Confidence Picks to Notre Dame’s 2020 Football Schedule

Ever done an office confidence pool for football games? I fill out one from 12-1 and pick a winner for all Notre Dame’s games in 2020.

Notre Dame is likely to be a pre-season top ten team when they kick-off the 2020 football season on August 29 against annual rival Navy.  The game is currently scheduled to be played in Dublin but a change of plans could be announced sooner rather than later in regards to that.

Of the 12 games scheduled some are potential “game of the week” material where ESPN’s College Gameday could very likely show up.  Others are essentially fillers to complete the 12 game slate.

Which are the absolute easiest match-ups and which should scare Notre Dame fans the most?

Here are my confidence picks for Notre Dame games in 2020.  Feel free to play along by commenting either here, by mentioning us on Twitter or on our Facebook page.

12 Points:

College Football Morning Announcements – May 28, 2020

Summarizing the day that was – NCAA extends dead period, Iowa State’s ticket plan – the model for NCAA? And Big Ten Icon Gone

Good morning and welcome to another Thursday.  We’re 93 days until college football kicks off the 2020 season (more on that in posts to come today) and there are some newsworthy things to discuss so that’s exactly what we did this morning in the tenth edition of the “College Football Morning Announcements” with yours truly.

[protected-iframe id=”ab26f1de43ec23f6c43f2085224fcc6c-162776928-7793168″ info=”https://anchor.fm/cfnpodcast/embed/episodes/Ep–10—5-28-2020-Dead-Period-Extended–Iowa-St-Plan–Big-Ten-Icon-Disappears-eemdk1″ width=”400px” height=”102px” frameborder=”0″ scrolling=”no”]

Subscribe to Nick Shepkowski’s CFB Morning Announcements on Apple Podcasts

In this episode:

NCAA Extends Recruiting Dead Period – FIW

Iowa State Announces 2020 Ticket Plan – USATODAY

Big Ten Icon is Gone – USATODAY

ESPN’s McShay Updates ’21 NFL Draft Board, Irish Prospect Makes the List

There was one Notre Dame player listed as a top NFL draft prospect after he exploded on the scene last year.

The NFL Draft brought many fans a piece of sports back into their lives a little over a month ago and ESPN’s Todd McShay is already look ahead to the 2021 edition. He has released his NFL Draft rankings and the Irish were represented with fourth-year junior defensive end Jeremiah Owusu-Koramoah checking in as the 17th best prospect (insider article).

McShay is enamored with Owusu-Koramoah as he “was an impact player for the Fighting Irish last season. I love everything about his tape. He is fast, he is instinctive and he is only getting stronger as he develops.”

Owusu-Koramoah blew up last year, totaling 80 tackles with 5.5 sacks, 13.5 tackles for loss, 2 forced fumbles and 2 recoveries along with 4 passes defended. After two years sitting behind Te’von Coney and Drue Tranquill and learning, Owusu-Koramoah honed his craft and just kept working. The time paid off making a big impact on defense and creating a hype train for the 2020 season.

Coming out of high school in Virginia Owusu-Koramoah was seen as an athlete which might be the reason he was just the 456th ranked player in the nation according to the 247Sports composite. He wasn’t highly recruited, the best two other offers Owusu-Koramoah had were Michigan State and Virginia. You have to give credit to defensive coordinator Clark Lea, as he identified the talent and developed Owusu-Koramoah into a potential first round draft pick. I expect a huge season from the talented linebacker and Owusu-Koramoah should be hearing his name called early in next years draft if he declares.

Notre Dame’s Most Recent Bowl Game Gets Name Change

When Notre Dame and Iowa State met in December it was the Camping World Bowl. Well, it is no longer as the Cheez-It Bowl is headed east.

When Notre Dame and Iowa State squared off back on December 28 they played in what was then called the Camping World Bowl.

It was one of several names the game has had over the years: The Blockbuster Bowl, Carquest Bowl, MicronPC Bowl, MicronPC.com Bowl, Tangerine Bowl, Champs Sports Bowl, Russell Athletic Bowl and since 2017, the Camping World Bowl.

Well, that is no more as the annual post-season game played in Orlando now has a different sponsor.

The Cheez-It Bowl.

So the annual game played each December in Phoenix makes the trip east now.

So do with it what you like, just know that if Notre Dame ends the year in Orlando this year, and not in the Citrus Bowl, that they’ll be playing for all of the Cheez-Its.  And if they do, let’s just hope it’s half as entertaining as the 2018 thriller between TCU and California in the Cheez-Its Bowl.

[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F-CaV6XPsdU&w=560&h=315]

94 Days Until Notre Dame Football (We Hope)

94 days out from Notre Dame and college football returning we look at the only ND All-American to wear number 94.

Notre Dame and Navy are scheduled to play August 29, still in Dublin, Ireland for the time being, although that could change in the next week.  That’s 94 days away.

94 days away from college football and Notre Dame football returning in a way we’re all a bit unsure about.

Since we’ve been counting down the days for the last week we’ve gone with records based on the number or yardage of plays.  Yesterday saw one of Kyle Rudolph’s most memorable plays with the Irish while today we remember the only Notre Dame player to ever earn All-American status while wearing 94.

94:  Willie Fry’s Number at Notre Dame

Willie Fry played at Notre Dame from 1973, 75-77, helping the Irish to a national championship in both ’73 and ’77 while twice earning All-American status in both 1976 and ’77.

Below you can see Fry make a few plays in the 1973 game against USC.

[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zu9WgEVHYPU&w=560&h=315]

Fry went on to play three seasons for the NFL’s Pittsburgh Steelers, winning a pair of Super Bowls in ’78 and ’79.

Fry died of a heart attack in 1998 at just 44 years old.

Rivals Reacts to Current Notre Dame ’21 Recruiting Class

The experts at Rivals looked that the Irish 2021 recruiting class, with a local and national perspective.

The Irish have seen their ups and downs in the 2021 recruiting cycle, but at the current moment Brian Kelly’s class of ten players ranks among the best in the nation. Rivals this morning took a look at their 11th ranked class in the country, with a local and national view of Notre Dame’s class.

Mike Singer, who covers the Irish for Rivals, sees the class from a quality not quantity perspective noting the “Irish are likely not even going to sniff 25 total signess, so it will be hard to have a highly ranked class. However, it should be very good when it comes to sorting by average star ranking.” Defensive end Jason Onye, the lowest committed player in the class according to Rivals, is seen as the 44th best prospect at his position. Not bad when looking at the class as a whole.

Singer mentions two prospect’s the Irish would love to see commit, Dont’e Thornton Jr. and Rocco Spindler. Both of them have recently released their top school lists and Notre Dame is in a great position to land both of them. He does say if the staff missed out on Spindler that “many would consider the offensive line class a failure” but it can’t be looked at by just star ranking. The base of Blake Fisher and Pat Coogan gives the offensive line class a great start, and missing out on Spindler would hurt, but it shouldn’t be seen as a failure if the Irish are unable to land a commitment from the talented guard.

As for the national outlook, Josh Helmholdt was quick to point out that the Irish haven’t had many recruiting wins since the mandated dead period. “Notre Dame is maybe the best national recruiting team in the country, but in order to maintain that distinction it needs to get kids on campus, so the visit shutdown disproportionately affects the Irish,” is how Helmholdt sees it. It’s hard to disagree with his assessment, as many other schools have jumped the Irish in the team ratings during the dead period. The feeling a prospect gets when in South Bend just can’t be replicated with Zoom visits.

If Helmholdt is right, and we surely hope he is, the return of on-campus visits should see a boom in the Irish’s class. Unfortunately for Kelly, the NCAA has yet to make an announcement as to when they will stop the dead period, so the addition of more prospects might just have to wait a little longer. We’d like to believe that Singer is correct as well, when all said as done the Irish might not have a highly ranked class, but the quality will be among the best in the nation.

Notre Dame’s best teams not to win a national championship

Notre Dame has had a few great teams that didn’t win a national championship. Inspired by a bad ESPN list here are seven of the best here.

I was scrolling through different pages over the weekend and this morning and stumbled upon an interesting sounding list at ESPN:

“Our top college football teams that failed to win the national championship”

Certainly this list will create some discussion and without a doubt, Notre Dame will be represented on here a few times over.

Or so I thought.

If you clicked the link and read/scrolled through you probably realized that in that list of 25 teams, Notre Dame was never listed.

Uh, what?

No offense to Bill Connelly, I’m sure he’s a stand-up human but what on God’s green earth are you talking about on this list?

I can see Notre Dame not having a top team on the list but none in the top 25 of it is just absurd.  Here are just a few for Mr. Connelly and yourselves to freshen up on as each could have won a title.

1941 – Frank Leahy’s First Notre Dame Squad…

95 Days Until Notre Dame Football (We Hope)

Notre Dame is scheduled to start their 2020 season in 95 days against Navy. Get your daily does of ND football here to count it down!

95 days from now Notre Dame is scheduled to take on Navy in college football’s Week Zero.  Will that happen?  We don’t actually know but we haven’t been told otherwise so we will continue to countdown the days until then.

If you’ve been following so far you’ve seen a few records and learned more about the players that set said records.

On Memorial Day we shared Deke Cooper’s Notre Dame record with you while sharing his biggest tackle with the Fighting Irish.

For 95 we go to a specific moment, one that purely electric from a player still catching touchdowns with regularity in the NFL.

95:  The total yards Kyle Rudolph trotted during his 2010 go-ahead touchdown reception against Michigan.  

[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rI_I70F0XjI&w=560&h=315]

That 2010 game might not have ended how Notre Dame players or fans would have wanted but a big-time throw, big time catch and one heck of a run afterwards meant for a memorable moment.

Rudolph finished his Notre Dame career with 90 receptions for 1032 yards and eight touchdowns, at least one of which we’ll revisit again on this countdown.

95 days to go.

Go Irish.

Notre Dame – Way Too Early Game by Game Predictions for 2020

Memorial Day: The Story of Notre Dame’s Jack Chevigny

When you hear the name Jack Chevingny what comes to mind? I’ll be honest, it wasn’t until not long ago that literally nothing did for me. I hadn’t heard of him, didn’t know who he was or why he was important. But on Memorial Day, or the day after, …

When you hear the name Jack Chevingny what comes to mind?

I’ll be honest, it wasn’t until not long ago that literally nothing did for me.  I hadn’t heard of him, didn’t know who he was or why he was important.  But on Memorial Day, or the day after, it feels like the right time to share his story.

Chevigny was a favorite of Knute Rockne, a blocker for the Four Horseman and screamed “That one is for the Gipper!” upon crossing the goal line and tying the legendary 1928 game with Army.

After college he was Rockne’s right hand man, believed to be the heir apparent of the legend but a feud between himself and Hunk Anderson caused Chevigny to depart the Irish staff at just 24 years old.  The star coach in the making that left Notre Dame and became the head coach of the NFL’s Chicago Cardinals and eventually the University of Texas Longhorns, where’d he lead Texas to an upset victory at Notre Dame Stadium in 1934.

Those feats alone would make him a legend compared to most of us, but where it ultimately mattered he was even more heroic.

After resigning from the Longhorns job Chevigny found employment as a deputy attorney general in Texas before working on the legal side for a friend’s oil business in Southern Illinois.

Chevigny tried to volunteer his services when the United States entered World War II but was turned away because of knee injury he sustained while playing football at Notre Dame.  As the war wore on though the restrictions became more laxed and Chevigny reported for duty late in 1943 at 36 years old.

Chevigny opted to be where the action was, asking to serve in the Pacific theater.  Ultimately those requests were answered as he was one of 26,000 United States Marines lost on Iwo Jima.

Jack Chevigny was a star and folk hero in his football career but what he did away from football made him a true American hero.

For more information on Jack Chevigny:
The Last Chalkline: The Life & Times of Jack Chevigny
“One More for the Gipper” – Nov. 11, 2014

Two New Preseason Top 25’s Released, See Where Irish are Ranked

It was Althon Sports and Pro Football Focus’ turn rank the preseason Top 25, see where Notre Dame landed in their projections.

College Football is trending in the right direction, as many conferences have announced plans to have student-athletes back on campus sometime in early June. The news has all of us salivating over the return of sports and dreaming about the upcoming season. Two different outlets, Althon Sports and Pro Football Focus have released their preseason Top 25 projections.

Let’s look at Althon Sports first, who rank the Irish 9th overall in the country heading into the season. Their look at the Irish goes in-depth as they voice some concerns prior to the contests being played, but nothing that we don’t know already. The core of Notre Dame’s returning offensive stars are led by quarterback Ian Book and all five starting offensive linemen. It’s the skill position where the Irish need to have players step up after losing a massive amount of production. “Incoming freshman Chris Tyree (RB), Jordan Johnson (WR) and Michael Mayer (TE) will have an opportunity to make an impact right away,” is how Steve Lassan of Althon Sports see’s it. Defensively, Lassan doesn’t think the group should miss a beat “but coordinator Clark Lea is going to have a busy fall trying to restock at defensive end and in the secondary.” The secondary concern’s shouldn’t be as large with the transfer of NC State’s Nick McCloud along with Ohio State transfer Isaiah Pryor and rising star sophomore Kyle Hamilton.

Pro Football Focus sees the Irish as one spot ahead at 8th in the country. Their preview doesn’t go as deep as Althon, but it’s still encouraging to see Notre Dame ranked that high. Book was singled out by PFF, as he had the “40th-highest PFF passing grade in the country in 2019,” a number that will need to be better if the Irish expect to contend for a spot in the College Football Playoffs.

Plenty of way-too-early Top 25 lists have been released, the majority have the Irish ranked anywhere from 8th to 12th at this juncture. When the season really gets started and the AP and Coaches polls are released, expect to find the Irish somewhere in that same range the preseason projections have them at.