Today we are previewing the defensive backs ahead of spring practice. This group is one of the few on the roster to keep their position coaches as Mike Mickens (Corner) and Chris O’Leary (Safety) lead a veteran group who added a key Transfer Portal addition this off-season but are bracing for a life forever without one of the most sought after NFL prospects in modern Notre Dame history.

Predicted 2022 Lineup

*Official 2022 roster size

1ST-TEAM
CB Cam Hart, r-JR, 6-2 1/2, 205*
FS Brandon Joseph, r-JR, 6-1, 192*
SS Houston Griffith, 5th SR, 6-0 1/, 202*
CB Clarence Lewis, JR, 5-11 1/2, 193*
NICK Tariq Bracy, 5th SR, 5-10 1/8, 177*

2ND-TEAM
CB Ryan Barnes, r-FR, 6-1 7/8, 187*
FS DJ Brown, 5th SR, 6-0 3/8, 200*
SS Xavier Watts, r-SO, 5-11 3/4, 195*
CB Philip Riley, r-FR, 5-11 1/2, 202*
NICK Jaden Mickey, FR, 5-11 1/2, 176*

Reserves:

FS Ramon Henderson, r-SO, 6-1, 190*
SS Justin Walters, r-FR, 6-0 5/8, 188*
CB Chance Tucker, r-FR, 5-11 3/4, 183*
CB Benjamin Morrison, FR, 6-0 1/2, 175
CB Jayden Bellamy, FR, 5-11, 170*

3 Questions

1) Can a star emerge from somewhere in this defensive backfield?

Kyle Hamilton was able to single-handily paper over so many cracks in the defensive backfield in his 2.5 years on the field for the Fighting Irish. He was a testament to how big of an impact just one great defensive back can have in the college game. For a while, it appeared Notre Dame was successfully moving on without the injured Hamilton to finish 2021 then the second half of the bowl game left a bad taste in everyone’s mouth.

Most eyes will be focused on 2 players this spring:

Cam Hart – A rare big corner who doesn’t look out of place due to a lack of speed, quickly flashed his potential early in 2021, and most importantly held on the entire season for an impressive first year of starting with frankly amazing consistency. It doesn’t feel like he’s entering his 4th year in the program but he’s potentially someone who is good enough to play himself into a quality NFL Draft position in the spring of 2023.

Brandon Joseph – For some outsiders, and maybe other Notre Dame fans who aren’t paying super close attention, Joseph is an off-season arrival from the Portal who could make a massive impact in the secondary. A closer inspection of his play showed that while he’s athletic and generally very good in coverage there were weak spots to his run stopping and tackling abilities. Perhaps we are gun shy after the Cain Madden hype last off-season but Joseph is more likely to be a solid starter than a rising star and we should know a lot more once spring practice begins.

2) How much of a role will some of the mixed bag veterans play versus rising youngsters looking to make mark?

I have Houston Griffith tentatively penciled in as one of the starting safeties although I have doubts about his ability to hang on to that spot. He was convinced to leave the Portal last year, surprised some by coming back for 2022 and has just 71 tackles, 1 tackle for loss, 3 PBU’s, and 2 quarterback hurries across 4 seasons on the field. Griffith has yet to notch an interception and has not broken up a pass over his last 29 games.

We’re not even sure that Tariq Bracy is returning for 2022 as he hasn’t officially declared it anywhere so perhaps he’s looking for a graduate transfer and graceful exit this summer.

It seemed like a coin flip whether DJ Brown was going to come back, as well. He’s been okay-to-solid for most of his career but hasn’t brought any major playmaking ability.

Now, Clarence Lewis is a veteran and is coming off a sophomore slump accentuated by a brutal bullying from Oklahoma State in the Fiesta Bowl.

Conservatively, let’s say 2 out of these 4 players mentioned above are playing serious minutes while 2 others do not. Who steps up into that vacuum of playing time?

3) Can the defense get comfortable playing 5, or dare I say 6, different defensive backs without feeling like there’s a drop-off?

This is where the return of Bracy feels absolutely crucial for 2022. If he’s not with the team there’s really no cornerback with experience at the nickel and I’m not sure Freeman used 3 safeties on the field at the same time a bunch last year.

We should be prepared for all of the listed 2nd-team players listed above as well as Ramon Henderson and Justin Walters to be involved heavily during the spring. Especially Henderson, he was used a lot during the bowl game and is probably on schedule to play a decent amount this fall.

Taking a look at things Barnes, Watts, Riley, and Mickey are definitely players to keep an eye on when camp opens. I’m particularly partial to Mickey who I think could challenge immediately as an impact nickel.

Overview

The defensive backfield is probably the most intriguing position group on the entire team. A lot of that has to do with most other positions being settled by returning starters. While you could argue the same is true for the DB’s I’m not sure anyone is really on the board in sharpie as a starter besides Hart and maybe Joseph.

Selfishly for our entertainment, I hope this is an exciting spring full of numerous positional battles. There are potentially a lot of moving pieces as the sport continues to rely more heavily on defensive backs to control the pass-heavy offenses littered across the country.

One thing I’m curious to see is how Al Golden A) Views all of these defensive backs and their skill levels and B) How much different he views using these players within the whole of the system. After initially believing this would heavily be a Marcus Freeman defense he opened the door to Golden having a much larger say which could trickle down to things like playing less press coverage.