Thursday, January 31, 2008

Coaching Shuffle: Lewis Out, Tenuta In

Notre Dame made some noise this offseason, and it didn't have anything to do with recruiting. Bill Lewis, the long time assistant head coach and defensive backs coach retired and Jon Tenuta, the former Georgia Tech defensive coordinator, was hired in his place. The difference of jobs between Tenuta and Lewis will be Tenuta will most likely take over at linebackers and Corwin Brown will coach the defensive backs, the job he held for the Jets, along with being the defensive coordinator.

All I can say is great job, White, Brown, & Weis. This guy is going to be a linebackers coach when he could be a head coach or defensive coordinator at big time programs. When you can get coaches like that as assistants and position coaches, it's always a good move. However, I would like to put him at defensive backs instead of linebackers. At Ohio State, he developed multiple stars who are now starters in the NFL. It's not like Brown did a bad job with the linebackers last year either. Kerry Neal and Brian Smith were fantastic. Joe Brockington was pretty good and he is now being projected to be drafted. Maurice Crum had some great games (UCLA comes to mind). With all of the youth at linebacker, I would rather have them keep a coach they are familiar with and give the defensive backs, who are mostly going to be seniors and juniors, the new coach.

When players are developing, the least amount of changes can be the best. We've seen what has happened with Alex Smith, QB for the San Francisco 49ers, when he loses his offensive coordinator every year. You don't want the young players having to spend more time on adjusting and less time on fine-tuning their skills.

If Corwin Brown moves to defensive backs coach, I won't be complaining either. He was the defensive backs coach for the New York Jets, and he played as a safety in the 3-4. If he moves, he will be prepared.

To sum it up, I'm not worried. Tenuta has been a great coordinator and assistant head coach throughout his entire career, and he does not have many blemishes on his record. When a coach could have been the head coach at a BCS Conference school (Michigan State) and a defensive coordinator for many schools, it's very good when you can get him as a defensive coach. If Notre Dame can continue to get these great position coaches, the players will continue to blossom. The decisions Charlie has made with his staff have been phenominal. Let's see if they produce on the field.

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Pick A Number Between 1 and 99

That's what 23 new Domers will be asked to do in a week when they sign their Letters of Intent. There are, for now, 22 scholarship players and one preferred walk-on with a memorable name. This will change if Milton Knox or Keith Wells get a scholarship offer and commit, but I do not think that will happen in my opinion. So for now, a choice will be made in one week. A decision that will change the outlook on the Notre Dame football team. One that will change the next four years. Their jersey numbers.

Dayne Crist-Crist is a quarterback, so the number will most likely be between 1 and 20. Crist is a big (6-5, 228), talented QB. His high school number is number 10. He's supposed to be the next Brady Quinn. Give him his number. #10.

Jonas Gray-Gray is a running back, so 20 to 49 sounds like the logical choices. However, we've seen Darius Walker and Ryan Grant wear single digits, so he could as well. His high school number is 24, which is taken. I say he follows in the footsteps of Julius Jones. #22.

Michael Floyd-Floyd is the most talented wide receiver to commit to Notre Dame since Randy Moss. Hopefully Floyd stays out of trouble over the next week so he can come to Notre Dame. Since I doubt that will be a problem, He needs a number. He will probably choose a number in the 80s. His current number is 80, but Richard Jackson has his hands on that one. Expectations aren't important. He'll follow in the footsteps of the last Notre Dame Heisman winner. #81.

John Goodman-Goodman is an option quarterback from the Midwest. He will not be a quarterback at Notre Dame, but he will be required to provide big plays. Someone just like that left and had a good Senior Bowl. Take Zibby's number. #9.

Deion Walker-Notre Dame's latest addition is a very fast wide receiver with a 40 time almost at 4.4. He wears number one in high school, but DJ Hord sports that number at Notre Dame. Walker should take a normal wide receiver number. This number is known for being what Alan Page sported. Make it a number that is usually reserved for tight ends. #88.

Kyle Rudolph-Rudolph is big (6-7) and he is fast (4.7). He will be used in the passing game for the next 4 years, and he hopes to follow in the footsteps of great Irish tight ends like Dave Casper, Ken MacAfee, and Anthony Fasano. He is a great receiver. People who bought John Carlson jerseys should be able to inherit a new jersey by graduation. #89.

Joseph Fauria-Fauria is a giant. Rivals has him listed at 6-8, and he is 250 pounds. He will be a great blocker in the Jumbo pack immediately. Notre Dame has two blocking tight ends (Fauria and Mike Ragone) and two receiving tight ends (Rudolph and Will Yeatman). Fauria wears 85 at Carmelite, but that is taken by Sam Vos. Bump it up one. #86.

Trevor Robinson-The firing of Bill Callahan may have been the best move for the Irish. With him getting the boot, Trevor Robinson and Jonas Gray switched their commitments to Notre Dame. Robinson has worn 78 in high school. There won't be much change. #78

Lane Clelland-Lane Clelland is the mystery lineman. He didn't dominate an All-American game like Braxton Cave. He didn't switch commitments like T-Rob. He doesn't have a famous dad like Mike Golic. However, Clelland is a great guard who is extremely physical. He wears 76 in high school. Andrew Nuss wears 76 at Notre Dame, so Clelland will get will get a new number. He should follow in the footsteps of Ryan Harris. #68

Mike Golic, Jr.-When an All-American recruit has junior in his name, you know he has good genes. His uncle, Bob Golic, was one of the best defensive players Notre Dame had in the 70s. Golic can't follow in his relatives' footsteps because Eric Olsen has 55, so Golic should pick up a number close to it. #57

Braxton Cave-Cave dominated the ESPN Under Armour All-American game. With his performance, he gave Dan Wenger some serious competition for the starting center spot. Cave wears 73 at Penn. If it ain't broke, don't fix it. #73

Sean Cwynar-Cwynar will be coming to South Bend early this year. He will be at Notre Dame for spring practices, giving him a real chance to start at defensive end. He wears 77 at Marion Central, but Mike Turkovich has 77 at Notre Dame. Cwynar should just take the only open offensive lineman number in the 70s. #79

Brandon Newman-Newman is huge. He is right around 300 pounds, and he is very strong. He could be one of the most powerful defensive tackles Notre Dame has had in a while. Newman wears 51 at Pleasure Ridge Park, but Dan Wenger has that one. Newman is a big man, so he needs a big number. #99

Hafis Williams-Williams may have to step up in 2008. Ian Williams is the only returning nose tackle, so Williams may be called on to make big plays. He wears 79 at Elizabeth, but Sean Cwynar already has that. Williams should follow Newman's route. #98

Ethan Johnson-Johnson is a very athletic defensive end. He could be the X-factor on this defense if he can come in and make big plays like Trevor Laws did. He wears 9 at Lincoln. John Goodman will take that number, so he can take a defensive lineman's number. #92

Steve Filer-Filer is a big-time local recruit. He goes to Mount Carmel High School, where he wears 44. Asaph Schwapp has that one, so he can go up a bit. #46

Anthony McDonald-Not much will change with Anthony McDonald. He sticks together with his teammate Dayne Crist. His school will have the same name. He will even have the same number. #54

Darius Fleming-Fleming could be breaking a lot of sack-related records by the end of his time at Notre Dame. Fleming is built perfectly for the pass rushing outside linebackers in the 3-4. He may have to improve at pass coverage, but that shouldn't be a big issue this year. He wears 90 at St. Rita, but that number is called for. He should go with a more linebacker-friendly number. #52

David Posluszny-The younger Posluszny definitely has good genes, much like Mike Golic and Dan McCarthy, two other 2008 recruits. Hopefully he inherited his brother's run stopping ability. He is a great pass defender, which may be a major asset for this team. He wears 31 at Hopewell, but that number is not available. Try higher. #37

Dan McCarthy-It's going to be a brotherly reunion at Notre Dame when Dan plays with his brother Kyle. However, Dan has had multiple injuries this year, and he will most likely get a redshirt. However, he still gets a jersey number. He may want to keep his old one (15), which is a wise decision. #15

Jamoris Slaughter-Slaughter, like McCarthy, has had injury problems. His knee should be fixed come summer, but he may not play next year, especially with all of the returning corners. However, he still needs a number. His number 8 is taken, so he should settle with a close number. #16

Robert Blanton-Blanton has the best chance out of any secondary player in this class. He is a great athlete, and he may have a chance to get some playing time in front of Gary Gray to get in the dime position. He shouldn't change much, including his number. #12

Now here is the preferred walk-on.

Some of you might know who it is.

Some of you may not.

He has a famous dad who was involved with a Notre Dame championship team.

He had a great pro career and his jersey is common among Notre Dame fans.

Here it is.

*drum roll*

Nate Montana-Another Montana. That's awesome. Now, he has to take his dad's number. It has to be done. #3

That would be the coolest thing ever for the son of the most famous Notre Dame sports player to wear his dad's number. Expectations normally don't apply to preferred walk-ons, so there may not be much pressure on him to recreate what his dad did. Either way, he HAS to choose this number.

Monday, January 28, 2008

Greatest Week Ever: Football Players

Since this is the week leading up to the Super Bowl, National Signing Day is the same weekend, and college basketball is starting to heat up, it's time for the Greatest Week Ever: Irish-style. For Notre Dame, recruiting is basically over besides some recruits that will get late offers, but I can't get into it. The suspense isn't there. The Patriots are in the Super Bowl, which is reason for me NOT to watch ESPN. The NBA and NHL are in their midseason, so the excitement of the 100 game series of the playoffs are almost here. While the snoozefests are going on, I will do a 7 part series of the greatest teams, players, coaches, and more of Notre Dame athletics. This should invoke good arguments. Now, I'm starting off with the hardest topic of them all: The Top 10 Notre Dame football players. Notre Dame has a long history of football greatness. They have had 7 Heisman winners and multiple great linemen who never had a chance at the Heisman. Oh yeah, the Gipper, Joe Montana, Jerome Bettis, Raghib Ismail, Joe Theisman, Brady Quinn, and Tony Rice are some players that don't fill those categories. Yeah, they've had some good players.

10. Tony Rice/QB/1987-89: Rice was the leader of three Notre Dame football teams with one being the 1988 national championship team. He was the greatest running quarterback in Notre Dame history, and he finished his career with the Johnny Unitas award in 1989 for the best passer of said year. What makes Rice's accomplishments even more amazing is that he had no freshman year. Because he did not pass the Prop 48 requirements, he didn't get to play or even practice with Notre Dame in 1986. He was essentially a first year player in 1987, where he led the Irish to a Cotton Bowl win. Rice was also the only starter on the Notre Dame 1988 team, both offense and defense, not to play in the NFL. He is one of the best option quarterbacks in the history of college football. Every player who runs a form of the option should watch tape of Tony Rice. He was the epitome of elusiveness and speed from under the center.

9. Tim Brown/WR/1984-87: Tim Brown may be more well known for his Hall of Fame career at wide receiver for the Raiders, but Brown was one of the top returners in college football before he became the All-Pro receiver in Los Angeles and Oakland. He had 1927 all-purpose yards in 1986, and he won the Heisman the following year. He ended his career with 5024 all-purpose yards and 107 receptions. His breakout game was against USC in 1986 where he returned a kickoff for a touchdown, had a touchdown reception, and returned a punt 56 yards to set up the game-winning field goal. Brown was the first true Notre Dame wide receiver to win the Heisman.

8. Joe Montana/QB/1974-78: Joe Montana may have only started for two years, but he made the most of his time under center. When Rusty Lisch went down against Purdue, Joe Montana got his chance. Montana came into the game with 11 minutes left in the game and the Irish down by 10 points. Montana threw for 154 yards and led Notre Dame to the win. He never looked back. Joe Montana led the Irish to 10 straight wins, including a win over Southern California in South Bend donning the green jerseys and a 38-10 win over Texas in the Cotton Bowl, which secured the national championship for the Irish.

The next year, Notre Dame made it to the Cotton Bowl once again, and Joe Montana gave us the most famous performance in Notre Dame sports history. In the Cotton Bowl, Notre Dame was down 20-12 at halftime, but the score was not the story. Joe Montana had hypothermia with his body temperature at 96. To recover, Joe Montana had multiple bowls of chicken soup and stayed under warm blankets. With just under 8 minutes left in the game, Notre Dame was trailing by 22. Joe Montana led the comeback, capped with a touchdown pass to Kris Haines with no time on the clock. Notre Dame won the game 35-34, and Joe Montana was immortalized. After his Hall of Fame career in the NFL where he won 4 Super Bowls, Joe Montana became the face of winning quarterbacks. If one thing is for sure about Joe Montana's career: If he played today, he would have a Campbell's endorsement.

7. George Connor/OT/1946-47: Like Montana, George Connor played only 2 years for the Irish, but he made the most of it. After World War II, Connor transferred from Holy Cross to Notre Dame, and he made an immediate impact. He was the anchor of the Notre Dame line that went undefeated in 1946 and 1947. He won the first Outland Trophy, and he went on to be an all-time great linebacker for the Chicago Bears. Connor was the first post-war dominant tackle. He was the main reason Notre Dame became a 1940s dynasty.

6. Johnny Lujack/QB & DB/1943-44, 46-47: Even after 60 years, Johnny Lujack is the only quarterback who had led his team to 3 national championships. Johnny Lujack may have been a Heisman-winning quarterback (1947), but he is probably most well-known for his game-saving tackle against Army in 1946, which locked up a national championship.

5. Paul Hornung/QB, RB, DB, & K/1954-56: Paul Hornung was actually on a winning team (9-1) as a sophomore in 1954, but his team's worst season was definitely his best. In 1956, Notre Dame went 2-8, but he finished second in the nation in offense and had 55 tackles. The controversial win over Jim Brown still had social impact. No matter how I feel about it (Paul Hornung was the best player in the nation and Brown was only considered years later when he became the greatest NFL player in history), this win started controversy that seemed to follow Hornung around wherever he went. He was banned for a year by the NFL for gambling, and he made insensitive comments about blacks a few years back. However, that won't take away his Heisman or keep him off this list.

4. Leon Hart/E/1946-49: Leon Hart was the last lineman to win the Heisman Trophy. However, the line was a bit different under Frank Leahy than it was today. Hart played end, which would be considered wide receiver or tight end. Nevertheless, he was phenominal. He never lost one game in his college career, and he had 13 touchdowns on 49 receptions. He was a force on defense, and he was also a great blocker for the T-formation runners that played for Leahy. He did it all over his career.

3. Ross Browner/DE/1973, 75-77: Browner is the greatest defensive player not named Hugh in college football history. He had 77 tackles for losses and 340 total tackles. Remember, sacks were not stats when Browner played, so we don't know for sure how many sacks he did have out of the 77. All we know is, he was the overall greatest defensive player in NFL history. He could stop the run and get to the quarterback. To top it off, he had 2 national championships.

2. Raghib Ismail/WR & RS/1988-90: Raghib Ismail was the most explosive player in football history. He could change the game on one play. Imagine Devin Hester times ten plus the fact that he could also catch the ball. He had over 1000 career yards in rushing, receiving, and kickoff returns. He is very underrated over all-time because he did not win a Heisman due to the fact that pass-happy offenses were still respected at the time and he did not start his pro career in the NFL. He played in the CFL for the most expensive contract in football history. Even though he started his career in the CFL, he ended his NFL career with 5295 yards receiving in nine years-an amazing stat when analyzed deeper. He was what Ted Ginn Jr. would be considered today. He was an all-time great and my favorite player.

1. George Gipp/RB, DB, & K/1917-20: This one is obvious. A pass thrown to the receiver he was covering was never completed. He averaged 7.5 yards per carry and he had 6 interceptions. He averaged 40 yards per punt and had 20 PATs. He died prematurely, but that may be what he is most known for. He gave his "Win One for the Gipper" speech to Coach Rockne on his deathbed, which ended up being immortalized in the movie Knute Rockne: All-American. Gipp is as famous as a running back can get. He was the first great running back in the history of American football. His impact cannot be overlooked.

Sunday, January 27, 2008

I'm Goin' To Vegas

I was on it yesterday. The seer inside of me predicted that Notre Dame was going to win easily over Villanova with Kyle McAlarney being the leading scorer. I was a little off on Luke Harangody. I said that he wasn't going to get a double-double, but I was wrong on that one. However, I also said that Tyrone Nash was going to get into the game. I also said Tim Abromaitis would play, but I'm not hung up on "details". For the most part, I was right, and that's all that matters.

Branching out from Notre Dame, I also predicted Connecticut over Indiana. Indiana is one of the most overrated teams in the country because they have a good freshman. Here's the truth: Gordon is overrated. Sure, he puts up 30 points on Chicago State and whoever else IU played in their joke of a non-conference, but he never shows up in big games, and he gets fatigued way too fast for a shooting guard. He is not on the same level as Michael Beasley and Derrick Rose. They were ranked at number 8, but all that proves is how college basketball rankings are a joke. Good thing they don't mean anything. IU is 1-2 versus the RPI Top 50, and that one win is over Illinois State. Their best win over a major program is over Georgia Tech. IU has lost to all of the good teams they have played. I expect a first round exit for the Hoosiers. Good thing they play in the pathetic Big Ten to boost their record and give them a better seed in the Tourney.

Saturday, January 26, 2008

A Chance We Cannot Mess Up

If there is a must win game in January, this is it. Notre Dame is 0-2 on the road, of course those losses are to Georgetown and Marquette. Villanova is not on their level, but they haven't lost at home this season, and like all Big East teams, they have a great crowd. Villanova is also on a cold-streak, so this game may be as important for the Wildcats as it is for the Irish. Let's see what the stats show.

Starting Lineups

ND
G-Tory Jackson (5-11)
G-Kyle McAlarney (6-0)
F-Ryan Ayers (6-7)
F-Rob Kurz (6-9)
C-Luke Harangody (6-8)
6th man-F Zach Hillesland (6-9)

Nova
G-Corey Fisher (6-1)
G-Scottie Reynolds (6-2)
F-Dante Cunningham (6-8)
F-Shane Clark (6-7)
C-Casiem Drummond (6-10)
6th man-G Malcolm Grant (6-0)

Key Matchups

C Luke Harangody versus C Casiem Drummond

Harangody has been the best player in the Big East this season. He is leading the Big East in points per game and is second in rebounding. He is the early leader for Big East player of the year, and if he gets going, he cannot be stopped. Drummond, however, has the size advantage in this matchup. We've seen Harangody struggle against UConn and Georgetown, who both have big centers. Drummond will need to play stronger than Harangody to stop him, and if he gets into foul trouble, this game is over.

SG Kyle McAlarney versus SG Scottie Reynolds

This one should be interesting. Kyle McAlarney is third in 3-point shooting and Reynolds is 12th. Neither of them is known for their defense, so this could be a scoring-fest from beyond the arc. Whoever can get hot first will have a major advantage.

Team Overviews (Rankings are in Big East and Leaders are in bold)

Record: NOVA (13-4) ND (13-4)
PPG: NOVA (8th, 77.5) ND (5th, 78.6)
Scoring D: NOVA (11th, 69.8) ND (6th, 65.1)
Scoring Margin: NOVA (8th, +7.6) ND (5th, +13.5)
FT %: NOVA (5th, .701) ND (1st, .731)
FG %: NOVA (12th, .444) ND (8th, .451)
FG% Against: NOVA (13th, .443) ND (4th, .394)
3 point FG%: NOVA (7th, .360) ND (1st, .406)
3 point FG% Against: NOVA (15th, .393) ND (8th, .338)
Rebounding Margin: NOVA (5th, +4.6) ND (1st, +9.8)
Blocks Per Game: NOVA (15th, 2.88) ND (11st, 3.59)
Assists Per Game: NOVA (12th, 13.9) ND (1st, 18.7)
Steals Per Game: NOVA (3rd, 8.5) ND (12th, 7.0)
Turnover Margin: NOVA (3rd, +3.88) ND (10, +.1)
Assist/Turnover Ratio: NOVA (13th, 1.0) ND (3rd, 1.4)

Advantage: Notre Dame (12-2-1) over Villanova (2-12-1)

Prediction: Notre Dame blows out Villanova on the road 84-66. Harangody will be held to 15 points and 8 rebounds, but McAlarney will make 6 threes and score 27 points. Notre Dame will have 21 turnovers, but they will still win easily due to Villanova's lack of big men on the bench. I expect to see Tyrone Nash and Tim Abromaitis get playing time in this game as they work their way into the rotation.

Freshman Outlook: Tyrone Nash and Tim Abromaitis are stuck on the depth chart behind Ryan Ayers, Zach Hillesland, and Luke Zeller. Next year, they will get much more playing time as Zach Hillesland will most likely be the starter at power forward. Carleton Scott has been redshirted to give him time to develop his raw talent. He could be phenominal and give Notre Dame a great power forward which they haven't had in a very long time (Troy Murphy was a center).