Since you're in Louisiana, we have a mission... |
The 5 Stages of Grief
2. Anger. 6pm. The reports are true! What an asshole.
Dateline: Flint Lake IN
Text of the Week |
Quote of the Week
"These guys are such great athletes. They look like they don't have a brain cell in their head... but they sure can play."
Kay Corriganwatching Ole Miss v. Mississippi St.
Word of the Week
Game 12 Thoughts
- 2007: 3-9
- 2008: 7-6
- 2009: 6-6
- Fun fact: 9 out of the top 14 ranked teams this year are headed by guys who were internal hires, promoted into those positions. It's not an anomaly for this to work.
- And it's not like hiring away Stanford's head coach worked out for us.
- The State of the Program. Exponentially better than it ever was for any of those other missteps.
- The continuity of a skilled, proven staff is huge. Marcus won't be in this alone, especially with Rees in his 3rd year.
- Recruiting. Talent doesn't just matter. At the college level, it's everything. (One need only look at Georgia for proof of that.)
- Freeman is a freaking machine here - as will he make his staff. And if I were Ohio State I'd be a little nervous about how strong that wall you think you have around the state.)
- Final thought: knowing how well Freeman connects with recruits, don't you think hiring him clarifies his status with for those kids? They now know he'll be there for them. That's a huge positive.
5) Upgrades? As dick-ish a move as Kelly pulled, Notre Dame does not seem to come out of this wholly unscathed. Let's hope this blindside spurs a greater sense of urgency to getting to parity with the other elite programs on off the field issues, like facilities (e.g. training table) and staffing (e.g. back office recruiting support) that they appear to be woefully behind.
Buddy's Buddy
RE-PETE (A shameless, illegal lift of Pete Sampson's weekly mail-bag)
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — The sentiment summed up the last 37 hours of Notre Dame football succinctly.
“So that video had a little different response from yesterday’s, huh?” said a program source not long after Tommy Rees told his players that he was staying with the Irish.
Notre Dame scored its second win over its old coach in as many days on Wednesday night when Rees chose to remain in South Bend over following Brian Kelly to LSU, turning down an offer that would have made him the highest-paid offensive coordinator in the SEC, sources told The Athletic. Not long after the move was announced, The Athletic’s Bruce Feldman reported defensive coordinator Marcus Freeman was expected to become the next Irish head coach.
Rees’ message to his players, delivered a little after 8 p.m. and tweeted by the program at 8:29, came one-and-a-half days after Kelly’s awkward exit speech at 7 a.m. Tuesday — a speech that, a source told The Athletic on Wednesday, was even more uncomfortable than the leaked video of the exchange had let on.
Kelly, out of the clip’s shot, chose to take the long route out of the Guglielmino Athletics Complex’s auditorium, walking a long flight of stairs to the second floor while passing his silent players and not making eye contact — the final scene of a meeting that turned out to be a gross miscalculation of how the ex-coach felt his players would respond to him leaving.
Now, with a new head coach at Notre Dame, Rees is expected to have total autonomy running the offense, a new element to his old position and one that appealed to the 29-year-old coach and former Irish quarterback.
For as much as Kelly had let loose in recent years, delegating play calling to his coordinator, this was still an offensive-minded head coach who was not above putting in play suggestions to the offensive staff as late as Thursday of game week, regardless of whether it had fit into Notre Dame’s weekly preparation or not.
According to sources, Rees deliberated the move Wednesday night at his home in South Bend, flanked by some of the program’s quarterbacks. Tyler Buchner and Drew Pyne both tweeted out #PayTommyRees during this time window before a mandatory meeting for offensive players was called at the Gug.
Rees, multiple sources told The Athletic, was on the verge of leaving for the lucrative offer in Baton Rogue before Notre Dame finally stepped up at the 11th hour and made him a competitive offer to stay at his alma mater.
“I love you guys. I love this place,” Rees told his players, according to the video. “I believe that we can win a national championship here and I’m committed to doing everything we can to get to that point.
“I know it’s been a hell of a week for you guys. I know it’s been a hell of a week for a lot of us that are a part of this place. This is where my heart is. I care too much to leave this place. This is where I want to be. This is where I want to win a national championship.”
The players applauded Rees’ announcement afterward, in stark contrast to Kelly’s pre-dawn meeting Tuesday. Rees hugged several players after his announcement.
From there, the first staff of the Freeman regime began to take shape.
Irish Illustrated reported that tight ends coach John McNulty was also expected to remain on staff. McNulty joined Notre Dame’s staff two years ago after working with Rees on the NFL level. The veteran assistant is popular among his position group, including with All-America candidate Michael Mayer.
The Athletic’s Feldman reported that running backs coach Lance Taylor would be staying at Notre Dame. Defensive line coach Mike Elston tweeted his intention to stay as well.
And all of this came one day after strength coach Matt Balis — in a colorful video of his own — told his players that he planned on staying put.
Make no mistake: Notre Dame would still be searching for a new head coach right now if not for Rees, whose decision to stay lends continuity to an Irish roster that is amid the winningest five-year stretch in program history, and whose opt-in was the most critical factor in Notre Dame deciding to move ahead and make the 35-year-old Freeman a first-time head coach.
Terms of Freeman’s deal to become head coach had yet to be ironed out as of late Wednesday night, a source told The Athletic, with Notre Dame still needing to run the process through proper university channels.
In separate individual interviews Tuesday night and Wednesday afternoon, respectively, Rees and Freeman impressed AD Jack Swarbrick with their visions for maximizing the potential of a program that has made the College Football Playoff in two out of the last three seasons, providing detailed plans on how to take Notre Dame to the next level.
In Rees, Notre Dame retains one of the bright young minds in the sport, a coordinator who has built three distinct Irish offenses in the span of two seasons. Last year, that meant building around a veteran offensive line and three-year starting quarterback Ian Book, a ground-first approach that got Notre Dame to the Playoff. This season, that approach changed to a more vertical pass game with graduate transfer Jack Coan at quarterback. When that approach struggled behind a young offensive line, Rees adjusted his approach to a quick, tempo passing game that brought the best out of Coan, and Notre Dame finished 11-1 with an outside shot at returning to the Playoff.
If the first 24 hours after Kelly’s departure were defined by shock and confusion over what Notre Dame had just lost, the ensuing 24 hours have turned out to be a blueprint of how Notre Dame will win moving forward.
“We have work to do this year,” Rees said. “And for the guys that are coming back, let’s go win a f—— national championship at Notre Dame.”
Cocktail of the Week
A dark and dizzyingly talented poet, Sylvia Plath struggled for years on this semi-autobiographical novel before finally dashing off the complete text in 70 breathless days.
Schedule
Wager
The main tenets of Plato's Republic? Nailed it. |
1) The next step will be a bowl-related tie breaker, continuing the practice of picking the primary January 1st games including the spread.
Wins | Archetype (Embodies) | Domer |
12 | Miracle On Ice To be clear, ND running the table wouldn't come remotely close to approximating the USA ice hockey victory over Russia in '80. Nothing in my lifetime will beat this. Nor will anything exceed the guilt I still have for ruining this for Castellini. Still ND going 12-0 seems similarly tough to envision with the little we know right now. |
Dave M. |
11 | Kerry Strug One final vault. Hit it, basically perfectly, and your country wins the gold medal. No pressure. Oh and you just tore two ligaments in your ankle on your prior attempt - you can barely walk. But apparently, you still have one more sprint in you. Boom! Done. ND winning 11 games is not really analogous to this but right now, it's looking just as iffy. | Jay F. Bill B. Bob J. Dave G. Peter B. Jim S. Jim B. Daryl M. Dennis R. Mike C. |
10 | Super Bowl III | Phillip S. Jerry P. Jim T. Tim S. The Dim One Ungie Bob S. Alex S. Ted C. Tom F. Mike G. |
9 | NC St over Phi Slamma Jamma |
Ward H. |
8 | Villanova over Georgetown In terms of improbability, you could probably flip this game w NC State's victory - they were both pretty awesome in a vicarious way. These rankings all being relative vs. the others, it's feeling 8'ish even if it probably deserves better. |
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7 | ND over Miami, 1988 Was this improbable at the time? Depends on who you ask - and if they're honest. Miami owned ND in the '80s. And yet, Holtz & Co. made everyone believe. Impressive, definitely. But on a scale of 1-10 as unlikely, maybe a 7. | |
6 | ND over Clemson, 2020 | |
5 | ND over Florida St., 1993 After the '88 Miami win, with Holtz still in charge... while never a 'lock', beating FSU was certainly no great surprise. And ultimately tempered by spitting the bit the next week against BC. | |
4 | If anyone wishes to play down here... | |
3 | ...be my guest. |
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Schadenfreude of the Week
Terry's Tools
It's rare that one gets such consistent, single-mindedness, categorically, of candidate.
Lucky me (us). But this week, it sure seems fitting.
At any rate, this is the "College Head Coach" edition of Terry's Tools.
And I am inclined to reiterate one my favorite expressions, of which there are a few permutations: "Crisis doesn't create character, it reveals it."
Well, consider us now paying attention.
The companion thought, which apparently doesn't apply to coaches, is this: It takes a lifetime to establish a reputation but only a minute to destroy it.
If you want me to stay...
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