Bloodied and reeling from last week’s inexcusable disaster against mighty Northern Illinois, Notre Dame (1-1) will slink out of South Bend on a two-hour bus ride to West Lafayette, IN. A once-familiar foe in the Purdue Boilermakers (1-0) await their arrival. The teams will square off for just the second time since 2014 after battling for 68 consecutive years dating back to 1946. The Boilers hope to end their eight-game losing streak in this rivalry. The Fighting Irish lead the all-time series 59-26-2. The game will be nationally televised on CBS beginning at 3:30 PM Eastern time.
It is a time-honored tradition for college students to embark on a road trip when things get a bit uncomfortable on campus. This year’s Irish are no different. The home crowd resoundingly booed them off the field last week, although the coaches deserved most of the blame. Purdue’s Ross-Ade Stadium will not exactly be a welcoming destination but the Boilermakers have serious question marks of their own in the trenches, at wide receiver, and at linebacker.
Coach Ryan Walters is in his second season at the school and is looking to improve on a 4-8 record in 2023. He was hired at age 36 after spending two seasons as Defensive Coordinator at Illinois. In Champaign, he was the architect of the nation’s top scoring defense (12.3 ppg) in 2022. Walters has spent much of his time rebuilding a roster that suffered significant attrition after former coach Jeff Brohm left for Louisville. He has a quality quarterback in Hudson Card, who was previously at Texas before joining the Boilermakers last season.
Purdue faces a difficult schedule this season and most fans had expected them to lose this game. Reporters asked Walters if Notre Dame no longer appears invincible in light of last week’s depantsing. “We’re going to err on the side of thinking they are going to be an angry football team”, he said. “Any time you are Top 5 in the country and lose the home opener, that’s going to leave a bad taste in your mouth. I know Coach Freeman will have those guys fired up and ready to play.”
The Boilermakers won their opener handily against Indiana State on August 31 but did not play last week. They dominated the stat sheet but had 11 penalties in the 49-0 mismatch. Card, who completed 59% of his passes last season, was 24 of 25 for 273 yards and four touchdowns. This was the best single game performance for a quarterback in Purdue history. There are many new faces in other key spots this season, though. Therefore, it is difficult to gauge Purdue’s relative strength based on this one lopsided game.
Notre Dame may have an issue at quarterback but Coach Marcus Freeman denied it on Monday. He named Riley Leonard to start on Saturday despite an injured left shoulder that contributed to a wretched performance last week. I will take this with a grain of salt until Leonard actually takes the field. Can Leonard be effective if he cannot risk running the ball and his passing ability is impacted by a painful injury?
Slot receiver Jordan Faison returns to action for the Irish while defensive lineman Gabe Rubio remains out. Regarding Purdue, their reported injuries are defensive back Nyland Green and wideout CJ Smith. Both are transfers from Georgia who will sit this one out.
NOTRE DAME’S OFFENSE vs. PURDUE’S DEFENSE
Purdue has a plus-sized front four led by Jeffrey M’Ba and rush end Will Heldt. Linebackers Kydran Jenkins and Shitta Sillah also add proven third down sack potential. Walters is eager to send pressure and he has the personnel to do it early and often. A strong secondary enables him to gamble with various blitzes. If the Boilers are able to thwart the Irish receivers with man coverage, it could be a long afternoon for whoever is at quarterback.
The back end, led by outstanding safety Dylan Thieneman, is the strength of this defense. He led the team in tackles last season as a true freshman. Thieneman reminds me of former Irish safety Harrison Smith. Watching him compete against Faison this week should be fun.
Faison’s return gives Notre Dame a viable target to complement Beaux Collins, Jaden Greathouse and tight end Mitchell Evans. Jayden Thomas seemed to disappear last week while KK Smith, Kris Mitchell, and Jayden Harrison failed to impress. This group must get themselves open this week and the throws must be on target. Steve Angeli would be my choice to start due to his accuracy, better footwork, and on-time release. Leonard is a better runner when healthy but that may be irrelevant this week.
Offensive Coordinator Mike Denbrock must tailor his game plan to the strength of his personnel. This means a ground-based attack designed to move the chains and maximize time of possession. In other words, the opposite of what we saw against NIU. The Irish had the ball for only 25 minutes last week, which wore down the defense. They ran only half as many plays as the Huskies in the decisive second half.
Denbrock’s greatest failures occurred on a pair of second down and one plays where he called for a pass. In the first half, one such attempt resulted in Leonard’s injury. In the second half, his interception cost them the game. Freeman must also pay attention and impart the situational awareness that was missing last week.
PURDUE’S OFFENSE vs. NOTRE DAME’S DEFENSE
Based on the Boiler’s opening game statistics, Card had little trouble adapting to a new wide receiver corps. Tight end Max Klare is the only one of the top pass catchers from 2023 that is on the team. He led Purdue with five catches against ISU. Jahmal Edrine and Jaron Tibbs are the best of the young wideouts. Both are 6’3”. Edrine missed last season due to injury after transferring in from Florida Atlantic, where he caught 39 passes in 2022.
Last year’s leading rusher Devin Mockobee returns to anchor the running game. The former walk-on ran for 811 yards while battling through fumble issues that he hopes are now behind him. Reggie Love and Elijah Jackson are capable backups with different skill sets. Love is a bruiser while Jackson is a home run threat.
This group runs behind an offensive line that returns three starters. In addition, left tackle Corey Stewart was imported from Ball State while right guard DJ Wingfield transferred in from New Mexico. Against ISU they paved the way for 583 yards of total offense, including 248 on the ground. They also allowed a pair of sacks.
Purdue will attempt to replicate the NIU plan to run the ball right at Notre Dame. Card and his receivers are better players than their NIU counterparts, so they will not be one dimensional. The Irish line will have to play with more energy to offset Purdue’s size. The linebackers must not surrender five yards after contact as they repeatedly did last week. On third down, Notre Dame must apply pressure or Card will have time to deal the Irish a losing hand.
SPECIAL TEAMS
Purdue punter Keelan Crimmins averaged 47 yards per boot against Indiana State. Freshman kicker Spencer Porath appears to have beaten out senior Ben Freehill for the job. He hit all seven of his conversion attempts. Thieneman returns punts for the Boilers and should be considered very dangerous. The speedy Jackson handles the kickoff returns.
Notre Dame’s special teams fell apart last week. Mitch Jeter had his only two attempts blocked quite easily by rushers up the middle. Poor blocking was to blame rather than Jeter. Australian punter James Rendell is still struggling to adapt to the American style of play. His low line drives are a recipe for disaster. Although Faison is back at his receiver spot, it is not known whether he will reassume punt return duties.
SUMMARY
The Irish certainly know they have to play better this week. The question is from where that extra production will materialize. Offensively, Leonard’s injury is problematic in that it limits his strengths as an athlete. Even when healthy, however, he was uncomfortable in the pocket and threw several ill-advised or off-target passes. Steve Angeli should start in his place and Denbrock needs to adjust his approach accordingly. Angeli has been getting a larger share of snaps this week in practice, so anything is possible.
We should not overlook the offensive line. They were badly outplayed last week individually and collectively. Even the right side of the unit including center Ashton Craig was lousy. They must create lanes for Jeremiah Love and Jadarian Price if the Irish are to have a chance at winning.
On defense, the line is underperforming due to a number of factors. Tackles Riley Mills and Howard Cross have not been productive. Cross in particular is far from his usual disruptive self. This indicates that the leg injury he nursed during fall camp is far more serious than the team has disclosed. Rubio’s continued absence hurts the situation at tackle as the undersized Donovan Hinish is best suited for spot duty. Jason Onye was supposedly ready for a breakout season but he’s off to a slow start.
At end, graduate transfer RJ Oben has been invisible. Only Jordan Botelho and Boubacar Traore have impressed, while Josh Burnham has flashed at times. Their pass rush efforts have been satisfactory but they typically give up over 50 pounds per man against the run. We may get a look at highly touted freshman Bryce Young this week.
These issues tell me the team’s shortcomings cannot be overcome by motivational speeches. Walters is an aggressive coach with nothing to lose. Expect him to bring pressure and physicality as often as possible to test whether Notre Dame can handle it. He may not have the most talented athletes on the field but we have already seen how relatively unimportant that can be.
Here are a few questions that will shed light on the outcome:
- Will Notre Dame make changes to its starting lineup?
- Can the Irish defensive front seven contain Purdue’s running game?
- Which team will have the fewest penalties and turnovers?
- Will the Irish special teams bounce back from a poor game last week?
- Can Notre Dame’s secondary keep Card from having another stellar performance?
- Will Faison help rekindle the Irish passing game?
- Can Notre Dame reassert control over the line of scrimmage?
- Will the Irish coaches have a game plan that matches their personnel?
PREDICTION
I will get to the game prediction but will start with a guarantee. If Coach Denbrock calls another pass play on second down and one, watch for an aging alumnus from the Parseghian era to find his way onto the sideline and punch him in the face. No judge or jury would convict this guy, even if Denbrock did not get up. Furthermore, neither Coach Freeman nor his fellow staffers would intervene. They would quickly realize they were being spared having to buy out Denbrock’s bloated contract.
Okay, I got that out of my system. Let’s hope it does not come to this. Just to be sure, I trust there are some excellent lawyers among you if I require your services.
It is stunning that the season outlook for the Irish has changed so significantly in one week. They are certainly not the top five team that was advertised upon their return from Texas A&M. Neither are they as terrible as they appeared in the home opener. It is not encouraging, however, when your two oldest and best players are far from 100%. That they are trying to play through it is not necessarily a positive sign. It is discouraging if the coaches believe the next men in cannot get the job done.
I believe Notre Dame will play with more intensity. The larger question is how they will hold up physically along both lines with the same personnel. It is best to assume this game will not represent a complete “all is well” turnaround. Another tight, low-scoring contest is more likely than not. Uncertainty at quarterback makes it very difficult to imagine how the afternoon will unfold. Purdue is not even a Top 50 team but this rivalry usually produces a solid effort from them. My level of confidence in the Irish coaches to have the answers has also declined this week. As I write this now, I believe the Irish will survive this road trip, but barely.
NOTRE DAME 20 PURDUE 17
Tell John what you think in the Comments section below
Will says:
The NIU upset was not a simply a hangover from the A&M game. The truth is ND is not very good. The team has 4 basic weaknesses: O-line is inexperienced, D-line is undersized, the receivers are mediocre, and Riley Leonard is seriously overrated. It is going to be a very depressing season especially for those who say “ND will run the table.” The reality is that ND will be fortunate to end up with 6 wins and a minor bowl bid. What is particularly confusing to me is why Leonard was recruited to run an offense that plays to his weaknesses rather than his strengths. Another question I have is why was a spread offensive coordinator brought in after Freeman declared he wanted a physical run game. None of this makes sense. The only conclusion you can make is that Freeman is completely clueless. He seems to think that ND lost because they were overconfident after the big win in week one. Does he not understand that NIU was the better team and that he is coaching a fundamentally flawed team? As the season gets uglier and uglier Freeman’s response will be fascinating to watch. Personally I think he will begin to understand that he is in over his head. Will he resign after a 4 and 8 season? I think it is possible. One thing is guaranteed: he will not be fired. My prediction: Purdue 24 Notre Dame 13. One last thing: a commenter named Mike Coffey called me a whiny bitch for pointing out (before the season started) the obvious problems with Freeman, Denbrock, and Leonard. I take no personal offense at the insult, but I’d love to get your take now, Mr. Coffey. Have you changed your mind about the team after NIU? My sense is that most ND fans are still in denial.
mike '73 says:
Must sadly agree with 3 of your opening 4 assertions; I would point out that with the near-abysmal (taking into consideration BOTH games) QB play, that we really have nothing to go on of substance regarding the WRs. I suspect that had NIU’s QB had our WRs, his stats would have been much better, and the same goes for Hudson Card at Purdue on Saturday. Our coaches so far refuse to play our other QBs, and clearly based on 2 games Leonard is not up to the task, though admittedly for a mix of reasons: new OC & system, missed spring practice period, possible lingering effects of ankle surgeries, effect of left shoulder torn labrum. This game is a disaster waiting to happen, as Purdue has a long-festering dislike for ND, it’s AT Purdue, QB is limited, both lines are undersized/undermanned, OC refuses to play-call to his players ACTUAL strengths (instead of his mistaken impressions of what those strengths should be). As to your “why?” – Leonard was signed up BEFORE Denbrock agreed to come. My score prediction is exactly the same as yours. If that comes to pass, then hopefully Leonard is shut down to “break glass in emergency situation only” status, the young QBs fight it out for the rest of the season, Freeman develops the cajones to shut down his OC’s ridiculous inclinations for play calling as needed, and we return (?start) to play the way Freeman has said he wants ND to play. As for Leonard, he could then seek a new placement elsewhere after using this as a redshirt season (only 3 games). Anything else and we lose at least 2 of our young QBs AND Deuce Knight, ending up with likely only one for 2025, putting us right back into the portal for yet another transfer QB, thereby killing any QB recruiting hopes until Freeman is gone (IOW, back to Brian Kelly 2.0 QB recruiting). Season prediction: 6-6 at best, IF Leonard plays the majority of the Purdue game.
Irish Angst says:
Spot on, my friend. That ND got outplayed on both lines and outcoached in every possible way points us towards another mediocre season in college football purgatory. I expected the offense to have problems, especially early this season, but except for a few big running plays in week one it’s been a complete train wreck. I like Freeman but he doesn’t appear to be the guy ND needs.
Mike says:
This didn’t age too well! How you can be this negative is beyond me.
Hank says:
Who cares about college football anymore? It’s all AstroTurf and money now. Scholar athletes no longer exist. There’s no attachment by the athletes to the school. They pick to make the most money. They transfer when they’re not a starter. There is no connection to the student body as a whole. When ND eliminated real grass and ceased spray painting gold on the helmets Friday night, that was about abandoning the echoes. They don’t wake up anymore.
Will says:
Hank, you make excellent points about how money has ruined college football. It’s not just the players who have become mercenaries, it’s also the coaches who could give a rip about school loyalty when they are getting mega millions in guaranteed money from contracts that run anywhere from 3 to 10 years. Freeman’s salary is reported to be $7 million a year over 6 years. Kelly is allegedly making 80 million over 10 years guaranteed. Look at Jimbo: his severance is in the 60 or 70 million range…for not working!!!! The college coaches are making more than the pro coaches. It’s insane. Oh, and let’s not forget that coordinators are also making millions of dollars with guaranteed multi year deals too. As an ND alumnus I really hate to think what Denbrock is getting for ruining ND’s offense. When coaches strike it rich for life, do you really think they have the incentive to break their backs for Our Lady’s University? Ara, Dan, and Lou basically made peanuts….but they bled gold and blue. You’re right, Hank, the only ones who really give a damn are the fans who are shelling out big bucks to see their school get humiliated.
Tim says:
Totally agree. College football means nothing to me anymore. They can lose the next 10 games for all I care.
Mike says:
yet you’re here commenting. makes sense
Pap says:
Well said Hank.After suffering through that season wrecker last weekend, I am opting to golf tomorrow afternoon. Now my frustration will totally be on me!
Vernon J says:
Right, Pap.
Golf while game is recording.
Watch commercial-less replay with no sound and eyes peering between small space between fingers.
“Fore left.” (Not my drive but a Leonard pass)
Coleman Clarke says:
Excellent analysis as always.. I expect a better effort, however, I believe that Purdue will win this contest as the Marcus Freeman era begins its rapid demise.. Freeman is a well intentioned good man who simply is not capable of leading this program that has been in a malaise since 1993 after suffering a heart breaking loss to Boston College and the departure of Lou Holtz and Vinnie Cerrato. This administration must decode if they want to pursue excellence and wade into the polluted waters of NIL and the recruitment of ego driven 5 star recruits more eager for the bag then the four year degree etc.. the failures at key positions like wide receiver and defensive line along with the pursuit of average portal quarterbacks instead of developing current players have also hampered this program as well.. it seems as if we are stuck in football purgatory at this time. I believe Purdue will win this game and am also predicting a loss to Miami or Ohio as well.
GeorgeH says:
I suppose tomorrow night will tell whether or not they are in the rapid demise of the Freeman era, but you hit the nail on the head with the current problems. ND isn’t recruiting top level talent at skill positions and they need more NIL money and a better plan/process for how to spend it to do that. I agree developing current players is more important than the portal where you’re likely to get washouts, but you have to get those 5 star recruits to develop or you’re going to strike out more than you don’t. Nick Saban flourished with “ego driven 5 star recruits” for years, but the difference was Saban taught humility. I think Freeman tries to do the same but the ND culture needs to change. Lou Holtz appearing on the video board pre-game saying, “We’re Notre Dame and you ain’t.” is not only arrogant and motivation for the visiting team, but it evidences a culture of pretension that leads to these kinds of losses. ND thinks it can just show up and win like it did in the 80s and 90s when the talent gap was bigger. It isn’t that way anymore due to the NIL issues, a decade of mediocre recruiting, and more parity in general across most athletics. So to me the solution is simple – you play ball like the big boys and get off your high horse about NIL, and then you learn to be humble as a program and that everything has to be earned. This includes the fanbase. Too many times I hear that Notre Dame should be this or Notre Dame should be able to do that. It is what you make it and like everything else it requires money and hard work.
As far as this season goes, I’m still confident the players want to play hard for Freeman who I’m still willing to give a couple years since he’s still like the 5th youngest coach in the country. He has the best coordinators in the country. The defense is stacked with NFL guys and the O-line is young and will get better. I said in another post I think the offense can be serviceable under Leonard as long as they focus on getting the ball to the playmakers they do have (Love, Collins, Price, Evans, Greathouse). But I do think they need to get Minchey or Carr on the field this season. Showing HS juniors and seniors they’ll get to play (along with the NIL) is a selling point that was missing under Kelly.
For your IRISH EYES only! says:
I agree with you, BUT I don’t believe that the university is interested in winning National Championships in football. They are pleased with 11-1, 10-2 to appease the masses. It’s almost like the football team is the CA$H Cow for the school’s athletic department and THEY benefit from it (Men’s Lax, Women’s Basketball, and Women’s Soccer).
GeorgeH says:
You might be right. That won’t work for much longer though with super conferences and expanded playoffs.
Jim Kress says:
John, nice analysis. Glad you haven’t given up.
Jake in Cali says:
JVAN,
Glad you’re continuing the column!!!
On my last three posts, I said the following:
– OL Coach is not doing a great job
– Irish play down to the level of competition- and I’m sick and tired of it
– Offense was abysmal against A&M
Many posters didn’t believe me and I can live withh that.
After ND lost to Stanford two years ago, they struggled to beat a bad Cal team the following week.
They won’t be so lucky this week.
ND will not be able to sustain drives against Purdue!
Purdue 21
Irish 17
Bill in the Ville says:
The sky is not falling…
I agree with John. A close contest where ND will prevail.
I am concerned Purdue had a week off to prepare but if MF acquiesces and gives Angeli a shot, I think we’ll see more than 20 pts for the Irish.
I’m not a fan of the offensive coordinator but he’s got a staff of talented coaches to create an effective game plan and 4 and 5 star players to carry out that plan.
Those same guys that wore out the Aggies and executed flawlessly 2 weeks ago are still there.
Irish 31 Boilermakers 13
Irishwolf says:
Hi John- SO glad you wrote the column this week, thank you!
I think the NIU game plan had a rhythm on both offense and defense that came from scouting ND very well. It seemed that they had a good handle on ND’s tendencies and took advantage of it. If ND stunted on D or was going to run on O, NIU had the perfect play/defense called to stop us. If we get behind again, or outmanned/outhustled, the Boilers could do the same. ND’s scheming may not be enough to cover their physical and attitude shortcomings.
Purdue 23, Irish 14.
aNDy in Virginia says:
Excellent as always, but irrelevant given that Louisville will beat us at home next week. They’re a legit Top 10 team with one of the best, maybe the best, QBs we’ll face all year.
Idaho98 says:
If Louisville beats us at home next week, that will be the most amazing win in the history of college football.
Jake in Cali says:
“Executed flawlessly “, are you kidding me? The Offense was horrible for three and half quarters against A&M..
ccb says:
I expect ND to rally hard on Saturday. A tight game w/ a little more offense.
ND 24 Purdue 20
However, I see ND’s ceiling as 8 wins this year with a floor of just 4 wins.
Anyway, go Irish!!
pete says:
Glad to see you came back strong this week. If Denbrock calls pass on 2nd and 1, that Ara era alumnus will be getting help from the Devine era.
Scott says:
And the Holtz era. It will be a gangland beating.
Alex Clark says:
A race to the offensive coordinator!
GeorgeH says:
“It is not encouraging, however, when your two oldest and best players are far from 100%.”
Leonard is not one of the best players on this team. I am not alone in doubting whether he is even the best qb. Against A&M their offense was at its best when Denbrock got the ball out of Leonard’s hands. ND needs more playmakers but that’s a problem for another year. For now, use the ones you have. Love nearly saved the day Saturday. Give him, and others (Collins, Price, Greathouse, Evans) more chances.
Sean McCarthy says:
“watch for an aging alumnus from the Parseghian era to find his way onto the sideline and punch him in the face” If I were attending the game, you wouldn’t have to take that charge by yourself JVan 🙂
Great analysis. I wish they would just move on from the one year rental in Leonard and develop some of the young QBs. We’re going to need them more now since this season is lost.
One Historian says:
JV;
“Inexcusable disaster against mighty Northern Illinois” – In your 1st sentence you go sarcastic, and you’re better than that – they beat us because they were the better team, period. They won because they were not awed by the stadium and the surroundings – when was the last time that that occurred? They won because ND was outplayed and out-coached – this was painfully obvious. And before I turned to another game I saw NIU players taking selfies at mid-field standing on ND.
We were served a large chunk of humble pie last weekend and how we respond to it – starting Saturday – will say much about ND.
John Vannie says:
NIU won because they were better coached. They are not a better team than ND except on the day it mattered.
One Historian says:
Exactly – on the day it MATTERED.
Angeli should start – also agree.
David Reuter says:
100% agree with this efficient and precise. wording.
Marty says:
Simply put, if Riley is ineffective and the coaching staff doesn’t have a backup ready to go, then some people on the staff need to be let go immediately.
♥️#501988🍀🏈💪 says:
I said it last week and I’ll say it again l……THIS week’s practice should be the HARDEST to date! PUNISHING Purdue into OBLIVION is the only OPTION!!!!!!!! Anything else LESS is Hogwash!!!!
JV, GLAD YOU ARE BACK BROTHER!!!! 👏🍀💪
The Obvious says:
I was at the 1983 ND-PURDUE game at Ross-Ade Stadium. Irish 52 – Purdue 6. (I called 5 straight ND offensive plays that day from the stands. And I’m no Mr. Vannie!) Faust’s 3rd year. A Faustian 7-5 season.
After the game, walking down from my End Zone seat, a fine Boilermaker fan hocked a loogie on my ND cap. It was a better world back then.🤣 I don’t predict game scores. But do not discount the skill set of Purdue QB’s or the accuracy of Boilermaker loogies.
Irish Angst says:
The only real redemption for ND is winning a national title. They’ve spent the decades since 1993 proving they can achieve mediocrity on a fairly consistent basis. I don’t see any evidence they will ever rise above the second tier of college football again. But I’ve been an Irish fan since the 1970s and I keep hoping ND will prove me wrong.
Bill McCabe says:
Mr. Vannie, I too salute your pregame and post game articles. Your analyses are always accurate and very clearly written.
I’m thinking this game could put the nail in the MT coffin. He needs to shut down the Brian Kelly tendency to the Mike Denbrock game plan and play calls. And, eat whatever NIL $ for Riley Leonard and play his RECRUITED QBs. He may as well go down with “his guys” and not Leonard. It’s the proverbial short trip from the penthouse to the s**t house and Ross Ade Stadium is a hostile venue.
Jim (the other one) says:
Leonard is getting paid around $1.1 million. I don’t understand all the rules on how this works, but couldn’t the Irish find a quarterback who has played a few years in the NFL and never quite made it but hasn’t used up his 7 years of NCAA eligibility or whatever it is that players get these days and just hire him for $1.1 million instead of Leonard?
George Quill says:
I would give Leonard exactly one full quarter to prove he can move this offense and that he is neither injured nor over-rated. Failing that, we give one of the young men who were recruited to our alma mater and who have worked with this TEAM his chance. How else will we be able to recruit young talent if we go to the portal to recruit an outsider with a long, gray beard every year?!
Jimbo says:
Irish 34
Purdue 16
Let’s go Angeli.
vegaspoker74 says:
Leonard was found to have a “posterior labrum” from the NIU game and is listed as questionable. Questionable “posterior labrum”? It’s been many years since my altar boy days but “posterior labrum must be latin for “quarterbacking skills”.
lj mahon says:
As many of us feel (I think), can’t we just develop our young QBs which were highly recruited. Season not a total loss yet, but one more loss (this could be PU’s weekend) then the season is lost and I believe Freeman loses his team as well. Angelli, Minchey and Carr, why the h*** not? Their passing accuracy will be better (esp down field) and they have more years at ND. What am I not getting here?
Go IRISH!
Jamie E Schumaker says:
I’m 70, too old to be fooled again by an over-his-head Coach and Athletic Dept. that doesn’t have clue.
The back yard and great weather is my solace and my refuge while seeing, only at a distance, another voyage of the damned.
Caliradojoeirish says:
“Notre Dame may have an issue at quarterback but Coach Marcus Freeman denied it on Monday. He named Riley Leonard to start…”
I GUESS FREEMAN IS EITHER TOO INCOMPETENT TO LEARN FROM THE POOR PERFORMANCE OF HIS STARTING QB, OR HE DOESN’T MIND LOSING.
Scott says:
Boy, I sure am glad none of your predictions were anywhere close to accurate. I saw them coming out and laying at least 50 on Purdue today. I just never posted because I just didn’t want to hear it from any of you.
To the guy who predicted a Purdue beat down… learn to read and research. Nobody outside of this site had Purdue beating ND, much less by 14 or 20.
GO IRISH!!! Do the same to Miami (Ohio) next week and then Louisville the following week.
Michael Case says:
Yeah, I had ND by 59 but I too waited to see what the final score was before I posted to ensure I was right.
Scott says:
Think what you want. Purdue is not a good team. My prediction was 50 – 14, but I really couldn’t care less what you think. There was no way this Purdue team was stomping ND, PERIOD.
One Historian says:
Sunday a.m.
Waiting for JV’s take.
That has to be the worst beatdown in the history of the series. It got a bit sad when it broke 50 – and then 60. I’ve always liked and respected Purdue but you can’t expect ND to ease up – it’s up to Purdue to fight back and they flat-out didn’t. I was afraid that a brawl would break out in the lasr few minutes.
I remember a ND-Pitt game way back when – the Irish were WAY ahead at halftime and they played the 2nd half just runs & let the clock run.
I still don’t know what to think about this team.
John Vannie says:
Game summary is posted.