Irish Seek to Regain Form at BC

Notre Dame will leave town after the loss to Georgia and seek redemption in New England as the Fighting Irish take on the Boston College Eagles on Saturday afternoon. Both teams suffered disappointing losses last week while struggling on the offensive side of the ball. The Irish will face a freshman quarterback for the second consecutive game. The Eagle signal-caller is Anthony Brown, who threw three interceptions in the team’s 34-10 loss to Wake Forest. Notre Dame’s Brandon Wimbush was victimized by pass protection breakdowns leading to sacks and lost fumbles against Georgia, but the first-year starter is also looking to correct his own mistakes as the season moves forward. ESPN will televise the game nationally beginning at 3:30 PM Eastern time.

Head coach Steve Addazio, who spent three years as an assistant at Notre Dame under Bob Davie, is now in his fifth season at the helm for Boston College. He holds a 25-28 record, and has recorded winning seasons in three out of four campaigns. The teams last played in November 2015 at Fenway Park, where the Irish edged the Eagles by 19-16.

The Irish have largely escaped the injury bug to date, although wide receiver Freddie canteen will miss this contest with a shoulder ailment. The Eagles have more serious problems, especially on the offensive line. Center Jon Baker was lost for the season with a torn ACL last week, and backup Shane Leonard is also sidelined. The task of making the line calls and snapping the ball now falls to Freshman Ben Petrula.

In 2014, Petrula was the starting left guard at St. Peter’s Prep in Jersey City, NJ, when Wimbush guided the Marauders to the Group 4 state championship. “Brandon is an explosive player and a really good kid and was a really great leader for St. Peter’s when I was there,” Petrula said. “It will be awesome to play against him for the first time. He was a leader for me as a young guy starting for the first time. That was his year to shine, and we won a state championship with him as a senior.”

NOTRE DAME’S OFFENSE vs. BOSTON COLLEGE’S DEFENSE

 width= The Irish were unable to open running lanes for their backs last week, and must find a way to establish a reliable ground game against the Eagles. Wimbush’s struggles and the failure of a downfield pass catching threat to emerge other than Equanimeous St. Brown makes it easier for opponents to game plan against this offense. Addazio is likely to commit eight players close to the line of scrimmage, copy Georgia’s strategy of deploying a spy to mitigate quarterback scrambles, and instruct his cornerbacks not to get beaten on a deep route.

The 4-3 Eagle defense is anchored by ends Harold Landry and Zach Allen, who lead a solid, veteran front four. The interior players are tackles Noa Merritt and Ray Smith, and two senior outside linebackers flank talented sophomore Max Richardson in the middle. This group is not likely to put great pressure on the Irish, but will try to contain the running game and force Wimbush into challenging third down situations.

Safety Will Harris leads a competent secondary, and he is supported by senior cornerbacks Kamrin Moore and Isaac Yiadom. This unit will challenge the Irish as long as the Eagle offense does not put them in impossible situations, as they did last week with multiple turnovers on their own side of the field.
Notre Dame can score points against this group if it remains balanced and diversified, but will not get far if they are predictable. The Eagles may lack All-American talent, but they have no glaring weaknesses or matchup issues in coverage that will be easy to exploit.

BOSTON COLLEGE’S OFFENSE vs. NOTRE DAME’S DEFENSE

 width= Freshman quarterback Anthony Brown was pulled from Saturday’s 34-10 loss to Wake Forest in the third quarter after throwing his third interception. He was replaced by Darius Wade, a senior who’s been a career backup. Brown has completed only half his passes, and most have been short, low risk throws. Kobay White and Jeff Smith are the leading underclassmen at the wide receiver position, while the lone senior Charlie Callinan has only two receptions in two games. Junior Michael Walker averages only six yards per reception to date.

Meanwhile, the Boston College offensive line is in pieces as noted above. Although Petrula has excellent potential, his first snap last week sailed over Brown’s head and killed whatever offensive momentum the Eagles had started to create. The running game has failed to gain traction, and tailbacks Jon Hilliman and A.J. Dillon are averaging fewer than three yards per carry.

The Eagles do not appear to have the skill position talent to pressure the Notre Dame defense, and Brown may still be susceptible to turnovers. He is not particularly dangerous as a running threat, and will have a difficult time directing his team into the end zone unless the Irish are generous with field position. The strength of the Boston College offense rests with tackles Aaron Monteiro and Marcell Lazard, but the interior of the line is young and raw.

SPECIAL TEAMS

Both Notre Dame specialists have demonstrated they are well above average. Kicker Justin Yoon looked great last week after a shaky opener, and punter Tyler Newsome has developed into a field position weapon. The Irish cover units remain solid but the return teams have yet to establish a threat.

For Boston College, kicker Colton Lichtenberg has been perfect this season while punter Mike Knoll’s statistics have been average at best. The Eagles have done an exceptional job in kick coverage so far this season. Unfortunately, they’ve had a lot of practice punting the football.

SUMMARY

Whether Boston College has the personnel to mimic Georgia’s defensive plan is very much in doubt. Early success with a few stops will create momentum for the hosts and impact the confidence of the visitors, so the offense needs to establish itself early. The Irish rushing attack should be able to create manageable down and distance situations if they are aggressive and physical. It’s not a winning strategy to simply tell your best athletes to “make plays” or outwit the opposition with inspired play calling. Notre Dame has an advantage in talent and needs to exploit it.

The Eagles will not score a lot of points on Saturday unless they are gifted, but they have the ability to make this an ugly game by keeping it low-scoring. Their hope is to force an Irish mistake and give themselves a chance to win at the end.

Here’s a few questions that will shed light on the outcome:

Which team will be able to establish a productive running game?

Can the Irish tighten up their pass protection schemes against Landry and company?

Which quarterback will find ways to convert on third down?

Will the Irish receivers help Wimbush by holding onto his passes?

Which special teams will have a positive impact on the outcome?

Will there be a Dexter Williams sighting in the Irish backfield?

Can Notre Dame fix the bugs in Brian Kelly Version 2.0 in time for the post-game presser?

PREDICTION

 width= The history between these schools is that Boston College typically plays over its head and the Irish operate without much visible emotion. This scenario could repeat on Saturday if Notre Dame is still licking its physical and emotional wounds from last week. There is some good news for the Irish – there will most likely be fewer fans in the stands cheering for the Eagles on Saturday than were screaming for the Bulldogs last week. I expect a boring but convincing victory over an outmanned opponent as the Irish try to build confidence for the more demanding teams on the schedule.

NOTRE DAME 27 BOSTON COLLEGE 16

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29 thoughts on “Irish Seek to Regain Form at BC

  1. Vannie,

    I was spot on In my prediction last week In regards to Georgia having too much speed on Defense
    for the Irish to handle.

    I believe this week is the opposite.. I believe the Irish have too much defensively for BC to handle.
    Elko will have his troops ready to pounce!! Irish know that they have a lot to play for in the next few
    weeks leading
    up to the USC Game.

    In spite of Brian Kelly (he’s not a great coach as I’ve said a million times), Elko and the boys
    take it to BC.. Gruden waiting in the wings!!!

    ND 33
    BC 13

    Anything less than this outcome will be a major disappointment!!

  2. Gruden said he will not coach in college last spring. But hey, we can dream. ND would thrive under a motivator like him. Change your mind JG! Go Irish!

    • Michael Boscarino says:

      Oh my God dude how many times does he have to say no for you to believe it will never happen. Please come back to reality!!

  3. Again looking for another domination like temple. BK will try his best to stay away from offensive calling but he will not. Another close one I fear as BC always gets in our face for this game. I don’t see a loss but it could happen. If so BK is on the clock and ready to unwind at MSU USC and Stanford…8 years are up..Another 500 season just spells no more.

  4. If ND O-line cannot push the BC D-line around this Saturday then there is something wrong! ND should win this game by
    at least 2 TD’s if not more, anything less then BK needs be on the next bus out of town. Dexter Williams
    needs touches as well as Josh Adams is going to wear out if he is the only horse in the stall. Oh, and stop running
    Wimbush, he is going to get hurt. Prediction: ND 42- BC 17. GO IRISH!

  5. Irish 34- BC 10 WImbush, Adams and Williams have a big day and Mack has a breakout game as the Irish get back in the Win column. GO IRISH

  6. Based on above description of BC offense, Irish may achieve a shut out due to improved D. If ND puts game away early in 3rd Q, Wimbush should stop runnng ball to avoid injury. If Irish are up by 21 points at start of 4th, backup QB and other positions should play. Winning big against BC is meaningless, so focus should be on staying healhy for next Saturday’s MSU game.

    ND 31
    BC. 3

  7. I have said Kelly is an 8-4 coach. Mark this up a one of the 8. BC is no match for the Irish this year (and never should be!). Wimbush will look good against a lesser quality defense and everyone will say he has learned from his mistakes last week. If the Irish are anyway near what Kelly says they should not lose any of the next 4 games. After 8 years of Kelly count me as a skeptic.

  8. Boston College will be challenged to make first downs of any kind; I would not be surprised if they didn’t cross the 50 for the first half. Their defense, however, is a talented, veteran machine that’s going to challenge every aspect of our offensive game plan. Neither offense is going to look all that hot. All other things being equal, I’d be predicting a low-scoring but easy ND win with lots of field goals, something like 23-6.

    We all know that’s never what happens when we play BC; it’s a game decided at least as much by passion and commitment as Xs and Os. BC always brings their A-game for the Irish, and ND is coming off a crushing, demoralizing loss, particularly for the offense. As a result, I’m concerned there’s likely to be some frustration, some careless plays, some emotional mistakes, and some focus issues. I see a high potential for turnovers, penalties, and blown assignments that end up affecting the outcome of the game.

    This is a test for our team. Are they able to focus on the road ahead and drive on without looking back, or are they all still glancing back in the rear-view mirror? Because BC’s a barreling truck coming around the corner, and a truck with a bad engine is still dangerous heading downhill.

    In the end, I still have faith. Our veterans are mature, they’re professional, they’re focused, and the rest of the team will follow their example. I’m sticking with my 23-6 prediction. We all should know by the end of the first quarter whether the team’s heads are in the game or not.

    If they don’t, we have a serious leadership issue.

  9. I’d like to see us dominate defensively. I know the offense will improve as Wimbush gets more comfortable but if ND is to have a good season (9-10 wins) the defense needs to smother teams like this. This really shouldn’t be a close game- ND 31-10

  10. When will this coach start winning against top tier programs/coaches? Answer: NEVER!
    How much more of this can anyone really take anymore?
    Support the players and the School Irish 28 BC 14. YAWN.

    • Agree. Never. Makes it difficult to get excited for a game against a lower opponent. If we win by 50, what does it prove? Next time we play a ranked opponent all the progress we see is gone.

  11. If ND doesn’t cover by two touchdowns, there are more games than USC and Stanford to worry about. BC barely got out of its own way against Northern Illinois and couldn’t find its way out of the stadium against Wake Forest. An unlikely loss will put the Titanic on its way.

  12. Anything less than a 20+ point win in convincing fashion (no late scores) will be a failure. Sure, BC has talent in their defensive front 7 but Wake Forest put up 34 on them. There is zero excuse for this now to be a game that Notre Dame dominates on both sides of the ball. 42-10 ND

  13. If Kelly loses this one it will be Weis’ Navy. I won’t be tuning in, however. I wouldn’t watch ESPN on a bet!!

  14. Thanks as always Vannie. I like the optimism from the posters above. I think (well, I HOPE) the Irish are pissed that they let last week get away from them and take it out on the poor Eagles. I sense a whoopin’. My wish list would include the following: the D plays out of their gourds and gets even more confidence, we find a few receivers, somebody gives Williams the damn ball, and Yoon is perfect. In answer to Jarrod above, it would at least “prove” that we can pound on teams that we ought to pound. That has not always been the case (Duke). Go Irish!

    • I was lucky enough to be at that Duke game! I get what you’re saying but I think Kelly has already proven he can’t pound the inferior teams with nearly enough consistency. In addition to the unacceptable losses (Navy, Duke, Northwestern, Tulsa, South Florida, etc) there have been far too many close wins vs. extremely inferior teams (Multiple vs Purdue, Pitt and Navy as well as Temple, BC, Viginia, etc etc.). We would need easy wins vs 9 of the next 10 inferior programs to convince me we are turning a corner. That’s why an easy win today doesn’t do anything for me. 🙁

  15. this is an easy game to predict. Nd wins in a blow out and all the blind ND fans will be happy the team is back on track. the fact is that we can’t win big games and we are out-coached in all big games. Winning this game by 100points doesn’t make Kelly anything more than the mediocre coach he is

  16. J Van spot on assessment of the BC game. Sorry for the late night rant about Georgia but it’s been killing me about the comments on the ND fan “sell-off” of tickets that provided a “home game” atmosphere for the Bulldogs. The facts are distorted to the point of ridiculous. The Notre Dame alumni ticket exchange has always provided ND alumni the opportunity to purchase tickets at face value. The facts…the ticket exchange has now been sold to a third party vendor. The facts… recent alumni are now shut out from the opportunity to buy tickets at face value. ND nation commenters who scream of the fan base not showing up for Georgia and possibly other games this season should be aware of all the facts! Son is an alumni and attended a wedding last weekend with the majority of his classmates at ND now alumni. Major topic was the alumni ticket exchange being sold to a third party and with it the ability to buy tickets at face value for home games gone. Let’s get the record straight. You shut out your alumni and what fan base do you expect with recent ND grads strapped with ND debt trying to buy tickets at inflated prices like the Georgia game. Just the facts Van. What else will this University put up for sale???

  17. ND should easily win this game but we can’t forget that Kelly’s teams often play down to their competition and let inferior teams hang around. I’m guessing ND will win by something like 35-17 but it will probably feel closer than that.

    It seems every year Kelly is telling us that the ND team is a “work in progress”. Kind of pathetic that after eight years the coach and the program always seem to be a work in progress, too with no real identity like other top teams.

  18. 2nd half is much better adjustments were made on defense for sure. Wimbush is a runner but he needs to get a lot better in the passing game by next week. O-line did much better and McGlinchey did a great job on Landry, kudos to the big man!