That someone who lost, was Notre Dame. On a crazed night in Athens with Georgia fans frothing at the mouth, the Fighting Irish stood up toe-to-toe to one of the SEC favorites while falling short on a would-be game-winning drive. One the one hand, it was a frustrating night full of penalties and missed opportunities while on the other hand Notre Dame stayed right there stride for stride with Georgia for most of the game.

Yet, another big game loss and a reminder that the Irish are close but still lack the horses in these massively huge games. Let’s recap the 6-point defeat to Georgia.

Stats Package

STAT IRISH DAWGS
Score 17 23
Plays 61 59
Total Yards 321 339
Yards Per Play 5.26 5.74
Conversions 5/16 4/11
Completions 29 20
Yards Per Attempt 5.85 7.19
Rushes 14 33
Rushing Success 42.8% 42.4%
10+ Yds Rushing 0 7
Defense Stuff Rate 24.5% 19.6%

 

Offense

QB: B
RB: D
TE: A+
OL: B-
WR: C

This felt like a game where Notre Dame played far from perfect on offense, went into a funk (3 drives to open the second half totaling 9 yards on 9 plays, plus 2 picks on the first 4 drives of the second half), made plenty of mental mistakes, but in the end somehow finished right where I think their ceiling is in a game against Georgia with a few players missing due to injury.

Certainly, they put the game on Book’s shoulders and I think he acquitted himself well enough. The 10-play 75-yard touchdown drive to get within 6 points late is something for the Irish quarterback to take away for confidence moving forward. Book either dropped back to pass or ran the ball on 81.9% of all snaps finishing with 293 yards of offense. In a game that saw Notre Dame gain almost 2 yards per play more than the 2017 matchup with Georgia it was mostly due to Book stepping up because he had precious little help.

It’s debatable if the Irish should’ve run more. In a perfect world yes, but with so much reliance on Tony Jones (7 of Georgia’s 12 stuffs came on Jones’ touches) it would’ve been difficult. Moving forward, obviously getting the run game much improved for a game like this has to be a priority. Only 3 successful runs from a running back and no carries from anyone over 10 yards isn’t going to cut it.

By the way, the Irish converted both of their third and short opportunities in the game, including one Tony Jones run. After such a freak out in the first two games that’s likely to get lost in the defeat to Georgia.

Chip Long came out immediately with a varied game plan that loosened up Georgia knowing the Irish weren’t going to count on running a bunch inside. It’s times like these where you wish the offense had that ability to do everything but hats off to the staff for not slamming their head into the wall and really looking bad on a big stage. The offense seemed to lose some of its dynamic play-calling in the second half, I have to assume Georgia made some big adjustments.

Run Success

Jones 3 of 9 (33.3%)
Book 2 of 3 (66.6%)
Keys 1 of 2 (50.0%)

Welcome back, Cole Kmet! The tight end shined brightly with 9 catches for 108 yards with a touchdown easily becoming Notre Dame’s biggest weapon on the night. Add in Tremble’s 20-yard catch (and effective blocking) and this was a tremendous night for the tight end position.

Unfortunately, it was a poor night for the receivers. Only 2 of Book’s first 8 targets to Claypool were completed (this did include one pass interference call though) and the majority of the wideout’s production came late in the game on the final touchdown drive.

It was a bad time for Chris Finke to have his worst career game. Despite a circus catch off the back of a Georgia defender, Finke bobbled a catch leading to an interception and didn’t attack the sideline throw that lead to Book’s second interception. One poor game could be excused but with just 7 catches for 81 yards (most of that damage coming on last week’s pop pass) it’s been frustrating to see Notre Dame really struggle to find a consistent second receiver.

In just one game, Kmet moves up to the second-leading receiver in yardage for 2019!

It’s too bad that 6 false starts (5 from the line) marred what was a pretty good performance overall for the offensive line. Book was not sacked and officially there were no hurries from Georgia’s defense. This too will likely get lost in the pain of the defeat–the line protected Book well enough for the offense to move the ball through the air and did reasonably well in the few times they decided to run the ball.

Defense

DL: B
LB: A
DB: B+

There’s no question the Irish defense should get most of the applause after this game. It was far from a dominant performance against a very good offense but Notre Dame played right near their ceiling and kept the team in the game right until the end.

In fact, I think we can say Georgia’s running game was largely held in check. The tackling was impressive, the Dawgs were under 50% success rate on the night, and the longest run was only 16 yards. The 7 to 0 disparity in runs of 10+ yards shines a light on Notre Dame’s offensive woes in this area, although the Irish defense did have a stretch in the second half where they weren’t as strong limiting Georgia on the ground.

At one point, quarterback Jake Fromm was completing a bunch of passes but for little damage. That he ended up 1.3 YPA better than Book at the end of the game says something about both offenses. Fromm was efficient and his pair of third down conversions through the air on their first touchdown drive, and a big third down touchdown pass in the 4th quarter were massive plays.

On third/fourth down passing attempts, Fromm finished 5 of 9 for 42 yards with 3 first downs and the aforementioned touchdown. Book finished 6 of 13 for 40 yards with 2 first down throws, the 1-yard touchdown to Kmet, and an interception.

The Irish secondary held up well against someone who only threw 6 incompletions but they needed one more big play when Fromm was backed up on the sticks. Just one more play!

Stuffs vs. Georgia

(season stuffs in parentheses)

JOK – 3.5 (6)
White – 2.5 (7)
MTA – 2.5 (5.5)
Kareem – 2 (4)
Gilman – 1 (5)
Lamb – 1 (1)
Bilal – 0.5 (5)
Hinish – 0.5 (1.5)
Moala – 0.5 (0.5)

We’ve talked in the past about the inaccuracy of charting quarterback hurries (how many games have you seen no sacks or hurries from both teams?) but the Irish definitely made Fromm uncomfortable a handful of times. That includes a couple snaps from Julian Okwara who nonetheless still feels like he’s massively underachieving this year. To date, just 4 tackles and one sack!

The good news is that the Irish remain consistently productive in the stuffs department. Georgia was off schedule a lot more than I’m betting they thought they’d be and it was this aspect to the game that really contributed to the Dawgs unable to put things away in the second half when the Irish offense was sputtering.

In my game preview I bet that the Notre Dame offense and defense SP+ rankings would feel inverted against Georgia. As those numbers adjust throughout the season I believe we got a good glimpse that the defense is by far the stronger unit and will carry this team in many games this year.

Final Thoughts

Do we want to imagine this game without Kmet in the lineup? I wasn’t on his bandwagon prior to this season and needed evidence that he was a game-changing tight end. Sold! Unfortunately, the drop-off from Claypool/Kmet to the other skill players is just so massive right now. Development of some younger players is going to be so crucial for this program.

The running backs (Jones and Davis) combined for 15 touches for 45 yards, just a measly 3 yard average. Georgia’s running backs finished with 32 touches for 144 yards.

I was shocked that Ian Book didn’t run the ball more. Only one first half carry! Previously, Book’s fewest carries in a game was 6 and he only finished with 3 against Georgia. A bit strange to me.

I didn’t hate Smart’s decision to kick the late field goal (from a UGA perspective) as I would’ve probably done the same feeling like my defense was holding Notre Dame in check. You were betting the Irish couldn’t put together 2 touchdown drives late in the game when they hadn’t drove the whole field for a touchdown even once up to that point, and Kirby won that bet.

It’s a bad idea to run a flea-flicker and even worse idea to run a flea-flicker where two of the receivers are running out of real estate to the boundary side. Also, great corner blitz call by Georgia to disrupt the play and even better interception from the safety.

By my count, the Irish threw the ball on 17 of 24 (70.8%) first down opportunities. That’s skewed a little bit by the final touchdown drive but it does seem like when the chips are down this offense is throwing two-thirds of the time on first down.

Prior to the season I thought this was a 9-3 team. Following the performance on Saturday I would definitely bet on a 10-2 record. Where will the other loss come from? I’m not sure but there’s likely a game where the defense inexplicably doesn’t play well and I’m positive there will be at least two more games where the offense really struggles and puts the Irish in a tight contest. Beware this weekend with Virginia in a classic let down spot.

Are we talking enough about how well Jay Bramblett has punted so far this year?

Don’t look now but Jeremiah Owusu-Koramoah is leading the defense in solo tackles. He’s also on pace for 82 tackles and 19.5 tackles for loss on the season.

Book has really improved his pocket presence over the last 2 games but boy that last snap of the game really did him in for good. He would’ve had a perfect opportunity to fire an accurate pass if he just stepped up into the pocket. Remember there was just under one minute remaining and the offense only needed 9 yards on 4th down. Resorting to a Hail Mary in that moment was a major fail for the offense.