General public in stands for Notre Dame/Syracuse?

Could the general public be allowed in for Notre Dame’s game against Syracuse this year? Not saying yes, but there is a logical path to it.

Earlier in the week we found out that unless you’re a Notre Dame student, part of the faculty and staff at the University or the parent of a Notre Dame football player or their opponent, that you wouldn’t be seeing a game at Notre Dame Stadium this fall.

That could be changing though, for one afternoon at least.

Might I add the keyword being “could”.

And might I add that “could” can’t be put in bold enough letters.

As pointed out by the South Bend Tribune’s Eric Hansen, the Notre Dame game against Syracuse will be played on December 5, after students will have been sent home for break that goes through the new year.

So would it be possible to fill the empty seats currently reserved for students with fans from the general public?

Here’s what Notre Dame Athletic Director Jack Swarbrick told Hansen:

“We don’t know yet,” Swarbrick said of the ticket policy for the first scheduled Irish home game in December since a 40-14 rout of SMU in 1953. “We’ll need to see how we do and how this works, and we’ll work with (St. Joseph County deputy health officer) Dr. (Mark) Fox as we get closer to that to see what might be acceptable.

“A lot of it is going to depend on how Indiana and St. Joe County are doing (with their COVID-19 metrics) when we reach that point in time. If we’re doing really well, I’m hopeful that we might be able to offer the opportunity to lots of area people to attend a game. But it all depends on factors that we can’t control right now.”

To quote the iconic film Dumb and Dumber, “So you’re telling me there’s a chance?!?!”

I wouldn’t count on it by any stretch of the imagination but it’s at least possible.  Like I’ve said since March, this thing has been so incredibly unpredictable from week to week that thinking we know what will be happening three months from now is unrealistic.

But there is at least a chance of seeing the Irish at Notre Dame Stadium this season if you’re not a student or staff member.

Even if it is against what should be a poor Syracuse team in Notre Dame’s first December home game since the Eisenhower administration.

Related:  Predicting Notre Dame’s 2020 game-by-game schedule results

Notre Dame Football: Is a leader at running back emerging?

Does Notre Dame have a running back starting to emerge from the back in the battle for reps?

One thing we’ve discussed this summer is that Notre Dame has a stockpile of options at running back, but that there isn’t a lot of faith in what those backs will be able to in 2020.

When Brian Kelly met the media for the first time back in the first week of fall camp, he noted the weight freshman Chris Tyree came in at and that Tyree wasn’t going to just be a gadget guy in 2020.  Kelly was also complimentary towards another running back earlier this week when asked about red-shirt freshman, Kyren Williams.

“I think the hard work, his commitment in the offseason has put himself in a position now where he’s what we thought he would be,” Kelly said. “He can catch the football. He’s got really good vision, escapability. He’s not afraid to block or run the ball up between the tackles so he’s going to be a really key piece for us moving into the season.” – HC Brian Kelly

Liam Eichenberg was interviewed after a recent practice and shared the following while discussing the offensive, specifically the running backs:

“The running backs – Kyren Williams is having a great camp. The offense is rolling. It’s been good.” – LT Liam Eichenberg

Williams played in the first four games of 2019 as a true freshman, getting four carries and one reception that totaled 29 yards.  He also returned a pair of kickoffs for a combined 35 yards.

It’s early and it’s going strictly on words from his coach and teammate, but it would appear Kyren Williams is turning heads and doing a lot to earn a good amount of touches early in the 2020 campaign.

Notre Dame Preseason Top 5? One Analyst Says Yes

With the strange feel around college football entering 2020, one preseason ranking now has Notre Dame in the top 5. Find out who, here.

Preseason polls have been out for sometime now as the both the AP Top 25 and Amway Coaches Poll powered by USA TODAY were released earlier this month amid the confusion of ranking teams even though they’re not playing football this fall.

Paul Myerberg of USA TODAY went ahead and ranked the 76 teams that will be playing FBS college football this season and he gave Notre Dame as much respect as any I’ve seen from any national outlet ahead of the 2020 campaign, as he ranked the Irish fifth.

Myerberg’s top ten went the following:

  1.  Clemson
  2. Alabama
  3. Georgia
  4. Oklahoma
  5. Notre Dame
  6. Florida
  7. LSU
  8. Texas
  9. UCF
  10. North Carolina

Myerberg ranked Notre Dame’s 11 opponents for the 2020 season as follows:

1.  Clemson
10.  North Carolina
24.  Pitt
25.  Louisville
28.  Florida State
41.  Duke
44.  Wake Forest
52.  Boston College
60.  South Florida
64.  Syracuse
68.  Georgia Tech

A battle of potential top ten teams the day after Thanksgiving in Chapel Hill?  North Carolina is improved but even in this strange fall to come that seems a bit strong to me.

For Myerberg’s entire rankings, 1-76, click here.

College Football Bowl Projections Harder than Ever

Where does Jerry Palm see Notre Dame going this post-season? A place they’ve been a bunch before to play a blue blood.

If you think trying to figure out a college football season in the middle of a global pandemic is difficult, think for a second about how hard it will be to plan out college football’s postseason this winter.

The Big Ten, Pac-12, Mountain West and MAC have all canceled their seasons, leaving FBS with just over half of their normal 130 teams even playing this fall.

Jerry Palm of CBS Sports gave his best effort in projecting who will end up where this post-season and for as insane as some games might look, take an LSU vs. Appalachian State Outback Bowl for instance, where he has Notre Dame headed is hardly a rare destination for the Fighting Irish.

And their opponent is hardly a stranger in the post-season, either.

Jerry Palm’s Notre Dame Bowl Projection on August 26, 2020:

Cotton Bowl – December 30, 2020 – Arlington, Texas
Notre Dame vs. Texas

A trip to the Cotton Bowl would mean Notre Dame likely went either 11-1 with an ACC Championship Game loss or 10-2 on the regular season.

It would also mean a familiar post-season destination for both Notre Dame and Texas. The Irish have played in the Cotton Bowl eight times in program history, the most of any bowl game.

Texas has played in the Cotton Bowl 22 times with their conference tie-ins between the old SWC and now in the Big 12.

Notre Dame and Texas have met in three of those Cotton Bowl games all-time with the Irish winning the 1971 and 1978 meetings while the Longhorns took the battle in 1970.

Why Are We Trying to Play College Football During a Pandemic?

Once Notre Dame students returned to campus, it only seemed like a matter of time before COVID-19 worked its devil magic.

Once Notre Dame students returned to campus, it only seemed like a matter of time before COVID-19 worked its devil magic. Sure enough, off-campus parties happened, and now, an outbreak has hit the university. It’s gotten to where the Rev. John Jenkins, Notre Dame’s president, has closed the campus and implemented remote learning for at least two weeks. Similar measures have been taken at North Carolina and Michigan State.

Other big-name universities can’t be far behind, so why hasn’t the ACC, SEC or Big 12 followed the Big Ten and Pac-12 in postponing football? Why is it so hard to admit that student-athletes cannot and should not be put in harm’s way if they’re not even being paid for it? If these Power Five conferences won’t pull the plug, they need to admit that student-athletes need to be paid. But it will be a hot day in the Arctic before that happens.

We’ve been warned for months that this coming fall will be brutal, especially since both COVID-19 and the flu will infect on person after another. College students having the opportunity to gather in large groups frequently only makes that problem worse. Sooner or later, the football teams will be affected. Since the players go to class, too (big shock, I know), they’ll be mixing with the off-campus party animals, and it only takes one slip-up to compromise the team and possibly the season.

It’s not worth playing football this fall. We’re already down two Power Five conferences, so the integrity already is lost. Should the other conferences proceed with the schedule, do you crown a national champion from them only? How is that fair to the conferences who would be punished for their precautions by having nothing to play for except their own championships?

Lives cannot be risked for the sake of millions of TV viewers and billions of dollars. If this pandemic has taught us anything, it’s that fun things and the almighty dollar have to take a back seat to public health no matter what the cost. So much already has been given up in 2020, and college football needs to be one more. Those who need football can turn to the NFL if they want.

For the sake of everybody, can’t you give up college football this fall so we can have it every fall afterwards? That we’re even having to debate this defies comprehension. Your team will be back once we have a vaccine or some other widespread means of keeping this virus in check. In the meantime, you can’t gamble these kids’ futures just because of some tradition or family history that goes back to your granddaddy’s daddy.

All of this ultimately lies with the conference commissioners, and they need to grow a conscience quickly. If you have to wait until the spring to play, so be it. So what if NFL prospects opt out? The college game predates the pro game by a wide margin, so in that respect, it could go back to its roots.

This is not a enjoyable thing to write because we all want college football, preferably this fall. But right now, students that go to school with the players on these teams are making it very difficult to justify it. If they won’t contribute to the greater good, you have to take their toys away. Though it’s not fair that the whole class has to be punished for the actions of a few bad apples, that hasn’t stopped teachers from doing it before, and there’s no reason it shouldn’t happen now.

Spike in COVID-19 Cases Happening at Notre Dame

As the ACC pushes forward with its fall football plans, COVID-19 continues to run rampant everywhere.

As the ACC pushes forward with its fall football plans, COVID-19 continues to run rampant everywhere. One question on Notre Dame fans’ minds has to be what happens to the season if the South Bend campus sees an outbreak of the virus. If present trends continue, we might get an answer soon.

The South Bend Tribune has reported a COVID-19 spike at Notre Dame. Before descending on campus, the nearly 12,000 returning students had to get tested for the virus. Only 33, or less than a half percent, tested positive. Now that students are back, things have taken a dramatic turn.

From Aug. 6 to Friday, Notre Dame has reported 29 positive tests, including 10 on the final day of that span. Since Aug. 3, there has been an 8 percent positivity rate. One university spokesman attributed many of the positive tests to an off-campus party, which was covered by WSBT-TV.

While Notre Dame is not at critical mass yet, it continues to be worth questioning what happens if students are sent home this fall and football continues to be played. What will it say if the players have to remain while their fellow students are elsewhere? At that point, the university would have some serious explaining to do for what would seem like reckless behavior. A lot of soul searching might be on the horizon.

WATCH: Joe Montana reacts to Tom Brady’s move to Tampa Bay

Joe Montana shared news about what Tom Brady didn’t enjoy about his time recently in New England. Watch and react to that right here!

Few have ever played quarterback better in the NFL than Joe Montana did, as the former Notre Dame hero helped guide the San Francisco 49ers to four Super Bowl Championships in his career.

Montana and the 49ers eventually split up though as the quarterback played out the rest of his career with the Kansas City Chiefs, getting them to the AFC Championship in January of 1994.

Montana sat down with Mackenzie Salmon on SportsPulse and discussed Tom Brady’s move to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.  During the conversation, Montana revealed something that bothered Brady about how things went in New England, see for yourself below.

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Color me surprised because my perception was always that Bill Belichick and Tom Brady worked hand in hand and that Brady had a ton of say as to what went into game plans and play calls.

Whatever the case in New England, it clearly worked for a long time as Brady left the Patriots after helping create the greatest dynasty the NFL has ever seen in his 20 years on the job.

I’ll be curious to see how Brady, who started to really look his age for much of the 2019 season, looks this year with what appears to be as talented of receivers and targets as he’s ever played with in his NFL career.

As for Montana, I’m wondering how Brady likes that conversation between a couple of legends getting out.

3 Notre Dame Players go on Medical Scholarship

On the first day of fall practice Notre Dame has seen three players play their final downs of collegiate football due to injury.

On the first day of fall practice Notre Dame has seen three players play their final downs of collegiate football due to injury.

Wide receiver Isaiah Robertson, offensive lineman Cole Mabry and running back Trevor Speights have all been categorized as medical non-counters meaning their scholarships will remain but their football careers will be over.

Robertson played in 18 games between 2017 and 2018 for Notre Dame, the majority of ’17 being on special teams before spending ’18 at various places defensively and at wide receiver.  He missed all of 2019 with a leg injury.

Mabry did not play in any game action as a freshman in ’18 before getting some reps in mop-up duty last year.  A shoulder/neck injury has unfortunately ended his football career.

And Trevor Speights drew attention this off-season as a graduate transfer from Stanford but his Notre Dame career is unfortunately over before it really even began.  Speights was supposed to add another body to the running backs room but injuries have apparently caught up to him again.  After missing two full seasons at Stanford, the most recent due to a knee injury, Speights will not play for the Fighting Irish.

Related:  Notre Dame Football COVID-19 Tracker

Why Notre Dame thinks they can pull football off in 2020

Notre Dame has had very few positive COVID-19 tests in the last two months and thinks football is still possible. Find out why, here.

With roughly 40% of FBS college football pulling the plug on the 2020 fall season, Notre Dame and the ACC remain scheduled to start games a month from today.

On the day Notre Dame opens fall training camp, the morning kicked off with Fighting Irish head coach Brian Kelly and start outside linebacker Daelin Hayes appearing on NBC’s Today Show.

The entire interview between Craig Melvin and both Kelly and Hayes can be seen in full below.

The biggest quotes from both were Kelly strongly sharing that “we believe we can play” as he detailed how thorough Notre Dame has been in using precaution to try and keep COVID-19 as far away from campus as possible.

Hayes shares his belief that essentially, if there is added risk in anything we do anymore, why not at least do what what we enjoy while being exposed to those risks, especially if players are under constant supervision and given weekly tests, like he says.

Full video of interview:

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I get both sides of the argument as to whether or not there should be games played and practices held.

If someone with COVID-19 plays football against a bunch of healthy young men then it’s inevitable that the between the blood, sweat, spit and whatever else gets passed along, that the virus will spread.

But if the players, coaches and staff have followed through with a plan and things have gone incredibly successful like they have, I have trouble with the thought that they don’t deserve at least a chance to play,until they prove they don’t.

I know we’re talking about a lot of 18-22 year old student-athletes and the mind of someone that age doesn’t always make the best of decisions.  So far protocols appear to have been followed with great success.

It’s easy to understand why the players and coaches believe they can pull this off, even while acknowledging the difficulty of the situation.  Obviously things can change in a moments notice with this like they’ve been doing nationwide for months, but until that time comes I fully see why the players and coaches so badly at least want a chance.

LSU AD Scott Woodward: ‘I believe our student-athletes want to play’

LSU issued a statement from Woodward on Monday.

It’s only Monday, but it’s already been a long week for those involved in college football and the future of the 2020 season.

LSU released a statement from athletic director Scott Woodward that came shortly after it was announced there would be no Mountain West football this fall.

Woodward said that the recent reports surrounding college athletics does not change the approach LSU is making, that he believed LSU’s student athletes wanted to play and that the university owes it to them to make every effort to return to sports safely.

Here’s a look at the complete statement:

“We remain steadfast in our approach in the Southeastern Conference, taking all the available time to gather as much information as possible in order to make informed decisions. We are united in our process and our focus on the safety and well-being of our student-athletes. The recent flood of reports surrounding college athletics does not alter that approach. As we have said since the beginning, we are patiently working through each and every variable following the direction of our Return to Safety and Medical Guidance Task Force. I believe our student-athletes want to play. We owe it to them to make every effort to do so safely.”

LSU football is currently set to begin the season against the Ole Miss Rebels in Tiger Stadium on Sept. 26.

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