Notre Dame-Duke football: Can Irish bounce back from tough defeat?

How will Notre Dame bounce back? A historic look at the Irish after their first losses…

Notre Dame football is unique in its independence.  While almost the entire rest of FCS college football has gone the conference route, and mega ones at that, Notre Dame has stayed independent.

In doing so their path to getting to the College Football Playoff certainly isn’t easy.  Often times it’s one loss for Notre Dame and dreams of the playoff can be forgotten.

This year could be different though based on the perceived closeness of so many of the top 15 or so teams.  Could 11-1 Notre Dame get into the playoff this year?

It’s worth keeping an eye on but in order to get to 11-1 you have to get to 5-1 first, and that starts with an upstart Duke team who is unbeaten on the young season and has already knocked off Clemson.

So how does Notre Dame bounce back from their first loss of the year?

Come out with their hair on fire and dominate?

Struggle through but sneak out a victory?

Drop a second in a row and eliminate all hope of the playoff?

Here is how Notre Dame has fared the game after their first loss of a season since Brian Kelly was hired previous to the 2010 season.

Notre Dame football: Bowl projections through 3 games

Where do you have Notre Dame headed this post-season?

Notre Dame is 3-0 on the young college football season with Central Michigan due in South Bend this weekend. A win is expected, but what are the national talking heads saying Notre Dame will do the rest of the way?

You can always tell what they think of a team based on which bowl game they project a team to play in. Before the season the majority of outlets had Notre Dame outside of the New Year’s Six. Has that changed a few short weeks into the year?

Here is where the various outlets around the nation have Notre Dame headed this postseason:

Oklahoma Sooners considered underrated in USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll by 247Sports

Football season is almost here and Oklahoma is already being touted as “underrated” by 247Sports.

We are a little less than four weeks until the start of the [autotag]2023 football season[/autotag]. Despite coming off a 6-7 season, there’s optimism about an improved campaign and expectations remain high.

The [autotag]Oklahoma Sooners[/autotag] debuted at No. 19 in the USA TODAY Sports Coaches poll. That is a good spot to be after a 6-7 season.

It is pivotal to get the program turned around and headed in the right direction this season before Oklahoma heads to the [autotag]SEC[/autotag]. The Sooners are hoping their physical growth will provide the framework to be better up front ahead of their move to the SEC.

The coaches have seen significant growth in both an understanding of the system and the skills they’ll put on display in 2023. The team looks more confident in what it is doing. For these reasons, 247Sports named Oklahoma an underrated team heading into the 2023 season.

The wide assumption on the Sooners is they improve in Year 2 under [autotag]Brent Venables[/autotag] on roster enhancements alone, but won’t necessarily be a threat to win the Big 12. Oklahoma has an elite quarterback room with [autotag]Dillon Gabriel[/autotag] and five-star freshman Jackson Arnold and Venables filled several positions of need through recruiting and portal signees in the 2023 cycle, making this group potentially better than advertised nationally heading into camp. Venables said he’s seen enough to be bullish on the potential of this year’s squad, which he said he puts no limits on. “I know for some people, that’s hard for them to see, but I have clear vision on what that looks like, and I’m really excited about this team,” he said. – Brad Crawford 247Sports

It also helps to have the schedule Oklahoma has in 2023. It sets up perfectly for a bounce-back season, letting everyone know last year was a fluke. Ultimately, Oklahoma is the only one who can prove the national perception right or wrong, and it starts this season.

An improved roster on the defensive side of the ball will make the biggest difference in Oklahoma’s ability to return to the top of the Big 12.

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How do Oklahoma and the Big 12 stack up in ESPN’s returning production for 2023?

Taking a look at how the Big 12 stacks up in ESPN’s returning production for the 2023 season.

Winter workouts are underway, and spring ball is right around the corner. It’s that time of the football schedule when teams are figuring out how to deal with the turnover they endured with NFL draft declarations and transfer portal departures.

Turnover is the name of the game in college football. The teams that consistently win are the teams that have had the best recruiting classes, which has allowed them to withstand that turnover.

Each offseason, ESPN’s Bill Connelly takes a look at the roster overhauls to determine which teams have the greatest amount of returning production (ESPN+). Returning production has had an impact in his SP+ ratings.

On average, teams returning at least 80% of production improve by about 5.8 adjusted points per game in the following season’s SP+ ratings. That’s a pretty significant bump! For a team ranked 25th in SP+ last year, adding 5.8 points to its rating would have bumped it to 10th. And in the past two seasons that weren’t majorly impacted by a pandemic (2019 and 2022), the average improvement for teams at 80% or higher is 6.8 points. – Connelly, ESPN

Not all programs are alike, however. Alabama, which ranked 125 in returning production, will be able to withstand losses a bit easier because they’ve recruited better than other teams in the bottom 33. We’ll have to wait and see if teams like TCU and Cincinnati are able to overcome their lack of returning production. Interestingly, those two schools each appeared in the College Football Playoff in the last two seasons.

Here’s how Connelly weighs the offense:

Broken out by position/player, you’re looking at roughly 29% for the quarterback, 6% for the running back and each of four wide receivers and/or tight ends and 9% for each offensive lineman. With each year of data, offensive line snaps become a heavier piece of the equation, which I find interesting. – Connelly, ESPN

So based on his equation, the Sooners lost 27% along the offensive line with the departures of [autotag]Anton Harrison[/autotag], [autotag]Wanya Morris[/autotag], and [autotag]Chris Murray[/autotag]. Toss in another 18% for the losses of [autotag]Eric Gray[/autotag], [autotag]Marvin Mims[/autotag], and [autotag]Brayden Willis[/autotag], and the Sooners have lost roughly 45% of their offensive production from a year ago.

Now the Sooners did welcome transfer additions [autotag]Walter Rouse[/autotag] and [autotag]Caleb Shaffer[/autotag] to replace two of their three departing offensive line starters, but given that Shaffer is coming from the Group of Five, his snaps don’t count as much as [autotag]Chris Murray[/autotag]’s.

Conversely, here’s how he evaluates the defensive side of the ball.

Perhaps surprisingly, turnover in the back of the defense causes far more of a shift in a team’s SP+ rating from year to year than turnover up front. By position, defensive backs make up about 46% of the defensive formula, while linebackers are at 40% and the defensive line is at 14%. – Connelly, ESPN

The Sooners’ biggest departures were at the linebacker level with [autotag]David Ugwoegbu[/autotag] (transfer portal) and [autotag]DaShaun White[/autotag] (NFL) moving on. They also lost [autotag]Jalen Redmond[/autotag] and [autotag]Jeffery Johnson[/autotag], but according to Connelly’s metrics, those snaps don’t weigh as heavily.

Oklahoma added some pieces along the defensive front to help bolster its pass rush and mitigate the losses. However, they are hoping for their young linebacker corp to take a step forward in 2023 to replace their veteran backers.

Here’s a look at how the Big 12 stacks up in terms of ESPN’s