Stanford Can’t Prevent Irish Victory

Everett Golson hit Ben Koyack on a last gasp, 23-yard scoring strike with a minute left in the game as Notre Dame came back to take down the Stanford Cardinal by 17-14 on a rainy Saturday in South Bend. The Cardinal had taken a 14-10 lead with three minutes remaining on an 11-yard burst up the middle by Remound Wright, but Golson rallied the Irish with a clutch 65-yard drive with their undefeated season hanging in the balance. Brian VanGorder’s inspired defense shut down Stanford in the waning seconds to preserve the victory.

In a physical contest dominated by the defenses, the windy and wet conditions compounded the difficulty for two struggling offenses. Both sides suffered an inordinate number of dropped passes and special team miscues, but Notre Dame in particular frittered away precious scoring opportunities that might have obviated the need for last minute heroics. The statistics that stand out as most telling are the Irish outgained Stanford by 370-205 and held them to a mere 47 rushing yards in 32 attempts.

Bad Hands Day The teams traded punches early until a fumble by Golson at the Irish 12 handed the Cardinal a golden opportunity. Quarterback Kevin Hogan converted two plays later with a ten yard dash up the middle after faking a pitch to the outside. The Irish came up empty on two scoring chances in the second period before finally evening the score. Golson’s poor pass was intercepted by safety Jordan Richards at the Stanford two yard line, and Irish holder Hunter Smith committed the first of two costly bobbled snaps that caused missed field goals by Kyle Brindza.

The Cardinal also failed to execute the snap and hold on a field goal try with 4:26 remaining in the half, and Notre Dame finally got its offense untracked. A 33-yard run by Golson on a quarterback draw set up a well-conceived crossing route that Chris Brown took for a score from 17 yards out and a 7-7 halftime tie.

The Irish enjoyed superior field position in the third quarter but failed to capitalize. When Cole Luke intercepted his second pass of the day early in the final period, it appeared Notre Dame would finally seize control. Smith botched yet another hold on a short field goal attempt by Brindza, however, and Stanford returned the ill-fated kick to its 44 yard line. VanGorder’s charges stuffed them for one of many three and out series on the day, and the Irish offense responded with new life. Golson’s pass to Corey Robinson near midfield was followed by a facemask penalty against the Cardinal, and Notre Dame reached the Stanford 35.

Facing a fourth and two on the next series, many in the soaked crowd expected Coach Brian Kelly to eschew another field goal attempt and go for it, but Brindza and Smith came onto the field to try again. This time Smith wore gloves and handled the snap perfectly, while Brindza drilled a 45-yarder for a precarious 10-7 lead midway through the quarter.

In a game filled with costly mistakes by the hosts, the Irish committed two devastating errors that nearly sealed their doom. First, the ensuing kickoff to Stanford’s Ty Montgomery resulted in a long return to the Cardinal 42. After yielding two first downs, three Notre Dame defenders had Hogan dead to rights on a blitz for a 15 yard loss, but let him escape to throw an incomplete pass. On the next play, Hogan hit Devon Cajuste for 23 yards at the Irish ten. Wright scored three plays later on a perfectly run draw play that took Notre Dame completely by surprise.

The Irish caught a break when Jordan Williamson’s kickoff rolled out of bounds and was placed at the 35 yard line. Golson overcame a few drops and his own misfires to move his team into Stanford territory, while Cardinal Coach David Shaw abandoned his plan to pressure the quarterback in favor of a soft prevent defense. A clear pass interference penalty on Stanford moved the ball to the 22, but Golson’s attempt to run a quarterback draw on third and seven was stuffed by Kevin Anderson for a four yard loss.

Better Late Than Never Golson then dropped back on fourth down and had time to scan the field before finding Koyack running free in the left corner of the end zone. The ball arrived just before the Cardinal defenders and Koyack held on tight for the winning score. I have to admit I had a brief flashback to Irish tight end Derek Brown’s failure to hold onto a similar desperation pass by Rick Mirer back in 1990, but Koyack did not have to deal with the sun in his eyes on this dreary but glorious day.

Let’s review the pregame questions for additional insight.

Which offensive line will best protect its quarterback? Stanford’s defensive front dominated the Irish offensive line most of the day. They applied pressure and smartly forced Golson to move to his left when attempting to pass. Fortunately for Notre Dame, the Cardinal rushed only three men during the final drive.

Will Notre Dame be able to contain Montgomery? The Irish effectively blanketed Montgomery all day, but paid for his one escape on the fourth quarter kickoff return.

Which offense will have a higher success rate on third down? Each team converted fewer than 35% of its chances, as both offenses could not avoid long yardage situations throughout the day.

Can Stanford cover the speedy Irish receivers? Notre Dame clearly had an edge in this area, but too many dropped passes almost negated it. Ironically, the slowest Irish pass receiver caught the winning touchdown.

Which quarterback will refrain from turning over the ball? Each signal-caller committed two turnovers, but Golson’s were particularly untimely and costly.

Which special teams will win the battle of field position? Notre Dame generally got the better of this tug of war, but faltered by giving Montgomery a chance to return a kick.

Which defense will make a critical stand with the outcome on the line? VanGorder did not make the same mistake as his Stanford counterpart in the final moments, choosing to go after Hogan rather than play conservatively. The result was a game ending sack and intentional grounding penalty that snuffed out the visitors’ final hope.

The win, couple with losses by four of the top six teams in the AP poll, should raise Notre Dame’s credibility and standing. The notion that the Irish had not defeated a good team is no longer valid, and their statistical dominance in this matchup is also impressive. Next week’s contest has the look and feel of a classic trap game, so there can be no letup in the pursuit of the ultimate prize.

Categories

35 thoughts on “Stanford Can’t Prevent Irish Victory

  1. Like I said Stanford is good, ND is better. ND defense looked fantastic, even better than Stanford. Maylock the announcer was annoying in how he kept praising Stanford on every play like he wanted to Marry Stanford. Golson is big boy football. ND defense is big boy football. This is setting up for an epic showdown between ND and Florida state. ND is going dominate North Carolina. Easy win. Then Florida State better be ready for big boy defense. I think that the Florida State game will be real low scoring. ND will knock florida state off of number 1 Bye bye florida state. ND is coming to town.

    • You couldnt be more right about Mayock during the broadcast. It was almost unbearable to listen to as he fawned over Stanford the entire game. Watched this game with my neighbor and we both were sick of him by the end.

      I do think FSU is vulnerable. Just gotta be focused and take care of North Carolina next weekend.

    • Yes sometimes Mayock gets a little stale, but I think it’s difficult for anyone to sound intersting for 3+ hours of constant comment. (NASCAR, which I like, is unwatchable for this reason.) I appreciate Mayock’s professionalism and knowledge. I really like him as a color commentator especially compared to those we’ve had in the past.

    • Mayock is smart. Knows what he’s talking about. He was just doing his job, and commenting about the number one defense in the country.

    • I thought the Stanford defense was playing the Stanford offense because all I heard was Stanford, Stanford, Stanford. My 13 year-old even asked me if Mayock went to Stanford.

  2. NDBonecrusher says:

    Bloody Sat is spot on Jimbo. 5 teams ranked ahead of ND lost. The pollsters are going to have a helluva time sending in their ballots today! Remarkable shakeup.
    But hold your horses about NC. On offense, the lads have a lot to do. O-line needs to gel. Backs need to get some yards. Everett needs to stop holding the rock like it’s going to magically stick to his hand. And there will be even more adjustments when some of the frozen five come back this week, which I believe will happen. Even with the exciting W it was hardly a complete, mistake-free game. When they DO figure out how to put together a complete game, LOOK OUT!!!

  3. This was big boy football and once again ND overcame adversity it created for itself. if we could put together some consistent play the game and many others wouldn’t be that close. We dominated in every area –even in rushing. But year after year and time after time with Kelly our special teams hurt us. Our kick off coverage put them at the 45 which ignited their only real drive of the game. Our muffed field goals kept the game close and nearly cost the game. it would have never been in question if we hit a couple of field goals earlier. It would also be nice if Brinza kept the ball out of the end zone on some of his punts. With that said, we shot ourselves in the foot over and over and still won a very physical game and the truth is we were the more physical team. The D played really well. Not sure why our supremely talented running backs continue to dance around instead of run. Im guessing they feel they need to make a big play in order to get more time. something is very wrong there. we got another week to try to fix that before the game we will need to be close to perfect in to win.

  4. As I said on my post after the game it was a great Irish victory but another sub par game by Golson. The final TD was great for us but with a 3 man rush and a wide open Koyack, who was open from the 10 yard line, I could have thrown that pass. The defense won that game and Stanford is not that great a team, but then again there doesn’t appear to be that many great teams this year. ND can’t look past NC, but I don’t think this is an ND team of old. They come prepared to play every week.

    Agree about Mayock, maybe then don’t have HD monitors in the booth but it was clear that Robinson keep his hands under that pass on review after review. It never “skidded on the ground”. What are they looking at? Go Irish!

    • Agreed. That ball never hit the ground and my wife even commented that she Mayock might need a trip to the eye doc.

  5. Vannie,

    Notice the lads in this article’s picture, just to the right of Koyak’s sholder. The 10 or so young men with similar opaque white rain ponchos. Are these some of the recruits? If so, some of these seem to be celebrating. Who are they?

    Might give us some insight to these guy’s inclinations toward becoming lrish.

  6. rumpofsteelskin says:

    Great game. It’s easy to criticize the players for some of the miscues like the snap handling, but I was there and I can’t overstate how miserable the weather was. Tough to handle the ball in those conditions.

  7. NDBonecrusher says:

    A hypothetical query for Vannie and all of NDN to consider: if the 5 are found to be innocent of academic misconduct, what ought the University/NCAA/both do to “do right” by these lads? At least some are potential pros who have lost half a regular season of exposure and development. A bonus year of eligibility? A high level public acknowledgement? I’m not sure what I would do if I were Fr. John but I’m pretty sure it would be more than, “Sorry kid-you’re OK. Now go play.”

  8. A great win for the Irish yesterday! Let’s not overlook a very good North Carolina team coming to town next week. Go Irish!

  9. We are still a work in progress. We have made too many mistakes the last two weeks to even compete with FSU. Let us not overlook North Carolina. They are having a bad season, ans are looking forward to beating us to save their season.

  10. Game ball goes to the D because they stopped Stanford cold in spite the O and special team efforts to give the game away. Kelly has called some of the best games of his tenure at ND this year. If the O would execute better we could have blown away our last three opponents.
    The men are fighting hard and playing inspired. Forget the polls and focus on the Tar Heels!
    GO IRISH!

  11. A great win under real tough conditions. Van Gorder has brought an attacking mind set to the defense and so far he’s managed to do it without giving up any significant big plays by the opposition. It’s been a long time since I’ve seen ND with this many underclass men who are playing significant minutes and contributing. Most of their best players have multiple years of eligibility. Possible trap game coming up, hopefully they’re not looking past UNC.

    • mrm, did you not just read 50 times that UNC is a trap game so don’t look ahead?

      This team must be a testament to how well Kelly has been recruiting. Like Chicago Irish said, so many underclassmen, playing so good, on both sides of the ball, especially on defense. Van Gorder appears to be an awesome D coordinator. He’s clearly enjoying himself very much. On the other side of things I think Kelly has actually been doing a good job of calling plays.

      Those of you who have commented on Mike Maylock (with the exception of the one poster who was clearly his mother) I very much agree with your sentiment. I’m especially sick of hearing his opinion about every review call (he’s most often wrong) and yes, his seemingly ceaseless praise for the opponent. I guess NBC wants to maintain a little bit of objectivity with the ND games and doesn’t want to come across pro-Irish per se, but at the same time let’s face it, most people who tune into ND games on NBC are ND fans and could do without the constant praise for the other team. I actually miss Piglet and his stinkin’ USC butt.

  12. If not for for the coaching acumen of Van Gorder we’d probably be 3-2. He’s like the Gus Malzahn of defense. Kudos to Golson for for not hanging his head and finally making a play when it counted the most. Still need to clean up the turnovers, especially deep in our own territory, since at some point the luck of the Irish will run out if this continues every week.

    IMO, ND will not face a more physical and active D-line than Stanford’s, so this will hopefully be a great learning experience going forward.

  13. I could not understand why the oddsmakers and pollsters have such a love fest with Stanford. When I saw they were 3 point favorites, I couldn’t believe it. They scored 10 points against USC which then gave up a boat load of points to Boston College. Stanford will lose at least three more times before the season is over. ND needs to beat Florida State because the way their schedule is shaping up, their strength of schedule will not have a top 25 team ranked in it other than Florida State as the Final Four are chosen. Don’t over sell North Carolina. They are terrible. Living here in the Tar Heel state they are in worse array than Miami was when Notre Dame played them in the Sun Bowl.

  14. Golson can’t take 3 quarters off. If you want to go all the way, you need to look better to beat the best.
    Stanford is good, but not elite. In 2012, ND beat them, but when they played the best in Alabama, they got crushed. FSU will be a good mid-season test, Golson will have to perform, and I think Kelly will have to make the game more simple and give him plays with easier decisions. Golson is the key in this spread, and Kelly needs to establish the run by giving Golson more reads with the option to hand-off or keep, but above all else, he and other skill players need to STOP RUNNING WITH THE BALL LOOSELY HELD! Stanford is not as good as they were with Andrew Luck; Michigan, Purdue and Syracuse are pretty bad, and Rice is horrible. Golson was a Heisman contender after the Rice and MI games, after the past two games he looks like a head-case.

    The defense has a plethora of something ND hasn’t had for decades: SPEED! But, they haven’t played a good offense yet, and they gave up two really long rushing touchdowns near the goal line. Three defenders bit on the fake pitch on 2nd and goal and let Hogan waltz in to the end one. Then another 9-yard run on 3rd and goal after a fake-blitz totally threw off the linebackers, and again a Cardinal rusher waltzed into the end one. I’m sure FSU will test many facets of the ND defense, but above all else, QB play will be key against a fast, strong, and aggressive FSU defense. I felt like Golson should have been replaced by Malik Zaire, who hasn’t been tested, but is a faster and more explosive runner. A running QB really opens up the spread, Golson is a decent runner but not a dangerous threat, and his tendency to fumble and slighter build make him a liability running the ball on a consistent basis. Let’s all hope that Kelly can coach a national championship calibre QB and Golson gets better, but I expected more out of him after his year off, and I think we’ll need another year or two to win it all.

  15. 1) Golson is short. This hampers his ability to see some open routes. There were so many times that routes were open and the ball got there way late because he doesn’t have the benefit of a clear central and peripheral view of the field of play. He also makes some crazy decisions, like that pick thrown when he could have thrown the ball away and we kick a chip shot field goal. It looked like his brain wanted to throw it away, but his instinct wanted to try to make a play, so the two met in the middle and he threw it low and outside where the Stanford DB made an incredible play on the ball. I like the guy, but we have to be willing to accept the riverboat gambler side of him (sacrificing ball security to make some cuts) along with the competitive and tough side of him as well. I have faith that, over time here, he learns when the odds are in his favor to gamble.

    2) There were several times where our offensive line let guys just run free into the backfield through the gaps to the right and left of the center. Holy mackerel, that is no way to win a football game. I know we’ve had some line shuffling, but we need to figure this thing out and soon. If I’m an upcoming opposing defensive coordinator, I’m studying the Stanford tape with great interest.

    3) Mayock needs to figure out how to get some better balance in the booth. More often than not, he seems to be leaning in favor of our opponents, probably in some bid to “remain neutral.” Twice he was swearing that the play would go against ND after a review when, in both cases, it was clear as day that the play was a good one for the Irish. Rather than admit he was wrong as the HD angles were presented on the broadcast, he feigned surprise and shock that the calls went our way. This just feeds the anti-ND kooks out there with more chum. Then again, perhaps NBC is trying to cast the widest net possible for ND lovers and haters. Controversy does sell, after all.

    4) As frustrated as I was throughout the game with our team’s mental errors, I strangely had faith that we would pull out the game in the end. I am very proud of this team of younger guys who just stood toe to toe with a Stanford team where most of the guys were 22 or 23 years old on both sides of the ball (youngest starter on either side was a junior). ND has the talent to truly be an elite squad if they can manage to focus the energy. We have an active and athletic defense. Our receivers and backs have real talent and big play ability. Our quarterback is super competitive and has a hose for an arm. The big question really is, can all of the horses pull in the same direction on the same day? If they can, I would put this team up against the best in the country and feel pretty good about the outcome. What’s more, many of these guys are young and only getting better.

    5) For anyone that wants to bang on coach Kelly, just watch how many NFL teams come banging on his door once the season is over. Listen to how the narrative at ESPN and other outlets has shifted towards one of respect for this guy and how he runs the program. Lou is known to have remarked about college students and their volatility based upon girlfriends, academics, etc. Kelly is winning in the rust belt at an institution with high academic standards, and doing so quite often. He should be our coach for a good long time to come if it were up to me. Even he has shown growth in his ability to work more positively with the kids (no more purple face).

    6) Looked cold back there in the Bend, but given that it was 100 degrees in California I wished for a minute that I was there in that glorious cold rain!

  16. Out Offensive Line had better grow up A Lot before Florida State game. It is painful to see the stifled running game resulting from their ineffectiveness.

  17. It is inevitable that Stanford fans are already trying to diminish the value of ND’s Víctory by saying Stanford did NOT play up to standards, and that this year’s Cardinal is NOT performing at the previous elite level.

  18. You’re right about the NFL and Brian Kelly. And unfortunately, the attraction is more than mutual. I think he wants to move to the NFL as soon as he gets an offer.

  19. I am never surprised that a few comments highlight the weaker/questionable points of our game instead of just enjoying the result. Stanford was a good opponent. Apparently they outplayed USC in a similar fashion to the way we outplayed them. I think we simply were better. What could be a better proof than the fact that in years past they rushed for 200+ and sat. they rushed for 47!
    And Golson is tall enough and smart enough to find the throwing lanes. I was there on Sat. it was ridiculously cold, yet he made several perfect throws (along with a few bad ones)

    This is my only forum to comment, so I want to add that I am one of the few that think some of the 5 will be exonerated. If you unknowingly copied or pasted, or a tutor added a few more comments than are acceptable, that is only punishable by a reduced grade, or even an F on that paper. From the rumours, it doesn’t sound like it was widespread. Just like in criminal law, their intentions should be one of the biggest factors.
    Lets get them back and whack Jamis Winston!

  20. Regarding BinCa’s comments about “no more purple face.”
    An acquaintance who watched the game says he saw Kelly call a player an f—ing moron, clear as day on the sideline, after a botched play…Can anyone corroborate this?
    I don’t mind a coach yelling “C’mon, get your head in the game!”
    But calling someone an f—ing moron crosses the line…

    • It’s all about context. Going purple-face shows a loss of control, which I don’t want to see in any coach, let alone a Notre Dame coach. But I’m not going to fault a coach for using harsh language as long as it’s not objectively offensive. Football coaches yell.

  21. I can’t believe the harsh criticism of Goldson. Sure he made some boneheaded moves. He is the reason we haven’t lost a game. with the likes of last years QB we would have lost two games by now. Give the guy a little credit. the o line hasn’t helped him at all. He has had a heck of a first five games even with the mistakes.