (QB, Green Bay Packers, ’57-62, ’64-’66), 1988 inductee Alan Page (DT, Minnesota Vikings, ’67-’78; Chicago Bears, ’78-’81), 2000 inductee Joe Montana (QB, San Francisco 49ers, ’79-’92; Kansas City Chiefs, ’93-’94 and 2001 inductee Nick Buoniconti (LB, Boston Patriots ‘62-‘68; Miami Dolphins ’69-’74, ’76). HEISMAN – Notre Dame has seen seven of its players win the John W. Heisman Memorial Trophy Award. The Heisman is presented each year to the outstanding college football player by the Downtown Athletic Club of New York. Notre Dame’s honorees include: 1943 1947 1949 1953

quarterback Angelo Bertelli quarterback John Lujack end Leon Hart halfback John Lattner

1956 quarterback Paul Hornung 1964 quarterback John Huarte 1987 flanker Tim Brown For many years, Heisman winners had to choose where to display their award because the Downtown Athletic Club presented only the single trophy to its winners. Leon Hart immediately presented his to the University – but many of the other trophies remained in the possession of the winners. The DAC eventually awarded two trophies – one to the winner and another to display at his school. Tim Brown was the first of Notre Dame’s recipients to receive both awards and the other six winners loaned their Heismans to the Sports Heritage Hall (overseen by the Notre Dame Monogram Club) for temporary display in the concourse of the Joyce Center beginning in Sept. 1988. That marked the first time all of Notre Dame’s winners had their awards on display simultaneously. Thanks to the cooperation of the DAC, the Notre Dame athletic department and the Monogram Club, arrangements were made for production of Heisman duplicates for the first six Irish winners. Those duplicates went on display in June 1990, enabling the originals to be returned to the winners. Bertelli passed away on June 26, 1999, while Hart died on Sept. 24, 2002.

HESBURGH – Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C., president of the University of Notre Dame for 35 years, retired from that position May 31, 1987. His effect on the University’s growth was profound, whether measured in public esteem, academic distinction, physical expansion or operating budget and endowment. Considered one of the most influential Americans in the areas of education and religion, he has been deeply involved in key social and moral issues, most notably civil rights. Father Hesburgh’s 35-year term marked the longest of any University president in the country and he holds a record for receiving more than 150 honorary degrees. His many distinguished honors include becoming the first recipient (in 2003) of the NCAA’s President Gerald R. Ford Award, honoring an individual who has provided significant leadership as an advocate for intercollegiate athletics on a continuous basis. Father Hesburgh served as co-chairman of the Knight Commission on Reform of Intercollegiate Athletics, whose landmark report was issued in May of 1991. Nearly a decade after releasing its initial series of reports, the Knight Commission reconvened in 2000 to determine what progress had been made and whether new issues need to be considered. Following their joint retirements, Father Hesburgh and the late Father Edmund Joyce, longtime University executive vice president, spent six months touring the country in a mobile home before serving as co-

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I R I S H FA C T S & F I G U R E S CONTINUED chaplains for a 1988 world cruise on the Queen Elizabeth II. Father Hesburgh now works out of an office in the Hesburgh Library (named in his honor in 1987) and devotes much of his time to the Institute for International Peace Studies. Hesburgh was presented with the Congressional Gold Medal in 2000 in Washington, D.C., the highest honor bestowed by Congress and the medal has been awarded to only approximately 300 persons in the history of the republic, with Hesburgh the first recipient from higher education. The medal was created by the U.S. Mint and features Father Hesburgh’s visage on one side while the other side shows images representing his religious community, the Congregation of Holy Cross and the University of Notre Dame. Father Hesburgh added to his distinguished life’s work in 2002, when he carried the Olympic torch as it crossed the Notre Dame campus en route to Salt Lake City for the 2002 Winter Olympic Games. He previously received the Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor, bestowed by President Lyndon Johnson in 1964. The only other Notre Dame graduate to receive the Congressional Gold Medal was Dr. Thomas Dooley, in 1961.

IRISH GUARD – As the Band of the Fighting Irish enters Notre Dame Stadium for its pregame salute, it is led by the drum major who is closely followed by the famous Irish Guard. Each member is dressed in an Irish kilt and will tower more than eight feet tall including his bearskin shako. The guardsmen are skilled marchers who are chosen for this honor on the basis of marching ability, appearance and spirit. The late John Fyfe, originally from Glasgow, Scotland, served as the long-standing adviser to the Irish Guard. The uniform of the Guard is patterned after the traditional Irish kilt. According to Seumas Uah Urthuile, an Irish historian, laws were introduced in Ireland about 1000 A.D. concerning the use of colors in clothing in order to distinguish between various occupations, military rank and the various stages of the social and political spectrum. The Irish Guard’s colors are significant to Notre Dame and utilize the “Notre Dame plaid.” The blue and gold represent the school colors intermixed with green for the Irish. The doublets are papal red. In 2006, Tess Murray, then a junior, marched her way to one of five open spots on the Irish Guard. She was the first female to do so since Molly Kinder in 2000 and only the second in the Guard’s 57-year history.

as chief financial officer during the presidency of Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C. Father Joyce was born in British Honduras (now Belize) on Jan. 26, 1917, and graduated from Spartanburg (S.C.) High School. He was the first student from South Carolina ever to attend Notre Dame and earned his bachelor’s degree in accounting, magna cum laude, in 1937. He worked with the L.C. Dodge accounting firm in Spartanburg and became a certified public accountant in 1939. He entered Holy Cross College in Washington, D.C. - then the C.S.C.’s theological house of studies - in 1945 and was ordained to the priesthood in 1949 at Notre Dame’s Sacred Heart Church. After ordination, Father Joyce was named Notre Dame’s assistant vice president for business affairs and then acting vice president in 1949. His tenure was interrupted by a year of advanced study at Oxford University in England. He returned in 1951 as vice president for business affairs and in 1952 was elevated to executive vice president, also serving as chairman of the Faculty Board on Athletics and the University building committee. Father Joyce was an influential voice in the NCAA, particularly dealing with educational integrity in college athletics. He was instrumental in forming the College Football Association and served as its secretarytreasurer. The National Football Foundation honored Father Joyce with its Distinguished American Award. President Eisenhower appointed Father Joyce to the Board of Visitors of the U.S. Naval Academy, and the U.S. Air Force awarded him an Exceptional Service Medal. He was inducted into the Indiana Academy in 1990 and three endowed chairs were established in his name at Notre Dame. After retirement, Father Joyce served as honorary chair of the Badin Guild, a planned giving organization for benefactors who provide estate gifts to the University. He also was a life trustee of the University. MASCOTS (CLASHMORE MIKE/ LEPRECHAUN) – The mascot of the Notre Dame football team during the 1930s through the ’50s actually was a succession of Irish terrier dogs. The first, named Brick Top ShaunRhu, was donated by Cleveland native Charles Otis and was presented to Knute Rockne the week of the 1930 Notre Dame-Pennsylvania game. There was a companion mascot There was a companion mascot named Pat in the 1950s along with several female terriers – but most of Notre Dame’s terrier mascots were known as Clashmore Mike. Football game programs in the 1930s and ’40s included a regular “column” from Clashmore Mike, who also was the subject of a 1949 book entitled “Mascot Mike of Notre Dame.” The feisty terrier appeared on the cover of the 1963 Notre Dame Football “Dope Book,” alongside head coach Hugh Devore and captain Bob Lehman. Two years later, the leprechaun – which is consistent with the Notre Dame athletic teams’ nickname of the Fighting Irish – was registered as an official University mark, with the leprechaun mascot going on to be a regular part of the gameday atmosphere alongside the Notre Dame cheerleaders.

JOYCE – Rev. Edmund P. “Ned” Joyce, C.S.C., a central figure in Notre Dame’s athletic success for nearly four decades, passed away on May 2, 2004, at the age of 87. Father Joyce, whose namesake is Notre Dame’s primary athletic facility, retired in 1987 after serving 35 years

McCARTHY, SERGEANT TIM – Since 1960, Irish football fans have grown silent for a moment during the fourth quarter of every home game as they strain to hear former Sergeant Tim McCarthy of the Indiana State Police. McCarthy has found that the atrocious pun is the best way to get the crowd’s attention for the serious message of auto safety. Some of his best groaners: “Drive like a musician: C Sharp or B Flat,” and “Those who have one for the road may have a policeman as a chaser.”

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I R I S H FA C T S & F I G U R E S CONTINUED MONTANA – Of the countless fabled names in Notre Dame’s football past, the one that still prompts as many questions as any other in the Notre Dame sports information department is that of Joe Montana, quarterback of Notre Dame’s 1977 national championship team. Many visitors to Notre Dame’s Heritage Hall often are surprised to discover that Montana never received All-America status and was not selected until the third round of the National Football League draft. Interest in Montana’s exploits remains keen partly because of his stardom in the NFL (he was a first-ballot inductee into the Pro Football Hall of Fame and was enshrined in July of 2000) and partly because his five years at Notre Dame were so eventful. Montana served as an honorary coach for the 2005 Blue-Gold game. Here’s a look at Montana’s Notre Dame career statistics: (JV in ’74; dnp in ’76 due to injury) G/GS Time PC-PA-Yds TD/Int TC-Yds-TD 1975 7/3 92:37 28-66-507 4/8 25-(-5)-2 1977 9/8 198:38 99-189-1604 11/8 32-5-6 1978 11/11 280:30 141-260-2010 10/9 72-104-6 Totals 27/22 571:45 268-515-4121 25/25 129-104-14 “MOOSE” – Fans who enjoy strolling the Notre Dame campus during a football weekend have a popular site to include in their agenda, as a bronze sculpture of legendary Irish student-athlete, head coach and athletic director Edward “Moose” Krause stands in front of the Joyce Center, looking over at Notre Dame Stadium. The sculpture – dedicated on Sept. 17, 1999, the day before Notre Dame played host to Michigan State–shows Krause sitting on a bench, looking toward Notre Dame Stadium and was produced by Jerry McKenna of Boerne, Texas, a 1962 Notre Dame graduate who also produced the Frank Leahy sculpture that was unveiled in the fall of 1997 outside of Notre Dame Stadium. Krause’s many honors include being inducted into the Knights of Malta–the highest honor a layman can receive in the Catholic church–at ceremonies conducted in New York’s St. Patrick Cathedral by Cardinal Terence Cook. The City of Hope National Medical Center honored Krause in 1997 and established an Edward Krause Research Fellowship, in recognition of his service to that organization’s philanthropic interests. Krause was named Man of the Year by the Walter Camp Football Foundation for his lifetime achievements and received the 1989 Distinguished American Award from the National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame. He served as the University Division representative for district four of the National Association of College Directors of Athletics and was elected to the Honors Court of the NCAA, in addition to serving on the National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame honors court. He earned three football monograms as a tackle at Notre Dame in 1931, ’32 and ’33, in addition to earning second-team All-America honors in ‘32. But his biggest college athletic heroics were accomplished on the basketball court as a center, and he was inducted into the National Basketball Hall of Fame in 1976. Krause earned All-America honors in

both basketball and football and also earned a monogram in track. After graduating in 1934, Krause returned to Notre Dame in 1942 as an assistant basketball and football coach. During Krause’s tenure, the Notre Dame football team played in nine bowl games and won four consensus national championships. The basketball team advanced to the NCAA Final Four in 1978 and made a total of 16 appearances in the NCAA tournament. Krause helped spearhead the building of the multipurpose Joyce Center, which opened in 1968, by a fund-raising tour which saw him visit 175 cities. He also saw 10 new sports reach varsity status at Notre Dame and handled the establishment of women’s varsity sports beginning in 1974. Krause passed away Dec. 10, 1992, one day after attending the Notre Dame athletic department Christmas party and just weeks before he planned on attending Notre Dame’s appearance in the ’93 Cotton Bowl. (AT THE) MOVIES – Notre Dame football has been the subject of a number of motion pictures over the years. “Knute Rockne AllAmerican” starred Pat O’Brien as the legendary coach while future President of the United States Ronald Reagan played the role of George Gipp, with the film making its debut in 1940. In 1997, Librarian of Congress James Billington designated “Knute Rockne All-American” as part of the National Film Registry, qualifying the film as an “irreplaceable part of America’s cinematic heritage.” An earlier movie, “The Spirit of Notre Dame,” released in 1931, starred Lew Ayres and told the story of two fictional freshman Notre Dame football players. The picture featured a number of Notre Dame players in cameo roles and was reviewed as “the best college picture since the coming of the talkies.” The most recent movie involving Notre Dame football was the 1993 picture “Rudy,” the story of Daniel “Rudy” Ruettiger, who earned a spot on the Irish squad as a walk-on and later played 27 seconds against Georgia Tech in 1975 in his last game as a senior.

NATIONAL CHAMPIONS – Although the wire service polls crowned Florida State as national champion for 1993, Notre Dame was named the national champion by a few sources. The Association of College Football Fans – “the only national poll that gives the fans a voice” – named Notre Dame its national champion and presented the Irish

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I R I S H FA C T S & F I G U R E S CONTINUED with its trophy at halftime of the Notre Dame vs. Cal State Northridge basketball game on Jan. 31, 1994. Don Harris, president of the group, was on campus to give the award to head coach Lou Holtz and the Irish captains. The group, which represents over 300 fans from around the country, had a poll each week and members called an 800 number, gave their official ID number and voted. Notre Dame received 114 firstplace votes followed by Florida State with 92. Auburn finished third but did have 98 first-place votes. The Scripps-Howard News Service, the Matthews Grid Ratings and College & Pro Football Newsweekly each also named Notre Dame as the 1993 national champion.

NATIONAL CHAMPIONS II – Notre Dame has always boasted 11 consensus national championships seasons in its official records, but the Irish have been mentioned as national champions in several other seasons. Dating back to 1919, Notre Dame can claim ownership to 21 national titles (including its 11 consensus crowns). The 10 additional national championship seasons in which the Irish received mention are (season record in parenthesis) – 1919 (9-0), 1920 (9-0), 1927 (7-1-1), 1938 (8-1), 1953 (9-0-1), 1964 (9-1), 1967 (8-2), 1970 (10-1), 1989 (12-1) and 1993 (11-1). POLICY – Following the 27-10 Rose Bowl win over Stanford that capped the 1924 season, University policy kept Notre Dame out of postseason bowls for 45 years. A revision of that policy, announced on Nov. 17, 1969, permitted Notre Dame to accept an invitation to play Texas in the 1970 Cotton Bowl. Rev. Edmund P. Joyce, C.S.C., Notre Dame’s executive vice president at the time, noted that athletes in all other sports at Notre Dame had engaged in NCAA postseason play, and that many football coaches and players had participated in postseason games on an individual basis. “The crucial consideration,” Father Joyce said, “was the urgent need of the University for funds to finance minority student academic programs and scholarships. “Notre Dame’s share of the bowl game proceeds will be dedicated to this pressing University need. Plus, bowl-connected activities of the football team will fall largely in vacation time.” In the past 38 seasons, Notre Dame has participated in 28 bowl games: seven Cotton Bowls, five Orange Bowls, four Fiesta Bowls, four Sugar Bowls, three trips to the Gator Bowl, and one visit to the Liberty, Aloha, Hawai’i, Independence and Insight bowls. PEP RALLIES – An essential part of a football weekend at Notre Dame is the traditional Friday evening pep rally. The band historically mustered the students with its march through the campus and arrived as the head of a parade of Irish faithful at the University’s Stepan Center. Interest in recent years has prompted a move to the Joyce Center arena for the 6 p.m. (with the team entering the arena at 6:30 p.m.) gatherings, while in ‘97 the first two pep rallies were held outside in Notre Dame Stadium, as was the first one in ‘98 and 2000. On Sept. 5, 1997, the pep rally before the Georgia Tech game – in conjunction with the rededication of Notre Dame Stadium – was held in the facility and attracted approximately 35,000 fans. Some of the featured pep rally speakers in recent years

have included television personality Regis Philbin, basketball analyst Dick Vitale, former Los Angeles Dodgers manager and Baseball Hall of Famer Tommy Lasorda and Cincinnati Reds manager Dusty Baker – while hockey legend Wayne Gretzky topped the special-guest list for the pep rally prior to the 1999 game versus USC. The pep rally for the USC game in 2005 could possibly be remembered as one of the greatest in the history of the program. Moved to Notre Dame Stadium, some 50,000 fans packed in to hear speeches from Rudy Ruettiger, Tim Brown, Chris Zorich and Joe Montana. In 2006, pep rallies prior to the Penn State and Michigan games were held in Notre Dame Stadium. PLAY LIKE A CHAMPION – It’s just a simple wooden sign, painted gold and blue and mounted on a cream-colored brick wall at the foot of a stairwell. Yet, the “Play Like A Champion Today” sign, found outside Notre Dame’s locker room, is so much more. The slogan “Play Like A Champion Today” is so synonymous with the University that one can be excused for believing that Father Edward Sorin, the school’s founder, received it as a divine revelation in 1842. While the exact origin of the slogan is not known, the sign that currently hangs in Notre Dame Stadium came courtesy of former coach Lou Holtz. “I read a lot of books about the history of Notre Dame and its football program,” Holtz explains. “I forget which book I was looking at - it had an old picture in it that showed the slogan `Play Like A Champion Today’. I said, `That is really appropriate; it used to be at Notre Dame and we needed to use it again.’ So, I had that sign made up.” Soon, the tradition of hitting the sign before every game developed. Holtz even used a copy of the sign when traveling to road contests to help motivate the team. The players took no time in embracing Holtz’s idea. “(The players) were encouraged by it; I told them the history of it, that this had been here years ago. I didn’t know who took it down, I don’t know why it wasn’t here when I came here, but this is part of Notre Dame tradition and this is what we’re going to do,” Holtz says. Chances are it will, as the sign still inspires the same feelings that Holtz hoped it would back in 1986. SUPER BOWL QUARTERBACKS – Notre Dame is one of just three schools that have produced three players who have gone on to start in the Super Bowl at quarterback. Daryle Lamonica started for Oakland in Super Bowl II, Joe Theismann for the Washington Redskins in Super Bowls XVII and XVIII and Joe Montana for the San Francisco 49ers in Super Bowls XVI, XIX, XXIII and XXIV. The only other schools to have three Super Bowl quarterback starters are California (Joe Kapp, Craig Morton and Vince Ferragamo) and Alabama (Bart Starr, Joe Namath and Ken Stabler). Notre Dame is one of five schools that can claim two former quarterbacks who have won Super Bowl games while the Irish were the only program to produce quarterbacks who started Super Bowls in the 1960s (Lamonica), 1980s (Theismann and Montana) and 1990s (Montana). SUPER BOWL WINNERS – Several former Notre Dame student-athletes have performed on the highest stage at the professional level, with 43 of them playing for teams that have won the Super Bowl, World Series, NBA Championship or Stanley Cup. That group includes 36 former Irish football players, listed as

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I R I S H FA C T S & F I G U R E S CONTINUED Rally sons of Notre Dame Sing her glory and sound her fame, Raise her Gold and Blue And cheer with voices true: Rah, rah, for Notre Dame We will fight in ev-ry game, Strong of heart and true to her name We will ne’er forget her And will cheer her ever Loyal to Notre Dame

follows in order of the Super Bowl champions on which they played: Bill (Red) Mack, Jim Lynch, Nick Buoniconti, Bob Kuechenberg, Rocky Bleier, Terry Hanratty, Dave Casper, Steve Sylvester, Bobby Leopold, Joe Montana, Joe Theismann, Dave Duerson, Tom Thayer, Mark Bavaro, Eric Dorsey, Steve Beuerlein, Ricky Watters, Bryant Young, Craig Hentrich, Lindsay Knapp, Derrick Mayes, Aaron Taylor, Todd Lyght, Marc Edwards, Jabari Holloway, Brock Williams, David Givens, Jerome Bettis, Rocky Boiman, Hunter Smith, Jerome Collins and Justin Tuck. Nine Notre Dame players own the double distinction of winning national championship and Super Bowl rings: Bleier (Pittsburgh Steelers), Casper (Oakland Raiders), Montana (San Francisco 49ers), Leopold (San Francisco 49ers), Lyght (St. Louis Rams), Lynch (Kansas City Chiefs), Kuechenberg (Miami Dolphins) and Watters (San Francisco 49ers). Current Irish head coach Charlie Weis, who did not play football as an undergrad at Notre Dame, owns four championship rings as a coach in the NFL. Weis won one ring with the New York Giants (1990) and three with the New England Patriots (2001, ‘03, ‘04). Weis’ third ring with the Patriots came after he had agreed to become Notre Dame’s head football coach in December of 2004. TRUE HERO – Former Notre Dame running back Mario “Motts” Tonelli, a native of Skokie, Ill., received the University’s 2000 Rev. William Corby Award for distinguished military service by a Notre Dame graduate. Tonelli was a fullback with the Irish in the mid-1930s and later survived the infamous Bataan Death March, spending 42 months as a prisoner of war before embarking on a distinguished career in Chicago politics. In March of 2002, he was inducted into the National Italian-American Sports Hall of Fame. Tonelli, who also played professional football briefly with the Chicago Cardinals, passed away on Jan. 7, 2003. His fascinating life story received national attention including a USA Today feature story and an in-depth feature that ran in Sports Illustrated just weeks after his death. VICTORY MARCH – The most recognizable collegiate fight song in the nation, the “Notre Dame Victory March” was written in the early 1900s by two brothers who were University of Notre Dame graduates. Michael Shea, a 1905 graduate, composed the music while his brother, John Shea, who earned degrees in 1906 and 1908, provided the corresponding lyrics. The song was copyrighted in 1908 and a piano version, complete with lyrics, was published that year. Michael, who became a priest in Ossining, N.Y., collaborated on the project with John, who lived in Holyoke, Mass. The song’s public debut came in the winter of 1908 when Michael played it on the organ of the Second Congregational Church in Holyoke. The “Notre Dame Victory March” later was presented by the Shea brothers to the University and it first appeared under the copyright of the University of Notre Dame in 1928. The copyright was assigned to the publishing company of Edwin H. Morris and the copyright for the beginning of the song still is in effect. The more well-known second verse, which begins with the words “Cheer, cheer for Old Notre Dame,” now is in the public domain in the United States (for both the music and lyrics) - but the second verse remains protected in all territories outside of the country. Notre Dame’s fight song was first performed at Notre Dame on Easter Sunday, 1909, in the rotunda of the Administration Building. The Notre Dame band, under the direction of Prof. Clarence Peterson, performed the Victory March as part of its traditional Easter morning concert. It was first heard at a Notre Dame athletic event 10 years later. In 1969, as college football celebrated its centennial, the “Notre Dame Victory March” was honored as the “greatest of all fight songs.” Michael Shea was pastor of St. Augustine’s Church in Ossining until his death in 1938. John Shea, a baseball monogram winner at Notre Dame, became a Massachusetts state senator and lived in Holyoke until his death in 1965.

Cheer, cheer for old Notre Dame, Wake up the echoes cheering her name, Send a volley cheer on high, Shake down the thunder from the sky. What though the odds be great or small Old Notre Dame will win over all, While her loyal sons are marching Onward to victory. The original lyrics, written when all athletes at Notre Dame were male, refer to “sons,” but in recognition of the fact that the Victory March is now played for athletic teams composed of men and women, many modify the words accordingly. The “Victory March” earned a number-one ranking in ratings compiled in 1998 in a book, “College Fight Songs: An Annotated Anthology.” The “Victory March” was also the number-oneranked fight song in a survey in 1990 by Bill Studwell, a librarian at Northern Illinois University. WALK-ONS – Notre Dame has a long history of walk-ons who have made impressive contributions on the football field. One near the top of that list is Mike Oriard, who emerged as a starting center and team captain in 1969 after coming to Notre Dame from Spokane, Wash., without a scholarship. He went on to earn second team AllAmerica honors and a prestigious NCAA postgraduate scholarship before playing for the NFL’s Kansas City Chiefs. Oriard now is a literature professor at Oregon State University and authored “The End of Autumn,” a book detailing his football experiences. The Irish also have featured a number of kickers in recent years who have risen from the walk-on ranks, including the likes of John Carney, Chuck Male, Mike Johnston and Reggie Ho. Notre Dame’s punter and placekicker in 1987, Vince Phelan and Ted Gradel, respectively, both were walk-ons who earned Academic All-America honors (as did Ho). Other walk-on standouts were Bob Burger, a starting offensive guard on the team that played in the 1981 Sugar Bowl and a member of the CoSIDA Academic All-America Hall of Fame, and Mike Brennan, a converted lacrosse player who developed into a starting offensive tackle with the Irish in 1989 before going on to a career in the NFL. Most recently, soccer player Shane Walton shifted to the gridiron and went on to be an All-America cornerback and leader of Notre Dame’s 10-3 team in 2002, while fullback Josh Schmidt took his game from the intramural fields to Notre Dame Stadium and emerged as a part-time starter in 2003 and 2004.

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MONOGRAM CLUB Annual Report n 1916, Irish athletic director and head football coach Jesse Harper formed the Notre Dame National Monogram Club. The forward-thinking administrator hoped to bring together the University’s varsity letter winners – past and present – to promote spirit, unity, leadership and sportsmanship. Football center J. Hugh O’Donnell, who would become Notre Dame’s 13th president in 1935, served as head of the club’s board.

I

Now, 93 years later, the Notre Dame Monogram Club continues to foster the mission of the University through the spiritual, intellectual and physical development of its students and alumni. Nearly 4,000 dues-paying members, who have earned a Notre Dame varsity athletic insignia for their competitive endeavors or team support contributions or as an honorary recipient, maintain a vibrant relationship

to the University through the common bond of sport. Members of the Monogram Club cross gender, age, geographical and sport lines, but they all share a love of Notre Dame and its rich athletic heritage and intellectual achievements.

Leadership In August of 2009, Beth Hunter assumed the position of assistant athletic director for studentathlete alumni relations. In her new position she will also serve as executive director of the Monogram Club. Hunter has worked with the Monogram Club since 2003 and was awarded an honorary Monogram in 2008 for her significant contributions to the club. Former Irish All-America running back Reggie Brooks ’93, joined the staff in April of 2008 as manager for Monogram/football alumni relations. He works with Fraleigh, the Board of Directors of the Notre Dame Monogram Club and Irish head football coach Charlie Weis to bring different generations of Notre Dame football players together through numerous projects and programs. Joe Restic ’79, a 1978 Academic All-American football player for the Irish entered his first year as president of the 37-member Board of Directors in April 2009. He is joined in the officer rotation by first vice president Dick Nussbaum ’74 & ’77, a Monogram winner in baseball and member of the Notre Dame Board of Trustees, and second vice president Haley Scott-DeMaria ’95, a former Irish swimmer and author of the book What Though

Athletics Director Jack Swarbrick with new members of the Monogram Club (cheerleaders) following the second Letter Jacket Ceremony held on March 25th in the Monogram Room.

The Monogram Club presented its 2009 Moose Krause Distinguished Service Award to former Irish head fencing coach Mike DeCicco during the club’s Annual Dinner held April 16.

the Odds. Former basketball player Marc Kelly ’82, who served as the club’s president from 2007-09 sits on the board as the past president.

Contributions & Gift Giving The Notre Dame Monogram Club and its members continue to make significant financial contributions to enhance the University’s athletics facilities, opportunities and programs and to bridge the gap between legend and legacy. In 2005, the club allocated $1 million toward the ongoing Notre Dame Stadium enhancement project. As part of the project, each of the five entry gates at Notre Dame Stadium have been themed to celebrate aspects of Notre Dame’s illustrious football tradition. This fall, Gate C will be unveiled to display former Irish greats who have been enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame. In 2007, the Club pledged another $1 million to the Spirit of Notre Dame capital campaign, which will be used to support the campaign’s athletics priorities. In August of 2008, the Monogram Club completed a $600,000 renovation of the Joyce Center’s Sports Heritage Hall, Basketball Office hallways and Monogram Room. The Club also created a reception area for former football monogram winners in Notre Dame Stadium that debuted during the 2008 season.

One of the most important functions of the Monogram Club is its commitment to the Brennan-Boland-Riehle Scholarship Fund (BBRSF), which provides assistance to qualified undergraduate students who are children of dues-paying members. One of the more significant endowed scholarship funds that the University administers, the BBRSF offers a minimum award of 75 percent of the student’s normal work and loan component of the financial aid package. Last year, 22 students received a total of just under $193,000 in aid. The fund, named in honor of Joe Boland, Rev. Thomas Brennan, C.S.C., and Rev. James Riehle, C.S.C., currently boasts an impressive market value of over $5.2 million, one of Notre Dame’s largest endowments. In 2009, the Monogram Club established the Postgraduate Scholarship Program as a means of continued support to its members. Under the program, one female and one male student-athlete who earned a Monogram at any point in their undergraduate career will be annually awarded a postgraduate scholarship in recognition of outstanding academic achievement, service, leadership and potential for success in postgraduate study.

The Monogram Club is pleased to recognize Thomas Bemenderfer ’09 (football) and Mallorie Croal ’09 (volleyball) as the inaugural recipients of the Monogram Club’s Postgraduate Scholarships.

Former reserve offensive lineman Thomas Bemenderfer ‘09 was one of two Monogram winners selected to receive the inaugural Monogram Club Postgraduate Scholarship. This fall Bemenderfer will enroll in medical school at Indiana University.

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MONOGRAM CLUB CONTINUED

Programs & Events During 2008-09, the Monogram Club sponsored several programs, projects and initiatives that supported the University’s past and present student-athletes and brought Monogram Club members together for service and fellowship.

Opened in the fall of 2008, the Monogram Club Football Players’ Lounge serves as a resource for past, current and future generations of Notre Dame football players

Notre Dame’s first black Heisman Trophy winner Tim Brown ’88 served as one of the keynote speakers during the 60th Anniversary of Black Student-Athletes weekend held April 16-19 2009.

THE MONOGRAM CLUB: • Purchased laptop computers for use by all of Notre Dame student-athletes while traveling and provided each student-athlete with an academic/athletic handbook and annual planner. • Provided close to $83,000 for post-season gifts and awards (championship rings, etc.) to various varsity teams. • Provided funding to help Notre Dame varsity sports travel abroad for competition and training, which included women’s volleyball to Italy in May 2009 and women’s golf to Ireland in August 2009. • Provided funding in support of the teamhosting program, in conjunction with local alumni clubs. • Financially supported student-athletes through the Dave Bossy Scholarship Grant. Scholarships are awarded to students-athletes who volunteer to work in summer service programs, in conjunction with the Center for Social Concerns. • Donated $125,000 to the Office of Student Welfare and Development to support events and programs for current student-athletes. • Provided players with their annual varsity monogram awards, which includes a monogram jacket, ring, blazer/stadium blanket and watch. • Welcomed back Notre Dame legends Adrian Dantley (’78 basketball), Pat Garrity (’98 basketball), Kerri Hanks (’08 soccer), and Brad Lidge (baseball), as well as the Notre Dame Monogram winners who competed in the 2008 Beijing Olympics – Shannon Boxx

Awards & Honors uring its annual April meeting, the Notre Dame Monogram Club presented the 2009 Moose Krause Distinguished Service Award to former Irish head fencing coach Mike DeCicco. In conjunction with DeCicco being presented the Distinguished Service Award, the Monogram Club organized and sponsored a reunion for all Irish fencers. During his 34 years as head coach, DeCicco amassed a spectacular career record of 680 wins compared to just 45 losses for a career winning percentage of over 93 percent. He coached the Irish fencing program to five national championships and eight of his fencers won individual national titles. Among his proudest accomplishments was the development of the women’s fencing team, which emerged as one of Notre Dame’s first varsity sports for women in 1977. DeCicco was able to form a

D

(’99 soccer), Selim Nurudeen (’05 track & field), Kate (Sobrero) Markgraf (’98 soccer), Candace Chapman (’06 soccer), Thomas Chamney (’07 track & field), Kelley Hurley (’10 fencing), Mariel Zagunis (fencing) and Gerek Meinhardt (’12 fencing). • Supported Irish football alumni in the Notre Dame Japan Bowl played July 25, 2009 in Tokyo, Japan. • Hosted the 1988 national championship team in celebration of its 20th anniversary. Festivities included the dedication of a statue for head coach Lou Holtz inside Notre Dame Stadium at Gate D. • Welcomed more than 100 black Monogram winners and their families for the 60th Anniversary of Black Student-Athletes Celebration as part of this year’s Blue-Gold Weekend. The weekend’s festivities included a reception in the press box of Notre Dame Stadium, a town hall meeting to discuss “The State of the Black Student-Athlete” and a formal dinner held in the Joyce Center Concourse. Former Irish soccer player Marvin Lett ’87 emceed the dinner that featured keynote remarks from Notre Dame Trustee and former Irish cheerleader Phyllis Stone ’80 and Notre Dame’s only black Heisman Trophy recipient Tim Brown ’88. • Held its first two Letter Jacket Ceremonies to honor first-time Monogram winners. Over 200 student-athletes received their Monogram jackets at a special ceremony held in the Monogram Room. Student-athletes from winter and spring sports received their jackets at the inaugural ceremony held in October, while student-athletes from fall sports received theirs at a ceremony in March. The ceremony featured the presentation of jackets, a keynote address from Director of Athletics Jack Swarbrick and a short video about the history and significance of becoming a member of the Monogram Club.

2008-09 NOTRE DAME MONOGRAM CLUB HONORARY MEMBERSHIP:

solid foundation for the women’s program which he coached during the first nine years of the program’s history. In addition to his success as a coach, DeCicco revolutionized the academic world as well. In 1964 under the guidance of Father Joyce, DeCicco created the academic advising program for student-athletes from scratch. The advising program created by he and Father Joyce was the first of its kind. Today the department is known as Academic Services for Student-Athletes. DeCicco headed the Office of the Academic Advisor for Athletes until 1990. During his tenure, DeCicco rapidly expanded the program to include all student-athletes and initiated the tutorial assistance program, class monitoring program and degree progress reports that remain the foundation of the office.

• Thomas Blum ‘68, longtime contributor to Notre Dame athletics • Beth Holtz, wife of former Irish football coach Lou Holtz • Beth Hunter, director of sports marketing who assists in the daily operations of the Monogram Club • Rev. John Jenkins, C.S.C. ’76 & ‘78, University of Notre Dame President • Susan McGonigal, longtime sports information administrative assistant • Jim Rakers ‘65, former Irish football player and active member of the Notre Dame Club of Phoenix

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OFFICIAL

FOOTBALL SIGNALS National Collegiate Athletic Association 1

2

3

Ball ready for play *Untimed down

9

Loss of down

17

11

Incomplete fo rw ard pass Penalty declined No play , no scor e Toss option delayed

Offside defense or free kick team Encroachment (NF)

28

Illegal participation

37

False start Illegal formation Encroachment offense

22

Illegal shift - 2 hands Illegal motion - 1 hand

Delay of game

Substitution infraction

30

31

32

Sideline interference

Running into or roughing kicker or holder

Illegal batting Illegal kicking (followed by pointing toward toe for kicking)

Illegal fair catch signal (NF) Invalid fair catch signal (NF)

38

39

40

Illegal touching or 30-second timeout First touching (NF)

Sideline warning

24

Failure to wear required equipment

33

41

16

23

21

First down

15

End of period

20

29

Ball dead Touchback (move side to side)

Safety

14

Disregard flag

8

7

Touchdown Field goal Point(s) after touchdown

13

Inadvertent whistle (Face Press Box)

19

6

5

TV/Radio time-out

12

Legal touching of forward pass or scrimmage kick

18

Uncatchabl e fo rw ard pass

Time-out Discretionary or injury time-out (follow by tapping hands on chest)

Start clock

10

4

27

Illegal helmet contact

34

Forward pass interference Kick-catching interference

42

35

36

Illegal pass Illegal forward handling

Roughing passer

43

Unsportsmanlike conduct Noncontact foul

44

Intentional grounding

45

Illegal block in the back Ineligible downfield on pass

46

Personal foul

Clipping

Blocking below waist Illegal block

Chop block

Holding/obstructing Illegal use of hands/arms

Helping runner Interlocked blocking

Grasping face mask or helmet opening

47 (NF) High School Note: Signal numbers 25 and 26 are for future expansion.

Tripping

Player disqualification

www.ncaa.org 208

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STADIUM

POLICIES & INFO T

he Notre Dame athletics department welcomes you to Notre Dame Stadium for the 2009 season – marking the 79th year of action in what is widely regarded as America’s greatest collegiate football monument. You are now part of the storied tradition called Notre Dame football in which we can boast the very best fans in the world. To help make this a memorable Notre Dame experience, we ask that all fans please respect the rights of everyone enjoying this sporting event. We would like to cheer for our players and coaches in a manner reflective of Notre Dame’s tradition of excellence. Also join us in giving our visitors a Notre Dame welcome and share with them why we “Cheer, cheer for Old Notre Dame.”

Please enjoy the weekend, and GO IRISH! Game Time Information: To obtain current Notre Dame football game times, as well as scores and summaries of all Irish athletic events, visit the official athletics department website at www.und.com.

SPECIAL RULES AND PROHIBITED ITEMS

TICKETS AND ADMISSION

Smoking Ban: In accordance with a St. Joseph County ordinance, there is no smoking allowed in Notre Dame Stadium. Passouts for smoking are not allowed. Fans are encouraged to bring ONLY necessary items into Notre Dame Stadium. In addition, Stadium Security personnel reserve the right to inspect all items.

The Stadium Ticket Office will open at least three hours prior to kickoff and will remain open into the second half. The Stadium Ticket Office is located on the east side of Notre Dame Stadium adjacent to the Joyce Center.

Prohibited Items Include: Alcoholic beverages; glass containers, any cans, aerosol/spray cans; seat backs; strollers; coolers, flasks, thermoses (non-disposable two-quart or less are permitted); artificial noise makers; and weapons of any kind. Permitted Items Include: Unopened, sealed water bottles, binoculars, cameras and limited use of camcorders; pagers, cell phones and radios; blankets or rain apparel. THROWING OBJECTS IN THE STANDS OR ONTO THE FIELD IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. Exit and re-entry is NOT permitted. Please see the gate supervisor for emergency assistance.

• ALL persons, regardless of age, must have a ticket for admission. We do not issue child/lap passes. • General Public WILL CALL is serviced at Windows 4, 5 & 6 – Photo ID is REQUIRED. • Notre Dame and visiting player guest admissions are located at the Stadium Ticket Office. Photo ID is required and admission begins 90 minutes prior to kickoff. • The resale of tickets is prohibited on University of Notre Dame property. However, the Alumni Association operates a consignment program at the Gate 3 Ticket Office of the Joyce Center. (See www.und.com/tickets for more information on the Alumni Ticket Consignment Program). • For wheelchair and disability accommodations, please visit Window 1 of the Stadium Ticket Office. All persons utilizing a wheelchair must have a ticket designated for wheelchair accessible seating. You may also call 574-631-7356 in advance of game day.

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STADIUM POLICIES & INFO CONTINUED

• Persons leaving the Stadium will NOT be re-admitted. Please see a gate supervisor for EMERGENCY assistance. • Tickets that are lost, stolen or destroyed will NOT be replaced. • Stadium gates will open 90 minutes prior to kickoff. Please enter through the gate designated on your ticket. • Please retain your ticket stub with your seat location at all times. • Tickets returned in advance of game day will be sold through the Ticket Office and can be purchased by calling 574-631-7356. • Tickets with stub removed are void and will not be allowed into the stadium.

PARKING/TRANSPORTATION Game day parking is available on a drive-up basis for $20 per passenger vehicle. Game day parking is located north of Douglas Road accessible off of Juniper Road (White Field North). RV parking is only available in the White Field area at a cost of $100 per vehicle. Most parking lots will open at 8:30 a.m. on game day. Overnight parking is prohibited. Lots must be vacated within three hours of the game’s conclusion. Shuttle buses begin limited service (two buses) to the library circle shortly after the White Field opens (8:30 a.m.). Service will increase as game time approaches. These will run into the first half, with a minimum of one bus running the entire game. Post game, 12 buses will run in sets of four back to White Field. These will run until all the lines are gone or at least one hour after the game ends (whichever is longer). A wheelchair-accessible, disabled-patron shuttle is also available. Game day disabled patron parking requires either a valid stateissued placard (hang tag) or license plate. Game day disabled parking is available on a first-come, first-serve basis. To accommodate our disable patrons, we provide a game day disabled lot, the D2 North Lot, located on the southwest corner of the intersection of Douglas and Wilson. Shuttles equipped to handle wheelchairs and scooters will transport all individuals parking in this lot directly to and from the Stadium. To gain access to this lot, you must have your state-issued disabled placard or license plate on display in your vehicle upon arrival. The cost of parking in this lot is $20 per vehicle. Please call 574-631-7356 in advance of game day for more details. Football parking information and directions to White Field are available on the official athletic department website: www.und.com with parking listed on the tickets page.

STADIUM SERVICES Cameras and Radios: Limited use of cameras, video cameras, televisions and portable radios is permitted. Consideration of other spectators is expected. Concessions/Water: Full service concession stands are available around the stadium concourse. Concession services are provided by Notre Dame Food Services. (See permitted items on previous page). Disturbances: Please report any disruptive fans to the stadium ushers or to the Personnel Office under Section 4.

Doctor Calls: Doctors and others expecting calls, leave your name and seat location at the Stadium Ushers Office under Section 4. No announcements will be made on the public address system. First Aid: First aid stations (under Sections 4 and 25 on the lower concourse and outside Section 128) are staffed continuously by local physicians, nurses and paramedics from the South Bend Fire Department, from an hour and a half before kickoff until the game ends. Persons suffering from sudden illness or injury should report to the closest first aid room at once. Ask an usher to guide or escort you. Companions of (or persons nearby) patrons losing consciousness or otherwise not ambulatory should summon the nearest usher for rapid assistance and he or she will get medical help at once. Intoxicating Substances: The use of intoxicating substances inside Notre Dame Stadium is prohibited. Ushers and law enforcement officers have been instructed to refuse admission to ticket holders who are intoxicated or disorderly. Anyone found with alcohol or a controlled substance in the Stadium will be removed immediately. Lost and Found: The lost and found department is at the Public Safety and Information Office beneath Section 27 on the west (press box) side of the Stadium. Programs and Merchandise: Official souvenir programs are available from vendors in parking lots and both inside and outside the stadium gates. Officially licensed Notre Dame merchandise is available at souvenir stands located outside Notre Dame Stadium, at the Varsity Shops in the Joyce Center and at the Hammes Bookstore located just west of the Stadium on Notre Dame Avenue. Restrooms: Many restroom facilities are located throughout the Stadium. Should you need assistance, please contact an usher in your area. In addition, a unisex restroom is located on the east side of the Stadium. Note: These rules will be strictly enforced and violators will be removed from the Stadium. Repeat violators will have further football ticket privileges revoked.

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NCAA COMPLIANCE REGULATIONS

Thank you for your tremendous support of our entire athletics program. Our 800+ student-athletes, our coaches and administrative staff are very appreciative of your spirit and affinity for Notre Dame, in particular intercollegiate athletics. With that, your adherence to all applicable NCAA rules and regulations is essential as we strive to maintain and enhance our national athletic prominence while protecting the University’s tradition of integrity and values. Our Compliance Office staff stands prepared to assist you with your

questions and concerns regarding NCAA regulations. Please contact us immediately should you have concern regarding any situation. Your attention to these matters will ensure that the eligibility of both prospective student-athletes (“recruits”) and enrolled student-athletes is protected and maintained. Again, many thanks for your cooperation in this matter and your ongoing support. Go Fighting Irish! The Compliance Staff

WHO IS A REPRESENTATIVE OF NOTRE DAME’S ATHLETICS INTERESTS?

DOs AND DON’Ts FOR REPRESENTATIVES IN REGARDS TO A CURRENT STUDENT-ATHLETE:

(The following lists of examples are not all-inclusive. As always, ask before you act!) You are, if: • you are an enrolled student or graduate of the University.

(The following lists of examples are not all-inclusive. As always, ask before you act!)

• you have ever participated in or are a member of any organization promoting Notre Dame’s athletics program. (The former Quarterback Club, The 3-Pt. Club, The Fast-Break Club, etc.) • you have ever made financial contributions to the University of Notre Dame athletics department.

DO You may: • contact a current student-athlete regarding employment opportunities; however, no contact may be made without approval from the Compliance Office. • provide a student-athlete, not their family and friends, an occasional (once a semester) meal at your home.

DON’T

• you have ever helped to arrange employment of or provided any benefits to prospective or enrolled student-athletes. • you have ever been a season ticket holder in any sport. • you have ever promoted the athletics programs at the University of Notre Dame. According to NCAA rules, once an individual has been identified as an institutional “representative of athletics interests” the individual retains that title for life. The University of Notre Dame is ultimately responsible for the behavior of all its athletics representatives in relation to NCAA rules and regulations. Violations of NCAA regulations by an athletics representative could result in the loss of eligibility for involved student-athletes (e.g. no participation in competitions) and/ or severe sanctions against the University (e.g. loss of scholarships, television and post-season bans).

CURRENT STUDENT-ATHLETE A student-athlete is any Notre Dame student who is a member of a varsity athletics team. NCAA regulations apply to all student-athletes, not just those studentathletes who were recruited or who receive an athletics scholarship. *Note: NCAA regulations concerning enrolled student-athletes remain in effect throughout the entire year (including summer break). If a student-athlete has completed his/her final season of eligibility, all NCAA regulations must be adhered to until he/she graduates or leaves school.

You may not: • provide a currently enrolled student-athlete, their parents or friends any benefit or special arrangement without prior approval from the Compliance Office. • pay for or arrange for payment of room, board or any type of transportation for a student-athlete or their family and friends. • entertain student-athletes or their family and friends. (Exception: NCAA rules do permit institutional staff members and athletics representatives to provide student-athletes (not including their family and friends) with an occasional meal (defined as once a semester) provided the meal is at the staff member’s or athletic representative’s home and not at a restaurant.) • use the name, picture or appearance of an enrolled student-athlete to advertise, recommend or promote sales or use of a commercial product or service of any kind. Any use of a student-athlete’s name, picture or appearance must receive authorization from the Compliance Office. • provide any payment of expense or loan of an automobile for a student-athlete to return home or to any other location. • provide awards or gifts to a student-athlete for any reason. All awards provided to student-athletes must first be approved by the Compliance Office and meet all NCAA regulations. • provide an honorarium to a student-athlete for a speaking engagement. All speaking engagements must be approved in advance by the Compliance Office. • allow a student-athlete, his/her relatives or friends to use your telephone to make free calls.

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COMPLIANCE CONTINUED • continue established family relationships with friends and neighbors. Contacts with sons and daughters of these families are permitted so long as they are not made for recruiting purposes or encouraged by Notre Dame coaches.

• provide free or reduced cost lodging in your home to a studentathlete or a student-athlete’s family and friends.

PROSPECTIVE STUDENT-ATHLETE A prospective student-athlete is any student who has started classes for the ninth grade. Any student younger than ninth grade who receives any benefits from an institution or athletics representative would also become a prospective student-athlete. In addition, student-athletes enrolled in preparatory school or two-year colleges are considered prospective student-athletes. * Note: An individual is considered a prospect (whether or not they have signed a National Letter-of-Intent) until the first day of initial collegiate enrollment or the first day they report for practice, whichever is earliest. Therefore, all NCAA regulations concerning contact with a prospective student-athlete are applicable until that time.

THE DOs AND DON’Ts FOR REPRESENTATIVES IN REGARDS TO A PROSPECTIVE STUDENTATHLETE: (The following lists of examples are not all-inclusive. As always, ask before you act!)

DO • forward information about prospective student-athletes to the appropriate coaching staff. • have telephone contact with a prospect regarding permissible preenrollment activities such as summer employment, provided the prospect has graduated from high school and signed a National Letter of Intent. • have a telephone conversation with a prospect only if the prospect initiates the call. Such a call may not be prearranged by an institutional staff member and you are not permitted to have a recruiting conversation, but may exhibit normal civility. You must refer any questions about our athletics programs to an athletics department staff member/coach. • view a prospect’s athletic contest at your own initiative provided you do not contact the prospect or his/her parents. In addition, you may not contact a prospect’s coach, principal, or counselor in an attempt to evaluate the prospect. Jill Bodensteiner, Associate Director of Athletics (574) 631-9647 or jbodenst@nd.edu

DON’T You may not: • write, e-mail or telephone a prospective student-athlete or his/her parents in an effort to recruit them to Notre Dame. • become involved in making arrangements to provide money, financial aid or a benefit of any kind to a prospect or the prospect’s family and friends. • make contact with a prospective student-athlete and his/her parents when the prospect is on-campus for an official or unofficial recruiting visit. • contact a prospect to congratulate him/her on signing a National Letter of Intent to attend the University. • transport, pay or arrange for payment of transportation costs for a prospect and his/her relatives or friends to visit campus (or elsewhere). • pay or arrange for payment of summer camp registration fees for a prospect. • provide ANYTHING to a prospect, the prospect’s family or friends without prior approval from the Compliance Office. The support of our alumni and friends is welcomed and appreciated. We ask, however, that you also help to keep Notre Dame’s tradition of athletics integrity intact by following the NCAA regulations. Your assistance will help ensure that the eligibility of both prospective and currently enrolled student-athletes is protected and preserved. Your efforts to know and follow the NCAA legislation are greatly appreciated because violations could affect the eligibility of involved prospects or student-athletes and/or result in NCAA penalties being imposed on the University. To that end, it should be our goal, as the best alumni and fans in the country, to preserve and protect each and every student-athlete’s eligibility. All NCAA legislation cannot be covered in a limited space such as this program. Therefore, any additional questions should be forwarded to the Compliance Office in the Department of Athletics. Please remember to ask before you act!

Go Fighting Irish!

Jen Vining-Smith, Assistant Director of Athletics (574) 631-3248 or jvinings@nd.edu Brent Moberg, Director of Compliance (574) 631-3041 or bmoberg1@nd.edu Tom Timmermans, Coordinator of Compliance Information (574) 631-2237 or ttimmerm@nd.edu

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SOUTH BEND/MISHAWAKA… NOTRE DAME AND A WHOLE LOT MORE!

F

amous for its storied football program and the mystique of its 1,250-acre campus, the University of Notre Dame anchors this community. The Basilica of the Sacred Heart, the 14-story Hesburgh Library with its 132-foot-high mural depicting “Christ the Teacher” and the Main Building with its famed Golden Dome are among the most widely visited university landmarks. The University’s Marie P. DeBartolo Center for Performing Arts offers a unique combination of performance venues, high-tech production facilities and academic space. Free, student-guided tours of the campus are available. Contact the Eck Visitors Center on Notre Dame Avenue at 631.5726 for more info. Whether you’re a casual enthusiast or a diehard fan, every day feels like a Saturday afternoon in autumn at the College Football Hall of Fame. The game of college football comes to life through interactive exhibits, video, photo galleries, sound and the nation’s largest collection of football memorabilia. Changing exhibits often correlate college football’s relationship to current and historical events. The greatest players and coaches in the history of college football are forever immortalized during the Enshrinement Festival. This summer, the great Notre Dame football coach Lou Holtz was inducted, in addition to great players like Troy Aikman and Thurman Thomas. The community’s rich history can be found at the Museums at West Washington and Chapin, comprised of the Studebaker National Museum and Center for History. The Studebaker National Museum’s collection includes the first and last vehicles produced by the Studebaker Corporation, carriages of four U.S. Presidents, prototypes and industrial treasures. Copshaholm, the opulent and historic 38room mansion of industrialist J.D. Oliver, is a

A vibrant community, rich in history, rich in tradition. A golden glow illuminates this city comfortably nestled along the banks of the St. Joseph River. South Bend… Notre Dame and a whole lot more!

house museum filled with original furnishings from the mid-17th to 20th centuries. Also located on this ten-acre site in the West Washington Street Historic District are the grand Oliver Gardens, the Worker’s House Museum and the Center for History, repository for the collection of the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League. General admission for the Museums at West Washington and Chapin is $12 for adults, $10 for seniors and $7 for children 6 and over. Children 5 and under are free. Tippecanoe Place, a fine continental restaurant, was originally home to the former Studebaker Corporation President Clement Studebaker. Completed in 1889 at a cost of $250,000, this 26,000-square-foot mansion features four main levels, which contain 40 rooms, 20 fireplaces and an elevator – one of the first in the country. In addition, visitors will find a variety of four diamond, eclectic, ethnic and casual dining options in the community. Three hands-on children’s museums – Hannah Lindahl Children’s Museum, the Kidsfirst Children’s Museum and HealthWorks!

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SOUTH BEND/MISHAWAKA CONTINUED Kids’ Museum offer children of all ages the opportunity to explore. Get the “inside scoop” on this community’s version of “Willy Wonka” at The South Bend Chocolate Company and Chocolate Museum. The Military Honor Park and Museum located at the South Bend Regional Airport features an extensive collection of artifacts representing each branch of the military. A Studebaker Weasel and WWI Military Wagon, a WWII Era Jeep and Air-to-Air Sidewinder Missile are included in the museum’s collection.

The South Bend Museum of Art, the public art museum of the greater South Bend area, includes collections and exhibits focusing on contemporary and historical American art. Shiojiri Niwa Japanese Friendship Garden is the beautiful garden located on 1.3 acres near the St. Joseph River in Mishawaka’s Merrifield Park. The garden contains more than 20 different varieties of large plant materials, over 200 boulders and a teahouse pavilion. The Robert C. Beutter Riverfront Park is a five-acre urban park located at the Mishawaka River Center, the former Ball Band/Uniroyal site in downtown Mishawaka. The park is comprised of an abundance of walking paths and contemplative sitting spaces that take advantage of the prevalent water features. Visitors enjoy endless recreation opportunities in greater South Bend. Adventurers will enjoy both rafting and kayaking on the East Race Waterway, the first artificial whitewater course in North America or fishing on the St. Joseph River. Potato Creek State Park, Indian’s second largest state park, is only 20 minutes southwest of downtown South Bend. Hiking, biking, nature trails, canoeing, inner tubing and cross-country skiing opportunities are found at the community’s four county parks and 90 city parks. Potawatomi Zoo, Indiana’s first zoo, is home to more than 400 animals including several rare and endangered species such as the tiger, red panda, cottontop tamarin, snow leopard and lemur.

Golfers will be challenged at Blackthorn Golf Club, one of Indiana’s top public courses and the Warren Golf Course, located on the University of Notre Dame campus. Mishawaka is the destination for shoppers with University Park Mall and the North Mishawaka Retail Corridor, which features hundreds of chain, discount and specialty stores – the second largest retail concentration in Indiana. South Bend’s Erskine Village adds to the retail mix. For the artisan in you, downtown South Bend features impressive galleries and boutiques to explore. To further enhance the Notre Dame football fan on-campus experience, numerous activities and attractions are available through the season. Downtown South Bend features entertainment and dining options in addition to the popular Football Friday Tent Party. A festival atmosphere with live music, food and drink is available. In addition, fans can immerse themselves in the glory of game day at the College Football Hall of Fame, visit Knute Rockne’s tribute wing at the Center for History or just enjoy the merchants and eateries that make up South Bend. Find out for yourself why football weekends in South Bend are special!

For more information on Greater South Bend and a complimentary travel planner, call the South Bend/ Mishawaka Convention and Visitors Bureau at 800.828.7881 or 574.232.0231 ext. 301 or visit the Web site at www.exploresouthbend.org. South Bend/Mishawaka… Notre Dame and a Whole Lot More!

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THE NOTRE DAME BAND

A SONG FOR MOM By Tony Pawlicki, Trumpet Syracuse, Ind./Class of 2010

A yearly tradition inspires a love for Notre Dame.

November 4, 1995: Notre Dame was playing Navy. however, certain memories do stand out. I remember My first Notre Dame game was a birthday gift, one that I certainly didn’t understand at the time. While I may not remember much of the game, what I do remember is the atmosphere. I remember the student section immediately to our left, standing and cheering the entire game. I remember the feeling I got the first time I saw the Golden Dome and the Hesburgh Library. The two things I remember most, however, are my mother and the marching band. In the years following that day, my mom always made sure to secure tickets for the game closest to my birthday, every other year being the Navy game. With every passing year my love for this University grew, as did my desire to attend school here. Along with that love came an intense fascination with the Band of the Fighting Irish. A trip to Notre Dame wouldn’t have been complete without listening to the Concert on the Steps, Trumpets in the Dome or watching the band march out. There was no single greater factor that determined where I wanted to go to college than the Band of the Fighting Irish. Envisioning trotting out of the tunnel, the tradition, the excitement and the music, mixed with my love of Notre Dame, drew me to this place more than anything. Making the band at Notre Dame has been a dream come true; a dream that was almost never realized after being denied admission and having to transfer in order to attend school here. The past three years have gone by in a blur;

vigorously embracing a stranger in the band after the comefrom-behind win at Michigan State in 2006. Turns out he would later become my roommate and one of my good friends here. Celebrating New Year’s Eve with friends in New Orleans, traveling with band friends to Spokane, Denver and NYC for basketball tournaments, and even making a young boy’s day when friends and I lifted him up for post-touchdown pushups at the Michigan game. However, what sticks out most in my mind was my first game as a student and my parents’ pride. I always will remember the rush of excitement when I trotted out of the tunnel for the first time. However, my band experience wouldn’t have been complete if my parents, who were always there to encourage me to follow my dreams, hadn’t been here every step of the way, especially my mother. So, as you are reading this, I am preparing for one of my last games as a student in the band. Ironically, Navy is today’s opponent, and today, also is my birthday. More than 5,000 days – 5,117 to be exact – have passed since my first game at Notre Dame, and I have seen my time here come and go in the blink of an eye. As such, my time in the band is almost at an end as well. While many things come and go, I know that I can always count on two things: the memories of a lifetime I made in my short time in this band, and my mother, dutifully sitting in the stands watching her son grow up just as she has every year since my first game. This game is for you mom.

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NOTRE DAME

ALUMNI ASSOCIATION http://alumni.nd.edu | 574-631-6000

Welcome Football Fans! The Notre Dame Alumni Association welcomes you to our campus! Are you a Notre Dame graduate or friend? Stay connected with the Notre Dame family through your local ND club. And remember: ND club membership isn’t just for alumni. Friends of the University can participate in ND club activities, too. Find your local club at alumni.nd.edu/clublocator.

Alumni Association Honors Outstanding Alumni During halftime of today’s game, Brig. Gen. Michael M. Brogan ’80 will receive the Rev. William Corby, C.S.C. Award for distinguished military service, and Ronald W. Zamber, M.D. ’83 will receive the Harvey G. Foster Award for his distinguished involvement in civic initiatives—especially those involving children. Brogan has served as a guard platoon commander, operations officer, guard officer, and executive officer at the Marine barracks, Naval Weapons Station, in Yorktown, Va. An honors graduate of the Advanced Communications Officer Course, in 1989 he assumed command of Company A, 3d, AABn, which was part of Task Force Ripper during Desert Shield and Desert Storm. From 1991-1994, Brogan served in the Amphibious Vehicle Test Branch in Camp Pendleton, Calif. Brogan was a distinguished graduate of the Marine Corps Command and Staff College. He spent four years working on the Advanced Amphibious Assault Vehicle program before returning to the 1st Marine Division to command the 3d Assault Amphibian Battalion. Brogan has received the Meritorious Service Medal with Gold Star, the Navy Commendation Medal with Gold Star, the Navy Achievement Medal, and the Combat Action Ribbon. In response to receiving this award, Brogan offers these words of thanks: Attending Notre Dame was a childhood dream. I remember my family’s annual trips to visit cousins who lived a couple of hours south of the University.

My parents, aunt, and uncle would go to a game while we watched the games on TV. I set my sights on going to Notre Dame, and because of a Naval ROTC scholarship, I was able to attend. For me, the ethical outlook I gained from my Catholic education, both in grade school and then at Notre Dame, has served me well as a career Marine officer. And even though I never became a practicing chemical engineer, the technical education allowed me to understand the engineers and scientists I oversee and made me far more effective as a program manager.

to reverse blindness, restore the gift of sight, and provide medical care and basic necessities to impoverished adults and children in Malawi, Nepal, Ecuador, India, and Costa Rica. I am very thankful and proud to accept this award on behalf of all the hardworking men and women in the Notre Dame family who strive to make a positive difference in our world. We invite everyone to share in this privilege of service to those in need. It continues to be my hope that we can all truly change the world, one life at a time.

Zamber and his wife, Suzan, co-founded International Vision Quest (IVQ), a non-profit organization that provides free eye care to men, women, and children in developing countries, and provides financial resources to entities that care for children living in poverty. Prior to founding IVQ, Zamber and his wife funded, organized, and participated in medical and surgical mission trips to Ecuador, Nepal, Malawi, and Costa Rica. During these trips, Zamber performed free sight-restoring surgeries and sight-preserving medical care on thousands of impoverished adults and children. Not only does IVQ provide free eye care, but it also helped fund the Rotary Netra Rural Eye Hospital in Vizag, India; supported the construction of classroom and kitchen facilities at the Malawi Children’s Village in Malawi, Africa; and has provided donations for more than 100,000 meals for destitute children through the Feed My Starving Children Organization. In addition, IVQ has contributed funds to the O’Hana Heritage Foundation to aid construction of a respite home for medically-fragile children in South Bend, Ind. In response to receiving this award, Zamber offers these words of thanks: It is a tremendous honor to receive this award. It has been one of the great privileges in my life to be a member of the Notre Dame family. I want to express my deepest gratitude to Chuck Lennon and the Alumni Association for honoring the work that my wife, Suzan, and I have been blessed to undertake in poverty-stricken communities around the world. I also want to thank the countless people who have helped us with our endeavors

Get Your Copy of We Are ND Learn about Notre Dame from the people who lived, learned and prayed there. The coffee table book, We Are ND: The Story of Notre Dame as Told by Her Alumni tells the true-life stories of alumni, complete with original photography. Visit the Alumni Association’s Irish Shop at alumni.nd.edu/irishshop to place an order, or buy it at the Hammes Notre Dame Bookstore.

ONWARD and Upward Have you visited the ONWARD: Alumni Career Development website (alumni.nd.edu/ career)? It provides tools for job seekers, as well as alumni who are looking to network with other ND alumni. The site includes job postings, webinars on various career topics, links to useful articles, and access to the alumni mentor program. In addition, there are career advisors who are available to answer questions and provide guidance.

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Contractors Building for the Future of Notre Dame

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HELPING THE “FORGOTTEN PEOPLE OF SOCIETY” The efforts of charity, Hannah and Friends, are a family affair for Charlie, Maura, Charlie Jr., and Hannah Weis.

By Maura K. Sullivan Laura steers her wheelchair around her apartment, pointing out her favorite stuffed animals and the Notre Dame comforter on her bed. Sharon Bui Green, executive director of Hannah and Friends, asks, “Do you love Notre Dame, Laura?’ “Yes!” Laura responds enthusiastically. “Do you miss your old apartment?” Green says. “No,” responds Laura with an emphatic shake of her head. Laura, a 47-year old woman with special needs, resides at the brand new Hannah and Friends farm on Hollyhock Road in South Bend. Green says that Laura slept on a mattress on the floor in her old apartment, where she heard gunshots every night and was afraid for her life. Now, she lives at the Hannah and Friends farm in the Schivarelli House with four other adult women with special needs. The home, built by donations from Irish alum and former football player Peter Schivarelli, has four bedrooms, a common living space and kitchen for the residents. “We didn’t give her anything beyond the basic necessities that human beings deserve and the first thing she said was, ‘I’m going to be living in luxury,’” says Green. “Why did she have to wait until she was 47-years old to live in a safe environment?” This is the question that Maura and Charlie Weis asked themselves when contemplating the future of their daughter, Hannah, who has a seizure disorder, Electical Status Epilepticus of slow wave sleep. She was diagnosed as autistic at a young age, but doctors finally properly diagnosed her with the seizure disorder at age 11, last year. “We realized that she was going to need to have a place to go someday. We have the financial means to put Hannah in a home, or build a home for her, do something,” Maura Weis says. “But where is the population going to go?” Hannah and Friends was founded by Irish coach Charlie Weis and his wife, Maura, in 2004. The mission statement of Hannah and Friends says that it is an organization dedicated to improving the quality of life for children and adults with special needs. And one of the ways that the Weis family wanted to improve life for those that Maura calls “the forgotten people of society” was to build a home where adults with special needs could live and work in a safe and healthy environment. “Why should they not have nice things and nice belongings and good food to eat?” she asks. “I just feel like society as a whole can do better for people with different abilities.” The farm includes the Schivarelli House, a recreation center, barn and stables, playground, technology building and a home for four male residents. Two men have completed all the necessary government paperwork and will move into the home once two other male residents complete the process, hopefully within the next few months. The farm sits on over 30 acres on Hollyhock Road in South Bend. The recreation center is the main building and has a lodge-type

Inspired by their daughter, Hannah, Irish head coach Charlie Weis and his wife, Maura, founded Hannah and Friends, an organization dedicated to improving the quality of life for children and adults with special needs, in 2004.

feel. This is where all the activities for younger Hannah and Friends members are held and where residents like Laura help with filing and the children’s activities. The recreation center offers dance parties, yoga, music and art classes, book clubs, and many other activities designed to stimulate and engage the minds of children with special needs. “We realize that a lot of kids don’t have fun dance parties or a place that is smoke-free that they can go,” says Green. “So we addressed that need. Whatever we see the need for, we have either funding or support to make it happen.” Green says that the aim of the programs is to be fun, affordable and accessible. They charge $3 per program in the recreation center and are able to keep their prices low because of the generous donations of supporters, particularly in the Notre Dame community. Alumni Hall, a men’s dorm at Notre Dame, donated more than

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Residents pose outside the house built by donations from former Notre Dame football player Peter Schivarelli and the band Chicago.

Alumni Hall, a men’s dorm at Notre Dame, donated more than $10,000 from their Finish on the 50 5K race to build a playground at the Hannah and Friends farm.

$10,000 from their Finish on the 50 5K race to build a playground at the Hannah and Friends farm. Recording artist Jon Bon Jovi donated the money for the male residence on the grounds of the farm and the recreation center was built with donations from the late staunch Notre Dame alumnus and benefactor Frank Eck. The organization has come a long way from the days when Green worked out of the basement in the Weis household. But the Weis home is where this all started, and is what keeps Hannah and Friends going strong today. Coach Weis serves as the national icon for the organization and Green says they get several e-mails a week from fathers who call Weis an inspiration who has helped them cope with having a child with special needs. Coach Weis is often found at the dance parties and other Hannah and Friends activities. He has even been known to dress up in a Barney suit, much to the delight of Hannah and all her friends. Charlie Weis, Jr. volunteers at many of the Hannah and Friends activities and DJs the dance parties in the recreation center.

“I think Little Charlie has made it cool amongst his friends in high school to be involved with Hannah and Friends and be nice to people of different abilities,” Green says. “His good friend, Tyler, even said that he had more fun at these dance parties than his own prom.” Green refers to Maura Weis as the head coach of Hannah and Friends. The slogan of Hannah and Friends is “awareness and compassion.” And it is a mantra that Maura Weis really pushes, according to Green. They want to spread the awareness and compassion from the 16 employees of the organization out to the South Bend and Michiana community and hopefully to the rest of the world. Talking to Maura Weis, the passion that she has for the organization is obvious. She is involved with all aspects of the foundation, from fundraising and contacting donors to feeding the horses in the barn. She wrote a book, Miles from the Sideline , as a resource for other parents of children with special needs and all the proceeds from the sale of the book went to Hannah and Friends. “The sad thing is that a lot of people who speak for people with different abilities don’t have anyone in their family [with special needs], so I don’t think you can totally relate unless you know somebody,” Maura says. Hannah Weis is the inspiration for all of the good that this organization does in the Michiana community. Hannah has two best friends named Katie, and the girls are known as the “Three Amigos” around their school and the farm. One of the “Three Amigos” is Katie Henry, a 14-year old with Down Syndrome, who has benefitted greatly from Hannah and Friends. Katie Henry loves the dance parties and music classes at the recreation center and one of her favorite things to do at the farm is ride the horses. “Unless you have a child with special needs, it is hard to describe the feeling of having a place where your child is engaged, happy and totally accepted,” say Katie’s parents, Tom and Sarah Henry. “Hannah and Friends is much more than just housing; it provides opportunities for friendship, learning, physical activity and satisfying work.” And the Weis family and employees of Hannah and Friends hope that this is just the beginning. They want the Hannah and Friends farm to serve as a prototype for similar residences throughout the country and will offer advice for fundraising and startup efforts. “Everyone is going to have someone in their family or a friend or a neighbor or someone who is affected by special needs,” Maura Weis says. “I think it’s time that society start embracing our folks and say, ‘You know what, we’ve ignored you guys for a long time and we are really sorry and we’re going to make your life so much better by smiling at you in a store, saying hello, face-to-face interacting with you, instead of just looking the other way.’ Society needs to step up and make a difference.” For more information on Hannah and Friends, visit: http://www.hannahandfriends.org

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CATCHING UP WITH...

HALEY SCOTT DEMARIA By Craig Chval

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oo frequently, it seems, gratitude is a fleeting sentiment. In the crush of life, gratitude can feel like a momentary condition, like being hot or cold or hungry or tired. Sometimes, however, gratitude is not something that we feel, but something that we do. For some, gratitude becomes a way of life. Haley Scott DeMaria is one of those people. As an 18-year-old freshman at Notre Dame in 1992, Scott DeMaria was a member of the Notre Dame women’s swim team making its way back from a meet against Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill. As the team bus was within a few miles of the Notre Dame campus, it skidded off the icy surface of the Indiana Toll Road, plunging After severely injuring her back in a bus accident, Haley Scott DeMaria was told she would never walk without braces. Not only did Scott DeMaria resume competing on Notre Dame’s swim team, but on Oct.29, 1993, she posted her best down an embankment and rolling over. time ever in the 50-yard freestyle, capturing her heat with a mark of 25.04. Two of Scott DeMaria’s teammates, Meghan Beeler and Colleen Hipp, were thrown from the bus and killed. Scott DeMaria was able to Following her graduation, Scott DeMaria returned to Phoenix, were she pull herself out of a window, remaining on her back in the cold and snow taught and coached swimming at her alma mater, Xavier High School. for over an hour. She left Notre Dame resolved to do two things: convert to Catholicism and Within hours, Scott DeMaria was undergoing emergency back surgery, ensure that she was always surrounded by the kind of community she had as doctors raced to minimize permanent damage from swelling against encountered at Notre Dame. her spine. The prognosis for a full recovery was grim. “It was just a formalization of a life I was already living,” explains Scott But despite being told by doctors that the most favorable outcome DeMaria of her decision to join the Catholic faith. would be to walk with the aid of braces, Scott DeMaria was walking with As far as community, she recognized in Xavier much of what she found a cane within five weeks of the accident. so important about Notre Dame. Defying doctors’ predictions that she would be hospitalized for a “It was a similar but smaller campus, faith-filled and with a very strong year, Scott DeMaria spent less than two months in the hospital before family element,” she says. returning home to Phoenix. When she announced her intention to return to Xavier was also the place where Scott DeMaria would continue the Notre Dame to complete the spring semester, her parents were less than healing that had begun at Notre Dame. One of her faculty responsibilities completely enthusiastic. was to serve as an advisor to the student council. One of the student Scott DeMaria prevailed, and finished the academic year at Notre Dame council members was killed by a drunk driver the night of Xavier’s prom; with two rods in her spine and a torso body cast. The summer brought the young woman had not been drinking. more trouble, however. One of the rods in her back broke, requiring three “What I saw was what I imagined happening at Notre Dame while I was additional surgeries. Scott DeMaria was confined to her bed in a San Diego in the hospital,” Scott DeMaria says. “Friends coming together to support hospital for a month, but made it back to Notre Dame for the fall semester. one another during a terrible tragedy; trying to make sense of loss of life.” That Scott DeMaria would be back at Notre Dame, on track to graduate Now, Scott DeMaria was on the other side of the equation. with her class and walking was no small miracle. But she was far from “It felt really good for me to be able to take my grief and be able to help finished. somebody else,” she explains. Not only would Scott DeMaria resume competing on Notre Dame’s Right around the same point in time, a meeting with the late actor swim team, but on Oct. 29, 1993, she would post her best time ever in Christopher Reeve prompted Scott DeMaria to reflect even more deeply the 50-yard freestyle, capturing her heat with a mark of 25.04. upon what she had been through. 231

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HALEY SCOTT DEMARIA CONTINUED the kind of community that Scott DeMaria During their conversation, Reeve and describes as existing at Notre Dame. Scott DeMaria became aware of how Scott DeMaria gets a particular kick out similar their injuries were; the difference of the response of one of her friends to the in precise location of their traumas to their book. spinal cords meant Reeve lived out his life “Once she read it, she said, ‘I totally get in a wheel chair while Scott DeMaria was you. Now I know exactly why you do the able to battle to regain her ability to walk. things you do, why you’re always saying “I’ll never forget him looking at me and yes. That’s what you have to do.’” saying, ‘You’re one of the lucky ones,’” she One of the many things that Scott recalls. DeMaria “has” to do is opening her family’s “It wasn’t that I was feeling unlucky, but home to first-year cadets – “plebes” – at I wasn’t feeling lucky,” she allows. “That the United States Naval Academy. The was a pretty big turning point for me. first-year midshipmen have very restricted “I began searching for what I was opportunities to leave the Academy, so supposed to be doing with this.” Scott DeMaria married her former Notre Dame classmate, local families fill the void for the “mids” As her soul-searching continued, Scott Jamie DeMaria, in 2000. The couple has two sons, James who can’t get home. DeMaria married former Notre Dame and Edward. “I love giving them a break,” she says. classmate Jamie DeMaria in 2000. “We have made such great friendships “I was Haley Scott, Notre Dame swimmer,” she says. “And I moved back to Phoenix and everybody knew and I love the role models that they are for my children.” The relationships her family has formed with the midshipmen even me as Haley Scott, Notre Dame swimmer. “And that was great, but when you get married, that changes,” she allowed Scott DeMaria to find a silver lining in Notre Dame’s 2007 loss to Navy in football. explains. “I like that sense of being able to create who I wanted to be.” “One of our mids was actually at Notre Dame when Navy won,” she As she had promised herself, a big part of who Scott DeMaria wanted to be was a person surrounded by a loving community. Scott DeMaria built says. “There’s no question that we’re rooting for Notre Dame, but I was so that community by serving others; she taught Sunday school classes at proud when my midshipmen came back and relayed stories of how kind church and became involved in the Notre Dame Monogram Club, currently everyone was at Notre Dame.” Few people have brought as much pride upon Notre Dame as has Scott serving as second vice-president. After welcoming sons James and Edward (now seven and five) into DeMaria, who continues to credit Notre Dame for her journey. “I’m such a great tangible example of how the Notre Dame experience the world, Scott DeMaria devoted herself to helping at the boys’ schools. Meanwhile, she continued to wrestle with what to do with her remarkable can change somebody’s life.” journey. Scott DeMaria shared a portion of her story with a next-door neighbor who was battling terminal cancer at age 38 with four children. Rather than relating the voyage in a conversation, Scott DeMaria gave the woman a written copy of a speech she had given. “I will never forget seeing her, barely able to walk, coming over from her house to mine and giving me a big hug and telling me, ‘You understand,’” recounts Scott DeMaria. “I started to really look at myself and that I have healed and healed in a pretty amazing way and asked myself, ‘What am I supposed to be doing with this?’ “I was married, I had my children, I was happy,” she says. “I almost felt selfish keeping this to myself.” Scott DeMaria decided to tell her story in a book. After two attempts that got sidetracked, Scott DeMaria produced What Tho’ The Odds, a firstperson account of her remarkable journey. Currently in development as a screenplay, the book can be ordered at www.HaleyBook.com “It’s such a great Notre Dame story and that story has nothing to do with me,” she insists. “It encompasses everything good about Notre Dame. “Probably my favorite part of the book is that for these women to go through this real tragedy, away from home, and to come out of it healthy in all the ways that count,” she says. “It is such a testament to the school. “We could have gone down so many paths, and none of us did.” The response to the book has been overwhelming, from friends and Scott DeMaria presented the flag at the Notre Dame-Michigan game at former teammates to swimmers inspired by her comeback to high school Notre Dame Stadium in 2008. students and their parents who have a new-found determination to find 232

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WORKING WITH A PASSION Jill Bodensteiner heads up Notre Dame’s compliance department. By Lauren Chval

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rowing up in “basketball-crazy” Valparaiso, Ind., athletics have always been a big part of associate ahletic director for compliance Jill Bodensteiner’s life. “Basketball was my passion — my absolute passion — growing up,” Bodensteiner says. “It provided me with friends, with confidence. I was really shy; it gave me an opportunity to open up a little bit. I was 16 when I graduated from high school, but on the basketball court we were all equals, so it was a good way for me to get my self-confidence. But I never thought of athletics as a career until I really started working with them closely as a client at Notre Dame.” Bodensteiner came to work for the University after practicing in a law firm. Not only did she obtain her bachelor’s degree from Notre Dame, but her father was an alumnus of the law school as well. Bodensteiner grew up cheering for the Fighting Irish, and at

the suggestion of her dad, she looked into working for her alma mater as a lawyer. She spent 12 years with Notre Dame’s Office of General Counsel before joining the athletic department this past July. Although Bodensteiner worked in everything from health care benefits to student sexual assaults, she says athletics became increasingly a priority in her work. “I loved my old job because it gave me an opportunity to learn every aspect of the University,” she says. “If it had any legal implications, I, at one point, had a hand in it. But as athletics became more and more a regular client, I spent a lot more time embedded in the department, and I liked that. I tended to find that my athletic stuff would end up on the top of my pile.” Bodensteiner worked to get her MBA from Notre Dame from 2006-08. The program helped her hone in on her strengths and made her think it was time for a change. But after spending her undergraduate years at the University and working here for over a decade, she decided she didn’t want to leave the Notre Dame family. “What I love about Notre Dame is its commitment to integrity,” Bodensteiner says. “In this day and age, when you work for a corporation, there are always issues of integrity and doing the right thing, and I am so incredibly lucky to be surrounded by a group of people who want to do it the right way. That is very underrated at times. I see friends of mine in big corporations struggling constantly with ethical dilemmas, and I just don’t feel like I have those. Because for the most part we’re all on the same page.” In her new position, Bodensteiner adjusted to managing a staff of four. She hired virtually an entire new staff, which she says has worked out very well. Learning to delegate to this staff was the biggest change for her, but Bodensteiner believes her new job brings the best of her abilities together. “When I tell people what my job is — folks who have known me forever — I tell them I’m working at Notre Dame. And that I’m working in athletics and that I get to use my law degree, and that I’m the administrator for women’s basketball,” she says. “It’s like, did you just write your own job description? It has just combined four things I’m extremely passionate about.”

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NOTRE DAME INTRODUCES IMPROVEMENTS TO FOOTBALL WEEKEND EXPERIENCE A variety of improvements to the University of Notre Dame football game-day experience have been instituted for the 2009 season in the areas of hospitality, communication, and safety and security. The new game-day initiatives are born out of an ad hoc committee’s study during the last academic year, and its subsequent report in the spring to Notre Dame’s president, Rev. John I. Jenkins, C.S.C. Assistant vice president for University events and protocol Mike Seamon, who in April was named director of football game-day operations, is leading the effort to implement improvements to Irish football weekends. “The University believes that Notre Dame home football weekends are and should be a great experience, and we know how important they are to our alumni and fans,” Seamon says. “This offseason has provided all of us at the University with the opportunity to drill down into all the various elements of the weekend in an effort to look at each one and see if there are ways to improve. “This is just the beginning of our commitment to make the Notre Dame football experience better than ever. We will be continually soliciting feedback from fans and making additions and changes in an effort to make the experience even better than it was the week and year before.” •

HOSPITALITY IMPROVEMENTS FOR 2009 HOME FOOTBALL WEEKENDS INCLUDE: • “Rally on the Green,” a hospitality village located on Irish Green (adjacent to the south side of the DeBartolo Performing Arts Center), will be in operation from 3 to 6:30 p.m. Friday and 10 a.m. to one-half hour before kickoff for each home game. Access to the area will be free of charge and open to the public. It will feature entertainment on a main stage (including bands and speakers), plus roaming “kid-friendly” entertainment throughout the grounds. Food and beverages (including alcohol) will be available for purchase, and Follett’s and other vendors will be on site.

A corps of Notre Dame guest service representatives, identifiable by green blazers, will be stationed around the campus beginning at 9 a.m. on game days to answer questions, offer maps and lists of activities and otherwise be of assistance to fans.

The University has created a sportsmanship document that outlines ND Game Day Courtesy Guidelines, including the rights and responsibilities of all fans. Additional signage will be available in parking lots and at Notre Dame Stadium gates to encourage positive fan behavior.

The hospitality village will close in time for the pep rallies, which are scheduled to begin at 6:30 p.m. on Friday evenings. Due to the renovation of the Joyce Center, pep rallies will be held in several locations, as follows:

Nov. 6 (Friday), Navy – on Irish Green

Nov. 20 (Friday), Connecticut – in Purcell Pavilion in the Joyce Center

Ticket scanners will be utilized at Notre Dame Stadium for the first time to ease entrance into the facility for fans attending games.

On home football Fridays, fans will be able to enter the north end of Notre Dame Stadium between 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and walk down the tunnel to the field for photo opportunities. The only time the tunnel would be unavailable would be when any visiting teams conduct Friday practices or walk-throughs.

A public parking option for up to 2,000 vehicles on the nine-hole Notre Dame Golf Course was previously announced. Located on the southwest corner of the campus, the course (once known as the Burke Memorial Golf Course) will offer two parking entrances – one on Angela Boulevard and another on Dorr Road. The parking will be of the drive-up variety, with no parking passes sold in advance for this area. The price will be $40. Football game

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GAME MANAGEMENT CONTINUED

tickets must be shown for entrance to the parking areas on the course. The parking area, as with all other Notre Dame football parking areas, will open at 8 a.m. Eastern time on game days. Tailgating will be permitted. If inclement weather makes the course unavailable, there will be signs to that effect at Exit 77 of the Indiana Toll Road and at entrances to the course. Only passenger vehicles will be permitted to park in this new area; no recreational vehicles, limousines, large trucks, buses or motorcycles will be admitted. All vehicles must exit the course by three hours after each game, so the course can be prepared for play on Sundays. Any vehicles remaining three hours after the conclusion of a game will be towed. FROM A SAFETY AND SECURITY PERSPECTIVE, NEW INITIATIVES INCLUDE: • In an effort to encourage appropriate behavior, fans will be able to utilize a new text messaging system to report any instances of unruly or disruptive behavior in conjunction with home games, including inside Notre Dame Stadium. The system will be in place beginning at 8 a.m. on Saturdays. Fans can simply text 41513 and type into the message the word “Irish” followed by a space, followed by a brief description of the issue and its location. Ushers, public safety personnel and/or University officials will respond as needed.

The University’s no trespass order has been reviewed and a new policy will go into effect beginning in the 2009 season. People who are disruptive on game days risk being issued a one-day Game Day Ban and will be prohibited from remaining on campus for the duration of the day. This does not change the University’s policy with respect to those who commit criminal or seriously offensive acts on campus, who are subject to being issued a full no trespass notice.

The University will continue to work with its community partners to provide the safest and most welcoming and enjoyable environment possible on game days – including a newly designed integrated command center in Notre Dame Stadium to respond to any issues.

COMMUNICATIONS INITIATIVES INCLUDE: • A new, enhanced football game-day Web site titled “Game Day: A Legendary Experience” will be available at gameday.nd.edu. A one-stop resource, the site will include information on pep rallies, special speakers on campus, parking, the Friday luncheon, the band and everything else that occurs on a home football weekend. •

Fans will be provided a variety of ways to provide feedback on their game-day experiences – including via the game day Web site and a toll-free phone number, 877-ND1-FANS.

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THE LAST

WORD By John Heisler

Today’s lesson, boys and girls, is about streaks. This has been a big year for Charlie Weis and his Notre Dame football program in terms of ending streaks. The Irish had lost nine straight postseason bowl games. That ended with the resounding 49-21 triumph over Hawai’i last December in the Hawai’i Bowl. They had fallen six straight times in Notre Dame Stadium to Michigan State. That ended Sept. 19 with Notre Dame’s 33-30 victory. They had lost six straight games overall to Boston College. That ended Oct. 24 when Kyle McCarthy and Brian Smith came up with late-game interceptions after Jimmy Clausen led his fourth fourth-period come-frombehind rally in 2009 for a 20-16 win over the Eagles. They almost ended the seven-game losing streak against USC, ending up on the four-yard line in the 34-27 Trojan win. So, now we present the best of Notre Dame football streaks for your pre-game entertainment: 288: Consecutive Notre Dame home games (including today) seen by recently-retired Notre Dame athletics administrator and former assistant football coach Brian Boulac. (If you’ve got a longer streak going, let us know.) 226: Consecutive pass attempts without an interception, by Brady Quinn in 2006 (Michigan State through Army). 211: Consecutive games sold out in Notre Dame Stadium (including today). 136: Consecutive PATs, by Craig Hentrich in 1989-92. 124: Consecutive pass attempts without an interception, by Jimmy Clausen in 2009 (current) 117: Consecutive Irish home games (including today) televised nationally by NBC Sports. 93: Consecutive home games without defeat, in 1905-28 (90 wins, three ties). 50: Consecutive seasons of providing late-in-the-game Notre Dame Stadium safety message, by Tim McCarthy, retired Indiana State Police sergeant (current). 47: Consecutive pass attempts in one game without an interception, by Brady Quinn versus BYU in 2004. 47: Longest opponent winning streak ended, by Notre Dame against Oklahoma in 1957 (still the NCAA record). 47: Consecutive starts (including today) by current Irish offensive tackle Sam Young, threatening the all-time record of 48 by Maurice Crum Jr. (2005-08) and Tom Zbikowski (2004-07). 43: Consecutive wins by any team over a major opponent in an uninterrupted current series, by Notre Dame over Navy, 1964-2006. 42: Consecutive winning seasons, from 1889-1932 (no teams in 1890-91). That was an all-time NCAA record, since tied by Nebraska (1962-2003) and surpassed by Penn State (1939-87).

40: Consecutive wins at home, in 1907-18. 39: Consecutive games without defeat, in 1946-50 (37 wins, two ties). 28: Consecutive wins in Notre Dame Stadium, in 1942-50. 23: Consecutive victories, in 1988-89. 23: Consecutive quarters opponents held without a touchdown, in 1980 (Army through Air Force). 19: Consecutive weeks as number-one team in Associated Press poll, by Notre Dame in 1988-89 (was the NCAA record, since surpassed by Miami in 2001-02 and by USC in 2003-05). 18: Consecutive years in which Notre Dame had at least one consensus All-American, from 1964 through 1981. That streak began with John Huarte and Jack Snow in ’64 and went through Bob Crable in ’81. 17: Consecutive Notre Dame games with an Irish field goal, in 2001-02. 14: Consecutive pass completions in a game, Ron Powlus vs. Michigan State in ’97 and Brady Quinn vs. Ohio State (Fiesta Bowl) in 2006. 14: Consecutive field goals connected on by Irish rookie kicker Nick Tausch (broke the all-time Notre Dame record from 1982 of 13 by Mike Johnston). 12: Consecutive career field goals made between 40 and 49 yards, by John Carney in 1984-85 (also an NCAA record). 10: Consecutive years that Notre Dame had at least one College Football Hall of Fame selection, from 1970 through 1979. That accounted for the inductions of Don Miller, Red Salmon, Heisman Trophy winner Angelo Bertelli, Ray Eichenlaub, Heisman winner Leon Hart, Marchy Schwartz, Hunk Anderson, Clipper Smith, Creighton Miller, Ziggy Czarobski, Nordy Hoffmann, and Heisman winner John Lattner. 9: Consecutive years in which Notre Dame played in a traditional Jan. 1 bowl game, starting with the ’87 season and going through the ’95 campaign (three Cottons, three Oranges, two Fiestas, one Sugar). The Irish won five of those, with all nine of them under coach Lou Holtz. 9: Consecutive shutouts, in 1903 (one 0-0 tie). 8: Consecutive defeats, in 1960. 8: Consecutive rushing attempts by same player, by five Irish (Mark Green vs. Boston College in 1987, Phil Carter vs. Air Force in 1980, Larry Conjar vs. Army in 1965, Neil Worden vs. Oklahoma in 1952, James Aldridge vs. Navy in 2006). 6: Consecutive games rushing for at least 100 yards, by Lee Becton in 1993. 4: Consecutive games with at least 100 receiving yards, by Golden Tate in 2009 (Purdue, Washington, USC, Boston College). Tom Gatewood had five straight to start the 1970 season. Some of you may be old enough to remember streaking on college campuses back in the 1970s. This is a different sort of streak – nonetheless, the sort (most of them) to which the Irish aspire. See if Notre Dame can add to any of these numbers today.

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