Five Wide Fullbacks returns to the world with questions on Big Ten matchups, air conditioning in football helmets, the first head coach fired this fall, the team to watch early in September, plus an underrated 2024 Irish commit.

1) Hypothetically, let’s say Notre Dame joins the Big Ten in football from 2024 and you can choose 3 programs that will play the Irish every year. Which teams do you choose and why?

We obviously have to keep USC as 1 of the teams, so we’ll pick the Trojans. While choosing the other 2 teams my mind immediately jumped to trying to spread things out geographically. History be damned, I’m not putting Michigan and Michigan State on my list. That would be boring. Since we already have a western team I’m picking one from the east and one from the Midwest:

Penn State: This is a good rivalry for Notre Dame, it’s nice to play in Pennsylvania a lot, and it could help Notre Dame recruiting against the Nittany Lions for the future Nicholas Singleton’s of the world.

Illinois: I was going to pick either Iowa or Minnesota here but the former is too boring and the latter maybe doesn’t generate enough hype for Irish fans. I’m also not looking for a super tough opponent here (Ohio State, for example) and there are a lot of Notre Dame fans with ties to Illinois–plus we really don’t play this school enough.

2) Who is the most underrated of the current 2024 commits for Notre Dame?

I mentioned in both wide receivers Micah Gilbert and Isiah Canion’s commit posts that they have potential to move up the rankings and be cornerstone pieces to this class. They are decently rated right now anyway and might not even qualify for this answer.

I have a feeling the real answer is going to be Cole Mullins.

I hope we see him play more of a pass-rushing Vyper role in his senior season. If he does, I think we could see him really start a great development curve and be viewed as a top pass-rushing prospect in this entire class. If he’s still playing more of a hybrid linebacker role then I doubt he will become a mid-t0-high 4-star recruit or anything close to that, but he could still be underrated either way.

3) Taking a peek at the upcoming college football season, who is your pick for the first Power 5 coach fired?

I thought this was going to be a super easy question and it turns out it’s sneaky difficult. Of course, there may be a firing for cause or something wild like that. But if we’re looking strictly at performance and a coach who has at least been given some time I’ve got 4 options in increasing likelihood:

Jimbo Fisher, Texas A&M – Yes, the buyout would be ludicrous. If my math is correct, and Fisher were to be fired mid-season in October, he’d be owed somewhere in the ballpark of $75 million. I’m not sure even the Aggies are that crazy but their patience could be put to the test.

Justin Wilcox, California – I included Wilcox here because he’s entering year 7 in Berkeley and he’s 8 games under .500 since 2020. But, he also signed a new contract just over a year ago that has him coaching at Cal through the 2027 season.

Neal Brown, WVU – A lot of people liked this hire after Brown went 31-8 in his last 3 years with Troy. Now entering year 5 with the Mountaineers, the football program really seems to have fallen off the map. He’s only 3 games under .500 over the last 2 season which isn’t terrible but there was some buzz that he could be out this past year. His buyout was $20 million last fall and we’ll see how much that drops this year.

He gone?

Jeff Hafley, Boston College – Hafley got a vote of confidence and a new contract after the 2021 season but things were pretty quiet after the 2022 campaign. He’s only won 4 games in the ACC over the last 2 years and even though his contract runs through 2026 I have to assume his buyout is not that large.

4) There are videos showing LSU players trying on air conditioned-filled football helmets. What’s the next great technology revolution in football?

I’d just like to point out that the company supplying this is called TigerAire which is exactly how you’d expect it from a company near LSU. It looks like they are selling individual cooling units for a helmet at $185.00 apiece which doesn’t seem too bad of a price. But I also wonder how reliable they will be in such a violent sport, and also how much heavier it makes the helmet.

I’m not sure if I’d call it a revolution per se, however, I think the next big thing to come Notre Dame’s way is finally figuring out an effective grow lighting system to bring grass back to the football stadium. There was another set of data released by the NFLPA a couple months and it doesn’t look good for turf. Slowly but surely I think we’ll see turf fade away at this level of football and that hit home for me when it was announced the Buffalo Bills will switch to grass after 50+ years of turf once their new stadium opens in 2025.

But, as I remarked last year natural grass for Notre Dame is as much about the indoor practice facility as anything. That’s where the real challenges and technology needs will be in the future.

5) Which college football team are you most interested in seeing early in 2023 based on whether they are ready to take the next step into a top team?

For me, it has to be Florida State. They finished 2022 ranked 27th according to SP+ and that 2023 pre-season projection has them 11th nationally, just a sliver ahead of conference rival Clemson. The Seminoles finished 10-3 last year (winning streaks of 4 and 6 games sandwiching a 3-game losing streak) and are poised to make a lot of noise. They’d be a fun team to play the Irish this year but they aren’t on the schedule until a visit to South Bend in 2024.

We should know real early where they stand, too. Florida State opens up against LSU again* this time in Orlando and their trip to Clemson comes really quickly on September 23rd. We are going to know how things stand at the top of ACC before a program like Michigan has even played some decent varsity programs.

The Noles played Duquesne in week 0 last year but their win over the Tigers in week 1 felt like their real opener.