It might be overstating things, it might not, but it sure felt like Howard Cross saved what was left of Notre Dame’s season when he tipped a pass that Marist Liufau intercepted, sparking Notre Dame to finish a 41-24 victory over Syracuse. The win put a 7-5 season, which would’ve felt like a disaster 3 months ago but doesn’t seem so bad now, firmly on the table.

It was a game that ND was utterly dominating but, per usual, not putting away when Syracuse’s starting QB Garrett Shrader, already banged up, left the game, allowing the Orange to pluck the electrifying backup QB that everyone but Notre Dame seems to have off the bench and make things interesting. The Cuse had a 24-7 lead down to 24-17 when Cross made the game-changing play.

After that, ND finished things off the way they began – grinding the Orange into dust up front. The Irish picked up their second away-from-home ranked win, which is interesting because they still have yet to play a good game at their actual home. (I was at the UNLV game so you were spared an instant reaction that day. I would’ve had thoughts.)

Some quick thoughts on a nice win:

Audric Estime is back in the circle of trust

It was a bit of a scare to see Estime develop fumblitis this season, but equally nice to see him be put right back out there to start today’s game. And he displayed what makes him such a valuable piece to this Irish attack all day, going for 123 yards on 20 carries. The Orange defense wanted nothing to do with him at any point, and for good reason.

Logan Diggs had a fair day himself, gaining 85 yards, but Estime is this backfield’s best big-play threat (IMO) and it’s important he’s on the field a lot. Applause to the coaching staff for trusting him and Estime for proving them right.

The defense (and special teams) was outstanding

Amazing what can happen when the ball bounces your way once in a while!

I speak rhetorically, of course, because Notre Dame’s fumble luck continues to belong in the theater of the absurd; I think they have one fumble recovery all season, offense or defense, which is just the fluke to end all flukes. The muffed punt Syracuse somehow landed on even though two Irish were on the ball with their knees on the ground basically summed it up.

But Brandon Joseph got things started with a first-play pick-6, a massive swing in a game ND knew it needed big plays from non-offensive sources. Cross’ play was already discussed. The fourth-down stop that set up the Irish to go down the field before halftime was another huge moment. To give up 17* points and force 3* turnovers against Syracuse is a win under any circumstances.

(* An interception being waved off for an offsides being called on the same guy that was offsides for Cal on Sept. 17, followed by the replay official deciding it’s fine to step out of bounds before you catch the ball if you’re wearing an orange helmet, means that TD doesn’t count. Agreed? Agreed.)

And Brian Mason. My goodness. No one usually cares who the special teams coordinator is, but he has transformed that unit. ND has five (!!) punt blocks this season, actually gets a few yards in the punt return game once in a while, and – knock on wood – has been consistently quite good on both punt and kick coverage. They’re the best unit on the field for the Irish, and frankly it might not be close.

Notre Dame has a QB problem

It couldn’t be all sunshine and rainbows. Even when ND earns its highest-ranked road win since the 2012 Oklahoma game.

Look, you know it, I know it, and I suspect the Notre Dame coaches know it too, not that they’d ever say so. But Drew Pyne is not a good quarterback. He was – apart from a very good drive right before halftime that gave the Irish a then-comfortable lead – quite bad again. The stat line: 9/19, 116 yards, 1 TD, 1 INT. The second-half stat line: 1/5, 11 yards.

Freeman reiterated that he’s fine with whatever offense results in 41 points, but you can’t count on a pick-6, a blocked punt inside the other team’s 5, a 60-pound advantage over the other team’s front four, etc. every week. The Orange announced to all what they think of Pyne when they started rushing three on every passing down in the second quarter and never stopped.

The bottom line is it is very, very hard to see a scenario in which Pyne has a meaningful contribution to winning the Clemson or USC games, and there’s a much greater than nonzero chance he could endanger the Navy or BC games if things go south on him in a game. I don’t know that this means you play Steve Angeli, either; I doubt that would go much better, even though he has more physical tools. It’s just…what it is, I guess.

Luckily, it wasn’t a problem for Notre Dame today, and the Irish secured a really nice win that spoke well to their young head coach.