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Monday, September 25, 2006

Caption Contest!!!


Beginning: NOW!!!
(Post your captions in the comments section.)

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Photo Of The Week


Gotta work on that spiral, John!

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Saturday, September 23, 2006

IRISH 40, SPARTANS 37

VICTORY!!!!!! This is a very, very key turning point in this season. This team has a ton of heart. DO NOT STOP BELIEVING!!!!!!

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LET'S TEACH THEM SOME FIELD MANNERS!!!

Coach Weis: "There's one incident in particular that I'll use for motivation."

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Monday, September 18, 2006

Gary Gray Is Irish!!!!!!

Woohoo! It's about time for a break from all the bad news. Yesterday, cornerback Gary Gray commited to Notre Dame. This is a major feat for the Irish, as they already are building a stellar defensive recruiting class. Let's take another look at the 2007 defensive recruiting class so far (In order of commitment date) :

#1. Kerry Neal, DE/LB, 6-1, 220
#2. Aaron Nagel, LB, RB, 6-1, 215
#4. Steve Paskorz, RB, LB, 6-2, 220
#5. Justin Trattou, DE, 6-4, 250
#6. Gary Gray, CB, 5-11, 165

Great job, Charlie, now, let's make this class even better with some more commitments!!!

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Sunday, September 17, 2006

What Went Wrong? Lack of Burning Desire

By Sir John

This really is one day I do not have to read the sports pages by experts to know what went wrong. 47-21.

I found the answer in what Coach Weis stated. "I was surprised that we collectively, from me on down laid an egg. I expected us to have a better performance."

Coach is saying that no one stepped up to the plate. "Let Joe do it." It was someone else's job to come out of mediocrity and be a star. Collectively means everybody, but that itself starts with each individual having the burning desire to win not being flat or lacking enthusiasm. Burning desire. Burning desire is an expression a wise coach once used to make undersized, overlooked nobodies manhandle teams better then they were.

There have been times I have said we don the blue and gold and simply show up saying 'We are Notre Dame and you're not.'

We often live in a rarefied atmosphere of we are the best. This fails to see that the other team usually wants us worse then we want them. It fails to see if we beat them we simply beat Michigan. If they beat us they beat Notre Dame and humiliated millions. That's incentive, that's burning desire.

It's having something go wrong once, then again and again until it is an unstoppable drumbeat. Collectively means waiting for someone else to do something.

That's an assistant coach even saying hold up, I have a better idea, or a player thinking 'I need to hit that sucker harder next time' or 'I need to run my route faster'.

The drumbeat of no 1st downs until minutes in the second quarter, 3 interceptions, 4 yards rushing and 11 penalties.


I got to thinking again about "Burning Desire", a limited edition book about my old high school, Flaget and it's coach, Paulie Miller. Paul Hornung came out of that school along with Howard Schellenberger.

There's a wide range of things coaches can do at halftime in a game if behind, whether it is deciding on personnel changes, schemes or chewing out a team. Important things and this is 2006 with complex offenses and defenses.

I'm reminded of an incident when Flaget got pounded in the first half and were trailing badly. Everyone trudged to the locker room except there were no coaches. The players sat around in silence waiting for the coaches to come and chew them out. Nobody appeared until a couple minutes before the half ended. The door opened and coach popped his head in and said, "Oh excuse me, girls, I was looking for the Flaget locker room."

One can't say that about 'girls' in politically correct 2006. But the team stormed out angrily and won that damned game. Sure, it was psychology in action. No schemes, no adjustments, just a mental change and the burning desire to win.

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Thursday, September 14, 2006

Penn State At Notre Dame Game Report

Sorry everyone the game recap is so late. I've had a busy week at school and haven't had a chance to do a recap. John Imre made a recap, and he gave me permission to post it on here. Enjoy!

By John Imre from ND Irish Fans

Fourteen years in the making and it finally comes to a close. Since the great "Snow Bowl" of 1992, both the Fighting Irish and Nittany Lions have gone through strong turbulence in their programs. Just as great teams of college football do, they both have managed to muster a comeback in their respective manner. The place? What greater place than when they last met, Notre Dame Stadium. No snowfall and no sleet this time around, just great early season weather.

After an outstanding 11-1 last season and a victory over Akron in last week's opener, the Penn State Nittany Lions visited the Fighting Irish of Notre Dame. The Irish marched downfield on the opening drive and cashed in on a field goal to give them an early three point lead. Clock management was one of the key Irish successes coming off of last season and it seems that some thing won't change. After consuming nearly 19 minutes in the first half, the Irish managed to put up a score of 20 -0. Brady Quinn threw 12 for 16 and 150 yards in the first half. The defense, after considerable questioning by the experts, kept the Nittany Lions at bay allowing their offense to do their magic. Make no mistake, Penn State quarterback, Anthony Morelli, put together some eye opening drives, but the Irish defense pulled together at critical plays and stopped Morelli and company from scoring until the third quarter. Morelli, who went 21 of 33 passing with one interception and a fumble, learned what it's like to play in a big game environment and learning wasn't easy to swallow. The Nittany Lion second half opening drive was quickly ended when Tom Zbikowski picked up a Maurice Crum, Jr. forced fumble on Morelli for touchdown. The day began to get longer for the Nittany Lions and they never seem to overcome their mistakes. The Irish, however, capitalized on these mistakes and closed the game as the fourth quarter neared. Brady Quinn ended the game at 25-36 passes, 288 yards and 3 touchdowns to Jeff Samardzija, Rhema McKnight and Darius Walker. Coach Weis, as always, took advantage of the overlooked tight end position as John Carlson racked up big numbers, 6 receptions for 98 yards. Travis Thomas put the nail in the coffin during a punt fake play and darted down field for 43 yards, setting up his own 1-yard touchdown run.

Penn State moved the ball frequently, but never finished their drives until late in the forth quarter against a second team defense.

A botched field goal attempt, an interception and fumbles proved too much for the Nittany Lions to recover from and the Notre Dame faithful canned any questions lingering in their minds.“Notre Dame played very well and they did a great job coaching,” said Joe Paterno after the game. “They outplayed us and their coaching staff did a great job." Although the Irish didn't play #1 Ohio State or #2 Texas, they did knock off a ranked Nittany Lion team with a sound well-rounded game to include offense, defense and special teams.

After missing 2 field goal attempts last week against Georgia Tech, Carl Gioia redeemed himself by splitting the uprights early in the first quarter. Travis Thomas if finding out just how intelligent of a staff he's dealing with. Travis is making his presence known on both sides of the ball and followed up with a touchdown. Something he probably didn't expect as he is listed as a starting linebacker. Statistically, today, Brady Quinn has lived up to expectations. While his supporting cast dropped a couple balls, he is well ahead of where he was in the second week of last season. "I thought Brady Quinn was a great player coming in and he didn’t do anything to change my mind,” Paterno said. Darius Walker was fairly quiet today in the running game, but came through with a Brady Quinn pass for touchdown.

Side Notes:
Penn State is a tough competitor and they should have enough in them to make waves in the Big 10 conference again. While the score may show the opposite, Anthony Morelli put together some great passes and lead his team very well. An early season showdown with another team such as the Irish should be a learning experience for the young quarterback and I don't suspect he'll lose any confidence. The famed and respected Coach Joe Paterno is putting together another young team that should not be overlooked. (Following information obtained from www.gopsusports.com). Today Tony Hunt became the 16th Nittany Lion to surpass 2,000 yards rushing for his career. Hunt surpasses Franco Harris (2,002) and Jon Williams (2,042) to move into 14th place on the Penn State all-time rushing chart.

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And Notre Dame Wins 30 to 29. Notre Dame Wins 30 to 27...


AAAHHHH!!! I'M TOO PATHETIC TO FIND WHAT THE REAL FINAL SCORE IS RIGHT NOW BECAUSE I'M TRYING TO HOLD IN MY SOBBBING!!!

Friday, September 08, 2006

Getting To Know Ambrose Wooden


Sept. 8, 2006

Senior corner back Ambrose Wooden enters the 2006 season looking to build on a strong junior campaign that saw him start all 12 games for the Irish at corner back. One of the team's most improved players in 2005, Wooden finished third in tackles with 61 solos and 13 assists for 74 on the year. He picked off a pair of passes and recovered a fumble while being credited with five pass break ups. Wooden led the Irish with a career-high 12 tackles (10 solo, two assists) in the opening win versus Pittsburgh. He had interceptions versus Washington and Tennessee and had a big fumble recovery in the Fiesta Bowl against Ohio State. GameDay's Brian Lasky gives Irish fans a chance to get to know Ambrose Wooden.

Lasky: What is your major and how did you get interested in that area of study?

Wooden: I am finance major here at Notre Dame. I have always been interested in numbers and the stock market.

Lasky: What has been your hardest class and why?

Wooden: My most difficult classes have been Managing Financial Institutions or Business Forecasting.

Lasky: What is your favorite class and why?

Wooden: My favorite class is U.S. Latino Spirituality. It's a class where I can broaden my perspective on spirituality, especially from the point of view of another culture.

Lasky: What made you pick Notre Dame over the other schools you were interested in? What were the other schools?

Wooden: As soon as I got to Notre Dame, I figured this was the place for me. I thought the atmosphere was amazing. The other schools I looked at were Stanford, Boston College and Maryland.

Lasky: To date, what has been the highlight of your Notre Dame career?

Wooden: The highlight for me has just been going out everyday and playing. From practice to the games, it's all been exciting. To be able to experience this atmosphere is just amazing.

Lasky: Who were your sports idols as a kid and why?

Wooden: My sports idols growing up were Deion Sanders, Chris McAlister, Michael Vick, and Adam Wall.

Lasky: As a football player, is there any one player you modeled your game after?

Wooden: The players that I try to be more like are Chris McAlister of the Baltimore Ravens and Deion Sanders even though no one can be like Deion.

Lasky: Who has been your biggest non-sports role model and why?

Wooden: My biggest non-sports role models would be my mom, dad, brother and sister. They have all had different experiences that I have learned from and have helped guide me through my life.

Lasky: What is one thing in your life that you cannot live without?

Wooden: I can not live without my family. They are my backbone. They keep me going. Whenever I have a tough time, I can call them and they make it that much better.

Lasky: Do you have any pre-game rituals?

Wooden: My pre-game ritual is that I have to drink red Gatorade. I am superstitious about that. I also write, "one play at a time," on my wristband.

Lasky: How do you think you've grown as a person since coming to Notre Dame?

Wooden: When I came to Notre Dame, I came in as a young man. I am beginning to develop and understand how there are positives and negatives in life. You are going to experience bad things in life. It just depends on how you respond.

Lasky: How and what do you do to balance your schoolwork and football?

Wooden: I try to stay focused on what needs to be done and stay ahead as much as you can. That can be impossible here, but you just have to do what you can.

Lasky: If you were stranded on an island and could only eat one meal, only listen to one song, and spend you time with only one person; what would you eat, what would you listen to and who would you pick?

Wooden: I would eat my mom's fried chicken, listen to Earth, Wind, & Fire and bring a family member.

Lasky: What CD do you have in your collection that would surprise people?

Wooden: I have Gavin McGraw, and Aerosmith, among other CDs.

Lasky: What would a movie about your life be titled and who would star as you?

Wooden: A movie about my life would be called, "The Long Run," since it has been such a long road in my life. Will Smith would probably play me.

Lasky: Who is the best athlete that you have ever competed against?

Wooden: Reggie Bush is the best athlete that I've ever played against. He is a great player.

Lasky: If you had the chance to play golf with anyone in history, besides you, who else would be in your foursome and why would you pick those three people?

Wooden: My foursome would include Tiger Woods because he is the best at the game, Martin Luther King since he was a great African-American leader and Michael Vick because of his athletic ability.

Lasky: When your football career is over, what do you see yourself doing?

Wooden: I see myself doing as much as I can for the community. Giving other kids the opportunities that I had to attend a great high school and come to a place like Notre Dame even if it is not Notre Dame. I want to just try to get them a college education.

Lasky: What is your favorite thing about playing for Notre Dame?

Wooden: I like everything about playing football at Notre Dame especially the camaraderie on the team. You cannot simulate a game here. There is nothing you don't like about game day from the walk to coming out of the tunnel.

Lasky: Describe what it feels like on game day and playing Notre Dame stadium?

Wooden: Game day at Notre Dame Stadium is a feeling that you can't describe. You get chills down your neck when you come down that tunnel. Once you run out on that field, you have all the screaming fans which is something you can't match anywhere.

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Wednesday, September 06, 2006

Fear the Mohawk

Ya look good, ya feel good, ya play good.

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Monday, September 04, 2006

Poll Time!!!

What will Notre Dame's season record be?
13-0
13-0
13-0
13-0
13-0
  
Free polls from Pollhost.com

Sunday, September 03, 2006

Irish Narrowly Escape Yellowjackets, 14-10

Saturday night was a tense one for Notre Dame fans around the country. The Irish came into Bobby Dodd Stadium ranked #2. Georgia Tech came into this game expecting to win and pull off an upset, as you could see by the energy the whole team had. The stingy Georgia Tech run defense blitzed all night, performing stunts all around, pressuring top Heisman Trophy candidate Brady Quinn for most of the first half. The Notre Dame offense stalled for most of the first quarter, resulting in three punts. Georgia Tech was pressuring inside Notre Dame's five yard line when Georgia Tech quarterback Reggie Ball dropped back a few steps and threw a jump ball to stud wide receiver Calvin Johnson. With a 6-inch height difference between him and Notre Dame cornerback Mike Richardson, Johnson easily nabbed the ball for a touchdown. After two Notre Dame drives in the second quarter, Notre Dame lined up on Georgia Tech's 5-yard line with sixteen seconds to go in the first half. With an empty backfield, Quinn took the snap, dropped back, and ran the ball in for a touchdown. It was a perfectly executed draw play that caught the whole Georgia Tech defense off guard. The Irish trailed 7-10 at halftime.

The whole second half was an entirely different atmosphere. The crowd was not into the game as much. The whole Georgia Tech team was fatigued. The Notre Dame offense was finally back on track. The Notre Dame offensive line was blocking the blitz, Darius Walker was getting yards, and Brady Quinn was completing his throws to the receivers. After the first Notre Dame drive of the second half, Darius Walker scored on a 13-yard run, stretching his body to break the plane of the goal line with the ball. After the Irish touchdown, it remained scoreless for the remaining time of the game. The Irish defense stepped up and held the Georgia Tech offense to 52 total yards, and allowing them to score no points. After Georgia Tech punted on 4th down late in the 4th quarter, Notre Dame has it's final drive as the Irish celebrated their 14-10 victory over the Yellowjackets.

Grades:
Offense:
Quarterback: Brady Quinn had a good night, not great. He had some trouble in the first half handling all of the pressure from the Georgia Tech defense, but came up with a rushing touchdown in the final seconds of the first half. He finally calmed down and led Notre Dame down the field in the second half, which led to a Darius Walker touchdown. He finished 23-38, with 246 passing yards, and one rushing touchdown.
Overall Grade: B

Running Backs: Darius Walker had a great night with 104 rushing yards, one rushing touchdown, and 18 receiving yards. Walker scored on a 13-yard touchdown run in the third quarter. Travis Thomas also got some time at runningback, rushing for 19 yards. Asaph Schwapp had a great night himself as a fullback, rushing three times for 13 yards, while blocking for the other runningbacks and Quinn.
Overall Grade: B+

Receivers: Rhema McKnight was making some impact on his first start since last year against Michigan, getting eight receptions for 108 yards, including a long reception on a 44 yard pass. He almost came down with a spectacular diving, one-handed grab, but it was ruled incomplete after an official review. Samardzija did not do so well, though, getting only six receptions for 74 yards. Him and McKnight were being thrown to a lot on little receiver bubble screens, which did work well, except for one that got called back on a completely horrible call in which Rhema McKnight was called for holding, which was clearly NOT A HOLD. New starter John Carlson at tight end showed his ability to catch, with four receptions, 36 yards, and a long of 14 yards. He showed great hands on a pass that was tipped by him, then tipped by his defender, and caught it on the ground. The only question is will he be a consistent blocker?
Overall Grade: B+

Offensive Line: The offensive line had some trouble in the first half picking up Georgia Tech's heavy blitzing and handling the crowd noise of Bobby Dodd Stadium, but regrouped and played well for the rest of the game. True freshman Sam Young had some early troubles also, making some small mistakes any other freshman would in his first game as a starter. Ryan Harris had a huge pancake block later in the game, and the rest of the line was great.
Overall Grade: B-

Defense:
Defensive Line: The defensive line had an average night, getting a tackle here and there, but did not bring much pressure. Still, Abiamiri and the line should have a great season bringing pressure on opposing quarterbacks and runningbacks.
Overall Grade: C

Linebackers: Travis Thomas had a decent night for his first game starting at linebacker, tallying four tackles, two of them for losses. We got whipped on Georgia Tech's rush offense, though, allowing 146 yards from them. Reggie Ball whooped us, gaining 75 yards, more than the runningback. Some of that yardage came from big third down plays. If we want to get the ball back in games against mobile quarterbacks like Reggie Ball, our defensive line and linebackers will need to step it up and stop them from getting big runs, especially on third down.
Overall Grade: C

Secondary: If you watched this game and the Fiesta Bowl, you wil see there is a huge difference in the secondaries. You might even not know that the secondary from the Georgia Tech game was Notre Dame's secondary. Remember the air raids that Ohio State quarterback Troy Smith gave us in the Fiesta Bowl? Not the case this time versus Georgia Tech. This secondary has greatly changed. We know this because this new and improved secondary held Georgia Tech to only 140 total passing yards. Those numbers are foreign compared to the 342 passing yards given up by the secondary in the Fiesta Bowl. Although there was a long 45-yard completion to Calvin Johnson and a 4-yard touchdown to Calvin Johnson on a jump-ball drill, the secondary played great. This is step #1 to our national champinoship run.
Overall Grade: A

Special Teams:
Kickoffs: Bobby Renkes was solid on kickoffs, averaging 64.7 yards on three kicks, and had one touchback.
Overall Grade: A

Field Goals: Carl Gioia: 0/2, missed from 42 yards and 36 yards. Either Gioia needs to fix his inconsistency NOW, or we will need to start a new field goal/PAT kicker. Coach Weis: "Carl, you've missed two field goals. You're going to make the next one."
Overall Grade: F

Punting: Geoff Price had a terrific night for his first career start at punter, finishing with 252 yards punting, averaging 50.4 per punt, and a long of 61 yards, on five punts. He also had one punt inside the 20 yard line. A great start for our new punter, who has a booming leg and great accuracy.
Overall Grade: A+

Returns: We had a pretty good returning game, especially on kickoff returns, considering we only returned two kickoffs. David Grimes returned one kickoff for 46 yards, while freshman George West returned one kickoff for 33 yards. Georgia Tech punted away from Tom Zbikowski for most of the game, but he did manage to get 30 yards with a long of 17 yards.
Overall Grade: A-

Final Analysis:
The offense had trouble advancing the ball in the first half, until the final few minutes. Partly this is because of all of the pressure of the blitzing Georgia Tech defense, pressuring Brady Quinn. The defense was very much improved, holding Georgia Tech to 259 total offensive yards. They contained Georgia Tech standout receiver Calvin Johnson well, holding him to 111 yards and one touchdown. Darius Walker had a great night, rushing for 104 yards and one touchdown, and receiving for 18 yards. Rhema McKnight was back in action, catching eight passes for 108 yards. Brady Quinn finished 23-38, 246 passing yards, and one rushing touchdown.

The special teams played superbly. Geoff Price had a huge night, starting for the first time at punter. He punted for 252 yards, averaging 50.4 yards per punt, and a booming 61-yard punt. The kickoff return team was great, also, with David Grimes returning one kick for 46 yards, and speedy freshman George West returning one kick for 33 yards. Tom Zbikowski finished with 30 punt return yards. Bobby Renkes was solid at kickoffs for the Irish, averaging 64.7 yards per kickoff on three kicks.

Now, the bad part. Carl Gioia. Gioia missed two field goals, one from 42 yards and another from 36 yards. This is pretty bad, considering our high school's kicker easily made a 31-yarder and Nick Folk of the University of Arizona nailed a 48-yard field goal with the wind against him, to win the game 16-13 against BYU. If Gioia does not improve right now, and fix his inconsistencies, Coach Weis may be forced to either go for it on 4th downs outside the 20, or put in freshman Ryan Burkhart or senior Bobby Renkes. Nice win, Irish!!!

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Saturday, September 02, 2006

LET'S GET IT ON!!!!!!!!!!

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GO IRISH!!!!!!!!!! BEAT GT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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