The final tier is here. There are a ton of great memories left on this list, but which game will be #1? The previous tiers are below.

Remember that the formula for this is [(Excitement at the time + Quality of Opponent) * Legacy]. All of these factors are graded on a scale of 1-10 and the final score is divided by two in order to get a nice number between 1-100.

#9: 2014 Michigan, 37-0

Excitement: 10

Quality of Opponent: 4

Legacy: 10

Final Score: 70/100

 

Maybe the most meme-able game of the Kelly era, where the Irish blanked Brady Hoke’s last Michigan squad in hilarious fashion. At the time we had no idea that this rivalry would be continued in 2018, so this game felt enormous. It felt like a must-win situation, with the rivalry’s pending cancellation and Brian Kelly’s 1-3 record against Michigan to that point. The result was a uproarious shutout against an incompetent opponent.

Unfortunately for the quality rating, the Wolverines sucked in 2014 and Brady Hoke got the ax. Furthermore, all of the archives for this game list the Irish as having finished with 31 points when they clearly finished with 37. For those reasons, this game objectively can’t be much higher in this tier. However, it’s hard to find another bludgeoning that matches the unbridled joy and memorability of this contest. Long live the BVG Fist Pump gif.

#8: 2013 Michigan State, 17-13

Excitement: 4

Quality of Opponent: 10

Legacy: 10

Final Score: 70/100

 

I see this game is the inverse of the 2014 Michigan contest. Instead of the thrilling, borderline erotic destruction of a bad Michigan team, this game featured a sluggish, boring slog against a great Michigan State squad. The Irish managed a paltry 220 yards against the Spartans’ defense and were only able to move the ball with the help of some timely penalties. This game is a complete mess when judged on pure ascetics and it felt like one of those “bad wins” at the time.

Nobody knew it then, but Michigan State would go on to have its best season in modern times. The Spartans went 13-1, beat 12-0 Ohio State to win the B1G and then won the Rose Bowl. In terms of pure quality, it is the best team Brian Kelly has beaten as head coach of Notre Dame. As such, 2013 Michigan State is the only team that scores a perfect 10 on this list in terms of opponent quality. I wanted to reserve that distinction for teams that were true national title contenders, and ND having to face MSU with their defense and Connor Cook should qualify.

#7: 2017 LSU, 21-17

Excitement: 8

Quality of Opponent: 8

Legacy: 9

Final Score: 72/100

 

The 2017  season had started to go off the rails after the Miami debacle and Notre Dame limped into bowl season with a suddenly listless offense and a 1-2 record since ranking #3 in the first CFP Playoff ranking. The first half of this contest seemed to symbolize how far the Irish had fallen as the offense sputtered again in rainy conditions. However, Brian Kelly made one of the most consequential decisions of his ND coaching career in going with Ian Book for the second half.

This is the true beginning of the Book ascendancy. The freshman rallied the Irish offense to all 21 points and picked apart one of the best defenses in the country. Meanwhile, Mike Elko’s last ND defense kept the game from getting out of hand before Miles Boykin made one of the defining plays of the Kelly era. Boykin’s unexpected brilliance put the Tigers to bed and gave the Irish a 10-win season.

Maybe BK still goes with Book in 2018, but I like to think that his stellar performance in this game created the conditions necessary for his promotion. Regardless, this game capped off a remarkable comeback season for Kelly and his program. He has become the rare ND coach to fully recover from a bad season and thrive afterwards.

#6: 2018 Syracuse, 36-3

Excitement: 9

Quality of Opponent: 8

Legacy: 9

Final Score: 76.5/100

 

This was a big boy win for a program that had fully matured and moved past its 2016 failures. All of the pregame talk centered around everything that could go wrong from moving a home game to Yankee Stadium, the obscene 2018 travel schedule, and the ridiculous pinstriped uniforms. In the end, none of it mattered against a Syracuse team enjoying their best season in over a decade. The Irish were never threatened by the Orange and the game was even more lopsided than the final score indicated.

Syracuse in 2018 was a bit fraudulent and utterly hopeless once Eric Dungey was knocked out in the first quarter. Yet, the big picture view of this game is that Notre Dame humiliated a 10-3 team by 33 points after much pregame consternation. As mentioned before, this was a mature win by the Irish and one that firmly established the program as a true contender in 2018.

#5: 2012 USC, 22-13

Excitement: 10

Quality of Opponent: 6

Legacy: 10

Final Score: 80/100

 

It’s hard to find a more tense, emotion-laden game on this list. Everything was riding on this one contest, with the Irish one win away from the national championship game. In a strange case of role reversal, the Trojans came into this game unranked after having been the preseason #1 team in the country while the Irish were #1 for the first time since 1993.

Looking back, it’s fair to say that Notre Dame was clearly the better team and should’ve won by more. They out-gained the Max Wittek-led Trojans 439-281 and jumped out to a 10-0 lead while holding down Marquis Lee. However, the greatest weakness of the 2012 team reared its head too many times and the Irish had to settle for five red zone field goals. This allowed the Trojans to mount one final effort at the goal line in the fourth quarter, and we all remember what happened next.

The retrospectives on this game are numerous and it is perhaps the greatest night of the 21st century for Notre Dame football. Forget the fact that USC was pretty crappy, or that Matt Barkley wasn’t playing, or that the Irish probably should’ve won comfortably. We all know this night would not have been as memorable if it were easy. In many ways, that’s the joy of the 2012 team which turned these otherwise brutal contests into something truly unforgettable.

#4: 2017 USC, 49-14

Excitement: 9

Quality of Opponent: 9

Legacy: 9

Final Score: 81/100

 

For so many Irish fans who were around for the Davie/Willingham/Weis years, this game was the ultimate catharsis. The Pete Carroll Trojans beat those Notre Dame teams eight years in a row, with five of those victories coming by 31 points or more. What the 2017 Irish  did on this night against a USC team that would win the Pac-12 felt special. The Trojans were never in it on this night as their defense was bowled over to the tune of 377 rushing yards.

It’s hard to write much more about the actual game other than this was maybe the sweetest butt-kicking of Brian Kelly’s tenure at Notre Dame. Sam Darnold was totally impotent while Brandon Wimbush put together a Tony Rice-like performance with 120 yards passing and 106 rushing. Of course, the real fireworks came from Josh Adams and the most punishing ND run game of 2010s. It’s still hard to believe the Irish beat an 11-3 USC team by 35 points.

Despite a 7-3 record against USC, most of Brian Kelly’s wins against the Trojans have been razor-close with four one-possession victories. Of course, Notre Dame is never going to do beat the brakes off their rivals the way Pete Carroll’s teams did in the 2000s (for one, none of these SC teams have been as bad as ND was those years). This game is a shining exception and a beautiful reminder of what Notre Dame football can do on a perfect night.

#3: 2018 Michigan, 24-17

Excitement: 10

Quality of Opponent: 9

Legacy: 9

Final Score: 85.5/100

 

The 2018 season opener featured a spectacular start against maybe Jim Harbaugh’s best Michigan team. The Irish threatened to blow the Wolverines out after going up 21-3 in the second quarter, but special teams mistakes and an extended offensive funk allowed Michigan back in the game. However, the Irish were never truly in danger on this night while Jerry Tillery and Tevon Coney snuffed out a last gasp effort by the Michigan offense.

After all the Harbaugh hype and a three year hiatus in this rivalry, the Irish simply handled their business in primetime. This was one of the best crowds of the 2010s with the help of College Gameday and a perfect green-out. Most importantly, this win solidified the post-2016 reboot. If the 2017 season was a return to form for Kelly, this win signified that he could take the program even higher. Of course, it always helps that this was against the hated Wolverines.

#2: 2012 Oklahoma, 30-13

Excitement: 10

Quality of Opponent: 8.5

Legacy: 10

Final Score: 92.5/100

 

Surprise! What is generally considered to be Kelly’s best win at Notre Dame is not at the top of this list. However, this is by far the best road win and one of the only wins of the past 25 years that truly grabbed the nation’s undivided attention. The Irish were double-digit underdogs but had exactly the right DNA for this kind of game. The 2012 team was tremendous at controlling tempo and this contest proved to be their masterpiece. OU finished the year #2 in SP+ offense, but only managed to get in the endzone once and mostly piled up a lot of empty yardage.

Young Everett Golson was a puppet master and the Irish ground game dominated the line of scrimmage. In contrast to the Sooners only managing 25 yards rushing (!!!), the Irish offense showcased perfect balance and rarely fell off schedule. The long, 10+ play drives were punctuated by big plays from the likes of Cierre Wood and Chris Brown which kept the game just out of reach before the dam finally burst in the fourth quarter.

I couldn’t quite figure out what to do with Oklahoma’s resume on the year. On one hand, the eye test suggests this was a team deserving of an score of 8. The Sooners lost to the three best teams on their schedule and were beaten by 17+ in two of those games. Yet, SP+ ranked 2012 OU as the fourth-best team in the country which is the highest-ranked team that Notre Dame has defeated in the SP+ era. Therefore, I made an executive decision and decided to just split the difference and give 2012 OU an 8.5 quality rating.

#1: 2012 Stanford, 20-13

Excitement: 10

Quality of Opponent: 9

Legacy: 10

Final Score: 95/100

 

This is Brian Kelly’s best win as head coach at Notre Dame. Both teams slugged it out in the pouring rain after College Gameday had wrapped up their first visit to campus since 2005. It was a bruising affair that saw Tommy Rees pull the ultimate emergency spot-duty when Golson was concussed on the final drive of regulation. Only the Pitt game later in the same season rivals the amount of adversity the Irish had to fight through on this day.

It seems that fans forget how truly difficult the overtime session was on both sides of the ball. Rees and Theo Riddick bailed the Irish out of third and long before TJ Jones made a sliding catch for the go-ahead touchdown. Of course, the the goal line stand is the real legacy of this game. The moment Stefan Taylor was stopped short on fourth and goal is perhaps the greatest in-game high of Kelly’s tenure.

The Cardinal finished 12-2 and won the Pac-12, followed by the Rose Bowl. The 2012 Stanford team is perhaps the second-best team Kelly has beaten at Notre Dame. Furthermore, this game represented the first time ND football flashed elite ability under Kelly. Notre Dame beat a top tier program at their own game after two years of the Cardinal manhandling the Irish. In my opinion, this game represents the moment when Notre Dame football truly returned.


Thus ends this marathon project. 10 years of Brian Kelly has provided a long and winding road (understatement!) which still hasn’t reached its conclusion. Feel free to let me know how you feel about this list in the comments and Go Irish!