In the late Brian Kelly era I argued that Notre Dame’s head football coach needed to be a killer on the recruiting trail and anything less was putting a cap on the ceiling of talent available for the Irish. This would seem obvious to most college football fans but in the past Notre Dame didn’t always need or rely on great head coaching recruiting because the school largely sold itself, worked through a vast network of private schools, and carried the premier brand in the sport.

I’ve mentioned many times how Notre Dame has never been a national power without consistently excellent recruiting (including multiple no. 1 classes) but hasn’t necessarily lived with a terrific recruiter at head coach in modern times. Charlie Weis was arguably the best of the bunch and even his record was incredibly spotty and titled toward offense.

One of the poor recruiters was Lionel Tyrone Willingham hired by Notre Dame on New Years Eve 2001 and fired 1,065 days later on November 30, 2004.

To be completely fair, I am absolutely certain Willingham believed recruiting at Notre Dame would be easy. Far easier than what he experienced at Stanford. He stepped on campus 5 years, 1 month, and 1 day after the last game of Lou Holtz and wasn’t too far removed from an era where Holtz–while struggling a little in the 1990’s after ace recruiting coordinator Vinny Cerrato left town–still had a lot of recruiting power to unleash but did so in a more hands off approach that would be mimicked in the months to come under Willingham.

You could forgive Willingham for thinking he could be stoic, exude leadership, and Notre Dame would recruit itself as long as he took care of business on the field. Following his 1st season on campus, it seemed to be working reasonably well. It was a Return to Glory™ and the Irish signed the No. 12 class for 2003, including 5-star defensive end Victor Abiamiri among a class where nearly two-thirds would go on to strong starting careers in South Bend.

Then, it all fell apart. Very, very quickly.

Here is the list of assistants at Notre Dame tasked with carrying recruiting over this time period:

Defensive Coordinator: Kent Baer (2002-04)

Offensive Coordinator: Bill Diedrick (2002-04)

Offensive Line/Tight End: Mike Denbrock (2002-04)

Defensive Line: Greg Mattison (2002-04)

Interior Offensive Line: John McDonell (2002-04)

Wide Receiver: Trent Miles (2002-04)

Running Back/Special Teams: Buzz Preston (2002-04)

Linebacker: Bob Simmons (2002-04)

Defensive Back: Trent Walters (2002-03)

Defensive Back: Steve Wilks (2004)

What is the biggest thing that jumps out? Willingham brought Baer, Diedrick, Denbrock, McDonell, Miles, and Preston with him from Stanford and Trent Walters (who came to Notre Dame from the Minnesota Vikings) was the only assistant to leave (he joined the Eagles for 2004) over this entire tumultuous period. This was controversial when it happened and nowadays, this would be sacrilegious.

Notre Dame was struggling both on and off the field and Willingham in tandem with the university administration simply did…nothing.

It also wasn’t the most exciting and enthusiastic staff.

Beginning in 2003, the coaches would turn the following ages: Baer (54), Diedrick (56), Mattison (54), McDonell (44), Miles (40), Preston (47), Simmons (55), and Walters (60) while only Denbrock (39) and Wilks (34) were under 40. Willingham himself turned 50 in December of 2003.

In comparison, the current Notre Dame coaching staff are: Marcus Freeman (36), Al Golden (53), Tommy Rees (30), Brian Mason (32), Harry Hiestand (63), Deland McCullough (48), Mike Mickens (34), Chris O’Leary (29), Gerad Parker (41), Chansi Stuckey (38), and Al Washington (38).

Age isn’t everything but when you’re having problems selling your school due to the results on the field and you’re trotting out mostly older men on the trail who are not backed up by an excited head coach it’s a recipe for disaster.

Both of Willingham’s coordinators would follow him to the embarrassing Washington campaign (11-37 overall) and would never do anything in major college football afterward. McDonell ran back to Stanford for 2005 and then Purdue for 2006-08 and has been out of Power 5 jobs since.

Trent Miles followed Willingham to Washington and eventually became head coach at Indiana State and Georgia State (combined 29-74 record) and hasn’t held a full job in college since 2016.

Buzz Preston didn’t coach in 2005, went back to Stanford for 2006, then New Mexico in 2007 before landing at Georgia Tech for a long time and is currently the offensive coordinator at Thomas University, a new football team centered around helping military members transition to civilian life.

1/12/04: Rivals reports ND offered 26 players and Tyrone is going in-home with 6 this week.

Simmons followed Willingham to Washington and has never returned to college football after leaving Seattle. Walters coached the Eagles secondary until 2007 and then retired while Wilks spent a year at Washington and has largely been in the NFL ever since and is currently the Carolina Panthers secondary coach.

Mattison and Denbrock we know well. The former was held over from the Davie era where he was defensive coordinator and had a very successful 40+ year coaching career. The latter followed Willingham to Washington but was able to resurrect his career by coming back to Notre Dame under Brian Kelly for 7 seasons, spent 5 successful seasons as offensive coordinator at Cincinnati, and just moved with Kelly to LSU to coordinate the Tigers’ offense this fall.

This wasn’t the type of staff that could carry recruiting with a team failing on the field, a head coach enjoying the golf course, and believing a bunch of late offers and in-home visits in January of senior years were going to wow high school stars.

Instead, this is how you only sign 31 players over 2 cycles.

***

2004-05 Recruiting

The Composite scores aren’t super accurate from such a long time ago but they give a general idea of the talent level with only 9 players in the Top 300 which is almost as many as the amount of 2 stars (7) that were recruited over this 2-year period. A quick recap of this mess:

Quarterback

Evan Sharpley 0.8556
David Wolke 0.8111
Darrin Bragg 0.7667

Bragg moved to receiver and never played, then switched back to quarterback and still never played. Wolke threw 3 passes for Notre Dame and transferred to Western Kentucky where he threw 13 touchdowns and 18 interceptions. Sharpley was a career backup who had the pleasure of playing 99% of his snaps during the 2007 season.

Running Back

Junior Jabbie 0.9000
Justin Hoskins 0.8778
Darius Walker 0.8778
Asaph Schwapp 0.8111

Jabbie of “whoosh” fame stayed at Notre Dame long enough to finish with 35 career rushing yards. Hoskins would leave after a couple years and finish with 809 rushing yards at Central Michigan. Walker was the top player from these classes by far with 3,249 rushing yards in 3 seasons. Schwapp (who sadly passed away from cancer 9 years ago) was a rarely used fullback finishing with 98 yards.

Tight End

Joey Hiben 0.9000

Hiben would quit football to focus on his architecture major.

Wide Receiver

D.J. Hord 0.9440
David Grimes 0.8333

Hord was the top recruit in these 2 classes, returned a few kickoffs, and caught 2 passes before transferring to Northern Iowa. Grimes had a solid career given his low 3-star status with 900 receiving yards.

Offensive Line

Paul Duncan 0.8778
Michael Turkovich 0.8556
Chauncey Incarnato 0.8556
John Kadous 0.8556

Duncan and Turkovich would make a bunch of starts on some really lousy lines. Incarnato transferred to Indiana after 1 year with the Irish and then moved to UMass in 2007. Kadous graduated from Notre Dame and that’s all I know about him.

Defensive Line

Brandon Nicolas 0.8556
Ronald Talley 0.8333
Patrick Kuntz 0.8333
Derrell Hand 0.8333
Justin Brown 0.7889

Nicolas transferred to Colorado after 1 season and would be a decent starter for the Buffaloes. Talley showed promise early in his career but left school after just 2 seasons before landing at Delaware and having a cup of coffee in the NFL. Kuntz turned into a good player later in his career with 8 tackles for loss as a senior. Hand basically did nothing while Brown played a decent amount over 4 seasons accumulating 72 tackles and 10.5 tackles for loss.

Linebacker

Anthony Vernaglia 0.9222
Kevin Washington 0.8556
Scott Smith 0.8556
Maurice Crum 0.8778
Abdel Banda 0.7889
Steve Quinn 0.7667

Vernaglia stuck around and ended up playing a little bit in 2007 finishing his career with 25 tackles. Washington didn’t make a dent and grad transferred to Abilene-Christian to finish his career. Smith was an underwhelming backup who totaled 54 tackles across 4 seasons. Banda medically retired during his sophomore season while Quinn was another underwhelming backup who totaled 31 tackles in his career.

Maurice Crum had a very good career notching 248 tackles and 19 tackles for loss. He’s currently the co-defensive coordinator at Ole Miss.

Defensive Back

Terrail Lambert 0.8778
David Bruton 0.8333
Kyle McCarthy 0.8333
Ray Herring 0.8333
Leo Ferrine 0.7667
Tregg Duerson 0.7000

Duerson, son of former star Irish safety Dave Duerson who tragically took his own life after dealing with CTE, quit football after one season. Ferrine saw the field quite a bit in 2005 but never made a big impact thereafter. Herring stayed 5 seasons in South Bend totaling 53 tackles.

Thank goodness Notre Dame got quality play out of the trio of Lambert, Bruton, and McCarthy. We saw Lambert total 115 tackles and 4 interceptions from 2005 to 2008. Bruton developed into a very good starter as an upperclassman and ended up playing 8 seasons in the NFL. McCarthy stayed 5 seasons and had some good moments totaling 241 tackles and 8 interceptions.