Former Notre Dame DB nominated for College Football Hall of Fame

Best of luck, Todd!

[autotag]Todd Lyght[/autotag] is a name associated with what many say was the last truly great era of Notre Dame football. He was a defensive back when the Irish won their last national championship in 1988 and got even better in the seasons that followed. Now, he has a chance to be enshrined as he is among 78 players nominated for the College Football Hall of Fame’s 2024 class.

Lyght was a consensus All-American in 1989 and 1990. Eight of his 11 career interceptions came in 1989 and are tied for third-most on the Irish’s single-season list. No Irish defender has picked off eight passes in a season since. He also broke up 20.5 passes in his career, which rank eighth in program history since pass breakups began being tracked in 1956.

More than a decade after finishing a 12-year NFL career, mostly with the Rams, Lyght began a tenure as Brian Kelly’s defensive backs coach. That lasted from 2015 to 2019. As such, he played a key role in the Irish making the 2018 College Football Playoff.

The results of the voting won’t be known until early next year, but let’s hope for the best for Lyght.

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Follow Geoffrey on Twitter: @gfclark89

Notre Dame atop 247Sports’ 2023 recruiting class rankings

What do you make of this?

With the verbal commitment from four-star receiver recruit [autotag]Jaden Greathouse[/autotag], Notre Dame strengthened its 2023 class further. In fact, 247Sports thinks very highly of what the Irish have done as far as talent coming in after this coming season. The site’s latest 2023 recruit rankings place Notre Dame at the very top. Its 17 four-star recruits are more than any other program, and five-star quarterback [autotag]CJ Carr[/autotag] makes this group even stronger.

It’s very interesting to see this happen when the Irish’s independence could be on borrowed time thanks to the potential mega-conferences coming to college football. If this group is able to put it all together to give the still-independent program its first national title since 1988, that changes the conversation drastically. From there, the Irish would be able to recruit even more big-name talent and remain relevant for years. Boy, wouldn’t this be the perfect way to silence some of these critics once and for all?

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Follow Geoffrey on Twitter: @gfclark89

A look back at Notre Dame’s 1988 national championship

Who was your favorite player on the ’88 squad?

Happy Tuesday to all as we’re now 88 days until Notre Dame football returns.

What better way to look at today than by looking back at the game-by-game breakdown that made up Notre Dame’s ultimate 12-0 season and national championship in 1988?

It’s the last year Notre Dame had a perfect season that included a bowl win and featured a few epic games en route to Lou Holtz and the Irish winning a national title in Holtz’s third season at the helm.

Tony Rice, Rocket Ismail, Ricky Watters, Chris Zorich, Michael Stonebreaker, Pat Terrell, and Todd Lyght were only a few of the stars that made that team so great.

With 88 days remaining until Notre Dame-Ohio State, here’s a look back at that ’88 season, game by game.

Farewell to 1988 Notre Dame TV broadcaster Dan Roan

A former “provocative” intern says goodbye to a Chicago sports TV legend.

You have to be a certain age now to remember a time when Notre Dame games weren’t broadcast on NBC. One of the last seasons of that happened to be 1988, the last time the Irish won a national championship. With no TV contract tied to a specific network, several networks broadcast the Irish that season. One network was Chicago superstation WGN, and the man handling play-by-play duties in that case was Dan Roan.

I bring this up because I’m writing this on the night of Roan’s last sportscast. The lead sports anchor at WGN is retiring after 38 years with the network. No one in Chicago has held such a position for longer, and that has led to him becoming a familiar face on the city’s airwaves. He has provided game and news coverage for every pro and local college team during his tenure, which makes it harder to think of him no longer being associated with Chicago sports.

I had the chance to see the man work up close when I was fortunate enough to land a sports internship with WGN. On Wednesdays and Thursdays between August and December 2010, I would be assigned one sporting event to cut highlights for that night’s 9 p.m. newscast. Naturally, I worked with Roan more than anyone else, and it was one of the happiest times of my life. Had I been given the opportunity to stick around longer, I gladly would have taken it in part because of the kindness Roan and everyone else at the station showed me.

It’ll be hard to say goodbye to Roan, but after being on the job for so long, the man has earned a break (and a lot of golf). Here’s hoping he enjoys life now in a state of complete relaxation. From the person he later called “the most provocative intern” he ever had, thank you, and good luck.

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Follow Geoffrey on Twitter: @gfclark89

Lou Holtz prayed Rosary for Notre Dame to win national title

Did the power of prayer help the Irish win their last national title?

This probably won’t surprise anyone, but Lou Holtz is a man of faith. That being the case, it only made sense that he and a Catholic university like Notre Dame worked so well together for so long. In fact, it was because Holtz prayed the Rosary on a regular basis that the Irish achieved great success in 1987 and 1988, or so he says in this interview:

https://www.instagram.com/p/CaVVFUXjI8J/

After Holtz’s first time praying the Rosary for 30 days, the Irish made it to the Cotton Bowl, the program’s first New Year’s Six bowl in seven years. The Irish suffered a 35-10 loss to Texas A&M in that game. Of course, the Irish won their most recent national championship the next year, and that followed another 30-day period of Holtz praying the Rosary.

Give whatever reasons you want for the Irish’s success during that two-year period, but as far as Holtz is concerned, his devotion to prayer was the primary thing that put his team over the top.

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Follow Geoffrey on Twitter: @gfclark89

Past and present: Legendary Notre Dame coach takes pic with Freeman

A past coach meets with the present Irish coach

The last Irish head coach to win a championship might have just taken a picture with the next Notre Dame coach to win a championship. Marcus Freeman, who has yet to even coach a regular season game for Notre Dame, recently took a picture with Lou Holtz.

Holtz led the Irish to their last national title in 1988, an undefeated season culminating in a Fiesta Bowl win over No. 3 West Virginia while besting No. 2 USC during the regular season finale. That memorable season also included wins over No. 9 Michigan and No. 1 Miami (FL). It’s safe to say the Irish earn that title.

Although Holtz would never duplicate that ‘88 season, he’s gone on to be one of the most well recognized faces in college football due to his work for ESPN and College GameDay. As for Freeman, the future is unknown, but bright. He might end the Irish’s long drought without a title.

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Follow Mike on Twitter: @MikeFChen

Listen: Frank Stams talks about nearly losing his scholarship

What if Frank Stams hadn’t switched to defense?

Chris Zorich had former Notre Dame teammate Frank Stams on his podcast Thursday. It’s really fascinating to hear if you want to know about the Irish in the mid-to-late 1980s (Warning:  Contains some NSFW language):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zTs-nPXIF4g

There’s one moment in the podcast during which Stams mentions that Lou Holtz, who was not the coach when Stams arrived in South Bend, came very close to taking away his scholarship in part because he missed the entire previous season because of injury:

That “first-year coach” who pretty much saved Stams from becoming an afterthought was Barry Alvarez. With help from the future Wisconsin legend, Stams was able to transition from fullback to linebacker. That’s how he became a key cog on the Irish’s 1988 national championship team, and it ultimately led to a seven-year NFL career. It’s amazing how a simple raise of a hand can change someone’s life for the better like it did here.

Twitter Pens Notre Dame Football Valentines for Valentine’s Day

Here’s hoping your Valentine’s Day has been pleasant, whether you’re single or faithfully devoted to the one you love.

Here’s hoping your Valentine’s Day has been pleasant, whether you’re single or faithfully devoted to the one you love. Whatever your romantic situation is, we all love Notre Dame football here. In fact, some Irish fans have taken it upon themselves to write valentines with that theme using the hashtag #ndfbvalentines. Let’s see what our lovestruck poets came up with for this holiday:

This is not the first year in which Irish fans have written valentines for the holiday. A simple search of the hashtag traces it back to 2018. Of course, it’s nice to see some new ones to reflect everything that happened during the past season. After all, some of them are only as good as the season after which they are written.

As long as we’re on the subject, we’d like to remind you readers how much we love you and your support. We hope you enjoy reading our content as much as we enjoy writing it. Here’s to normalcy and hopefully a crowded Notre Dame Stadium this fall.

Notre Dame Wasn’t Tight End U Until This Birthday Boy Paved Way

It’s not that great tight ends weren’t a thing before Derek Brown joined Lou Holtz and the Fighting Irish in 1988, but the high level of performance at the position wasn’t as steady as it is now.  More on that later, let’s focus on Brown, the birthday boy, for now.

Think for a second about how Notre Dame has become Tight End U in the last few decades.  Just tracking the position from now to the late 80’s is remarkable in a way to do.

In a few weeks Cole Kmet will join Alize Mack, Durham Smythe, Ben Koyack, Troy Niklas, Tyler Eifert, Kyle Rudolph, John Carlson, Anthony Fasano, Jerome Collins, Josh Owens, Jabari Holloway, Dan O’Leary, Pete Chryplewicz, Irv Smith and Derek Brown as the 15th different Notre Dame tight end to be drafted since 1992.  On average, every other year has seen a Notre Dame tight end get drafted in that time.  So let’s examine that last name listed a bit as he turns 50 today.

It’s not that great tight ends weren’t a thing before Derek Brown joined Lou Holtz and the Fighting Irish in 1988, but the high level of performance at the position wasn’t as steady as it is now.  More on that later, let’s focus on Brown, the birthday boy, for now.

Derek Brown’s numbers at Notre Dame look rather pedestrian by today’s standards, having pulled down 62 receptions in four seasons.  Eight of those receptions wound up being touchdowns while he totaled 899 yards along the way, 71 of which came against West Virginia to clinch the ’88 national title.

He was also very key in helping run an offense that required tight ends that were willing to throw their body around and get physical, something his career stats don’t show.

With Brown turning 50 today I looked up any stories or information I could find about him.  Back in 2013 he did an interview with “Her Loyal Sons” that shares the bizarre feeling he had after winning the ’88 title, why he chose Notre Dame over Miami and plenty on what he’s been up to since leaving football.

Ultimately Brown didn’t prove worth the 14th overall pick, scoring just one touchdown in his NFL career but he did raise the bar significantly for what has since become Tight End U.  There were greats before him in the form of Ken MacAfee, Dave Casper and Mark Bavaro but the regularity they came out wasn’t nearly as great, although still impressive.

Those soon to be 15 draft picks at the position in 29 years is insane. For comparisons sake though, in the17 years previous to Brown being drafted by the New York Giants in the first round of the 1992 NFL Draft, five Notre Dame tight ends were drafted.  That’s not bad talent at the position but clearly after Brown ended the four year drought of Irish tight ends getting drafted at all, it’s become a regular occurrence.

Happy 50th, Derek Brown!

Notre Dame Football: Remembering National Champion George Williams

Williams played a key role in Pat Terrell’s game-winning deflection against Miami in the famed Catholics vs. Convicts game of 1988 and after doing some reading, it’s obvious he was absolutely adored by his teammates.

I’m not one to jump behind caskets and act like someone meant a ton more to me than they ever did.  When someone dies I look up to I acknowledge them, the situation and try to carry on.

Some effect greatly.  I never was a huge Kobe Bryant fan aside from collecting his basketball cards as a pre-teen, but for a variety of reasons that death hit me like a ton of bricks.  Maybe it was because he was only a few years older than me, maybe it’s because he was one of the last athletes from my youth that appeared bigger than life and invincible or maybe it’s because I’m a new father of a young daughter and thinking about all the details of his passing was just flat out difficult to imagine.

Former Notre Dame defensive tackle and key member of the national championship team in 1988, George Williams, died this past weekend at just 50 years old after suffering from hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis.

I’m not going to pretend to know a ton about him or act like he was one of my favorite players because that wouldn’t be sincere.  I was familiar with the name, could tell you his position but I couldn’t share for a second how great of a player he was or how great of a person he was because I simply just have no memories as I was just two when Notre Dame won it all in 1988.

Williams played a key role in Pat Terrell’s game-winning deflection against Miami in the famed Catholics vs. Convicts game of 1988 and after doing some reading, it’s obvious he was absolutely adored by his teammates.

Tim Prister of Irish Illustrated does a great job breaking down games, recruiting and so much more but has a knowledge of Notre Dame football history that few can touch.  He wrote a worth-while piece about Williams on Wednesday morning that is worth reading in full when you have a few minutes as he gets quotes from some of the biggest names attached to that ’88 squad.

Here’s some of what Prister got from one of Williams’s former teammates, Reggie Brooks:

“As a player, absolutely tenacious,” Brooks said. “I was on the scout team and I was trying to run away from him most of the time. It was tough sledding watching the o-line trying to block him.

“He was one of the fiercest nose tackles I played against. So quick and explosive for a big guy. Extremely agile. He was coming for you.”

After college Williams spent part of 1992 with the Cleveland Browns.

George Williams was just 50 years old and is survived by his wife and two children.