Notre Dame’s 2025 recruiting class officially got underway 592 days ago when Miami defensive tackle Davion Dixon gave a verbal commitment to the school. For this recruiting cycle, the early signing period was moved up and away from bowl/playoff season and begins this Wednesday, December 4th while running through Friday, December 6th.

Last year, the Irish had a quiet 2024 recruiting cycle but these things rarely last forever. If you haven’t experienced ups and down as a fan you haven’t been following recruiting long enough. This class that is about to sign was full of a lot more drama and offered a lot more promise once upon a time.

Notre Dame’s 2025 Recruiting Class

Class Size: Welcome to the 105 Era

In case you missed it, the NCAA removed the headcount scholarship sports and increased scholarship limits for sports based on roster size. For football, programs are allowed an additional 20 scholarships to fill up 105 roster spots beginning with next year’s 2025-26 academic season. That means this incoming 2025 recruiting class will be the first freshmen as a part of this new system.

We may see freshmen high school classes grow in size but the early signs, at least for Notre Dame, are little change so far. In fact, the 24-man class for 2025 is right around the average size for Notre Dame from 2022-24–adding Schmidt yesterday just bumped it over the actual average. From a national perspective, Syracuse (33 commits) is the only program in the country right now with 30 or more verbals.

As mentioned in a previous scholarship article here at 18S, we’d expect the increase to 105 to mostly help walk-ons to become scholarship athletes while it may give the coaching staff a little more freedom to find a couple more pieces in the transfer portal.

Flip SZN: Breakfast for 5

Last year’s class was pretty stable and we didn’t see a big industry around Notre Dame trying to flip some players down the stretch. For 2025, a few more names flipped over to the Irish including the following: receiver/athlete Antavious Richardson from USF, offensive lineman Cameron Herron from Iowa, quarterback Blake Hebert from Clemson, running back Nolan James from Boston College, and kicker Erik Schmidt from Wisconsin.

The Losses: Less Fun

Notre Dame lost 7 commits from this cycle:

S Ivan Taylor (0.9677)
QB Deuce Knight (0.9860)
TE Nate Roberts (0.9328)
DE CJ May (0.8894)
WR Shaun Terry (0.8828)
RB Daniel Anderson (0.8800)
RB Justin Thurman (0.8875)

Taylor committed to Alabama, Knight has committed to Auburn (but continues to flirt with Ole Miss), Roberts gave a verbal to Ohio State, May committed to Louisville, Terry committed to Missouri, Anderson has yet to pick a new school since leaving Notre Dame’s class on October 3rd, while Thurman has given a verbal to Kansas.

Freeman Impact: The Gem Finder

Notre Dame continues to struggle to break through into the elite recruiting programs under Marcus Freeman. Last year’s class bounced back and forth before landing at 9th in the Composite rankings while the Irish sit at 12th nationally today just a smidge ahead of Oklahoma. The current average recruit ranking also sits at 90.48 points, the first time since the 2021 class that Notre Dame has dipped below 91 points on average according to the 247 points system.

Adding More Talent:

In addition to Daniel Anderson mentioned above, the following listed players have a scholarship offer from Notre Dame but remain uncommitted this week:

RB Jayshon Limar (0.8478) 
WR Jayce Cora (0.8700)
DE Zahir Mathis (0.9571)
DE Sharlandiin Strange (0.8833)
DE Andrew Hines (0.8514)
DT Isaiah Campbell (0.9825)
DT Tyler Parker (0.8385)
LB Madden Faraimo (0.9679)
LB Nathaniel Owusu-Boateng (0.9499)
ATH Michael Terry III (0.9789)
ATH Jett White (0.8808)

The Irish have faded with Owusu-Boateng after his visit last month which stinks. It looks like he’ll be deciding between Michigan, Colorado, or Texas. Notre Dame was hoping for good things to happen with Faraimo but as of this writing, he was trending towards USC following another visit this past weekend for the Notre Dame game.

There was hope that wide receiver Derek Meadows (0.9463) would come back into the picture with Notre Dame but he remains committed to LSU while figuring things out with a potential flip to Michigan or Alabama.

There was a flip chance for tight end Andrew Olesh (0.9692) after he visited but that too has faded.

Florida verbal and defensive tackle Jalen Wiggins (0.9378) visited last month and could be a flip down the stretch. However, it seems more likely he sticks with the Gators or flips to Florida State instead.

Most Underrated Prospect: Ko’o Kia

I don’t have a great reason for why Kia isn’t more highly rated. He didn’t get a ton of attention from schools east of the Mississippi but that’s not unusual for a Hawaiian prospect. Still, along with Notre Dame he had offers from Oregon, Texas, and USC among several other quality power programs.

A Hawaiian visiting with snow on the ground: good vibes. 

Kia has really impressive explosiveness and has the archetype of a fast, modern linebacker. His older brother also came back from a mission and was playing well above expectations for Notre Dame before suffering an injury earlier this season. Further, Kia plays at a nationally recognized high school like Punahou–it’s bizarre to me that he’s not even on the radar as a top linebacker in this class.

Strengths: Secondary

Adding more depth was important for 2025 with Xavier Watts and Benjamin Morrison destined for NFL Draft greatness, although the remaining talent level in the Irish secondary is strong enough that this cycle didn’t need to be a major hit. However, the core of Golden, Blair, Zackery, and Richardson (he could potentially play DB) is a tremendous core for this class and there’s a lot to like with Thomas and Long, too. It might not have been a home run type of positional grade for the secondary but it’s very good talent and numbers coming in soon.

Weaknesses: Wide Receiver

Everyone saw this coming all cycle long, and it remains depressing. Richardson is a complete burner with impressive speed and he’ll be needed at receiver for the Irish, although most of his other offers were as a defensive back. We’ll see how things pan out with the famous names of Burress and Bettis. There’s an interesting case to buy low with this group, however, this was a disappointing and frustrating cycle for this position that puts a ton of pressure on the 2026 class.

# of Early Enrollees: 12

It’s pretty much who isn’t enrolling early these days, isn’t it? The following are set to be taking classes and lifting weights with the program in January:

QB Blake Hebert
RB Nolan James
WR Elijah Burress
WR Jerome Bettis, Jr
WR Antavious Richardson
OL Owen Strebig
OL Matty Augustine
OL Cameron Herron
DL Davion Dixon
CB Cree Thomas
S Jadon Blair
S Ethan Long

It’s tough to predict how things will look in the spring in the transfer portal era. However, Notre Dame could potentially have an overwhelming amount of players to use on offense when practices begin in 2025.

According to reports, Hebert will be practicing with the team during playoff prep (like Carr did last year except the Irish were getting ready for the Sun Bowl and not a home playoff game).

Notre Dame’s Predicted Final Team Ranking for 2025: 14th

We should mention that Will Black is a massive recruit and On3’s no. 2 overall recruit which makes him one of the top players to sign with Notre Dame in recent memory. Unfortunately, it’s fair to say that this 2025 class as a whole is far too disappointing. To put things into perspective to see where the bar is set–Georgia has 5 commits ranked higher than Will Black in the Composite, while Alabama and Texas each have 4 apiece.

It’s difficult not to look past the lack of hype with the class on offense, with the aforementioned receiver situation, a re-setting and loss of both running back verbals, and with late flips to fill up the class at both running back and quarterback.

Three or four players who develop into stars in a class can change perceptions real quick, though. Can the Irish find them from this 2025 haul? I’m doubtful of that happening and the more likely route is this class comes through with 8 to 12 really quality players most of whom rise into starting roles down the line. Soon, we’ll turn our attention to 2026.