In a sudden matter of minutes on Monday night, Brian Kelly was gone from Notre Dame. After nearly 12 full seasons the coach has decided to leave for LSU and what is reportedly a very large bag of money. We’ll have more on his legacy in the coming days and weeks.

Speculation on who will replace Kelly is already dominating the college football news cycle and as we await a press conference from athletic director Jack Swarbrick this morning at 10 AM Eastern (see the embedded video below), I wanted to get some thoughts on the site about moving forward.

I think it was normal to assume when the time came for Brian Kelly to leave Notre Dame that there’d be a more concrete timetable in place with the appropriate and necessary time to flesh out his successor. This crazy sport is rarely that forgiving.

My most immediate reaction is that Notre Dame is now forced to decide, possibly within a matter of hours and certainly within a few days, how it wants to move forward with their coach gone.

Watch Swarbrick’s Press Conference Here:

At this very moment, we’re likely looking at 3 options for Swarbrick:

1) Hire Marcus Freeman

2) Hire Luke Fickell

3) Hire Someone Else

It wasn’t too long ago that Notre Dame grabbed a Cincinnati coach who was undefeated at the time and ruffled some feathers by leaving before their Sugar Bowl game. However, with the playoffs it does feel like there’s a difference in the perception of Fickell leaving the Bearcats with that carrot still being dangled. Perhaps Notre Dame will wait and see if Cincinnati trips up this weekend against Houston and/or waits to see if Cincinnati makes the playoffs as an undefeated anyway? Either way, I have a hard time seeing an announcement for Fickell when we don’t know Cincinnati’s fate.

If Swarbrick decides to go with someone else we’re assuming this process could take a little longer and stretches well into December. Can they wait that long?

Right now as the AD it has to be a huge internal struggle to balance doing what is best for the program long-term with the fact that technically this 2021 team is still alive for a National Championship, could very well be in a playoff game soon, and is at least locked in for what could be a very winnable (and fun!) major bowl game. It’s not like Notre Dame is #1 in the country right now, but man, going on a long coaching search right now feels weird knowing it’ll likely crumble the Irish’s chances to close out this season.

This brings us to Marcus Freeman.

Just over 3 months ago I was the guy saying let’s slow our roll with the hype around Freeman or making him Head Coach In-Waiting or anything like that. Results needed to be shown on the field before making any further assessments.

Today, it may be time to pull the trigger and hire Marcus Freeman for this job.

There’s also another dichotomy at work with Notre Dame right now. On the one hand, Brian Kelly raised Notre Dame’s profile in a big way since 2010 and with all the recent unprecedented poaching going on there’s a very real possibility the Irish make a big and bold move in the coming days that knocks everyone’s socks off.

Coming off the success of the Kelly era, perhaps you’d even expect that type of move. God knows there will be a certain section of the fan base up in arms if this doesn’t happen.

On the other hand, Notre Dame does feel suddenly constrained in its choices and passing over Freeman could have some disastrous ramifications in the short-term that would really force Swarbrick & Co. to nail Kelly’s successor in a way I’m not sure the landscape is offering a solution to right now.

With Kelly and Freeman gone, you’d think just about every assistant will be moving on. The recruiting could crater suddenly. And remember, we have a big post-season game coming up! This isn’t skip-bowl-season-time at Notre Dame.

I’m personally not that smitten with Fickell and wouldn’t be too excited about him coming to South Bend in addition to the weird timing to deal with for him. The likes of Matt Campbell, Dave Clawson, Dave Aranda, Kyle Whittingham, P.J. Fleck, Jeff Brohm, or Clark Lea aren’t terribly exciting right now. We’ve kind of known this is the situation for a couple years, it’s not a great job market for high-ceiling proven coaches within Notre Dame’s grasp.

Unless there’s a plan for stunning moves* with big names like Dabo Swinney, Ryan Day, Mario Cristobal, Nick Saban, Kirby Smart, and Jimbo Fisher the choices out there are pretty meager.

*Obviously, some of these would be bad fits and not happening but from a pull perspective these are massive hires.

Therefore, I’d be shocked if Marcus Freeman isn’t named interim head coach at this Swarbrick press conference, at minimum. Not doing so seems aggressively reckless. With the support we’ve already seen from current players and future recruits for Freeman since last night–plus plenty of smoke among the beat writers–it’s very possible Freeman is announced as the new permanent  head coach not soon after I hit send on this published article, too.

This feels like the right decision.

I don’t feel like this is settling. Freeman’s ceiling could be very, very high and he has shown a number of elite traits as a coordinator that could translate to big things at Notre Dame. He’s young, good looking, motivated, articulate, and as a black and Korean man has the ability to transform the culture and cool factor in South Bend that is incredibly enticing for a place that still struggles with being a place for white, stuffy rich people. In this vein, Freeman being hired feels very inspired and worthwhile.

If Freeman really is a strong recruiter and things don’t work out as head coach the risk seems worth it to see if he’s that kind of star. If not, the roster should still be in a very good place and Notre Dame will look for a new head coach down the road.