Print Edition of the Irish Insider for Friday, September 23, 2016

Page 1


2

INSidER

The observer | FRIDAY, September 23, 2016 | ndsmcobserver.com

commentary

Irish play evokes memories of 2014 Renee Griffin Sports Writer

In the beginning, there was hope. Hope that Notre Dame would finally break through in 2016 and reach the College Football Playoff, the promised land that had seemed at times so close and at times so far in the years since the national championship loss to Alabama. The preseason hype wasn’t limited to fans. Irish head coach Brian Kelly said before the season that his primary goal was to qualify for the playoff, and the Irish snagged the No. 10 ranking in the AP preseason top 25. The 10-3 record of 2015 was nothing to sneeze at, after all. Not crazy to expect year-to-year improvement, right? Wrong, as was proven under the lights in Austin in Week One and at Notre Dame Stadium in Week Three. This is not the same team as last year, and not in a good way. In hindsight, it was unlikely that defensive coordinator Brian VanGorder’s 2016 defense would even rival the 45th-ranked front of the previous season, considering it lost eight of its top-10 tacklers (Jaylon Smith, Joe Schmidt, Elijah Shumate, Max Redfield, Keivarae Russell, Romeo Okwara, Sheldon Day and Matthias Farley). The lack of stability on defense was underestimated, perhaps because, as Kelly himself said Tuesday, his usual response to struggles on defense is to get his offense to score more points. Clearly, the burden of making up for the defense’s deficiencies has been too large to bear this season. DeShone Kizer may be improved from his first year as starter, but he was not given the chance to show it when Kelly elected to punt on fourth-and-seven, down by eight points, in the final minutes against the Spartans. He was handicapped against Texas, too, as a result of Kelly’s indecision at quarterback. The departure of three of the top four receiving targets from 2015 – Will Fuller, Chris Brown and Amir Carlisle – doesn’t help, either. The running game was supposed to be reliable, with senior Tarean Folston taking his position back from graduated C.J. Prosise, and yet Notre Dame had 57 rushing yards on 25 carries on Saturday. The Spartans’ front is famously physical, true, but it also allowed 30 more yards than that to an FCS team. Three games into 2016, Notre Dame’s fall from grace — or, more literally, the fall from the top 10 of the AP poll to not being ranked at all — makes this team more similar to the Irish squad of 2014 than to that of 2015. The second half of 2014, that is. As a reminder, Notre Dame started 6-0 that year, ranked No. 5 in the

country, before traveling to No. 2 Florida State for a matchup with the highest of stakes. The Irish lost on a controversial call. Hopes of reaching the College Football Playoff were not entirely lost yet, especially with a win against Nevada — excuse me, Navy — the following week. Then Notre Dame found itself down 31 points against No. 11 Arizona State in the next game. Everett Golson and the offense staged a comeback to pull within three points, but failed to finish; the 55-31 defeat tossed the Irish out of the top 10. Twenty-one days later, Notre Dame ended the regular season with a mediocre 7-5 record after losing three straight to Northwestern, Louisville and USC. The defense gave up 44.5 points per game in that last stretch. A few comparisons come to mind. Some remained hopeful after the ill-fated trip to Texas to open the 2016 season, attributing the 5047 loss to the Longhorns’ offensive firepower and the Irish indecision at quarterback. Notre Dame still had a hypothetical, albeit distant, chance at the playoff. The 39-10 win over Nevada in Week Two indicated improvement. Then came the 36-28 loss to Michigan State, which proved beyond all doubt that this team was not playoff-caliber. Whether the rest of the 2016 campaign will mimic the downward spiral of 2014 remains to be seen. Contact Renee Griffin at rgriffi6@nd.edu The opinions in this column are those of the author and not necessarily those of The Observer.

MICHAEL YU | The Observer

Irish senior Tarean Folston rushes the ball during Notre Dame’s 36-28 loss to Michigan State last Saturday at Notre Dame Stadium. Folston touched the ball just four times in the defeat to the Spartans.

GRACE TOURVILLE | The Observer

Irish senior defensive lineman Isaac Rochell prepares for a play during Notre Dame’s 36-28 loss against Michigan State. Rochell, one of Notre Dame’s four captains, leads a defensive unit without a sack in 2016. Paid Advertisement

SENIORS: Turn your passion into your profession

Master of Science in Management The business degree for nonbusiness majors with no work experience. Give us 11 months and we’ll give you the tools to make a living doing what you love.

APPLICATION Q&A WEBINAR: Get tips to apply by Sept 27 and a free fee waiver!

Monday, September 19 Online @ 7:00PM RSVP: mendoza.nd.edu/msm


insider

By ZACH KLONSINSKI Assistant Managing Editor

Every Notre Dame fan remembers the winning touchdown against Virginia last season. Trailing by one at the Cavalier 39-yard line facing second-and-9 with just 19 seconds remaining, backup quarterback DeShone Kizer rolled to his left and found a streaking Will Fuller edging behind the Cavalier secondary for a touchdown that saved the Irish from what would have been a disastrous, early season loss. Amid all the headlines from the victory — like Kizer’s sudden promotion from unknown to hero after Malik Zaire broke his ankle late in the third quarter — one wouldn’t blame Irish fans for missing one piece of news: Thenjunior tight end Durham Smythe had torn his MCL and would miss the rest of the regular season. Nor will many fans remember that Smythe made an important “play” on that torn MCL right before Kizer found Fuller for the final score. Smythe’s play was not a highlight-reel catch, however. Nor was it a pivotal block. It didn’t leave a lasting image like Kizer streaking down the field with his arms raised in celebration or break the internet like the heartbroken Virginia student draped over the wall. It was, however, an effort that demonstrates the grit and unquantifiable nature that makes tight end one of the most underappreciated positions in college football. With 43 seconds remaining in the game, Kizer threw to his right on a screen to running back C.J. Prosise, who was tackled inbounds after picking up just a yard. Smythe had lined up on the opposite side of the formation and kicked out farther to the left to block a Cavalier defender. “Forty seconds left, we’re running that screen to the right. I go out and meet my guy in the hole, the alley player, the SAM,” Smythe said. “I’m trying to stay in front of him and all of a sudden I just feel someone full speed roll into the side of my leg.

ndsmcobserver.com | FRIDAY, September 23, 2016 | The Observer

“And to be honest I thought when it first happened ‘My leg is broken.’ It rolled on me, I snapped back kind of, I felt a couple pops. I thought, ‘Oh, this is going to be really bad.’ Rolled over, saw that my leg was intact at least, facing the right direction.” Notre Dame had only one timeout remaining, and in college football if an offensive player is injured and needs to receive medical attention with under two minutes remaining, his team has to use a timeout or let 10 seconds run off the game clock. The Irish could ill afford either option. And Smythe knew it. “It was kind of all in the heat of the moment, but then I realized there’s 30 seconds left in the game … I don’t want to lay here and get a 10-second run-off and lose the game because I am laying on the field,” Smythe said. “So I roll over, kind of power limp off the field, jump onto the table, tell the trainers that my leg is in some trouble and then all of a sudden the crowd goes crazy.” The very next play, Kizer found Fuller at the pylon. “Luckily Will Fuller came through for us there,” Smythe said. “At least we got the win, but personally definitely not one of my brighter moments. “ … From a strictly pain side … there’s adrenaline running, we’re at the end of the game trying to make a crazy comeback so I’m focused on that, but that was an extremely painful couple seconds for me, and then the plane ride home.” Being able to bear his fair share of pain shouldn’t come as a surprise though. For Smythe, making the unquantifiable plays is just what comes with the territory at ‘Tight End U.” “It’s the resume that’s presented to you,” Smythe said. “With the track record that we’ve had here … with me, growing up I watched [Kyle] Rudolph, [Tyler] Eifert, [Anthony] Fasano. It goes back really far. “ … [Playing tight end at Notre Dame] becomes a responsibility. I tell a lot of people it’s kind of a mix between a responsibility

and an honor because first and foremost you’re getting your name mentioned with all these guys who have done incredible things. But then it becomes a responsibility to keep the name ‘Tight End U’ and uphold the production.” For Smythe, that production is hard to find on a stat sheet: in his career, he’s totaled just six receptions for 45 yards. Two of his grabs have been for touchdowns though, including one last weekend in the loss to Michigan State and one on a fake field goal earlier in the game against Virginia last season. While he came out of high school more involved in the pass game, Smythe said he’s worked hard on both facets of being tight end in college football — catching the ball and blocking for the person with it. “It’s about flipping the switch, especially at our position, because day-by-day we’ll be working with the offensive line for a portion of time with an emphasis in the run game or with the receivers with an emphasis in the pass game,” Smythe said. “ … Over the years I’ve come to really appreciate the run game … and honestly if I had to say at this point they’re probably pretty even for me.” Smythe showed that ability against the Spartans. During Notre Dame’s second drive, Kizer rolled left and stared down Spartan sophomore cornerback Vayante Copeland. Copeland had to make a choice — stop Kizer’s running lane and leave sophomore receiver Equanimeous St. Brown open behind him, or stick with St. Brown and let Kizer take off. Copeland chose the former, and Kizer lofted the ball over him to St. Brown, who raced down the sideline for 48 yards to the Michigan State 28-yard line. Copeland had to make that impossible choice because Smythe was ahead of his quarterback, locked up with the Spartan defender who was supposed to prevent Kizer from reaching the edge. Then in the fourth quarter

Smythe ran a post to the middle of the end zone, initiating contact with then shaking loose from the physical Spartan defender shadowing him. Kizer hit Smythe on the numbers to bring the Irish within eight points. Smythe said he paid a physical price for his other touchdown too, back against Virginia. Notre Dame faked a field goal and Kizer — still the unknown backup quarterback and holder at that point — flipped the ball to Smythe on a shovel pass. The tight end barreled his way into the end zone, landing hard on his shoulder. “I had a shoulder sprain the week before [in the victory over Texas], so I took some medication before to kind of numb it up a little bit,” Smythe said. “Fell on that during the game and really dislodged the AC joint in my shoulder, so I was playing all game with a dead right arm.” Smythe had surgery on both his knee and shoulder that week, and he spent the rest of the regular season on Notre Dame’s injury report, included with the likes of quarterback Malik Zaire, running back Tarean Folston and defensive backs Drue Tranquill and Shaun Crawford. “I would never call it a blessing because everyone in there is out for an extended period of time, but I think it really help as individuals,” Smythe said of rehabbing with so many others. “Maybe we wouldn’t want five other guys in there like there was, but … we developed a relationship, all of us in there, just kind of pushing each other. We’d come in on days where we’re feeling extra sore and you look over and Shaun Crawford is stretching his leg and he’s over there biting on a towel. … So it kind of became one of those relationships like if this guy can do it, I’m obviously going to do it too, which maybe not a blessing, but as individuals it all helped us recover faster.” Smythe returned in time to start for the Irish in the Fiesta Bowl, making one reception for five yards. He started all three games he appeared in last season, catching one pass in each

3

game. Now a senior, Smythe said his journey to “Tight End U” wasn’t all that surprising in hindsight. “I grew up a huge Notre Dame fan, randomly,” Smythe said. “My dad and mom always preached to me from a really young age that you need to find the best mixture for you, but also the best mixture of academics and athletics. “So I don’t know when this was, maybe sixth grade or before, but obviously I knew the top football programs so I googled the [US News and World Report college rankings]. Just went through looking for schools at the top of the list who also had great football programs and I came across Notre Dame at 13 or 14, and I checked them out more. And then I kind of just developed a crazy interest from there.” Originally Smythe committed to Texas after then-head coach Mack Brown came to his school. Growing up a Baylor fan — his father was an offensive lineman for the Bears and lettered on the school’s 1980 Southwestern Conference championship team — Smythe said he’d always hated the Longhorns but admitted the state’s flagship school dominated in the area. “Back then, my junior or sophomore year, Texas was — if you got a Texas offer, especially in my area, Texas was an hour away, you’re going to Texas basically,” Smythe said. “So I kind of jumped on that pretty quickly, was committed for a few months, but kind of realized toward the end of my recruiting process that Notre Dame was still there. “Notre Dame is something that I’ve wanted to do since I was 10 years old. So I took a visit up here in January. There was three feet of snow on the ground, and I’d never seen snow like that at all before, but I fell in love. I fell in love with the people, the campus. It was everything I’d imagined in my head but even more. “And I kind of just knew stepping foot on campus that this was the place for me.” Contact Zach Klonsinski at zklonsin@nd.edu


4

Insider

The observer | FRIDAY, september 23, 2016 | ndsmcobserver.com

HEAD T

3:30 p.m. ET | Notre Dame Stadium MICHAEL YU | The Observer

BLUE DEVILS PASSING

BLUE DEVILS OFFENSIVE COACHING

Duke’s air attack is led by redshirt freshman quarterback Daniel Jones. Through his first three career games, Jones has thrown for 800 yards and two touchdowns. However, much of that production came in the team’s lone win in Week 1, as Jones has not thrown for a touchdown but has turned the ball over twice in his team’s last two games against Wake Forest and Northwestern. He also spreads the ball between his three starting wideouts, Anthony Nash, T.J. Rahming and Johnathan Lloyd, all of whom have over 10 receptions and 150 receiving yards. It’s no secret that Notre Dame’s secondary in particular has been exposed at times this season, allowing a 66 percent completion percentage, a 169 quarterback rating and a 47 percent third down conversion percentage in its two games against Power 5 programs. The unit does, however, have an interception in each of its games this season, showing an ability to come up with timely turnovers. Additionally, the Irish held Nevada to a mere 201 yards through the air in its lone win of the season.

David Cutcliffe has turned around the Duke program as of late, leading them to at least eight wins in each of the last three seasons. Offensive coordinator Zac Roper, however, is new to his position, as he took over for Scottie Montgomery — who left to become the head coach at East Carolina — in January. Through his first three games, Roper has helped the Blue Devils engineer an average of 433 total yards per game, although that production has only led to 27 total points in each of the team’s last two games. On the other side of the ball, Irish defensive coordinator Brian VanGorder has become a lightning rod for criticism given the team’s two early-season losses. His high-pressure, complex scheme does not seem to fit the personnel he has to work with, as his unit has yet to generate a sack this season and has blown its coverage on several occasions, resulting in either long gains or significant thirddown conversions.

EDGE: EVEN BLUE DEVILS RUSHING The Blue Devils rushing attack is two pronged, heavily featuring Jones and redshirt senior running back Jela Duncan. The two players have 31 and 35 carries, respectively, this season, accounting for over half of the team’s production. The duo also has six of the team’s eight touchdowns on the ground, showing an ability to run the read option effectively in the red zone. As a team, however, the Blue Devils only average 3.6 yards per carry. The Irish front seven has been inconsistent this season, holding the Wolf Pack to a mere 99 yards on 30 attempts but also yielding over 230 yards on the ground to both Texas and Michigan State. Notre Dame has also allowed nine rushing touchdowns on the season, including five to a Longhorn attack that heavily featured quarterback Tyrone Swoopes and the read option in the red zone.

EDGE: EVEN

DUKE

MICHAEL YU | The Observer

WR

(R-Sr.) Anthony Nash 83 (R-So.) Chris Taylor 82

(So.) T.J. Rahming 3 (R-Fr.) Aaron Young

8

WR

LT LG C RG RT TE

(R-Jr.) Gabe Brandner 76 (R-So.) Christian Harris 70

(R-Sr.) Jela

Duncan

25

(Jr.) Shaun Wilson 29

(R-Fr.) Daniel Jones 17 (R-Jr.) Parker Boehme 12

RB QB

(R-So.) Zach Harmon

63

(Fr.) Julian Santos 65

(R-Jr.) Austin Davis 50 (R-So.) Zach Harmon 63

(R-Sr.) Tanner Stone 79 (R-Fr.) Zach Baker 69

(R-Sr.) Casey Blaser 71 (R-Jr.) Sterling Korona 78

(R-Sr.) Erich Schneider 88 (R-So.) Daniel Helm 80

WR

(R-So.) Johnathan Lloyd 5

(R-Jr.) Quay Chambers 19

(R-Jr.) Bryon Fields 14 (So.) Jeremy McDuffie 9

CB

EDGE: DUKE BLUE DEVILS SPECIAL TEAMS After losing Ross Martin to the NFL at the end of last season, Duke has turned to true freshman AJ Reed as its kicker this year. Although Reed is 10-for-11 on extra-point attempts this season, he has been unsuccesful on all three of his field goal attempts so far, including two misses from within 40 yards. For Notre Dame, sophomore C.J. Sanders has had a significant impact in the return game, averaging nearly 17 yards per punt return.

(Sr.) Deondre Singleton 33 (R-Fr.) Jordan Hayes 13

S

(R-Jr.) Dominic McDonald 51 (R-So.) Danny Doyle 56

(So.) Ben Humphreys

34

(R-So.) Tinashe Bere 43

(R-Fr.) Joe Giles-Harris 44 (Jr.) Zavier Carmichael 24

(R-Sr.) Corbin McCarthy 26 (R-Fr.) Brandon Feamster 30

(R-Sr.) DeVon Edwards 27 (Jr.) Alonzo Saxton II 21

MLB WILL

(R-Sr.) A.J. Wolf

93

(R-Fr.) Trevon McSwain 95

(R-Jr.) Mike Ramsey 99 (R-So.) Edgar Cerenord 92

(So.) Marquies Price 91 (Fr.) James Hornbuckle 59

S

DE DT DT DE

S (Sr.) Breon Borders 31

EDGE: NOTRE DAME

(Fr.) Mark Gilbert 28

CB

BLUE DEVILS SCHEDULE (1-2) Sept. 3 Sept. 10 Sept. 17 Sept. 24 Oct. 1 Oct. 8 Oct. 14 Oct. 29 Nov. 5 Nov. 10 Nov. 19 Nov. 26

North Carolina Central (49-6 W) Wake Forest (24-14 L) @ Northwestern (24-13 L) @ Notre Dame Virginia Army @ Louisville @ Georgia Tech Virginia Tech North Carolina @ Pittsburgh @ Miami (Fla.)

(Fr.) AJ Reed 48 (Sr.) Danny Stirt 43

(R-Fr.) Austin Parker 42 (Sr.) Danny Stirt 43

(Sr.) Ryan Smith 10 (Jr.) Shaun Wilson 29

PK P PR

(R-Fr.) Austin Parker 42 (R-Sr.) DeVon Edwards 27 (R-Jr.) Joseph Ajeigbe 23

(R-Sr.) Thomas Hennessy 57

Alex Carson

Zach Klonsinski

Marek Mazurek

Assistant Managing Editor

Assistant Managing Editor

Sports Editor

Right now, I’ve got flashbacks to a dire four-year stretch in South Bend. They’re flashbacks to 2008, when the Irish lost to Syracuse, and 2009, which saw a defeat at the hands of UConn. Flashbacks to Brian Kelly’s first two years, which saw losses to Tulsa and South Florida. Tack on that 2014 Northwestern loss, and you’ve got a catalog full of humiliating losses suffered in the last several years. Saturday is a perfect opportunity for the Blue Devils to join that list, visiting the week after Notre Dame’s playoff hopes died. But at the end of the day, DeShone Kizer does just enough to paper over the defense’s problems and avoid a new addition to the aforementioned list of embarrassing home defeats. FINAL SCORE: Notre Dame 34, Duke 31

Quite frankly, Duke shouldn’t give Notre Dame any trouble Saturday at Notre Dame Stadium. DeShone Kizer and the Notre Dame offense will have a field day picking apart a Duke secondary that surrendered touchdown passes of 26, 44 and 58 yards against Northwestern last week. The Irish running attack should be able to gather momentum as well: Wake Forest rattled off three touchdowns on the ground in the Demon Deacons’ victory two weeks ago. The problems with Notre Dame’s defense will again be masked against an inept offense, as the Irish shut down Nevada in between streaky — at best — performances against Texas and Michigan State. Expect Duke to still put up points before the Irish scout-team defense hits the field though. FINAL SCORE: Notre Dame 59, Duke 24

H KR LS

With a trip to the College Football Playoff not an option, the rest of this season is about pride for the Irish. With Duke coming to town, Notre Dame will restore a little bit of that pride Saturday. Expect Notre Dame to run the ball a lot against a weak Blue Devil front seven. We’re talking 100-yard games from both Josh Adams and Tarean Folston. After losses to Northwestern and Wake Forest, Duke just isn’t good enough to exploit the many gaps in the Irish defense, no matter how many times redshirt freshman quarterback Daniel Jones throws the football. DeShone Kizer will do what he needs to, which shouldn’t be much, and Notre Dame will get a win at home to placate the more vocal members of the fanbase. FINAL SCORE: Notre Dame 28, Duke 13


Insider

ndsmcobserver.com | FRIDAY, september 23, 2016 | The Observer

5

O HEAD on NBC

Notre Dame

KATHLEEN DONAHUE | The Observer

IRISH PASSING

CB

Nick Coleman (So.) 35

24

Donte Vaughn (Fr.)

WILL DE DT DT DE

WR WR RT RG C LG LT TE WR

H KR LS

S

Andrew Trumbetti (Jr.)

98

8

Devin Studstill (Fr.)

21 Jalen Elliot (Fr.)

9 Daelin Hayes (Fr.)

Daniel Cage (Jr.)

75

94 Jarron Jones (Gr.)

Jerry Tillery (So.)

99

MLB

5

Nyles Morgan (Jr.)

48 Greer Martini (Jr.)

93 Jay Hayes (Jr.)

Isaac Rochell (Sr.)

90

S

55 Jonathan Bonner (Jr.)

SAM CB

Te’von Coney (So.)

4

22 Asmar Bilal (So.)

36

17

James Onwualu (Sr.)

23

Drue Tranquill (Jr.)

8 Avery Sebastian (6th)

44 Jamir Jones (Fr.)

Cole Luke (Sr.)

27 Julian Love (Fr.)

Equanimeous St. Brown (So.)

6

81 Miles Boykin (So.)

EDGE: NOTRE DAME

C.J. Sanders (So.)

3

DeShone Kizer has been one of the few consistently steady performers for the Irish. Head coach Brian Kelly has balked at the notion that DeShone Kizer needs to carry the Irish for them to succeed, but he has accounted for 13 of the team’s 15 touchdowns through three games, including nine through the air. The Irish also boast a trio of strong receivers in Equanimeous St. Brown, Torii Hunter Jr. and C.J. Sanders. St. Brown has stood out in particular thus far, leading Notre Dame in receptions, yards and touchdowns at the receiver position. Duke, on the other hand, has seen its secondary struggle as of late. Most recently, the Blue Devils allowed Northwestern quarterback Clayton Thorson to throw for 320 yards and three touchdowns against them. Prior to that game, Thorson had only surpassed 200 yards in one of his 15 career starts and had eight touchdown passes total over that span.

15 Corey Holmes (Jr.)

IRISH RUSHING

Alex Bars (Jr.)

71

78 Tommy Kraemer (Fr.)

Colin McGovern (Sr.)

62

66 Tristen Hoge (So.)

53

Sam Mustipher (Jr.)

75 Mark Harrell (Gr.)

RB QB

33

Josh Adams (So.)

25 Tarean Folston (Sr.)

14

DeShone Kizer (Jr.)

8 Malik Zaire (Sr.)

Quenton Nelson (Jr.)

56

57 Trevor Ruhland (So.)

Mike McGlinchey (Sr.)

68

70 Hunter Bivin (Sr.)

80

Durham Smythe (Sr.)

82 Nic Weishar (Jr.)

16

Torii Hunter Jr. (Sr.)

29 Kevin Stepherson (Fr.)

4

Montgomery VanGorder (Jr.)

14 DeShone Kizer (Jr.)

3

C.J. Sanders (So.)

2 Dexter Williams (So.)

61

Scott Daly (Gr.)

54 John Shannon (Fr.)

PK P PR

19

Justin Yoon (So.)

85 Tyler Newsome (Jr.)

85

Tyler Newsome (Jr.)

42 Jeff Riney (So.)

3

C.J. Sanders (So.)

10 Chris Finke (So.)

Notre Dame vs. Temple

EDGE: NOTRE DAME IRISH OFFENSIVE COACHING Offensive coordinator Mike Sanford

Ben Padanilam

Renee Griffin

Associate Sports Editor

Sports Writer

The loss to Michigan State sent Notre Dame to its first 1-2 start since 2010. But it won’t be starting 1-3. There weren’t many positives in last Saturday’s loss, but a game against a poor Duke squad can be just the medicine the doctor ordered after a loss, just as was the case with Nevada. The Irish should find better success on the ground than the 57 yards they had last week, and DeShone Kizer will be able to have his way with this Duke secondary when needed after finding his groove late against the Spartans. Oh, and the defense shouldn’t be challenged much, as Duke has just 27 points total in its last two contests. FINAL SCORE: Notre Dame 41, Duke 24

Although the Irish were held to just 57 yards on 25 carries in their loss to the Spartans, the Irish had found success previously on the ground, surpassing 200 yards in each of their first two games. The trio of Kizer, Josh Adams and Tarean Folston have accounted for over 86 percent of the team’s production on the ground, with each of them having over 125 rushing yards on the year. Additionally, Kizer has accounted for four of the team’s six rushing touchdowns this season. The Blue Devils, however, have failed to effectively slow opponents’ rushing attacks at times this season. Most notably, Duke was gashed for 239 yards by Wake Forest two weeks ago, and Demon Deacon freshman running back Cade Carney found the end zone three times in his team’s victory. Then, Northwestern junior running back Justin Jackson ran for 98 yards in the Wildcats’ 24-13 win over the Blue Devils this past Saturday.

Just like they did against Nevada following the loss at Texas, the Irish will bounce back against a mediocre team after Saturday’s defeat. The Notre Dame defense is likely to look much better than it did last week (could it look worse?) and a solid run game will probably return to the offense that sorely needed it when the Spartans came to town. DeShone Kizer should shine. The Blue Devils’ failures against Wake Forest and Northwestern do not inspire confidence and surely make them seem incapable of knocking the Irish down even further. Notre Dame is not a top team. It will not qualify for the College Football Playoff. But it will beat Duke on Saturday to bring its record to 2-2, for what that’s worth. FINAL SCORE: Notre Dame 38, Duke 12

MICHAEL YU | The Observer

and Kelly have had success calling the plays for the Irish offense this season, as Notre Dame has averaged 38 points scored through its first three games of the year. That’s not to say the unit hasn’t had its share of challenges. In Saturday’s loss, the Irish offense struggled to move the ball until late in the third quarter when Kelly and Sanford began to dial up the vertical passing game to open up the defense. On the other side of the football, Duke has largely struggled in its two contests against Power 5 opponents. Cutcliffe’s and defensive coordinator Jim Knowles’ defense has been beaten both on the ground and through the air in each of the losses. However, the scheme has been able to generate big plays for the Blue Devil defense, as Duke has 14 sacks and six turnovers forced in its three games thus far.

EDGE: NOTRE DAME IRISH SPECIAL TEAMS Notre Dame has seen its special teams play improve as of late, particularly that of junior punter Tyler Newsome. Newsome had his best game of the season Saturday, averaging over 50 net yards on his six punts, including a career-best effort of 71 yards. Justin Yoon has been largely consistent for the Irish, converting 14 of his 15 extra-point attempts and hitting two of his three field goals so far this year. For Duke, senior receiver Ryan Smith has made his presence felt in the return game, averaging over 13 yards per punt return.

EDGE: EVEN IRISH SCHEDULE (1-2) Sept. 4 @ Texas (50-47 L, 2OT) Sept. 10 Nevada (39-10 W) Sept. 17 Michigan State (36-28 L) Sept. 24 Duke Oct. 1 vs. Syracuse Oct. 8 @ NC State Oct. 15 Stanford Oct. 29 Miami (Fla.) Nov. 5 vs. Navy Nov. 12 vs. Army Nov. 19 Virginia Tech Nov. 26 @ USC

Follow Observer Sports on Twitter for live updates and analysis during the game this weekend and all season long. @ObserverSports


6

INSidER

The observer | FRIDAY, September 23, 2016 | ndsmcobserver.com

Irish leaders look forward after 1-2 start By BEN PADANILAM Associate Sports Editor

Three weeks into the 2016 season, and Notre Dame is unranked and out of contention for the College Football Playoff. This past Saturday’s loss to No. 8 Michigan State have the Irish (1-2) off to their worst start to a season since 2011. “It’s never a good feeling,” senior linebacker and captain James Onwualu said. “Obviously it’s not exactly how I imagined starting off the season, my senior season.” The consequence of that start — elimination from the playoff picture — has the team facing questions about its motivation going forward. But before it can worry about the remainder of the schedule, the team must first move on from its first two losses and not dwell on the past, captain and senior offensive lineman Mike McGlinchey said. “I mean, obviously there’s a little disappointment that we haven’t won the games that we wanted to win,” McGlinchey said. “But at the same time it’s not something that I’m trying to dwell on. There’s nine games left on that schedule up there, and that’s what we’re focused on, and that’s what I’m focused on is getting better each and every week and that’s the only thing you can do as a football player. If we start focusing on what happened in the last three weeks, we’re probably going to hit a pretty big wall here in the next nine games.” Hitting a wall is something some of the team’s veterans has experience with. In 2014, the Irish started the season 6-0 and surged up to No. 5 in the rankings. But then, they went on to lose five of their next seven games, all starting after a devastating loss on the road to then-No. 2 Florida State. Senior receiver and captain Torii Hunter Jr. said his

approach that year was to focus on maintaining his competitive desire, and he added that his mentality will very much be the same for the rest of this season. “I think as a competitor, I still kind of had the same mindset that we wanted to go out there [in 2014] and win some games and still prove that we need to be here,” Hunter Jr. said. “As a competitor, I don’t think my mindset has changed much. I always want to go out there and win no matter what, no matter what the end goal is. “Even if we couldn’t play in the national championship, I still want to win, no matter what the record is and what the record [looks] like.” McGlinchey and Onwualu echoed that sentiment, pointing out that regardless of what the team’s record ref lects, every player understands they represent both themselves and the team each time they take the field. Thus, a desire to improve and take pride in both regards will be in immense motivational factor going forward. “I think it’s got to be self and team pride,” McGlinchey said. “It’s the constant battle to become the best person and player you can be each and every day. And along with that, comes the best team we can be every day. That’s the motivation — it’s just become better and do better and continue to work for that, and everything that we do is about that and that’s the fun thing about what football is.” “Yeah, again, just like focusing on the next week,” Onwualu said. “Trying to let the past just settle and be in the past, and just taking every game as another opportunity to compete and to show your skills and show what you’re improving on and continuing to work on your game.” The captains also understand that, particularly for

CAROLINE GENCO | The Observer

Irish senior linebacker James Onwualu, front left, celebrates with teammates during Notre Dame’s 39-10 win over Nevada on Sept. 10.

them and their fellow seniors. There are only so many games remaining in their Notre Dame careers, so they are aiming to make the most of it and finish the season strongly. “I know we have a lot of games ahead of us which is exciting, and I have a couple more games that I get to play at Notre Dame Stadium,” Onwualu. “There’s so much more to come from this season and so much more I can learn and my whole team can learn. … Just really trying to look forward and focus on these games that we can get some great wins in.” And they believe the rest of the team has adopted that mentality, understands these motivations and is ready to focus on Duke and the other eight games remaining on the schedule. “Guys are ready to work again and they are hungry, and that’s what we need and that’s the only thing that we can focus on is the next nine weeks ahead and obviously starting with Duke,” McGlinchey said. “It’s a special characteristic of our football team to be able to do that and obviously we have some great leadership in our coaches to make us do that and help us focus on that.”

MICHAEL YU | The Observer

Irish senior receiver Torii Hunter Jr. leaps for a pass during Notre Dame’s 36-28 home loss to Michigan State last Saturday. Paid Advertisement

Contact Ben Padanilam at bpadanil@nd.edu Paid Advertisement


insider

ndsmcobserver.com | FRIDAY, September 23, 2016 | The Observer

7

Jones, Edwards lead Duke into matchup at ND By ALEX CARSON Assistant Managing Editor

Redshirt freshman Daniel Jones wasn’t supposed to be Duke’s starting quarterback this season. But when redshirt senior and returning starter Thomas Sirk reinjured his Achilles in late August, the Charlotte, North Carolina native was thrust into the starting role.

When Jones takes his team’s first snap Saturday at Notre Dame Stadium, though, he’ll be going against an Irish secondary that’s in the same position. Senior Max Redfield, who was dismissed from the team last month, was supposed to start at safety, not freshman Devin Studstill. Before injuries, followed by a suspension, senior Devin Butler could have made a

good case for the starting spot at cornerback. Now, after an injury to sophomore Shaun Crawford, it’s sophomore Nick Coleman and freshman Julian Love getting the playing time instead. A month ago, fans wouldn’t have been expecting Jones to throw Coleman’s way. But that’s where the Blue Devils (1-2), and Irish (1-2), are at. Irish head coach Brian Kelly

Paid Advertisement

Sweatpants Party with Guac & Dory

Finding Dory, Finding Nemo, FREE CHIPOTLE SWEATPANTS ENCOURAGED

Friday September 23 9PM–1AM LaFortune Ballroom

/saoND

@saoND

@sao_ND

@sao-nd

ND/SMC/HCC Students Only

praised the Blue Devils’ young quarterback during his Tuesday press conference, saying Jones has been “as good as anyone in the country” when it comes to running an offense this year. “We have film on him. He’s poised,” Kelly said. “I love his poise for a freshman. He has a really good command of the offense. He does not seem at all fazed when he’s back there. “Now, they’re in an open-ended offense where you’re exposed at times, and he does not blink back there. I like the kid. I think he shows a lot of poise, and he’s got some athletic ability.” Blue Devils head coach David Cutcliffe said he expects Irish defensive coordinator Brian VanGorder to attack Jones, who’s thrown the ball 48 times in each of Duke’s last two games — both losses, to Wake Forest and Northwestern. “He’s going to try to cause a lot of problems for Daniel,” Cutcliffe said during his Wednesday teleconference. “We’ve got to manage him, manage the people around him and put our players in position to hopefully be successful a larger percentage of the time than what we’ve been.” But while there’s a similarity to draw between the Blue Devils passing game and the Irish pass defense, it’s not so easy to find one when it comes to defensive pressure: Duke has sacked opposing quarterbacks 14 times this year, coming in at third-best in the nation and top in the ACC. Notre Dame is yet to record one. Perhaps the most interesting part of Duke’s pass rush is the 5-foot-9, 180-pound DeVon Edwards, who leads the Blue Devils with three sacks this season. Cutcliffe, however, said racking up sacks isn’t the only uncharacteristic thing the redshirt senior defensive back has done in his athletic career. “Well, I went and watched

DeVon practice basketball when he was in high school, and the thing that impressed me most, he was a 5-foot-9, 180-pound scoring machine, great shooter, but you know what he was, he was their leading rebounder,” Cutcliffe said. “He had a way to get the ball. He had a fierceness about getting to a ball that went up on the basket. He has the same fierceness when he comes after a quarterback.” Kelly praised Duke defensive coordinator Jim Knowles, complimenting the defensive tactics he employs in Durham, North Carolina. “He’s got a good scheme,” Kelly said. “They do a really good job of coaching their players. They do a nice job, and they’ve got some veteran players that have played a lot of football.” Edwards’ impact, though, doesn’t just lie on the defensive side of the ball. As the 2016 season carries on, a storyline might present itself: Can Edwards usurp C.J. Spiller as the NCAA’s all-time kickoff return champion? Spiller notched seven during his career at Clemson; Edwards currently sits on six. But will Irish sophomore Justin Yoon give Edwards the chance to take one to the house? When asked if Notre Dame will kick to Edwards on Saturday, Kelly was noncommittal. “Absolutely. And then maybe not,” the Irish head coach said. But when discussing Edwards, Cutcliffe was a little more concrete in his thoughts. “With all of the things that he does for his team, I don’t know if there’s a bigger MVP anywhere,” Cutcliffe said. “You know how big a fan I am of DeVon’s. He slices, he ducks, he fakes, he cuts. He’s strong, pound for pound, unbelievably strong.” Contact Alex Carson at acarson1@nd.edu

Paid Advertisement

SEPT. 24

VS.

ST. TERESA OF CALCUTTA

SAINTS FOR THE YEAR OF MERCY

ON THE OCCASION OF HER CANONIZATION

Leonard DeLorenzo, Director, Notre Dame Vision; Department of Theology, Notre Dame

10:30 – 11:30 a.m. Andrews Auditorium Lower Level, Geddes Hall

INSTITUTE FOR CHURCH LIFE

Please recycle The Observer.


8

INSidER

The observer | FRIDAY, September 23, 2016 | ndsmcobserver.com

recruiting

Jeter commits, ND stays attractive after losses By MAREK MAZUREK Sports Editor

If there was a silver lining for Notre Dame this past weekend, it certainly wasn’t on the field. The Irish were effectively eliminated from playoff contention by No. 8 Michigan State. Despite the loss, however, Notre Dame had a strong weekend on the recruiting front, adding a verbal commitment from Rivals.com four-star prospect Donovan Jeter on Monday. Jeter is listed at 6-foot-5, 255 pounds and figures to play either defensive tackle or defensive end for the Irish next season. Blue and Gold Illustrated recruiting analyst Bryan Driskell said Jeter could be an impact player for the Irish front seven. “He’s a really good fit for Notre Dame’s defense,” Driskell said. “He’s a power player at 6-foot5 ... he benches as much as 285 [pounds]. He fits what Notre Dame’s looking for in a strongside end. He can play strong-side end, he can play three technique. He’s a guy that can defend the run, can handle himself setting the edge and he’s also got some ability to rush the quarterback. I think that’s really something they’re missing right now in their power players. Jeter has a chance to be an impact player, and as we know, Notre Dame needs more impact players along the defensive line.” Jeter’s commitment following a loss should comfort Irish fans, as it shows the program is still desirable despite not being in the playoff hunt. Driskell said this is due to the fact that recruits are less affected by individual games than most fans. “I think fans tend to make more out of how a team loses than players,” Driskell said. “If Notre Dame goes 9-3 still season,

which is plausible ... it’s not going to affect [its] recruiting. The reality is, recruits tend to be more big picture and down the road than fans are. Fans live in the moment, rightfully so. Kids are like, ‘Well I’m not on that team. When I get there, we’re going to beat Michigan State.’ “Kids who end up coming to Notre Dame, tend to have more a big picture view of what they’re looking for. … Unless they’re going 8-5 and getting their butt kicked by people, kids are still going to be interested.” The commitment of Jeter also continues a recent trend for the Irish of attracting recruits from western Pennsylvania. Including Jeter, Notre Dame has six verbal commitments from western Pennsylvania in its 2017 and 2018 recruiting classes, and Driskell said this is a concerted effort from recruiting coordinator Mike Elston. “A couple things show me Notre Dame has made western Pennsylvania a priority,” Driskell said. “It actually started before this year, but this is the first year it’s paying off. Pennsylvania as a whole — and western Pennsylvania in particular — used to be a tremendous pipeline back in the ’60s, ’70s and ’80s. … Notre Dame is trying to get back in there. Recruiting coordinator Mike Elston took over western PA as his region. You don’t send your recruiting coordinator into a new region unless you’re trying to say, ‘This is going to become a place where we really have to put a lot of emphasis,’ and Mike Elston has really done a great job there.” Notre Dame hosted nearly 20 recruits on official visits in one of the biggest recruiting weekends of the year. This Saturday against the Blue Devils, the action will be less frantic, but Driskell said one player to keep an eye on is 2018

tight end Zach Kuntz, a 4-star prospect and Rivals.com’s No. 1 tight end. “He’s arguably one of the top two or three tight ends on the board,” Driskell said. “He’s a guy that [Notre Dame] would take right now in a heartbeat. He’s going to be on campus, [and] this is his second trip to campus — he

was also here for the Blue-Gold Game. He’s a kid that’s a big time player for them. “As of now, that’s the only big name they’ve got coming up for Duke. And with it being a smaller visit, they’re going to be able to spend a lot more time on really showing him some love and showing him that, ‘Hey, you’re a

Contact Marek Mazurek at mmazurek@nd.edu

Paid Advertisement

Saturday, September 24 @ 11:00 pm $200 in prizes for the winning team! LaFortune Student Center Ballroom

Paid Advertisement

Like us on Facebook. fb.com/ndsmc observer

guy we really to lead this class.’ It wouldn’t surprise me if during or after the visit you hear people like [Notre Dame commits] Phil Jurkovec and Bo Bauer talk about keeping that Pennsylvania pipeline going.”


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.