Notre Dame players official Senior Bowl measurements

Here is how the six Notre Dame players measured out this week, all of whom will be playing for the National team in Saturday’s game. 

The annual Senior Bowl takes place this weekend, with kickoff between the American and National coming at 2:30 p.m. ET and can be viewed live on NFL Network.

Last year saw four players from the Senior Bowl selected in the first round of the NFL draft.

Notre Dame has six players participating in this year’s Senior Bowl and although it’s unlikely that any of those six will have their name called in the first round, the majority will have their name called at some point.

Here is how the six Notre Dame players measured out this week, all of whom will be playing for the National team in Saturday’s game.

Notre Dame earns seven All-ACC Academic team members

For the first time in program history, Notre Dame Football student-athletes have earned selections to the All-ACC Academic team, following their first season as a conference member. Seven Irish players earned the honor, including: 

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NOTRE DAME, Indiana — For the first time in program history, Notre Dame Football student-athletes have earned selections to the All-ACC Academic team, following their first season as a conference member. Seven Irish players earned the honor, including:

  • Graduate student quarterback Ian Book (graduate studies)
  • Senior offensive lineman Robert Hainsey (finance)
  • Graduate student OL Tommy Kraemer (graduate studies)
  • Freshman tight end Michael Mayer (undeclared, First Year of Studies)
  • Graduate student wide receiver Javon McKinley (graduate studies)
  • Graduate student WR Ben Skowronek (graduate studies)
  • Senior linebacker Drew White (science-business)

 

Ian Book 

The winningest quarterback in Notre Dame history (30-5), Book has completed 228 passes for 2,830 yards and 15 touchdowns, also adding 116 rushes for 485 yards (ranks third on the team). The graduate student and team captain won the 2020 Pop Warner National College Football Award, and was named third team All-ACC by the conference. He is a finalist for the Manning Award, as well as a semifinalist for the Maxwell, Davey O’Brien and Johnny Unitas Golden Arm awards, while finishing in the Top 10 in Heisman voting.

Robert Hainsey

Hainsey, a mainstay on the Irish O-Line and selected by the conference as All-ACC Second Team, was a rare two-time team captain, and was a finalist for the Senior CLASS Award, also being named Senior CLASS Award First Team All-America. He was named ACC co-Offensive Lineman of the Week for his performance vs. South Florida, and has totaled 34-career starts. Also returning from a season-ending injury in 2019, Hainsey is a member of a line that has paved the way for a 1,000-yard rusher in Williams, and two additional players who have totaled more than 480 rushing yards on the season (RB Chris Tyree  – 496, QB Ian Book – 485).

Tommy Kraemer

Kraemer owns the most career starts by an Irish offensive player in 2020, ending the season with 39 under his belt. Returning to the field in 2020 after a season-ending injury in 2019, Kraemer produced at a high level, even after missing a game due to injury. Named ACC Offensive Lineman of the Week at Boston College, and selected to the All-ACC team chosen by the conference, Kraemer was a member of a unit that helps move the chains at a high level on third down. The Irish led the ACC and ranked ninth in the FBS in third down conversion percentage with a remarkable 49.4 success rate.

Michael Mayer

True freshman Michael Mayer ties for the lead on the Irish offense with 42 receptions, totaling 450 yards, adding two touchdowns. His 42 receptions in 2020 are the most in a single season by a Notre Dame true freshman tight end in Irish history, and rank tied for seventh among all Notre Dame tight ends for single-season receptions. He was named to the Pro Football Focus Team of the Week at Pitt and to the FWAA Freshman All-American Watch List, and was selected by the conference to the All-ACC Third Team.

Javon McKinley

McKinley led the Irish in receiving yards (717), while tying for the lead in receptions (42) in 2020. He added three receiving touchdowns. Noting All-ACC Honorable Mention recognition from the conference, he was named ACC Receiver of the Week for his performance against Syracuse in the regular season finale. McKinley also posted one rush for 15 yards.

Ben Skowronek

Skowronek led the Irish in receiving touchdowns in 2020 with five, as he caught 29 passes for 439 yards in 10 games. With three receiving touchdowns at Boston College, no other Notre Dame player has ever recorded more receiving touchdowns in a single game vs. a Power 5 opponent than Skowronek’s three. He also noted his first-career rushing touchdown in 2020 on the first rush of his career (at North Carolina).

Drew White

White tied for third on the team in tackles with 57, also posting 9.0 TFL (loss of 27 yards), and 1.5 sacks. He totaled two pass breakups and two QBH in 2020, starting all 12 games of the season, and notched his first solo sack of the season in the ACC Championship, bringing his career total to 3.5. White was awarded the game ball for his performance at North Carolina, in which he posted five tackles, 2.0 TFL (-8 yards), 0.5 sacks (-4 yards) and one pass breakup. White combined for a sack, his first of the season, pushing his career total to 2.5.

Notre Dame’s Senior Bowl Participants

Notre Dame has six former players participating in this Senior Bowl which is more than any other school.

The annual Reese’s Senior Bowl gets underway this week in Mobile, Alabama before the game takes place on Saturday, Jan. 30 at 2:30 p.m. ET.

Some of the best talent from all of college football will be on display this week as players from all over and programs big and small try to improve their draft stock.

Notre Dame has six former players participating which is more than any other school.

Will all six get drafted?

Unlikely but here s a very brief profile on each former Fighting Irish player participating in Senior Bowl activities this week:

Watch: Ben Skowronek Speaks Ahead of Senior Bowl

This past season was kind to Ben Skowronek. All it took was a move from Northwestern to Notre Dame for his true potential to be unleashed.

This past season was kind to Ben Skowronek. All it took was a move from Northwestern to Notre Dame for his true potential to be unleashed. Now, he’s getting ready to play in the Senior Bowl on Jan. 30 in Mobile, Alabama. He took some time to speak with WPTA-TV, the ABC affiliate in his hometown of Fort Wayne:

That’s some pretty elite company praising and helping Skowronek. Clearly, they think he has serious potential to succeed at the next level. That will be a nice asset during an NFL Scouting Combine that will be drastically different from years past. It only adds to what’s always a serious challenge for NFL hopefuls.

Skowronek is one of seven Notre Dame players in this year’s Senior Bowl. Rounding out that list are Ian Book, Liam Eichenberg, Robert Hainsey, Aaron Banks, Daelin Hayes and Adetokunbo Ogundeji.

The ‘transfer toilet’ is how one ACC coach views the portal

Wake Forest head coach Dave Clawson had some interesting words when asked about the NCAA transfer portal.

Since the inception of the NCAA’s transfer portal in October of 2018, many players have enter their name in. Over 1,000 student-athletes did so in it’s first year of existence, with many more following the path the past two years.

In an interview with the Winston-Salem Journal, Wake Forest head coach Dave Clawson was overtly critical of the “transfer toilet” as he so eloquently called it. The topic was breached when John Dell asked about his former running back Kenneth Walker, entering the portal and subsequently committing to Michigan State.

“The joke in the ACC room is that sometimes we call it almost like the transfer toilet. There are players that go in there, and you never see or hear from them again. This whole idea there’s a portal and a one-time transfer (rule) and isn’t this freedom great? But you are still only allowed to have 85 scholarships, and you can still sign only 25 players a year. So you have all these players going in there thinking they can go anywhere and play. There are still scholarship limits,” explained Clawson.

He went ever further saying “a lot of those players go into the portal not being informed of the national dynamics of that portal, that there are 65 Power Five programs,” going back into his comments about scholarship limits.

Clawson does have some solid points, but transfers have worked for many players including Notre Dame’s Ben Skowronek (although a different case as a graduate transfer) and former Irish now Boston College quarterback Phil Jurkovec. It hasn’t worked for many also, citing Miami’s Tate Martell.

The argument here is that if coaches are allowed to leave freely, so should players and it’s a solid point, but to a degree. Michigan’s Jim Harbaugh thinks players should be allowed to have one free transfer, where they wouldn’t have to wait for the NCAA to make a ruling on being eligible immediately.

Cases like Martell’s don’t always makes sense, as he claimed due to Urban Meyer leaving after his second season that he should be eligible right away at Miami, FL. They granted it to him but said no to Luke Ford. The Illinois native played his first year at Georgia, but he wanted his sick grandfather to see him play. The NCAA denied his request, his grandfather passing away during his season where he had to sit out a year.

The “transfer toilet” needs more rules, the NCAA must have better criteria as to what grants a player immediate eligibility and what doesn’t. This year has obviously been different, with most transfers being granted eligibility right away.

Either way, Clawson got our attention comparing the transfer portal to a toilet bowl.

Grading Notre Dame’s positional groups for the 2020 season

Letter grades for Notre Dame football during their 2020 season, which saw them go undefeated in regular season play, only to lose their final two games.

The season has now ended and we can start to look back on what was a very odd 2020 season of college football. Two of 247Sports analysts Brad Crawford and Bud Elliott, broke down each team in the ACC and gave out grades for their performances.

Both, Crawford and Elliott gave the Irish A’s for the 2020 season, but I wanted to dig a bit deeper and give grades out for each position group and coaching. So here it is, my grades for each Notre Dame unit from this past season.

Rose Bowl and CFP Semifinal: Fourth-Quarter Analysis

Most people who love to hate Notre Dame won’t admit it, but the Irish did as well as they could against Alabama.

Most people who love to hate Notre Dame won’t admit it, but the Irish did as well as they could against Alabama. The outcome for the Rose Bowl and College Football Playoff Semifinal was far from unexpected. One team simply had too much talent compared to not only this game’s opponent, but just about everyone else. So we saw Notre Dame’s memorable season come to an end with a 31-14 loss.

The Crimson Tide (12-0) approached the red zone in the early moments of the fourth quarter but couldn’t quite get there. Will Reichard salvaged the drive with a 41-yard field goal. Considering how most of this game went, it was a small victory for the Irish (10-2).

Ian Book returned after suffering an injury in the third quarter, and he led an impressive drive to give the Irish a chance at putting up another touchdown. He completed a pass to Michael Mayer in the end zone, but it was wiped by an illegal shift from Chris Tyree and George Takacs. Left with no choice but to try and get that touchdown back, Book had two chances to do so. Both of those failed on incomplete passes to Ben Skowronek and Avery Davis.

The Irish’s defense got a little pride when Jayson Ademilola and Adetokunbo Ogundeji sacked Mac Jones, who also was called for intentional grounding on the play. Since that happened on third down, it gave the offense another chance to put points on the board. Book led a pass-heavy drive and even got some help on an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty from Nick Saban of all people. The drive ended in a 1-yard touchdown run from Book, so the senior can say he went out on a high note.

Surprisingly, that was not the Irish’s last time on offense. They recovered an onside kick, so Book and the other seniors on the unit got to see the field once more. If there wasn’t so little time left, another touchdown might have happened. There was just enough time for an incomplete pass towards the end zone, and that was it.

Que sera sera. That’s all that can be said. The debate on whether the Irish should have been allowed into the playoff will rage on. However, they were selected, and they had to come out and play despite the long odds.

Rose Bowl and CFP Semifinal: Second-Quarter Analysis

For the most part, Notre Dame still can’t figure out how to stop Alabama’s offense in the Rose Bowl and College Football Playoff Semifinal.

For the most part, Notre Dame still can’t figure out how to stop Alabama’s offense in the Rose Bowl and College Football Playoff Semifinal. At least it’s been able to move the ball itself. That was expected since the Tide don’t have quite the dominant defense they’ve had in the past. But that doesn’t make trailing, 21-7, at halftime any easier.

The start of the second quarter saw the Irish’s offense pick up where it left out to end the first. Ian Book and Kyren Williams did everything in their power to move across the red zone. It appeared Book scored the Irish’s first touchdown on a short run, but he was ruled down at the 1-yard line. Facing fourth-and-goal, Book gave the ball back to Williams, who got the Irish on the board.

The Tide barely batted a eye at that, however. After picking their first first down on their next drive, they showed what they could do once again. Mac Jones completed three consecutive passes of no less than 15 yards. The last of those was his second touchdown pass to DeVonta Smith, this one for 34 yards.

The Irish got the ball back and didn’t get very far, forcing a Jay Bramblett punt. Surprisingly, the Tide also had an unproductive possession that ended in a punt. Though 37 seconds remained, it was enough time for Book to run 20 yards and then hit Ben Skowronek for a 20-yard reception. Ultimately, there only was enough time for a 51-yard field-goal attempt from Jonathan Doerer, but it fell short, so the Irish aren’t in any better of spot than they were when the first quarter concluded.

Notre Dame leader goes ‘Hoosiers’ on Rose Bowl

The Rose Bowl isn’t being played in its regular Pasadena home this Friday but AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas is on the short list of most iconic football venues in the world. To Notre Dame grad-student and wide receiver Ben Skowronek it’s just …

The Rose Bowl isn’t being played in its regular Pasadena home this Friday but AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas is on the short list of most iconic football venues in the world.

To Notre Dame grad-student and wide receiver Ben Skowronek it’s just another game that’s being played in just another venue.

“I’ve played in a lot of pretty big stadiums,” Skowronek said ahead of Monday’s National Semi-Final, “It’s the same 100 yards as the high school fields and fields from youth football that I played on”.

It’s good to know that even if “Hoosiers” was released over ten years before Skowronek was born that he’s still channeling his inner Norman Dale.

Now can these bunch of young men from a school based in Indiana knock off the modern college football dynasty?

ACC Championship Game: First-Quarter Analysis

If Notre Dame wasn’t intimidated by Clemson before, it’s not going to be in the ACC Championship Game.

If Notre Dame wasn’t intimidated by Clemson before, it’s not going to be in the ACC Championship Game. It doesn’t matter that Trevor Lawrence is part of the equation now. The Irish came ready to play. However, that’s not enough as they trail, 7-3, after the first quarter.

The Irish were the first to get the ball and impressed out of the gate. In back-to-back third down situations, Ian Book connected with Michael Mayer for gains of 10-plus yards. The offense got as far as the Tigers’ 28-yard line before Book was sacked on another third down. Charlotte native Jonathan Doerer got the Irish on the board by getting just enough power to hit a 51-yard field goal.

When the Tigers took over on offense, the defense had a few moments in which it bent but didn’t break. Clarence Lewis hurt the unit’s cause by taking a face-mask penalty and putting the Tigers well into Irish territory. It could have spelled early disaster, but Kyle Hamilton came up with an interception before that happened. Talk about picking up your teammate.

The Irish looked like they would pounce on this momentum. Ben Skowronek picked up a 26-yard reception on the first play from scrimmage, and Kyren Williams ran 24 yards to get to the Clemson 10. The offense stalled out, and Doerer came out for what appeared to be a chip shot from 24 yards out. Instead, he hit the left upright, and Irish fans suddenly are worried that three points could make the difference in this game.

With the miss, momentum shifted the other way. This time, something came out of it. After back-to-back runs, Lawrence found Amari Rodgers down field and completed the long pass. Rodgers was off to the races and a 67-yard touchdown after that. How will the Irish respond to that?