All week, I couldn’t shake the thought that Notre Dame was going to win comfortably over Indiana. (And they did. 27-17, final score, and it wasn’t that close.)
It’s not the Hoosiers’ fault. The idea some will probably start trumpeting that IU didn’t belong in this playoff because their schedule was too weak was, in my opinion, mostly silliness. The best at-large team that was left out was, depending on your point of view, 9-3 Alabama or 10-2 Miami. Miami didn’t play anyone either (and probably should’ve been 9-3, maybe even 8-4), and Alabama lost to two mediocre teams the likes of which IU crushed all season. The Hoosiers should’ve been in, full stop.
However, the unavoidable, undeniable problem they faced in this matchup was one Notre Dame fans are familiar with in Playoff matchups: The other team just flat-out had better players at every position.
It did not take very long for that concept to bear fruit.
🫶🫶🫶
9️⃣8️⃣ yards
Jeremiyah Love is a BAD MAN#GoIrish
— Notre Dame Football (@NDFootball) December 21, 2024
From there, ND largely controlled the game on the ground and on defense, with an occasional nice pass play mixed in. It didn’t have to be exotic tonight, because it all worked. However, the Irish did pull out a couple of new special teams tricks, running a reverse on the second half’s opening kickoff that helped start a drive in IU territory and tricking Curt Cignetti into wasting a timeout with some fake field goal weirdness.
Some thoughts on ND’s biggest postseason win of my conscious life:
This is a tough program, and especially a tough defense
I haven’t actually looked up to see if anyone else in the playoff is dealing with the injury concerns Notre Dame is, so I won’t say for sure the Irish have the lead in that unfortunate category. I will say that if ND is NOT leading that category, whoever is is damn impressive, because what we are seeing is well past ridiculous at this point.
Rylie Mills, Rocco Spindler and Bryce Young were added to the walking wounded during the victory; their status is unknown at this point. They join a list that includes (and I’m just listing guys who I know are done for the season) two of ND’s best pass rushers, its best cover corner, a projected starting offensive lineman and probably more key guys I’m forgetting. That also doesn’t include guys who were injured for large chunks of the year and are now back.
And basically none of that mattered, because the newly-extended Marcus Freeman has built a tough program. No way the Notre Dame of 2018 and 2020 survives that kind of rotten injury luck. Heck, we know the ’18 team didn’t; it only took one cornerback getting hurt for Clemson to junk whatever its game plan was and target his replacement over and over and over again for touchdowns.
This group, particularly the defense, just keeps burying teams. IU was basically never able to do much on offense – they averaged 2.3 yards per carry – until the late stages, which didn’t technically count as garbage time but certainly wasn’t NOT garbage time. Kurtis Rourke is not particularly mobile, and that proved to be an issue against a ND pass rush that did a very good job getting home throughout most of the game.
Riley Leonard
It again was not a game full of dimes and exceptionally pretty stats from the quarterback. That’s not his game and almost certainly never will be. But it was damn effective. He completed 23-of-32 – and probably should’ve had a couple of more – and included some clutch third-down conversions. Leonard wasn’t a big factor in the run game this time, with only 30 yards, but his mobility was an asset again at a few key moments.
And while the stakes weren’t particularly high by the time he made his deep throw to Jordan Faison to precede ND’s final touchdown, it was probably his most impressive play of the season all things considered. There’s no way in hell he makes that throw in September. He’s a different guy now.
riley leonard; jordan faison pic.twitter.com/dnUbb4RGbT
— ◇ (@H00DH3R0) December 21, 2024
If you haven’t read Riley’s Players Tribune essay, do yourself a favor. It’s longer than it needs to be, but it’s full of good anecdotes. Leave it to him to sum up what we all love about our head coach in one sentence: “He makes you feel like you’re not playing for him, you’re playing with him.”
(And a tip of the cap to Faison, the day’s top receiver for both sides. I’m not sure he’s ever looked quite like the guy from the second half of last season, and to whatever extent that’s true we can blame the high ankle sprain from the Texas A&M game, but he made several really nice plays tonight, and he’ll absolutely be needed going forward.)
A statement program win
While I, as mentioned above, was not a fan of Sean McDonough’s “gee, I don’t know if IU should’ve been here” routine towards the end of the game – we’ve been there, Hoosier bros, trust me – it was sure nice to be on the other side of that discussion for once. Notre Dame was a physical, overpowering, dominant football team Friday night, and they left no doubt. But for IU’s window-dressing scores at the end of the game, it was every bit as dominant a win over them as Ohio State administered in November, and there were no terrible punt snaps or blatantly self-inflicted wounds needed for this one.
Too much cyber-ink has been spilled about the previous Notre Dame coach and comparisons to Marcus Freeman. This is Freeman’s program now, and it has been for some time. He just delivered ND’s first CFP win, and its biggest postseason win in 31 years. And he did it decisively. Only the clowniest of clowns on the Internet is skeptical of Notre Dame’s place in college football now.
(This is where I weigh in on the “Curt Cignetti is kind of a gasbag” conversation that is starting to pop around a bit. It is definitely more than a little annoying, just from a football fan perspective that he coached like a doofus at times Friday after popping off with the “we beat the s— out of Top 25 teams” comment on GameDay – there was simply no acceptable explanation for punting the football early in the fourth quarter already down 17 – but I really don’t care if he’s mouthy. It’s not really my cup of tea, but he’s coaching a program that has no history of success to lean on. I think programs like that need guys who maybe come off as gasbags sometimes to imbue some confidence into the fan base. Hopefully, IU is back in the playoff sooner than later.)
We have a kicker again!
Mitch Jeter needs to kick the ball higher, but him drilling that 49-yard field goal late in the first half was such a load off. It was easy to tell how much that moment meant to both Jeter and Marcus Freeman by their celebrations.
He’s probably still not the automatic guy ND thought it was getting – see the block – but at some point ND is probably going to need him to drill a clutch kick late in a game, and there’s evidence again that he can do it.
Three more
The friends in the desert have installed Georgia as slight favorites – by a point – in the Sugar Bowl. I hope we hear some good injury news before then, because ND may need it in order to win.
Georgia is as talented as any team in the country, whether the Bulldogs have their starting quarterback or not. I don’t know if Notre Dame will win.
But the great thing is, there is really no legitimate reason at all to think they can’t.
Hope is a good thing. Maybe the best of things. See you on New Year’s night.
I truly love watching this team. The offense can frustrate me but, they rarely make huge mistakes, the defense though, never disappoints. This team is coached to play winning FB and absolutely believes in their coaches. Their faith in their coaches is truly remarkable. Freeman’s belief in himself has grown too, His aggressiveness, will usually get applause. (though the fake FG tonight was not wise)
Hopefully we’re healthy in eleven days. If so, UGA has their hands full.
A few of my thoughts after the game:
– Mid-watch last night, I made a comment to my wife how bizarre and quickly the broadcast went from fellating IU to shitting on them.
– Hand to whichever deity you subscribe to, before the play occurred I mentioned that a 98-yd TD rush would be dope as hell.
– That was an all-out ass kicking, which sucks the score doesn’t reflect. The first half especially, it seemed like ND was /enjoying/ beating the shit out of IU, which they absolutely should have been enjoying. Earlier this year the ass kickings seemed more like business, this one seemed pleasurable for the guys.
– RL was cool and calm in the pocket. What a game he played. 100% correct on the long pass to Faison being his play of the year.
– While it’s good ND didn’t end up getting stopped in the red zone and IU used a time out, sucks that fake FG was wasted. That would have been nice to have in the pocket when it was more necessary.
– I think it was Jeter’s first FG – sweet geeze that kick changed direction 2 or 3 times before deciding to go right down the middle.
– Beau Collins, c’mon man. Another drop and lazy on that first onside kick. Don’t wait for the ball to come to you, go get the ball.
– Surprised IU didn’t try more passing early. They weren’t really having success on the ground.
– McElroy looked like he was 3rd generation funeral home director.
– If the air in NW Indiana was anything like it was in eastern Iowa, that was a much colder game than the temperature alone would indicate. Hope the fans enjoyed it and even got a few flurries in the second half.
– CMF was going berserk on the sidelines in the mid 3rd Q (~9 mins left). Told the sideline judge “I’m gonna need you to go ahead and do your job” but I don’t think we ever picked up on what he was pissed about. Did this come up in a post game interview?
– Whatever the opposite of a postmortem is is much more fun. Good game.
Go ND. Beat Dogs/Lions/Ducks (or Longhorns).
One last, edited thought – curious what % of points ND has given up that have been in garbage/garbage-adjacent time. Gotta be close to 60%, right? I’m going to try to crunch the numbers and answer myself. EDIT – 41/163 = 25%. I was way off. Maybe recency bias with IU, USC, Army, UVA & GA Tech all doing it in the back half of the schedule.
That’s the ESPN special. I’ve seen them do it so many times live during boxing matches once they decide their guy isn’t going to win. It’s kinda funny but mostly boorish.
He did the same thing on the second one AND the kick took almost as wild as a bounce and I was about to lose it for a split second.
Did the blocking on the blocked FG attempt look weird to anyone else? By weird I mean lazy. The guys from the snapper on right looked like they barely leaned forward to push and, surprise surprise, the IU defenders were able to leap high and get hands up.
I suspect the special team units might be spending too much practice time on trick plays instead of, you know, FGs and kickoff.
Fg blocking has been an issue all season, but also, Jeter may have line-drove that one too. Still, as a blocker you got to get hands down, so punch stomach’s of rushers.
Kickoff is fine, I suspect you meant kick return? That’s been a tough one, and we definitely got “beauxregarded” on the onside kick. He must be a REALLY nice guy, because judas priest, he is consistently a liability in all facets of his play.
Jeter’s kick definitely seemed low for that distance but letting them go up that easily shouldn’t have happened either. It’s like the Bears blocked kicks this year.
I meant onside kicks.
As a fan from 2005, I’m really going to savor this game. There was a lot of pressure, and the conditions were rough. It was nice to see high levels of execution and pretty consistent control of a decent opponent. It’s a relief not to have to be the target of “Did they even belong?” this morning.
I also like imperfect wins in CFB. They aren’t satisfying, but they are wins and sources for motivation.