Notre Dame football: Brian Kelly wins 100th, ties Holtz

Brian Kelly joined rare air for Notre Dame head coaches on Saturday. More on his accomplishment right here.

With Notre Dame’s 45-31 win over Boston College on Saturday, Brian Kelly joined a club that only only two other Fighting Irish head coaches have membership to.

The win was Kelly’s 100th at Notre Dame, tying him for the second most all-time in program history with Lou Holtz who went 100-30-2 between 1986 and 1996.

Kelly now sits at 100-39 since taking over the Notre Dame job in 2010 and is just five away from tying Knute Rockne for the most ever in program history.

Ara Parseghian sits fourth all-time with 95 career wins while Frank Leahy finished his illustrious career with 87 wins heading the Irish for fifth most.

In case you were wondering, Charlie Weis, Tyrone Willingham, George O’Leary and Bob Davie combined to win 92 games during their runs of head coach from 1997-2009.

College Football Jobs Ranked, Notre Dame highly coveted

The Irish head coaching job has been and will continue to be one of the best jobs in all of college football.

Coaching the fabled Notre Dame program has always been a high-profile job, expectations for every coach that lead the football program will always be sky high. Although the Irish have not won a title since 1988, the job is still held in high regards as 247Sport named the position as the 9th most coveted head coaching job in the country.

Brad Crawford, who ranked the jobs for 247Sports, sees that “there might not be a brand stronger than Notre Dame in college football. Touchdown Jesus, South Bend, the gold helmets … you get it.” It very hard to argue against that, there are not many schools with the same tradition that Notre Dame sports.

The explanation of the ranking is something that we all know, but Crawford points out two reasons why the Notre Dame job gets the 9th spot. The “drawbacks here that other programs don’t have in the Top 10 is location and academics. The standards at Notre Dame are higher than most and Indiana isn’t exactly pumping out elite athletes annually. That’s why Brian Kelly has taken a nationwide approach to recruiting during his tenure.”

The national approach has worked, but not quite as well as Kelly would like. In the last 5 recruiting cycles, including the current one, the Irish will have signed just 2 instate players. Kelly has said the recruiting needs to go to another level to compete with the teams they need to beat to be among the best in the nation.

The Notre Dame head coaching job will always be one that comes with gigantic expectations and lots of scrutiny. It is not cut out for every coach, some of them just can’t handle what it means to be the Irish’s lead man. Kelly’s been at the helm for 10 years now and he’s helped bring back some respectability after the Bob Davie, Ty Willingham and Charlie Weis eras.

Notre Dame Football: Stream All 2000 Home Games

2000 was a surprise season that saw Notre Dame go to the BCS. Relive all six home games online NOW!

I have been a passionate Notre Dame football fan for as long as I can remember.  Most kids in my class grew up loving everything in regards to the Chicago Bears but that has never quite been the case for me as I’ve always enjoyed the college game and specifically Notre Dame football more.

I was a freshman in high school in the fall of 2000 and had never been to a game before.  My sister was starting her freshman year at St. Mary’s College that same fall which meant my fandom went from “strong” to “obsessive”.

Maybe I’ll write more about that season in the not so distant future but in the meantime I’ll let you know that all home games from the 2000 Notre Dame football season are available to stream.

Week One:  vs. Texas A&M
Notre Dame is coming off just a five-win season in 1999 but starts the 2000 season right with an impressive showing against Texas A&M as the Aggies make their first-ever trip to Notre Dame Stadium.

Week Two:  vs. No. 1 Nebraska
For the first time since 1993 the top-ranked team in the country came to South Bend.  Seemingly 50,000 Nebraska fans made the trip to see two Notre Dame special team scores and Bob Davie play for overtime.  Whoops.

Week Three:  vs. No. 13 Purdue
After Arnaz Battle broke his hand against Nebraska, Gary Godsey was called upon to help get the Irish a win.  Their defense and special teams helped out as Nick Setta’s game-winning field goal as time expired sent the Irish to 2-1.

Week Six: vs. Stanford
After a loss at Michigan State two weeks earlier and coming off a bye, Matt LoVecchio made his first start for the Irish in what would be the first of seven-straight wins to close the regular season.  Of just as much importance, this was the first Notre Dame football game I ever attended.

Week Nine: vs. Air Force
Following a pair of wins over both Navy and West Virginia, Notre Dame returned home at 5-2 to take on a pesky Air Force team.  Thanks to heroics from Glenn Earl and Joey Getherall, a stunning upset was avoided.

Week Eleven: vs. Boston College
Following the thriller over Air Force, Notre Dame enjoyed a bye week before welcoming Boston College to South Bend for Senior Day.  The Irish controlled things for the duration in this one, winning 28-16 and finishing the home season 5-1.

Notre Dame would go on to beat Rutgers and USC on the road, finishing the season an unlikely 9-2 and earning a berth in the BCS for the first time where they would get run out of the building by Chad Johnson and No. 5 Oregon State.

Notre Dame to Highlight 1999 Comeback win vs. USC on Saturday

1999 was a forgettable year for Notre Dame outside a couple of comeback wins over blue-blood programs. Relive one of them Saturday night!

Notre Dame has been doing a great job keeping us entertained with plenty of old classics to watch during our respective quarantines.  Saturday they dip into that bag yet again with a memorable comeback victory from an otherwise pretty forgettable season.

1999 saw Notre Dame go just 5-7 after being within a regular season finale win at USC of going to a BCS bowl game.  Instead, Notre Dame lost that game with no Jarious Jackson at quarterback as he was injured and that, coupled with a bowl loss to Georgia Tech seemed to only slow things headed towards 1999.

Notre Dame started the year by blowing out Kansas before consecutive losses at Michigan, Purdue and to Michigan State.  A comeback win over Oklahoma to start October before blowing out Arizona State got the Irish back to .500 when USC came a calling in mid-October.

Having lost three straight to USC, Notre Dame sure was looking like it was going to be a fourth consecutive defeat at the hands of the Trojans as they trailed 24-3 early in the third quarter.

A few Trojans mishaps led to Notre Dame scores before Jackson eventually fumbled into the endzone, only to have tight end Jabari Halloway land on the loose ball to give the Irish the 25-24 lead with just over two minutes remaining at a rain-soaked Notre Dame Stadium.

The win moved Notre Dame to 4-3 on the season before a victory over Navy got the Irish to five a week later.  That was unfortunately all the wins Notre Dame would find that fall though, losing the final four games to Tennessee, Pitt, Boston College and Stanford to finish just 5-7.  It was their first losing season since Lou Holtz’s debut year when the Irish went 5-6 in 1986.

USC would finish just 6-6, missing a bowl game as well in what was the second of three seasons with Paul Hackett guiding the ship.  He’d be fired after the 2000 season and be replaced by some guy named Pete Carroll.

Enjoy one of the few bright spots from the fall of 1999 Saturday night by watching on YouTube and tweeting along using #NDWatchParty.

Notre Dame to Re-Broadcast 1998 Classic vs. LSU

Most college football fans have no recollection of 1998 Notre Dame vs. LSU but for those who watched it was four hours of all-time weird.

By pure luck Notre Dame and LSU have had a nice little run as the two have met six times since 1997.  A few of those have ended in some thrilling finishes, most recently the Capital One Bowl win with Miles Boykin snagging the game-winning touchdown reception from Ian Book late in the fourth quarter.

Notre Dame is going to re-air another classic Notre Dame/LSU contest on Saturday night as they’ll be showing their 1998 win over the Tigers at Notre Dame Stadium.

Notre Dame was ranked tenth in the nation and on the cusp of a BCS berth if they could knock off LSU and USC in the final couple weeks of the year.  For those that don’t recall, this game featured:

  • Four combined returns for touchdowns
  • Eventual bust Abram Booty having a moment in the sun as the highly regarded recruit goes off for 153 receiving yards and two touchdowns.
  • A Notre Dame win that finished with one of the dumber things Bob Davie ever did on the Irish sideline

You can check that all out here on Saturday night at 6:30 p.m. ET as Notre Dame and LSU do battle again 22 years later.  It was an all-time strange one that ended in victory but man alive was it a strange way to get there.

New Mexico Football: Danny Gonzales’ First Recruiting Class Turns Heads And Keeps Promises

The New Mexico Lobos 2020 Recruiting Class Is Complete With 24 Signings. Class is complete with a high school focus and southwest feel. Contact/Follow @HardwoodTalk & @MWCwire Danny Gonzales completes his first recruiting class in Albuquerque, and …

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The New Mexico Lobos 2020 Recruiting Class Is Complete With 24 Signings.


Class is complete with a high school focus and southwest feel. 


Contact/Follow @HardwoodTalk & @MWCwire

Danny Gonzales completes his first recruiting class in Albuquerque, and it’s a good one. 

As we look towards the month of February and with National Signing Day officially in the rear view, coaching staffs can begin to regroup and look onward to spring practice. The Mountain West has welcomed four new head coaches to the conference this off season, some faces familiar and others not so much. But no matter the coach, job or school one thing remains and that’s national signing day.

Danny Gonzales is one of those familiar faces we mentioned earlier, an Albuquerque native who walked-on at New Mexico from near by Valley High School during the last years of Dennis Franchione’s tenure and in the Rocky Long’s first year in charge back in 1998. Long has had his own storied success with the Lobos as he has transitioned from player to head coach and now defensive coordinator almost fifty years later.

Gonzales has walked a similar path to Long’s and has enjoyed success in every role he’s taken while doing it. At New Mexico, San Diego State and most recently under Herm Edwards at Arizona State. Only failing to reach a bowl game in five of his 19 seasons on a collegiate coaching staff. Fans and administration are hoping he brings some of that winning pedigree to Dreamstyle Stadium this fall, everyone knows it’s overdue.

But the life blood of college football is still recruiting, and of course player development is another big component of on field success but still how do you mold that 6-4 210 pound kid from Lovington into that 6-4 255 pound NFL draft top-ten pick? Well you got to get him there first. And of course all eyes are on Danny Gonzales and his newly formed coaching staff to put together a strong first class and win down in Albuquerque.

Now let’s be a little realistic, Gonzales was hired back in mid-December. Right around the NCAA’s early signing period on December 19th. With only one player committed to the Lobos at the time in El Paso native Gabe Stonewall (a Bob Davie Commit, now commited to Lamar). It was a little hard to think he would put together a class to top the Mountain West recruiting rankings in just over a month and a half right?

But his first recruiting class at New Mexico is different, yes different in structure, origin and let’s say expectations than classes of years past. But you can attribute than directly to the man in charge and his former coach, mentor and boss who is now his employee.

Recruiting classes under Bob Davie and Mike Locksley before him tried, but often failed to have a local feel and representation to them. Both brought in local players, on scholarship and as walk-ons during their time in Albuquerque but a majority of the roster was made up of players from around the country. Locksley had connections back in the DMV (D.C., Maryland and Virginia area), which is where he brought in a lot of his players from. Davie whose connections were a bit broader brought in recruits from a little bit of everywhere.

That was completely fine but the New Mexican community like most around the country enjoy seeing homegrown kids on the field. Which has been a goal for Danny Gonzales since day one. To recruit not only regionally but locally in his home state and to give local players opportunities like the one that he was given over twenty-five years ago.

The class stands at twenty-four players signed to NLI’s after national signing day, it includes 7 Texans, 10 Californians, 3 Arizonians, 1 Louisianan and of course 2 New Mexicans. Those New Mexicans are Dion Hunter a linebacker out of Rio Rancho (Cleveland HS) and defensive end Bryce Santana of Los Lunas (Los Lunas HS). Besides a very southwest feel the recruiting class also lists only one junior college player in offensive lineman Isaak Gutierrez of Butte College. It is yet just another difference between the recruiting styles of old and new. As Davie and Locksley both heavily recruited the junior college ranks.

Next, the list:

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Former Notre Dame Captain Reportedly Named Texans DC

Weaver takes over a defense that gave up the fifth-most yards in the NFL in 2019 but did manage to allow a significantly more respectable 19th fewest points.

Former Notre Dame captain and defensive end Anthony Weaver has worked his way from player to graduate assistant and now all the way up to an NFL defensive coordinator.

On Monday news broke courtesy of ESPN’s Adam Schefter, reporting that Weaver will be named defensive coordinator of the Houston Texans.

Anthony Weaver was a star defensive end at Notre Dame, playing under Bob Davie from 1998 through 2001.  In 2001 he served as a captain and was named team MVP for a squad that disappointed to the tune of just a 5-6 record after earning a Fiesta Bowl berth the season before.

Weaver went on to become a second round draft pick of the Baltimore Ravens in 2002 and played four seasons there before playing three more with the Houston Texans from 2006-08.

Weaver then got his start in the coaching ranks at the very bottom, serving as a graduate assistant to Urban Meyer at Florida in 2010 before taking a job as linebackers coach at North Texas in 2011.

From there it was a long climb to his new post as Weaver had stints with the New York Jets, Buffalo Bills, Cleveland Browns along the way.  In 2016 he took over as defensive line coach of the Texans before being promoted to defensive coordinator today.

Weaver takes over a defense that gave up the fifth-most yards in the NFL in 2019 but did manage to allow a significantly more respectable 19th fewest points.

For a flashback, check out this newsclip about Weaver from 2013 that briefly features footage from his kicking career in high school and one of his highlights from his days at Notre Dame.

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