Sometimes a spread from Vegas can’t be large enough. If you watched the first half only between Notre Dame and Florida State you might have left believing it was a bit of a lackluster performance from the Irish nursing a 21-3 lead. Yet, doubling up that score would’ve been right near my game prediction and easily covered the 26-points from Vegas. Instead, Notre Dame shutout the Seminoles in the 2nd half and won by 49 points. It’s the 6th win of the Marcus Freeman era of at least 40 points, trailing only this year’s Purdue game and last year’s Pitt game as the largest margin of victory over a Power conference team.

Here’s the 18 Stripes review of Notre Dame’s 52-3 win.

QUARTERBACK: B

I won’t call this a sloppy performance from Riley Leonard, although things in the passing game were just a little off on Saturday night. With such a big win having 14 completions to 13 incompletions isn’t the type of efficiency we were hoping for in this game. It wasn’t bad and things were close to being much better–it was just a handful of inaccurate throws prevented more domination, especially in the 1st half where Notre Dame punted 3 times.

On the ground, of course Leonard continued his fantastic season scoring his 12th and 13th rushing touchdowns of 2024. His opening touchdown run on Saturday will be among his key highlights from his Irish career, what an incredible run. By the way, Leonard now leads the team in rushing this season.

We got a brief look at Steve Angeli again and he went 3 of 3 with a nice goal line fade touchdown throw to Deion Colzie.

RUNNING BACK: B

Jeremiyah Love had a big game against Navy prior to the bye week but he’s been held at bay for the large part since the Louisville game. That includes on Saturday against Florida State with only 19 rushing yards and a long of 5 yards. That explains why Leonard has now moved ahead as the leading rusher for the Irish.

Jadarian Price felt like he was big part of the gameplan and yet only 7 carries! Thanks to his impressive 65-yard touchdown run he finished with a healthy 13.6 yards per carry average.

This looked like a Kedren Young 4th quarter type of game but Notre Dame went to walk-ons Justin Fisher and Jake Tafelski instead. Maybe a bit curious but Young has played in 3 games so far and they might be trying to keep his redshirt. Not burning both his year and Aneyas Williams’ (8 games played already) in the same class seems like the smart decision.

WIDE RECEIVER: B+

According to the official scorebook there were only 2 drops in this game, although it seemed more like 4 or 5 depending on your definition of inaccurate throws and/or catchable passes. I continue to belief the smoothness of the passing game starts with how much they get Beaux Collins going as the preferred Leonard target. Against Saturday, he had 1 catch on 4 targets, so not great.

Similarly, Faison had one really bad drop and 2 catches on 5 targets. However, I would argue Faison’s 4th down catch for 22 yards late in the 1st half was the most important moment of the game. The Irish scored on the next play to go into halftime with a healthier 21-3 lead.

This was the type of game we’d hope to see often from Jaden Greathouse. He tied his season-high for catches in a game and his 66 receiving yards was the most in 2024 so far. All while wearing some sort of large white turtleneck!

TIGHT END: A

In spirit, I’m going to count the acrobatic effort from Mitchell Evans that would’ve been included on Sunday’s “Moss’d” section from ESPN NFL Countdown. It would’ve been the cherry on top of a really strong game from Evans and the tight ends. We might take it for granted sometimes, but the touchdown catch from Evans is a play not many tight ends throughout the country can make.

OFFENSIVE LINE: B+

Florida State was pretty spunky on defense, early on at least. They did a good job stressing the pocket and slowing down the run game a little bit in the 1st half. Anthonie Knapp briefly left the game after getting bundled into and I thought this could be a game where the offensive line ended up playing really poorly.

That didn’t happen. Notre Dame finished the game completely dominating.

DEFENSIVE LINE: A

Florida State’s poor offensive line was definitely confirmed on Saturday night! The Seminoles looked to empty the playbook on their first drive amounting to 75 total yards before settling for a field goal. They were actually really effective on the ground with all but 14 yards coming from the running game, too. They’d need the rest of the game to match that rushing production from the first drive.

Yes, it got pretty ugly up front for the visitors. Notre Dame’s 8 sacks were the most on the season and tied for the most in a game since the 2019 win over Virginia. Notably, huge games from veteran Rylie Mills (3 sacks) and the younger Donovan Hinish (2 sacks).

The only downside was an ankle injury to Howard Cross which didn’t look great. He’s been so banged up this season I wonder if we’ll see him extremely limited or maybe even out the rest of the regular season?

LINEBACKER: B+

This was a game for the speed linebackers. With the defensive line eating up front, Jaylen Sneed and Jaden Ausberry could utilize their quickness to make some plays. They’d combine for 2.5 tackles for loss. Sneed also picked up a sack and actually forced a fumble, although the ball bounced right back into the quarterback’s body as he fell to the ground.

SECONDARY: A

Jordan Clark’s offsides and holding penalties on the same play were a lowlight of the evening. He’d make up for it later with a nice diving interception. Florida State couldn’t afford any turnovers but made sure to add a pick six late as an added bonus to Notre Dame. How about Luke Talich making a read on that play!?

Things were pretty dark for Florida State’s passing game. Brock Glenn started the game going 1 of 11 for just the 14 yard completion mentioned above. True freshman Luke Kromenhoek looked a little more effective overall, but the Noles bounced back and forth between the quarterbacks a couple times throughout the game.

A check down to running back Lawrance Toafili for 15 yards from Kromenhoek was the longest pass play of the game for the visitors.

NOTES:

This was a game for YPP. The 453-208 total yards advantage doesn’t tell the story as much as Notre Dame’s +4.3 yards per play advantage. That’s a paddling.

I will note that Notre Dame is currently +2.15 in YPP this season which would slot in just ahead of the 1996 and and 1974 seasons for the 3rd best mark in school history since 1964.

If there’s a wet blanket for any notions of a deep playoff run it’s probably because deep down we know this offense isn’t consistently good enough when it matters, the injuries on defense will probably catch up to us, but also the situation with Mitch Jeter not being healthy is now a big problem when games start to get tighter.

Charleston Southern is currently 1-9 and Florida State gets them next after a bye week. It’s likely a 2-10 season for the Noles and to make matters worse they open up hosting Alabama in 2025. They also have Florida, Clemson, and Miami on next year’s schedule too. That includes road trips to the Swamp and the eastern Death Valley. This program looks to be in big, big trouble.