Tag: Brian Kelly
IRISH VIDEO: “Inside Notre Dame Football: Post-North Carolina State and Pre-Wake Forest” – WatchND

Inside Notre Dame Football: Brian Kelly and Jack Nolan take a look at Notre Dame Football after the victory over North Carolina State and looking ahead to Wake Forest.
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IRISH VIDEO: Brian Kelly Post-Game Press Conference After Notre Dame’s Victory Over North Carolina State – WatchND

Brian Kelly post-game press conference after Notre Dame’s victory over North Carolina State
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Should Notre Dame Fans Brace Themselves for a Big Skid? Unexpectedly soft first half of the season followed by murderer’s row closing stretch.

Resurgent Notre Dame rides a 5-1 bubble that has fans and click-hungry media thinking big. Yet strength of schedule is about to go from padded to rock solid.
Heading into the season Notre Dame was a 4-8 ball club, diving into a 12-game regular season featuring 11 teams that made bowls the previous year. The one opponent who had missed bowl season still beat Notre Dame last year and went to the College Football Playoff just two years ago.
So, absent improvement, the Irish did not necessarily have much of an argument as to why, in particular, they could win any one of their 12 games.
What happened next was that, in the first half of the season Notre Dame ended up playing four teams who currently have losing records … only one team ranked when the Irish played them … and one more team with a winning record, unranked at the time, yet ranked now.
At 5-1, Notre Dame fans and the media have lapsed into a predictable blend of overhype and “hope-springs-eternal,” “sky’s-the-limit,” starry-eyed optimism.
(There is even the cringe-worthy habit of celebrating the right kind of loss. The gushy, almost non-apologetic trumpeting of Notre Dame losing by one point to Georgia might be the most head-scratching celebration of defeat since the institution gave Charlie Weis a massive contract extension for losing to USC.)
Looking at it another way, Notre Dame is 0-1 against ranked opponents, 1-1 against teams with winning records, 1-1 against teams currently ranked and 4-0 against teams with a losing record. (To be fair, one of the latter was sitting at .500 until Notre Dame beat them.)
So Notre Dame has played four teams that went from being a bowl team in 2016 to having a losing record. After the fears of a 4-12 Notre Dame potentially going winless, the Irish ended up with a surprisingly well-padded first half of the season.
(Now, to be fair, Notre Dame never pads its schedule as much as a lot of other programs. For example, Notre Dame is one of a very small number of Div. I-A/FBS programs that has never played an opponent from Div. I-AA/FCS. And it is not even that common for Notre Dame to play a team from outside the “Power 5” conferences, mostly with the exception of service academy teams, whom the SEC, of all people, usually rates as Power 5-quality.)
In a big mid-season pendulum swing, Notre Dame, in the second half of the schedule, faces six teams with winning record, including no fewer than four nationally ranked opponents out of six. A fifth team was ranked just last week, and another unranked team has a strong record.
While the Irish deserve some credit for strengthening their quality of play on multiple tracks, they are about to confront a stunning about-face with regard to strength of opposition.
And one pesky detail from the highly-touted defeat to Georgia was that Notre Dame’s supposedly vaunted rushing attack was limited to 55 yards rushing, by the only ranked opponent that was ranked when they played them.
Notre Dame showed that they do not, in fact, have an elite running game. By comparison, when Notre Dame had an elite running game decades ago under Lou Holtz, they would rip off solid yards per play against most elite opponents.
There are a few other problems. One is that Notre Dame does not really have a quarterback. They have a rookie starter in Brandon Wimbush who is inconsistent and plays more like an all-purpose athlete with strong-armed heaves, whose main virtue has been the ability to avoid turnovers. Ian Book showed himself to be a better quarterback, yet failed to avoid turnovers.
The ground game showed itself to be good enough to pad its stats against weaker opponents. But even there, there were issues. The running backs do not have blazing speed, or they would not have been run down from behind by Boston College. The offensive line is not dominant, or they would have had strong production on every down. Instead, Notre Dame padded its stats with individual plays where everything came together in a perfect confluence of events, but their averages on most other plays were not that great, after taking out the big plays. Are some of the players “taking a play off” here and there, a terminology NFL scouts sometimes use?
Historically, one can recall Notre Dame having opponents with similar stat-padding, such as service academy teams. In the past, when Notre Dame was an elite program, it was not unheard of for a service academy team to have huge rushing stat numbers, and be among the nation’s rushing leaders, as Notre Dame is now, but then came up against an elite Notre Dame and see the stats come down. That, of course, is what happened when Notre Dame played Georgia. Except a Navy or Air Force seeing their top-5 rushing stats come down against a Lou Holtz-coached Notre Dame team did not get limited to 55 yards, like Notre Dame did in their impotent performance against Georgia.
If the early season pattern holds, then Notre Dame would lose half their games against remaining opponents with winning records. That would mean, at best, finishing 8-4, a decent turnaround, and on track for the trademark Brian Kelly 8-5 that threatens to make him the Mike Brey of Notre Dame football, if — and it’s a big if — Brian Kelly can improve his performance in the post-season to be as strong as Brey’s has now become.
If Notre Dame continues to be winless against ranked opponents, if the 0-1 turns into 0-5 against ranked opponents, then they would finish, at best, 7-5, Ty Willingham territory.
One interesting added twist is that the unexpectedly padded early season, the unexpected front-loading of easier opponents, combined with the massive offseason coaching staff upheaval, made it harder to envision a scenario in which Notre Dame might announce at mid-season that Brian Kelly would be replaced.
These days, elite programs, or programs with the desire to return to elite status, do not engage in the last-minute firing-and-hiring spectacle that Notre Dame followed with the transitions from Bob Davie to George O’Leary to Tyrone Willingham, the transition from Willingham to Charlie Weis, or the transition from Weis to Kelly. The idea of firing a coach at the beginning of December and scrambling to back their way into hiring a George O’Leary within days or weeks is just not part of the big time.
Following the patterns set, from time to time, by schools like LSU, USC or Florida, Notre Dame would have to start transitioning at mid-season, or earlier, with an interim coach, coach-in-waiting, or some other arrangement with a longer lead time.
Historically, by comparison, one of Notre Dame’s best coaching hires, Ara Parseghian, reportedly took the initiative to call Notre Dame because Hugh Devore had been given an interim status, to serve as a bridge to a new hire. So, a half-century ago, Notre Dame showed some initiative and innovation with their coaching transition, gave themselves a long lead-time, and it paid off.
Of course, it is difficult to envision Notre Dame doing what USC did to Lane Kiffin, when A.D. Pat Haden drove to the airport to fire Kiffin on the tarmac next to the team bus after a late-night loss. That move, of course, was followed by elevating Ed Orgeron, who already was on staff, and already had head coaching background, in the SEC no less.
Yet it still bears noting that, presumably as an unintended side effect, Kelly’s revamping of the assistant coaching staff meant there no Ed Orgeron’s on staff at Notre Dame, no assistant coaches of experience and stature suitable to being an interim head coach for half a season on so big a stage.
Be that as it may, the padded schedule earlier in the season was a pure gift for Brian Kelly. Unless Notre Dame can show strong improvement, and unless they demonstrate the ability to beat ranked opponents, one might surmise a different scenario had the two halves of the season been flipped.
If the final six teams had come first, would Notre Dame be looking at something like a 2-4 record right now? Would the same team, with the same coach and the same players, be sitting at 2-4, just because the schedule was different? Coming off the 4-8 meltdown, then going 2-4, would have meant coaching change war drums beating loudly.
Yet now, even if Notre Dame has yet another Big Skid under Brian Kelly, they lose just a little bit of the current PR fluff at a time, then end up in a minor bowl again, like when they hung tough with Florida State then went into the tank for the entire second half of the season several years ago.
The situation presents a test of character for the Irish, and time will tell whether, or how much, they get exposed for being a little less elite than the wildly inflated College Football Playoff talk might suggest.
The gift of an inflated 5-1 record should inspire much-needed improvement and greater playing intensity, to seize the tremendous opportunity that the inflated record presents. Yet the program still has yet to demonstrate that it can actually turn the corner and return to elite status, and they might simply not have the personnel or the character to do what they need to do, to avoid the skid. Time will tell.
IRISH VIDEO: “Brian Kelly Post-Game Press Conference After Notre Dame’s Victory Over North Carolina” – WatchND
IRISH VIDEO: “Brian Kelly Press Conference After Notre Dame Victory Over Miami (Ohio)” – WatchND
Does Notre Dame Have a Must-Win Game vs. Miami of Ohio? And Will This Be Another Brian Kelly Flat Game?

Already the usual fluffy hype has begun, including the “woulda-coulda-shoulda” excuse-making that tries to celebrate a Notre Dame loss, because it was close and to a good opponent that might rise in the rankings. Heading into their game with Miami of Ohio, Notre Dame is, indeed, 3-1. And, like Gerry Faust, Kelly has Notre Dame floating in and out of the rankings. Yet, to look at it another way, Notre Dame is 0-1 against teams then-barely ranked in the top 15, they are 1-1 at home and they are 3-0 against teams that are unranked. Their three victories come against teams with a combined record of 5-6.
Kelly’s Lads now will show whether they can avoid coming out flat against a Miami of Ohio team that does not sound like a big name, yet is the Cradle of Coaches and is 8-3 across their last 11 games, including a bowl loss to an SEC opponent. Coming out flat is a not-uncommon occurrence under Brian Kelly, in an era pock-marked by close games where a Brian Kelly team played down to the level of the opposition, lapsed into a dogfight against a weaker or middling opponent and sometimes did not pull out the win.
Former Notre Dame assistant coach (and former Notre Dame player) Skip Holtz once brought a middling South Florida team (one that finished with a losing record that year) into Notre Dame Stadium and spanked Notre Dame with a three-point Bulls victory. Like Skip Holtz, Miami of Ohio Head Coach Chuck Martin is a former Notre Dame assistant, indeed the offensive coordinator during the only season in the Brian Kelly era where Notre Dame showed signs of almost returning to elite status. So, as a former Notre Dame assistant, Martin will by no means be intimidated by the stadium or the hype and supposed mystique.
Yet, for Kelly, Martin is a much worse scenario, since Martin has had longstanding association with Kelly himself. The situation is a bit more like when Notre Dame basketball coach Mike Brey goes up against Duke and Mike Krzyzewski.
Brey was a Duke assistant during Duke’s greatest heyday and has gradually morphed into a bit of a nemesis for Duke as Notre Dame head coach. That presumably is due to some combination of Brey’s basic ability, his lack of awe for his old stomping grounds and his familiarity with Krzyzewski and Coach K’s system and tendencies.
Kelly may have relinquished offensive play-calling, and his new coordinators may have tweaked things. Yet Notre Dame still is a Brian Kelly program, and Chuck Martin’s familiarity with Kelly goes way back to the small college level (where, incidentally, Martin, as a head coach, matched Kelly’s small college national championship tally).
In a stroke of poetic symmetry, Chuck Martin and Miami of Ohio warmed up for Notre Dame by blowing out Central Michigan last week, Brian Kelly’s former ball club where Kelly first broke into Div. I-A/FBS a little more than a decade ago.
Expect to see Notre Dame to have a marginal size and talent advantage, and try to ride their running game, uneven as it is, to some kind of plodding advantage. However, also expect to see Miami play harder, and Notre Dame potentially to be a bit flat. And remember, even in the games where Notre Dame won by multiple scores this year, things stayed even for a while. Against Michigan State, Notre Dame was even decisively outgained, and only acquitted themselves by seizing opportunities when the Spartans beat themselves with a rash of turnovers.
The law of averages might come back to bite Notre Dame on the neck, if their sporadic quarterback play produces some turnovers. And expect Chuck Martin to have his underdog ballclub to at least play with discipline and intensity.
So we might, indeed, see Notre Dame in a dogfight for at least part of the game, and
for that dogfight to drag on if Notre Dame has had a cozy week believing their own press clippings, and come out flat. Expect Miami to have a chance to win if Notre Dame starts making mistakes and committing turnovers while Miami plays disciplined and plays hard.
But is this a must-win game? Probably.
If Notre Dame loses, they take a 3-2 record into a road game in the Carolinas during hurrican season, against a North Carolina team easy to underestimate with a lulling record, who nevertheless hung within one or two touchdowns of multiple strong opponents. That’s followed up by a game against an elite Southern Cal and tough games against North Carolina State, at Miami of Florida, home against Wake Forest, and on the road against Navy and Stanford.
So if Notre Dame gets upset by Chuck Martin and Miami of Ohio, and falls to 3-2, even if they manage to rebound with a win at North Carolina — not at all a given — they could then find themselves struggling to stay above .500 against a slate of six opponents across the second half of the season who each have the ability to beat Notre Dame.
The Irish are still three wins away from bowl eligibility. One of the most embarrassing factors to emerge last season was not simply that Notre Dame went into the tank at 4-8, or that they curled up in a ball against Southern Cal once things started to go against them (in stark contrast to what the 4-6 Notre Dame team under Lou Holtz who staged an inspired rally to beat a ranked Southern Cal in the Coliseum to close out Holtz’s first season). What was even more embarrasing was the realization that, setting aside all that PR hype about academics, Notre Dame went into that game knowing that they were not, at all, guaranteed a bowl bid exception even if they climbed to a 5-7 record. There has been no indication that they have improved their academic standing, by the actual NCAA measures that count, to go to a bowl at 5-7 (although the number of bowls has proliferated so much, who knows).
If Notre Dame can find a way to win against Miami of Ohio and Chuck Martin, and somehow avoid hurricanes and take care of business at North Carolina, they would at least be one win away from bowl eligibility before heading into the murderer’s row gauntlet of those final six games.
If they lose to Miami of Ohio, in addition to the mathematical implications, that could invoke yet another Brian Kelly tendency — the skid. In addition the the “Flat Game” tradition there’s the tradition of “The Skid.” Losing to Miami of Ohio, then heading to hurricane-ridden Carolinas against a North Carolina team that hung within 5 points of Cal, within 12 points of Louisville and within 10 points of Duke would not bode well for Notre Dame avoiding The Skid.
And, as mentioned, Notre Dame is 0-1 against teams in the top-15. In that final stretch of six opponents, two are ranked in the top-15 and several more should be at least top-25, five of the six are getting votes in the polls. The only opponent in that final stretch who is not getting votes yet is undefeated and has beaten Notre Dame multiple times in the past decade.
A must-win game is a game that helps if you win, and can have a catastrophic impact if you lose.
So is Notre Dame’s match-up with Miami of Ohio a must-win game for Notre Dame?
Probably.