Notre Dame opens up the first spring practice of the Marcus Freeman era tomorrow on St. Patrick’s Day. Will it be full of good luck then? Today we preview the most talked about position in American sports, the quarterback. After a one-year stop for Jack Coan the starting position opens back up again with rising sophomore Tyler Buchner the betting favorite to take the job.

We’ll discuss that and more below.

Predicted 2022 Lineup

*Official 2022 roster size

DEPTH CHART

Tyler Buchner, SO, 6-1, 215*
Drew Pyne, r-SO, 5-11 1/2, 200*
Steve Angeli, FR, 6-2 3/8, 210*
Ron Powlus III, r-FR, 6-2 5/8, 225*

3 Questions

1) Will the offense be able to rely on Tyler Buchner’s arm beginning in the opener?

Hey, time for a quick plug. Just before Christmas I went over the situation with Buchner’s arm and passing abilities with a warning that if your expectations are really low be prepared to be extremely wrong but also he’s unlikely to dominate through the air straight away.

We saw this for several years with Ian Book under center–when you have a good running game built around a mobile quarterback who is able to make things happen with his feet then it makes the layups in the passing game that much easier.

I think this offense will find a lot of layups for Buchner throwing the football. I imagine we’ll see plenty of 13 of 19 for 179 yards type games from the young quarterback which on paper won’t blow anyone away. However, if that’s paired with a really potent running game and a team routinely scoring 30+ points it could be a wonderful first year of starting for Buchner.

2) Wait, is the job already Buchner’s?

A wild Drew Pyne appears! I’ll say this in Pyne’s favor, at least he’ll be getting a massive amount of snaps during the spring. Incoming freshman Steve Angeli will be on campus for these practices but you imagine he is a long, long ways away from even thinking about challenging for serious playing time. Likewise, Powlus was one of if not the lowest rated recruit we’ve ever graded so I think everyone is aware of his situation on the depth chart.

Pyne will get his opportunity, no doubt.

Realistically, something pretty bad would have to happen to Buchner in practices absent injury for Pyne to move into the driver’s seat. I think there are fears of Buchner being too much in the mold of Brandon Wimbush as the latter dealt with some visible struggles to his accuracy and confidence. But even in that situation it took an entire off-season plus a few games (with Book looking good in practice the whole time) for a switch at quarterback to be made.

It’ll be a test of Pyne’s patience, for sure. However, he’s much closer to real playing time in 2022 than he ever was last season and being the backup at Notre Dame traditionally hasn’t been too bad of a position in recent times. He has to be ready.

3) Should we be concerned about Buchner getting hurt given his running abilities?

Yes, of course! But what can you do?

There was consternation about the inability to add to the depth chart this off-season but that never seemed realistic as bringing in someone with an immediate higher ceiling than Buchner was always going to be tough and convincing someone to sit as a 3rd-stringer behind Buchner and Pyne doesn’t really feel necessary. You might as well play Angeli if it gets to that point, and I would admit, he’s probably mature enough to perform at a decent floor given his inexperience anyway.

You can maybe run Buchner a little less over the course of a season but again that is easier said than done. How many times during the Book era did we clamor for him to run a little less in the “easy” games only to find out the offense doesn’t run as smoothly without his legs? For example, Book only carried the ball 5 or fewer times in 4 career games and only once against a Power 5 opponent. We just have to accept that Buchner will carry the ball a lot and pray he stays healthy.

Overview

There will be a massive spotlight on Tyler Buchner this spring. It’s too bad there will only be 1 fully open practice to the media before the Blue-Gold Game because it would be nice to see a larger sample size of his progress and abilities. Unfortunately, we’ll have to make do with a lot more speculation and fuzzy guessing about Buchner’s development based on small glimpses and vibes.

Let this be my space to complain about the lack of media access, especially during the spring which has always seemed aggressively closed off and should be a more relaxed and entertaining time to see the progress of players who may not be given such a window during fall camp. I was hoping under Marcus Freeman we’d see a more open policy but that hasn’t come to fruition.

Maybe next year with a year under his belt things will loosen up.