4th and 16. The 2023 season, not to mention a potential firestorm week the likes of which Marcus Freeman has never seen, hung in the balance Saturday night at Duke.

And Sam Hartman worked his magic.

You have to believe Hartman took it personally when he came up short, literally (in the first quarter) and figuratively, in key moments last week. This time, Hartman took off and, incredibly, got 18 yards and the first down.

And then Audric Estime took it to the house. Notre Dame wins, 21-14.

(Footnote – this game ended Hartman’s 35-game streak with a touchdown pass. I’m sure he does not care.)

Some disjointed thoughts:

The final drive bailed out a disgustingly ugly game

The question all week was how Notre Dame would respond. I myself said we’d learn a ton about how Marcus Freeman handled a new kind of adversity. The verdict – this team has guts, but holy crap was some of it awful.

The pre-snap penalties – I lost track of how many – were just inexcusable. Two false starts on the center (the center?), lining up offsides at least twice, another missed field goal, whatever in God’s name Chris Tyree was trying to do on that punt…this was not the game of a well-coached, focused team. So in that respect, there remain a bunch of questions.

Questions like: Is the light ever going to turn on for Tobias Merriweather? Why couldn’t an offensive line that largely pushed around Ohio State create nearly as much running room against Duke? How on earth do you even think to look for targeting on a totally innocous-looking quarterback keeper?

But imagine trying to answer those questions after handing yet another program a signature moment at Notre Dame’s expense, something this team has majored in over the past 25 years. At least ND managed not to do that.

Howard Effing Cross

A week or two ago, our writer’s room noticed that Howard Cross was Pro Football Focus’ top-rated defensive tackle this year to date. He is the only DT in the country to be rated in the top 10 against both the pass and the run. The reaction was, mostly, bemusement.

Cross? Him? We haven’t really seen much of him. Really?

Well, now we get it. Thirteen tackles would be a really impressive total for a linebacker. For a defensive tackle it’s basically unheard of. And Cross made his presence known on the final defensive play of the game, knocking the ball loose from Riley Leonard for a fumble that ND – FINALLY, after an incomprehensible 10 fumbles this season without a recovery – fell on to secure the win.

(And by the way, he apparently played the game with a sinus infection.)

Unfortunately, the play also resulted in what looked like a serious ankle injury for Leonard. No one wanted to see that, and hopefully the Duke signal-caller will end up being alright. I’m sure he wanted to play better Saturday, but he certainly displayed resilience and game toughness at major moments.

Mitchell Evans has officially arrived

Without Jayden Thomas or Jaden Greathouse, the Notre Dame receiver room desperately needed a boost. The hope was it would come from Merriweather or Tyree. No go on either of those. Instead, Evans delivered, nearly going for 100 yards in the first half alone and seemingly coming up with a big catch whenever it was needed.

After the NC State game it appeared for all the world Holden Staes was about to make his name as the next great Notre Dame tight end, with the less explosive Evans lost in the shuffle. But Evans, already a key factor in the running game, has emerged as an incredible safety valve for Hartman of late. He evokes memories of John Carlson or Anthony Fasano, finding his spot and grabbing the ball seemingly no matter what. (His ridiculous circus catch early in the game wasn’t quite as good as his Ohio State grab, but it goes right there on his highlight reel.)

Exhale

We were very close, depressingly close to a reckoning for the Marcus Freeman era. Notre Dame was up 13-0 at one point in this one and probably ought to have been up at least 10 more (of course, given that Duke missed two makeable field goals, I’m sure they have their own regrets) and then they got swept under a wave of Duke momentum. It was a near-disaster that the Irish averted through sheer nerve.

I recall the motto of 2021 was to survive to the bye week after the first two weeks created white-knucklers. Notre Dame won’t have that luxury. They’ll face a probably ranked Louisville in a similar situation to tonight’s Duke game next week, and then Southern Cal comes calling the week after. If the Irish are to make themselves heard in the postseason picture, they’ll have to be much better than they were tonight.