Dateline: Flint Lake, IN
- The Wizard of Oz's Dorothy discovering not only is she not in Kansas anymore -- but that wicked witches and flying monkeys would actually be a quality of life improvement.
- Field of Dreams' Moonlight Graham accused of some truly awful things -- although on the bright side, if a reformed Hitler youth chokes on a currywurst in the courtroom, he'd be your go-to guy.
- Hogan's Heroes' Colonel Klink turning out to be quite the opposite of the bumbling idiot he portrayed in the POW camp.
Quote of the Week
Word of the Week.
- the Wadden - Marcel golf swing tips leading to (more) consistent ball striking
- going down a martini rabbit hole (how James Bond could do anything after drinking his Vesper martini was beyond belief for Jerrence)
- the granddaughter's visit and her consistent challenge of his worldviews and orthodoxies.
Summertime Thoughts
"Keep going, Louise!" |
Buddy's Buddy
RE-PETE (A shameless, illegal lift of Pete Sampson's weekly mail-bag)
I can understand whiffing on Derek Meadows, a five-star receiver that ended up in the SEC. But why is it so hard for Notre Dame to find a couple of solid four-star wideouts? The passing attack isn’t that archaic for crying out loud. — Gerrard L.
It’s a fair question. It’s also healthy to put Meadows in a separate category. Losing a five-star receiver to a school like LSU that regularly puts out first-round receivers and counts Ja’Marr Chase and Justin Jefferson as former players? No shame in that. Notre Dame’s NFL production at receiver is non-existent (20 catches for 171 yards among four receivers last year). You’re selling Meadows on being the guy who can change that. LSU can sell Meadows on being the next big thing at a place that does big things really well.
As for the second part of the question: Notre Dame’s receiver class last year is a decent counter-argument. Cam Williams and Micah Gilbert were national-level prospects. Logan Saldate was a good regional one. If Notre Dame can stack classes like Williams-Gilbert-Saldate annually, the program would be good long-term. On top of that, receiver is the most transfer portal friendly position, meaning finding one or two versions of Beaux Collins, Jayden Harrison and Kris Mitchell should be/can be a regular thing. Notre Dame wants to “major in high school recruiting,” per Freeman, but adding annually at receiver feels sustainable.
If you look at the national trends in recruiting receivers, Notre Dame’s issue has been more talent identification than getting numbers, although the ’25 haul has issues on both fronts.
Just to make the point, here are four blind high school recruiting hauls at wide receiver during the past four cycles (2022-25):
- Team A: Six four-stars, three three-stars
- Team B: Seven four-stars, three three-stars
- Team C: Six four-stars, one three-star
- Team D: One five-star, five four-stars, two three-stars
Those teams are Georgia (A), Notre Dame (B), Texas (C) and USC (D).
Yes, Notre Dame is way off the pace of LSU, Alabama and Ohio State. Basically everybody is. This year’s receiver haul has been a disaster to date. But the group of Rico Flores Jr., Jaden Greathouse and Braylon James also looks like a mess. Three years ago, the Irish went all in on Tobias Merriweather, CJ Williams and Amorion Walker. Also a disaster.
Point being, the fix here is not “sign more four-star receivers!” It’s do a better job identifying talent in high school that matches Notre Dame, then do a better job developing that in South Bend. This isn’t an issue tied to a single assistant coach or even a single head coach. It’s a program problem that Notre Dame needs to fix. Mike Denbrock and Riley Leonard can help.
Cocktail of the Month
Barcelona (11.07) |
Bishop would've enjoyed Brazil's national drink when she lived in Rio de Janeiro. Made from cachaça -- which, like rum, is a liquor derived from sugarcane, and unlike rum, can be produced only from freshly pressed sugarcane juice as opposed to molasses -- the caipirinha retains a tell-tale grassy funkiness.
Bishop's favorite cachaça was called Tatu, its bottle emblazoned with the image of an armadillo -- the same animal that would be the subject and title of her famous poem for Robert Lowell.
Schedule 2024
Wager 2024
Wins | Director - ND Equivalence | Domer |
12 Christopher Nolan | The Nick Saban of the film world - Nolan is Mr. Swing For The Fences Big Idea Guy, even if every effort isn't always a home run. But they are undeniably ... epic. Just like a 12-0 season. | Kevin C, Matt L |
11 Martin McDonagh | Hello, he's Irish! Solidly predictable for always being really, really good. And as his reputation has been burnished, the star talent in his cast has followed. Sound familiar? | Jerrence, Daryl |
10 David Fincher |
Pretty much a stud in both film and TV formats. Always interesting, albeit with palpably dark undertones... one is never sure how the story is going to end up. Much like a 10 win season will feel like. | Pat B, |
9 Yorgos Lanthimos | Do I always understand what's going on his films? Nope. | |
8 Richard Linklater | Perhaps the product of recency bias - I quite liked 'Hit Man' - Linklater's films fall for this blogger into the "nice-fun-I see an interesting insight" category. They just don't feel especially memorable. Like we'd view an 8 win season. | |
7 Wes Anderson | When does quirky/idiosyncratic become tiresome? When you feel like you're watching - again - an inside joke that you're not included in. Anderson attracts an an all-star cast that no longer seems to add up to the sum of their parts. In a word, disappointing. | |
6 Lars Von Trier | Uncomfortable. Unpleasant. Disturbing. Often off the rails, his films might be 'art' but it's tough to call it many people's definition of entertainment. | |
Schadenfreude of the Week.
Terry's Tools.
Name of the Month
No doubt Notre Dame beat writers will be salivating over the headlines that'll almost write themselves if young Mr. Johnson signs on to a part of Freeman's Class of '26.