Will Irish Eyes be Smiling this Fall?

Lumi

LOKI
Forum Member
Aug 30, 2002
21,104
58
0
58
In the shadows
Will Irish Eyes be Smiling this Fall?


Being a Notre Dame football fan or supporter just isn?t as much fun as it used to be. Coming off regular seasons of 3-9 and 6-6 respectively, its put up or shut up time for the sometimes Fighting Irish. Will this finally be the year Charley Weis and quarterback Jimmy Clausen make Notre Dame football relevant again?

Weis might be on par with ?the most interesting man in the world? who occasionally drinks Dos Equis beer, just in the gridiron sense. Weis came to South Bend as this larger than life character and sold everyone with his bravado and New Jersey tough-guy attitude. He was reported offensive genius behind the New England Patriots (until the next one came along) and was never shy about taking credit for Tom Brady?s growth and success.

Weis was 9-2 and 10-2 in his first two seasons, utilizing former coaches Bob Davie?s and Ty Willingham?s recruits as upperclassmen. In retrospect, Willingham?s firing makes more sense today, as the Irish have lacked talent from its junior and senior classes the previous two years.

Weis made a fundamental mistake to start, he should have preached patience like current president Barack Obama did on the campaign trail. That?s easier said then done with the Subway Alumni and big financial backers; however it would have gone a lot further than making promises he hasn?t kept.

Jimmy Clausen was to be the great savior, partnered with the perfect coach under the Golden Dome. This is a critical year for the junior Clausen also. His freshman season he was overwhelmed and played behind an offensive line that couldn?t keep an army of ants out of the backfield, let a lone a 300-pound defensive lineman. Clausen was much improved last season, but had several forgettable outings, like those against Boston College (0-17) and USC (3-38). Though Clausen had a spectacular game in the Hawaii Bowl, legends are not made around South Bend playing football in Hawaii on Christmas Eve.

Sportsbook.com has Notre Dame at Ov8.5 win total, which doesn?t sound like BSC material, unless they change the schedule back to nine games.

Offensively, Notre Dame has a chance to really be productive. Clausen can wing the pigskin and reports have greater dedication to making better throws, plus positive signs of improved accuracy, especially on out-routes and balls thrown in seven to 15-yard range outside the tackles. Golden Tate and Michael Floyd should be heard of a great deal as receivers and sophomore Kyle Randolph has the look of the next Notre Dame tight end who will end up playing Sunday?s once his college career is complete. This group of pass catchers is arguably the best in the country.

Notre Dame could pass the 8.5 win total, if the power running game returns. The Irish have averaged sickly 110 and 75 yards per game the last two seasons. To be taken seriously, the four returning offensive linemen must play like men, with the Irish averaging at least 150 yards per game, with a stable of above average running backs.

What will determine Weis? fate probably is something he?s not a big part of, the Notre Dame defense. Six starters return with a load of uncertainty. Three returning lettermen are in secondary, meaning only three starters in the front seven. The Fighting Irish should be better in blitzing defense in year two of defensive coordinator Jon Tenuta?s style. Though far more athletes are on the two-deep roster, many are sophomores and juniors without a great deal of experience. In many top-flight programs, that would not be an issue, however Notre Dame hasn?t been in the class of elite football programs for some time.

Jeff Makinen of StatFox isn?t convinced the Irish are on the rise until they prove it. ?Notre Dame has proven to be overrated year after year. Weis is 29-21 and 23-26-1 against the spread, not coach of the year material. Clausen has gotten a large amount of publicity, with what kind of results on the field? Ron Powlus (former Irish QB) was supposed to be great; I?m seeing similarities between the two quarterbacks. I?d bet Under until you see a reason to change.?

The schedule appears to be conducive to success, at least right today. Nevada, Washington, Boston College, Navy and Connecticut should all be winnable encounters at Notre Dame Stadium. Michigan will be improved, nevertheless is about where the Irish was last season after 3-9 campaign and Purdue brings in a new coach, giving Weis two shots at road wins. Washington State is rebuilding off 2-11 season and will meet the Irish in San Antonio, as showcase for potential Texas recruits to come to northern Indiana to play football and earn an exceptional education.

If Notre Dame is truly a better team, they win those eight games, period.

Concerns start with Michigan State, who continues to get better under coach Mark Dantonio and they have won and covered six straight in South Bend. Do the Irish finally put up a fight?

November road games at Pittsburgh and Stanford could be BCS berth games. The Panthers defeated Clausen and company 36-33 in overtime last season and they will give Notre Dame full attention with a bye week to follow. Coach Weis? crew could catch a break in season closer against Stanford, who will have played Oregon, USC and bitter rival Cal in the previous three weeks.

For many followers and detractors of the Blue and Gold, the benchmark matchup is USC. The last three games have been losses by total score of 120-27 and it could have been worse. The Trojans are on 7-0 and 6-1 ATS roll against Notre Dame, but look to be the most vulnerable in years with three starters back on defense and new assistant coaches taking over. This doesn?t mean USC is reverting back to pre-Pete Carroll days, just the slightest opportunity for Weis to regain much of his lost stature.

The season will be a success if the Irish earn BCS berth. One rung down on the acceptability scale would be 9-3, with USC upset. Anything less could mean sorry Charlie.

Best educated guess is the Irish get to nine wins and cover the Over.
 

Lumi

LOKI
Forum Member
Aug 30, 2002
21,104
58
0
58
In the shadows
Notre Dame Fighting Irish Team Report - 2009

Notre Dame Fighting Irish Team Report - 2009

Notre Dame Fighting Irish Team Report - 2009

Notre Dame last won a national title in 1988. They have never won a BCS Championship since the inception of the controversial format. After defeating Hawaii 49-21 last year in the Hawaii Bowl hopes are riding high in South Bend. Can the talented Irish and head coach Charlie Weis deliver in 2009? Go inside for our forecast and point spread observations.

Coaching

Charlie Weis, is in his 5th season at Notre Dame, must have a jump up in the polls or the former New England OC may be looking for a job. When Weis took over the ND job he replaced Ty Willingham and was successful with the former players. In his first two years the Irish won 19 games, but did not win a bowl game. Once Weis? recruits became more prevalent the record dipped to just 12 wins the last two seasons. So, we might be looking at a college coach who is overrated, and one who never played a down of football. In fact, since Weis left the Patriots the yardage numbers for their offense have increased. Weis is 29-21 at ND, 7-6 last year. Yes, we know about the Super Bowl rings.

Team

The Irish return 15 starters to the fold for the summer practice sessions and the key will be junior QB Jimmy Clausen (3,172) who threw for 25 touchdowns, but 17 interceptions. His experiences behind center should pay dividends this season for the overall development of the offense. Last year the running game managed only 3.3 yards per carry, up from 2.1 in 2007. The Irish field an experienced offensive line this time, so no excuses. Also, in 2008 points per game increased to 24.7 from 16.4. The Irish return all their key running backs and wide receivers along with highly regarded 4-Star RB Cierre Wood (4.5) from Santa Clara who was chased heavily by USC and UCLA. Defensively, Notre Dame allowed just 22.2 points per game down from 28.8 in 2007. This season Jon Tenuta will be calling the defensive signals which should help improve a unit that returns only six starters, but has quality depth. The Irish defensive line must improve on their 26 sacks in 2008 to keep the defense off the field. One critical area of concern is special teams, Weis needs to develop enhanced field position from this unit and turnovers when the opportunity arises. Over the Weis years, ND has not been strong in this area?

Scheduling and Point Spread Observations

On a positive note, the Irish could start 5-0 SU, but then, after a bye week face the Trojans in South Bend. How they play in that game will dictate the balance of their season. Note, I did not indicate they need to win. Unfortunately, Notre Dame faces hard nosed Boston College the very next week at home. Against the spread would caution the Irish when venturing to the ?Big House? the second week of the season, especially when listed as a road favorite of -4 ? or higher. Finally, Notre Dame travels to Pittsburgh for a revenge game on November 14th, circle it on your calendar.
 

BobbyBlueChip

Trustee
Forum Member
Dec 27, 2000
20,715
290
83
53
Belly of the Beast
Interesting blog post from Blue Gray sky on ND's opposing QBs. Here's the summary below:

2009 Opponent Quarterback Analysis and Ranking

The one word summary of this year's crop of opposing quarterbacks is "inexperience". Last year, there were 8 returning starters on this list. In 2007, the number was 9. In 2009 however, the total number of returning starters is a paltry 3, with one of them missing nearly the entire season last year due to injury. Sure, there are a handful of new starters at schools like WSU, UConn, and Navy who have a few starts under their belt and Stanford has the experienced Pritchard on the bench, but that still only puts the number up to 7. Michigan, Boston College, Stanford, and possibly even USC and Michigan State will be starting QBs this season who have yet to take a single snap in college.

That sound you hear is Jon Tenuta salivating at the thought of all that inexperience lining up opposite his defense. While ND will have their own inexperience issues on the defensive line and at linebacker, Tenuta will be dialing up blitzes and changing coverages non-stop in an attempt to rattle the quarterback. Where this plays into ND's favor is the talent and experience in ND's secondary. One of the more game-tested secondaries in the country, if the front seven can produce steady or even semi-steady pressure on the opposing QB, the opportunities for interceptions or at least batted down passes should be very high this season. ND's defenses have consistently produced between 9 and 15 interceptions the past 6 seasons. A good goal for this year's secondary would be to try and match or beat the 21 interceptions put up by 2002 defense that featured Shane Walton, Vontez Duff, Gerome Sapp, and Glenn Earl in the defensive backfield.

Of course, in this era of the spread offense, defenses also have to worry about a quarterback's feet. And while there may not be many (any?) proven pocket passing threats this season, there are a handful of dangerous runners lining up under center. At the front of the pack are Jake Locker and Colin Kaepernick. Kaepernick rushed for over 1,000 yards last season and Locker was only 14 yards shy of the same milestone in 2007. The revamped Irish linebacking corp will have their hands full keeping both QBs from turning potential sacks into 20+ yard scrambles. And while they are inexperienced, Michigan's Forcier, Navy's Dobbs, and Boston College's Tuggle and Boek all have the mobility to rack up quality rushing yards against an undisciplined defense. Throw in the more-mobile-than-you-might-expect Corp and Nichol at Southern Cal and Michigan State respectively and the list of running threats at QB is more impressive than the list of strong-armed pocket passers.

Moving to the rankings, as always I will favor experience, production, and overall position depth over potential. If the opponent faces ND later in the season, I might give potential a bit more of a boost, but for the most part these rankings try to stick to what we have already seen, rather than what we hope or fear to see. And sticking with previous years, I will attempt to keep coaching acumen and offensive system out of the rankings as much as possible.

1. Washington - Locker is a talented and tough player. Fouch provides some experience off the bench.
2. Nevada - Kaepernick will become a household name this season, especially if ND isn't ready for him.
3. USC - Three high school All-Americans on the roster, but lacking in experience for now.
4. Pittsburgh - Nothing flashy here, but Stull and Bostick have been around for a few years now.
5. Stanford - Luck has as much potential as any QB on this list with Pritchard adding experience.
6. Michigan State - Two decent prospects will be slowed a bit by their lack of career playing time.
7. Navy - Dobbs is a respected teammate and will be a tough runner to keep in check.
8. UConn - Will Frazer still be the starter for his return trip to ND?
9. Purdue - Elliot could surprise a bit, but more likely TerBush will pass him by later in the year.
10. Washington State - This position was a mess last season. If injury-free it will be much improved.
11. Michigan - A skinny freshman or a former walk-on are the main options for Michigan.
12. Boston College - No experience on the roster and a three-way QB battle that will split snaps in practice.

All_the_Single_Irish.gif
 

thomas_howard

Registered User
Forum Member
Oct 15, 2007
1,167
15
38
Houston
3. USC - Three high school All-Americans on the roster, but lacking in experience for now.

:shrug:

pretty sure they've got more than that...
 

Lumi

LOKI
Forum Member
Aug 30, 2002
21,104
58
0
58
In the shadows
Weis feeling better about standing during game

Weis feeling better about standing during game

Weis feeling better about standing during game



SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) -Notre Dame coach Charlie Weis is feeling good about his health as well as his team.



Weis was worried three weeks ago about whether he'd be ready to stand along the sideline for a full game after having his right knee replaced in December. The condition of that knee had deteriorated after his left knee was severely injured when a 264-pound player collided with him during the Michigan game last September.

``It's taken a drastic turn for the better,'' Weis said Monday. ``My right leg feels way better. I still don't have great staying power. But every day that's getting better and better.''

The pain in Weis' knees got so bad last season before the surgery that he watched Notre Dame's 49-21 victory in the Hawaii Bowl from the coaches' box.

Weis spent the summer working on his legs, walking on a treadmill in a pool in the training room. He'd walk up to four miles a day for as many days a week as he could find time. Weis said working in the pool is good for him because of nerve damage to his feet, the result of complications from gastric bypass surgery in 2002.

On Monday, Weis leaned at times on an equipment box alongside the field. There also was a seat at practice for him, but the seat was a regular sight at practice before he was injured as well.

Weis, 53, plans to have his left knee replaced after the season is over, saying it still gives him problems.

``If you see me walk, my left leg is like this ... it takes a hard left when I'm walking,'' he said.

As well as being happy with his improving stamina, Weis said he's happy with what he's seen from his players so far. With players still not in full pads, he's been focusing on just five players.

He's been watching to see how tight end Mike Ragone is looking after surgery for a torn anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee. He's watching James Aldridge, who switched from tailback to fullback, and how Darius Fleming is adjusting after moving from defensive end in the nickel package to a strongside linebacker.

He's also watching how center Dan Wenger is adjusting to being demoted to second string and the stamina of nose tackle Ian Williams.

``Fortunately, in all five of those guys that I brought up it's been a positive impression I've gotten from all of them within the things I was looking for,'' he said.

Competition for starting positions won't truly begin until Thursday.

So far the only player who is not taking full part in practice is defensive tackle Hafis Williams. The reason he is not allowed to practice has not been disclosed.

Weis also said Monday that he put a stipulation on players who want to wear helmet visors, which Notre Dame's hasn't previously allowed. The visors must be clear, saying he didn't want players to have ``Darth Vader visors'' because ``I thought were way too Hollywood for Notre Dame.''

He also required players who use visors to be clean shaven and clean cut. Most of the two dozen or so players who got the visors needed a haircut or a shave. Weis said he had a ``conga line'' of players coming through his office seeing whether their hair was short enough after a cut to get a visor.

``We had some fun with it,'' he said.

Weis, a fan of the New York Yankees, was asked if his desire for his players to be clean cut was an influence of George Steinbrenner.

``If you look at several players on our team, you'll know I don't have much of a Steinbrenner influence,'' Weis joked.
 

Lumi

LOKI
Forum Member
Aug 30, 2002
21,104
58
0
58
In the shadows
Notre Dame Loses Snowball Fight

Notre Dame Loses Snowball Fight

Notre Dame Loses Snowball Fight

Notre Dame got into a snowball fight with its "fans" on Saturday and lost. Notre Dame made the mistake of basing its aerial attack on the wisdom of Charlie Weis and the arm of Jimmy Claussen. Given that their opponents were drunken fans who were completely uncoordinated, they stood no chance. This upset several Notre Dame players, who challenged their own students to fights.
 

Lumi

LOKI
Forum Member
Aug 30, 2002
21,104
58
0
58
In the shadows
Notre Dame's 2009 schedule analysis and forecast

Notre Dame's 2009 schedule analysis and forecast

Notre Dame's 2009 schedule analysis and forecast

This is a make-or-break season for Notre Dame coach Charlie Weis. Luckily for him this is his most talented Irish team.

The offense should be loaded. While junior quarterback Jimmy Clausen has started 22 of the Irish's 25 games since 2007, Notre Dame has won just 10 games in that span. Last year did end on a high note with the Irish thumping Hawaii in the Hawaii Bowl. Clausen was stellar in that game, completing 22 of 26 passes for 401 yards and five touchdowns and no interceptions.

As a sophomore last year, Clausen had the third-most prolific passing season in school history. He completed 268 of 440 passes (60.9 percent) for 3,172 passing yards and 25 touchdowns. He had the second-best sophomore season by a quarterback in school history, behind only Brady Quinn.

But, again, the Irish went just 7-6 in 2008, and Clausen had eight picks and one touchdown pass in losses to Michigan State, Boston College and USC.

A major problem has been the running game under Weis. The Irish have posted the three worst rushing seasons in school history under the coach. Last year it was a little better at 109.7 yards per game; the year before it was a 75.3-yard average when Notre Dame won just three games.

Weis says the Irish need to establish the run so teams can't focus on stopping the passing attack and the stats show that when Notre Dame can run the ball it wins: The Irish were 5-1 last season in games when they rushed for at least 100 yards and 2-5 in games when they rushed for less.

Notre Dame will start four seniors on the offense line and has 10 offensive starters back overall. Armando Allen, who led Notre Dame in rushing with 585 yards last season, figures to be the main tailback, but there?ll be a bit of a committee. And very few teams have a better top duo of receivers than Golden Tate and Michael Floyd.

This year?s defense is a bit thin on the line but strong at linebacker, which works out nicely since the team is switching from a 4-3 to a 3-4. Keep an eye on true freshman LB Manti Te'o, who should become a star. The secondary should be solid, with former outside linebacker Harrison Smith moving to safety to help matters.

Here is Notre Dame?s schedule (times in flux):

September 5 vs. Nevada

September 12 at Michigan

September 19 vs. Michigan State

September 26 at Purdue

October 3 vs. Washington

October 17 vs. USC

October 24 vs. Boston College

October 31 vs. Washington State (San Antonio)

November 7 vs. Navy

November 14 at Pittsburgh

November 21 vs. Connecticut

November 28 at Stanford

With really only four true road games, there?s no excuse for Notre Dame to win fewer than nine games. Weis could be fired if the Irish lose that opener to the Wolf Pack and expect that game to be close. Nevada, led be dual-threat QB Colin Kaepernick, was third in the nation in rushing last year and is one of the most underrated programs in the nation.

I like a 4-1 start to the season for Notre Dame, with the lone loss probably coming to Michigan State. The Spartans have won nine of the past 12 in that series despite usually being the underdog.

We really find out if Notre Dame is a BCS team on Oct. 17 against Southern Cal. Oddsmakers have an early line on this one at USC -6. The Trojans held the Irish without a first down until the end of third quarter last year and have won seven in a row in this series. That?s the longest losing streak for ND against anyone since losing eight straight vs. Michigan State from 1955-63.

I think this year?s is actually quite close, but it will be another Trojan victory.

There is no reason the Irish can?t win out following the USC game. They should be favored in every game but possibly at Pittsburgh, which doesn?t have LeSean McCoy to gouge that Notre Dame defense this year.

Boston College blanked the Irish last year but is rebuilding. Stanford could be a bit of a test, but if the Irish are playing for a BCS bowl (and at 9-2 they probably would be), they won?t get tripped up there.

A 10-win season will get Notre Dame into one of the BCS bowls, because the TV networks still love the Irish. And 10 wins certainly would take some pressure off Weis. BetUS.com lists the team?s season win total at 9. The Irish are just +2200 to win the national title, which are the same odds as Penn State.

I would argue anything that is 8-4 or worse costs Weis his job, because the schedule won?t set up this favorably again.
 

Lumi

LOKI
Forum Member
Aug 30, 2002
21,104
58
0
58
In the shadows
Weis ad catches Irish eyes

Weis ad catches Irish eyes

Weis ad catches Irish eyes
A billboard near the Notre Dame campus in South Bend, Ind., recently grabbed Fighting Irish football coach Charlie Weis' attention -- and it wasn't an ad for McDonald's.

"Best wishes to Charlie Weis in the 5th year of his coaching internship," reads the billboard.

"Everything was great until that last word," said Weis, who guided Notre Dame to a 7-6 mark last season and is 10-15 the past two years. "I'm the head coach at Notre Dame. Welcome to my world. That comes with the territory."

The sign's message is attributed to "Linebacker Alumni."

Tom Reynolds, a former Irish letterwinner, told The South Bend Tribune that he paid for the sign on behalf of about 50 other former players.

Weis said his only concern is beating UNR in the season opener.

"I could not care less about any other things," he said. "That's all I want to do. I'm not worried about hot seats, cold seats, anything."
 
Bet on MyBookie
Top