Notre Dame fans spent 3 quarters mostly fretting, complaining, maybe even doubting as the Irish slopped to a 7-point lead against NC State.

ND won by three touchdowns, 45-24.

It’s a choose-your-own-adventure type of day in the Irish fan base!

Secondary is primary

Remember barely a year ago, when ND was entering the Ohio State game and we were all convinced that with the green and (relatively) untalented secondary the Irish were fielding, there was no way they could be competitive?

Things have changed quite a bit. The secondary has been the rock of the defense, and especially today. The Irish picked off Brennan Armstrong three times (one each by three guys) and played terrific in coverage all day. Benjamin Morrison and Cam Hart are as good a CB duo as there is in the country, Xavier Watts had a fine game at safety, and Ramon Henderson flashed at times as well.

It’s rarely been more important in recent years for ND’s secondary to be good, given the Irish are still waiting for a game-wrecking defensive lineman to emerge. Today was the first time ND’s secondary faced a test, and it’s safe to say it passed. NC State’s scoring drives were all heavily aided by penalties, garbage time, or in one case, just a perfect throw and catch by Armstrong and Keyon Lesane. Hard to complain much about that.

Play-action success

Grinding an opponent down is nice and all, and Notre Dame had some success doing that over time, even if it was a bit frustrating at times along the way. (If you’re going to line up in that goofy wishbone set on a short-yardage play, you’d better block better.)

But the great thing about the running game (and having a good quarterback), is it turns the play-action game into a massive weapon. The key touchdown pass from Sam Hartman to Davis Sherwood in the fourth quarter was but the most obvious example. Mitchell Evans also went uncovered on the play, had Hartman decided to go that route.

The actual running game itself was not what you’d hope; outside of the badly needed 80-yard explosion by Audric Estime coming out of the weather delay, ND didn’t do a lot on the ground. But it was good enough to create opportunities in the pass game, and Hartman is obviously good enough to take advantage.

The 2nd-year HC continues to grow

No one enters a football game planning for a 2-hour weather delay, and it certainly seems ND didn’t; the report that the Irish had to go to the stadium concessions for food to keep the players fueled during the delay wasn’t the best look. However, on the field, the Irish came out and ran better offense after the delay. And while the penalty situation was abominable in the first half, ND only committed one in the second half, and that one was the shoulder-shrug, what-can-you-do roughing the passer for Jason Onye touching the quarterback’s helmet.

For whatever else you can say about these Irish, they seem very capable of avoiding driving into a ditch and also getting out of the ditch when they’re approaching it. That’s no doubt a reflection of the experience level of the team, but it feels like an endorsement of Marcus Freeman’s rapid growth as a head coach as well.

Also nice to see: The late touchdowns in games that are pretty much decided but not quite. ND seemed to actively avoid such things under the previous regime, but today we saw Hartman lob a TD to Holden Staes (and what a game for Staes, eh?) that temporarily put ND up 45-17. Necessary? Not really. But there’s nothing wrong with continuing to play to win.

One more scrimmage

ND has one more chance to prepare for Ohio State when Central Michigan comes to town next Saturday. Is this a team that can beat the Buckeyes? I still don’t know. Maybe there’s nothing I could’ve realistically seen today that would’ve led me to be confident in that one. But we do know that barring absolute disaster next week, it’ll be the biggest game at Notre Dame Stadium in some time. Relish that day when it comes.