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.

88 Days Until Notre Dame Football Returns

In 88 days we get Notre Dame football back. In the meantime, relive the last national championship team at Notre Dame!

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In 88 days we’ll gladly all welcome Notre Dame football back when they take on the Navy Midshipmen in Annapolis.  In the meantime, we have rosters to break down, opponents to preview and position battles to discuss.

In the meantime why not take a moment to remember the last national championship football team at Notre Dame?

(19) 88: Notre Dame’s last football national championship

After Reggie Ho’s heroics helped Notre Dame to a win over Michigan in the opener the Irish rolled with wins over Michigan State, Purdue and Stanford to move to 4-0.

A win at Pitt in early October moved Notre Dame to 5-0 before the greatest Notre Dame football game many have ever seen, a 31-30 thriller over powerhouse and No. 1 Miami on October 15.

Wins over Air Force, Navy, Rice and Penn State followed before a battle with the top two ranked teams in nation when No. 1 Notre Dame traveled to No. 2 USC for the regular season finale before a 27-10 win despite being significantly out-gained by the Trojans.

The Irish then knocked quarterback Major Harris out of the game early in the Fiesta Bowl as Notre Dame won that contest 34-21, earning their first national championship since 1977 and their last claimed title on record.

Got an hour?  Check out the highlight video recapping that magical 1988 season below.

[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_A5sT_YARUk&w=560&h=315]

Notre Dame Football: Elite Eight Voting – Golden Dome Region

The Golden Dome Regional Final finds Notre Dame’s last national championship clincher meeting up with the final regular season game that year, a 1. Notre Dame vs. 2. USC match-up.  As you’re probably not surprised, 1988 remains well-represented in this as we continue to narrow things down.

We have reached the Elite Eight in determining the greatest Notre Dame football game since 1986.  As we said upon selection, there were some great ones that didn’t end in Notre Dame’s favor, no doubt.  We did decide make the requirement that Notre Dame did in fact need to win in order to garner consideration for a tournament berth.

The Golden Dome Regional Final finds Notre Dame’s last national championship clincher meeting up with the final regular season game that year, a 1. Notre Dame vs. 2. USC match-up.  As you’re probably not surprised, 1988 remains well-represented in this as we continue to narrow things down.

Tale of the Tape:

What else is there really to say other than “Notre Dame clinched a national championship!” when they beat West Virginia to cap the 1988 season in the Fiesta Bowl.  If you require more though, here you go: Notre Dame was in control for the majority, winning 34-21 and also out-gaining the Mountaineers by 173 yards.  It was dominating for a title performance which to me would probably be the third or fourth most-memorable game from that season, actually.

In order to get to the Fiesta Bowl and have a national championship shot though, Notre Dame had to finish the regular season unbeaten.  To do that the No. 1 Fighting Irish had to go to No. 2 USC and take care of business against Rodney Peete and the Trojans.  They had to do so without Ricky Watters or Tony Brooks who were sent home for missing team dinner Friday night.  Notre Dame lost everywhere that day except the scoreboard and turnover battle.  On just eight first downs and 253 yards (21/356 for USC), Notre Dame completed the perfect regular season with a 27-10 win in the Coliseum.

So Who Moves On – You Decide…

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And don’t forget to vote in the other regional finals, either:

Basilica Region: ’88 Miami vs. ’91 Florida

Grotto Region:  ’89 Colorado vs. ’92 Penn State

Hesburgh Region: ’93 Florida State vs. ’12 Oklahoma

Voting will close Monday evening at 10 p.m. ET so get it done now and share with your friends until then.

2020 FIW Tournament: Notre Dame’s Best Games Since 1986 (Introduction)

Who is ready for a tournament that will consume your life for the next three weeks?  Come hang out with us and check back often as we determine the best Notre Dame football game since in the last 34 years.

Who out there is ready for a tournament that will consume your life for the next three weeks?  Aren’t we usually used to that this time of year?  Since we’re all on lock down anyway, let’s have a tournament of our own —

For Notre Dame fans it was already looking like a March to forget.  The women’s basketball team had an incredibly rare off year and the hockey team saw their season end last weekend after dropping two straight in Minnesota to get eliminated from the Big Ten Tournament.  Neither was tournament bound.  Unless Notre Dame went on a miracle run and won the ACC Tournament, the men’s basketball team wasn’t going to be participating in March Madness, either.

What we have for you here at Fighting Irish Wire though is a tournament to remember some of the good and hopefully start some (mostly) friendly debates.

What is the best Notre Dame football game since 1986?

A couple of facts for this bracket and what the selection committee is thinking as we finalize the bracket before it’s Sunday evening release:

  1.  It was put together by Nick Shepkowski and Jeff Feyerer.  The two used a draft type format to come up with seeds for the majority of it, aside from the very top seeds.
  2. It doesn’t matter if the game had national championship implications or not, was it a great game?  It’s worth at least remembering and discussing.  There will be some of the classics you will easily recall and hopefully more than a couple that make you think “oh man, I entirely forgot about that…how in the bloody hell did the Irish win that?!?!”
  3. The only real rule for this is that it had to have occurred since Lou Holtz took over (starting in 1986) and Notre Dame had to have won.  Sure, 2000 Nebraska was a thriller as was 2014 Florida State and 2005 USC.  They were losses though and I’m fine with not having to relive those for now.  Let’s just hope this Coronavirus goes away so we don’t have to start bringing up some of the painful heartbreak and analyzing it too thoroughly (let’s obviously hope Coronavirus goes away for the obvious reasons, too).

We will unveil the bracket on what is normally “Selection Sunday”.  You the Fighting Irish Wire community will then be in charge of voting for the games you think most-deserve to move on and you’ll come right to FIW to do just that.

If you’re not following us on Twitter, be sure to do so and if you’re not following our Facebook page be sure to give it a like.  We’ll post the rounds on both of those and share reminders to vote on each round of action.

Here’s the plan for voting for the games:

First round voting will start on Monday, March 16 at 9 a.m. ET and go through Wednesday, March 18 at 6 p.m ET.

Second round voting then starts Thursday, March 19 at 9 a.m. ET and goes through Sunday evening, March 22 at 6 p.m. ET.

Sweet 16 voting will then be conducted March 23 at 9 a.m. ET and go until Wednesday, March 25 at 6 p.m. ET.

Elite Eight voting will be held then from Thursday, March 26 at 9 a.m. ET and go until Sunday evening of March 29 at 6 p.m. ET.

We’ll then conduct Final Four voting starting Monday, March 30 at 9 a.m. ET and have it go through the evening of Wednesday, April 1 at 7 p.m. ET.

Championship voting will finally take place starting Thursday, April 2 at 9 a.m. ET and go through Monday night, what would have been the night of the NCAA Men’s Basketball national championship.  We’ll close voting at 11:30 p.m. ET to go right along with when “One Shining Moment” usually is hitting the air.

Check back here Sunday night to see the bracket and be sure to share it with your Notre Dame fan friends all March long.  We may not have live sports but we’ll still have plenty of fun in the coming days and weeks.

In the meantime, what games that you fear we may be forgetting need to be included on this bracket?  Get your last minute submissions in before the committee unveils the bracket Sunday night!

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.

Notre Dame Football: 31st Anniversary of Last National Championship – 3 Thoughts

I really hope it doesn’t take 31 more years for Notre Dame to win another national title.  Like I said earlier I was far too young to have any memory of the 1988 team besides what I’ve read online or watched on YouTube.

January 2, 1988.

I was still a month from turning two so I have no real-life memory of the day, the Fiesta Bowl or celebrating a national championship.  What I do know are a few things:

One:

My first takeaway has always been when learning about the 1988 team that as ridiculous as it sounds, the Fiesta Bowl win over West Virginia that clinched the title feels like it was at most the third biggest game of the ’88 season, perhaps even the fourth.  Miami in the Catholics vs. Convicts battle immediately comes to mind, then for me my head goes to the No. 1 vs No. 2 regular season finale at USC.  And finally, Reggie Ho’s heroics against Michigan in September I think of before the Fiesta Bowl comes to mind.

Two:

Who could have ever guessed that would be the one and only title Lou Holtz would win in South Bend?  The program was on the rise and entering an incredible run from 88-93 that saw them go a combined 64-9-1, suffering just one loss in each of ’89, ’92 and ’93.

Yet each year the failed to win the national championship, even as ridiculous it remains to me Florida State was given the nod in ’93 but the program’s greatest heights in the modern-era, or at least since color-TV became the norm saw one championship and a bunch of close calls.

NBC has more exclusive television deals for their football team since that January night than they do national championships.  Which leads me to…

Three:

I really hope it doesn’t take 31 more years for Notre Dame to win another national title.  Like I said earlier I was far too young to have any memory of the 1988 team besides what I’ve read online or watched on YouTube.

I’ll be 64 years old in 31 years if I make it that long.  Please don’t have me still waiting by then, Brian Kelly and company.

In the meantime enjoy some highlights from that memorable night, at least for those that are old enough to remember it.

 

 

Notre Dame Should Take Extra Step when Throwing it Back

Don’t ask me why I remember this so vividly because I don’t honestly remember. Nor do I remember what year it was that they went away but I assume when the stadium was opened post-renovations in 1997.

When No. 15 Notre Dame hosts Boston College on Saturday afternoon they’ll do so as a significant favorite in a series the Irish haven’t lost in since 2008.

They’ll also be wearing throwback uniforms made to honor the 1988 national championship team when they do so.

Unfortunately I don’t think anyone will be showing off their bare midriff quite like Chris Zorich used to, but I wouldn’t object if someone chose to.

Instead the playing field at Notre Dame Stadium on Saturday should give a nod to not just the 1988 team but the entire Lou Holtz era.

No, they shouldn’t cut the capacity down to under 60,000, even if it’d mean a new sellout streak beginning, but a small, formerly unique characteristic should return Saturday afternoon.

I’m talking about the font of the yard-line markers that used to be one-of-a-kind to Notre Dame Stadium.

There are probably plenty of people reading this who are so young that they have absolutely no clue what I’m talking about. Heck, some that are old enough to remember probably don’t, either. If you’re in that boat, watch the video below and take notice of the yard line markers when you can.

Don’t ask me why I remember this so vividly because I don’t honestly remember. Nor do I remember what year it was that they went away but I assume when the stadium was opened post-renovations in 1997.

It’s an odd request from me I’m sure and I probably sound very old-school in making if. I however I promise I’m not always: I swear I love the video board and am all for the field turf as well as the “ND” on the 50 yard-line.

I just want Saturday for the actual yard-markings to get painted back to how they used to look.

And then left that way forever.