First, let’s get this out of the way now: I cried.
Thirty-one years. Thirty-one long years of not winning these games. Of coming up short. Of drawing the best possible opponent. Of chuckleheads on the Internet pretending losing games meant they shouldn’t have been in them.
It all got swept away in less than one game minute of ecstasy.
An enormous, game-changing sequence in the Sugar Bowl.
Notre Dame forces a strip-sack and follows it up with a TD on the next play.
A 3-3 game entering the final minute of the first half turns into a 13-3 Notre Dame lead over Georgia at halftime. #CFP pic.twitter.com/2Hska79Ifb
— The Comeback (@thecomeback) January 2, 2025
Because we are all “hold me, I’m Irish,” I think we all agree that at no point whatsoever the rest of the day did things feel in hand. But in the end, ND beat the SEC champions, 23-10, for its school-record 13th win, and they won it in all three phases of football.
The defense
I’m the guy who always looks for storylines, so forgive me, but this one seemed to find me. How fitting was it, I say, that Donovan Hinish – who is only playing because like 6 other defensive linemen got hurt – came up with the final sack to sew up the best ND victory of many of our conscious lifetimes?
Central Catholic grad Donovan Hinish closes out the Sugar Bowl with this sack. #WPIAL pic.twitter.com/gGHqWHZMfS
— Brad Everett (@BREAL412) January 3, 2025
This team does not stop. Down Rylie Mills. Down Howard Cross. Down, for a while, Xavier Watts. Down almost every major defensive cog at one point or another. Notre Dame still was largely dominant on defense against an offensive line that held a 50-pound advantage per man and was assumed to be one of the greatest strengths for Georgia.
And you know what? ND’s strip-sack fumble that completely turned the tide in Notre Dame’s favor wasn’t won on that field. It was won in the head of Kirby Smart. The two-time national championship winning coach blinked. Instead of going into halftime down 6-3 with the backup quarterback, he tried to steal a possession. And he did it because he knew damn well Notre Dame was a good bet to beat his team if he didn’t. It backfired on him.
The Irish came up big on big downs on defense over and over again. Even when flags made them do it again. The blitzes largely either got home or caused enough mayhem to make the play. The depth of this team…I mean, imagine any Davie/Willingham/Weis/Kelly team being down so many important pieces and still largely shutting down the SEC champions. It’s simply incredible to witness.
The special teams
My goodness. It’s always called the hidden yardage. Tonight it was a close second to the defense as the reason ND won.
First of all, Mitch Jeter is fixed. Three 40-plus yard field goals and he absolutely drilled the first two and made the third too. Hard to overstate how important those makes looked down the stretch when the game was a 13-point game instead of a four-point one.
Second of all, Jayden Harrison returned the first kickoff TD Georgia has surrendered in five years to completely melt the brains of any Irish fan watching and officially moving all of us into “just please don’t screw this up” mode.
And third of all, Marcus Freeman and Marty Biagi. Holy schnikes. It wasn’t just the guts to call that fire-drill punt in the fourth quarter with everything hanging in the balance, but the pitch-perfect execution of it. And it got ND an enormous first down.
The offense
Obviously the offense was the third of the three phases if you’re ranking why ND won. But that doesn’t mean it didn’t play its part.
Most notably, the boys took advantage of the aforementioned special teams win by running a full five minutes off the clock, picking up a couple of clutch first downs along the way. By the time, Georgia got the ball back, it was essentially impossible for them to win.
Riley Leonard, of course, was made to carry the load offensively with Jeremiyah Love at far less than 100 percent. He delivered, gaining 80 yards on 14 carries, including an awesome third-and-long conversion run that will hopefully be eclipsed at some point in the next couple weeks as the signature Riley Leonard highlight.
WHAT AN EFFORT TO GET THE FIRST DOWN BY RILEY LEONARD! 😤 pic.twitter.com/vaciuZpGyH
— ESPN BET (@ESPNBET) January 3, 2025
Leonard wasn’t asked to do a whole lot as a thrower – though he did make a couple of solid throws in clutch spots – but he was never supposed to be that guy. What he was supposed to be was a physical, indomitable, gutsy leader. And good Lord, was he that tonight. There are better, more complete quarterbacks in the country. There aren’t any it’s easy for me to visualize leading this particular Notre Dame team.
The coaching
Notre Dame owes Brian Kelly (I swear I don’t mean to bring this name up again) a debt of gratitude for leaving exactly when and how he did. If he leaves any other time than he did, Marcus Freeman isn’t at Notre Dame right now. Had he left before 2021, Freeman doesn’t get hired as DC. Had he waited until the 2021 offseason rather than leaving after Thanksgiving, Freeman’s probably coaching Duke or something right now. Instead, he left at a time where the entire team – the entire school – coalesced around Freeman as a guy worth gambling on.
It’s not always been easy. But when you saw Freeman on the sideline in the Sugar Bowl, outcoaching the best current coach in the sport, you saw a man in complete control of everything. Was there a single point – one single time – that you saw Freeman on the sideline and thought anything happening on the field was surprising to him, was a situation for which he wasn’t prepared? He looked at all times like everything unfolding was exactly what he thought was going to happen.
His growth as a coach is why Smart blinked at the end of the first half and helped Notre Dame get 7 more points before the break. It was why he was so confident making fourth-down decisions, never seeming to be close to wavering. It was why this team just will not stop coming at an opponent no matter how many people get hurt. This is Marcus Freeman’s program. As much as it can be for any football coach, it’s Marcus Freeman’s school. Those players, that staff, they’d follow him into the gates of hell and would do it feeling bad for Satan for what was about to happen.
Next
Notre Dame is going to the Orange Bowl semifinal against Penn State and they’re looking like the Vegas favorites, despite a two-day rest disadvantage*, despite a M*A*S*H unit on defense, despite their opponent being put into the easiest bracket in the field while they had to bare-knuckle box the (at worst) second-most talented team in the country, despite so much working against them.
(* It was an eerie feeling New Year’s Day, watching other games while our brains were still wired for a game we knew wasn’t going to be happening as New Orleans dealt with what it dealt with. It doesn’t need to be said, but all positive vibes to the Bayou right now. In the trivial football world, Notre Dame’s response to the situation it found itself in was unmatched, and to me it was expected. And it’s why everything they’ll be up against over the next week doesn’t worry me.)
There is no ceiling. Notre Dame can do this. I told our writers’ room the day the playoff bracket was announced that as long as this team stayed focused like they had the previous 10 weeks, they were going to the national championship game. They’re now one win away from making me look like I have a clue.
I feel you, Andy. Like we said on Discord, I’m still not totally even positive we won. My brain is still somehow still worried about a Georgia comeback. What just happened?
Remember when I said I wished Beck was starting for them. Lolz.
Stockton played a pretty good game for a backup against the best pass D in the country, and/but made exactly the game swinging mistakes that an inexperienced player would.
Honestly I’m not sure Beck would’ve played better. To my eyes and small sample size, Stockton has looked like the better qb, he just doesn’t have the experience.
One would think Beck might have been better in just throwing the ball away or being aware of protections breaking down and so not holding on to the ball too long which might have prevented a turnover.
But yea agree that otherwise it wouldn’t be clear that Beck would have played much better.
Exorcising the “ND ain’t won a real bowl game” demon and the ghost of the 2006 Sugar Bowl all at once feels so damn good. So proud of this team for all the adversity they’ve overcome to get here.
Let’s go win the Orange Bowl next.
As well as close games against UGA in ‘17 and ‘19. I’d love the chance to exorcise ‘22 and ‘23 OSU demons as well.
First up, let’s bury our last two trips to Miami
I cried too, at the end of the game, and I was around for the Natty’s in ’73, ’77 and ’88. I cried because Notre Dame, the place that gave me a shot at being someone, the school that dominated when every other sports team I rooted for stunk, is now back as one of the heavyweights.
One of my old roommates was at the game. He called me from the stands after the game and we cried together on the phone.
Go Irish!
I’m crying now, Cubsfan. The next morning. Thanks to you and the guys.
I shed my tears on the second pick 6 vs. SC. I was so relieved, as I knew this team had the moxie to make “noise” in the playoffs if they could only get there. I was crying so hard I started laughing at myself.
Last night, on the strip sack, I started yelling “Al Golden Al Golden!”, man what a job he’s done. On the kickoff return, I had a flashback to Al Hunter and Ara in the 73′ Sugar Bowl and thought, my God we’re going to win this.
Freeman and Co. are into opposing coaches heads now. They know something is coming but, not when. It causes them to take timeouts at bad times or make crucial errors of judgement. Kirby had his pants pulled down last night.
Hopefully there aren’t too many more entries into the injury report. No classes, means a week of only football and rest. Man, this has been a fun ride.
Go Irish !
Yes, Al Hunter ’73. OMG, I thought the same. I seldom refer to it as the 3rd and 8 got all the attention — Ara’s most gutsy call — but w/o the KO return, we don’t win.
Yeah, a wild ride so far. No classes, and they get a day off HCMF said yesterday with a wink and a smile to Rylie L and X.
This is beautiful
Nice write up. I’ll admit, after that kickoff return to start the second half, i was one of those fans thinking “please don’t screw this up”.
This felt really good, ND and the fans needed a big win like this (against the mighty SEC champs)
Andy — thanks so much. I couldn’t sleep after the game which ended for me at 2 am, so just woke up, and saw this. You have risen to great heights of eloquence!
“Those players, that staff, they’d follow him into the gates of hell and would do it feeling bad for Satan for what was about to happen.”
As only befits the occasion
This entire article is gold, but I agree, that line is the highlight and makes me want to run through walls for… well, all of you. All of us.
One thing I don’t think we see as fans and is very hard to do as a team is staying focused on the next game and end goal. I think by any measure we as fans would call this season a success, (and probably be ok we whatever the next result is) but I don’t think the team sees it this way.
Just from what little I saw from their celebration it seemed subdued in that way of celebrating a small victory, but there is more work to do. Their focus isn’t on ending a 31 year major bowl drought, it’s on winning a NC. They don’t really care if they be Georgia or Boise State, what mattered was winning the game to move to the next step.
To keep that mindset after a major victory is incredibly hard to do, it’s why the teams that have been before usually have a better shot. (Assuming similar talent levels) All credit to the coaching staff for building this type of culture. I think there’s a good chance it pays off against PSU.
Exactly – we don’t need another NIU type letdown game following a big win against an SEC team
There’s a TON of rat poison going around right now. I’m not too worried about this team’s focus level at this point but national takes on ND have never been more positive.
Holding Georgia to 2.1 yards per carry with ND’s depleted defensive line and Georgia’s offensive line weight advantage was key story of the game. Al Golden is great!
I absolutely concur, if you pair that up with our young also depleted O-line kind of holding their own vs a really good Ga D-line. That is, we couldn’t get much push but we got the 2 and 3 yard gains, way better than stuffs and one yard gains. And not unbearable pressure on our QB.
So for me, we outmuscled the SEC despite serious wounded ranks which I find is a very bug deal.
I visited some Georgia boards.Not to gloat. Just to get the pulse. Overall they are taking it well. But there is a bit of “fire Bobo” talk which to me just = Al Golden is special. I hope he truly likes it here as much as it appears.
In their defense, Bobo really does suck. But even with Monken back, I’m not sure they’d win the game.
“Notre Dame owes Brian Kelly (I swear I don’t mean to bring this name up again) a debt of gratitude for leaving exactly when and how he did.”
Great point. Funny how things work out. Freeman used to have eyes that looked “scared” but now his eyes are different, the team is different and he is the reason why.
He’s (happily) learning on the job. Really hard to do as the ND HC.
What may save him from the “what you are in your 3rd year as the ND HC is what you’ll always be” historical reality is the new factor, the CFP. He may have a chance for redemption from NIU purgatory.