Notre Dame football: Top 25 quarterback recruits since 2000

Four in the top 16 since the 2020 recruiting class. Not bad by Tommy Rees on his way out the door.

It was once said the highest pressure position in all of college football was playing quarterback at Notre Dame.  Sure, when [autotag]Beano Cook[/autotag] puts the pressure on you to win multiple Heisman’s and national championships, it’s nearly impossible to dispute the claim.

Times have changed a bit in recent decades and although the pressure on Notre Dame quarterbacks might not be the same as it was during the peak of the [autotag]Lou Holtz[/autotag] era for [autotag]Ron Powlus[/autotag], but pressure comes with playing for the Irish still, no doubt.

Quarterback has also been perhaps the biggest difference between the elites and Notre Dame in recent years in the sense that the elites have an elite signal caller while the Irish put out good but far from elite players at the position recently.

If we look back since the year 2000 there have been some fantastic quarterbacks to wear blue and gold.  Which of those came in with the biggest hype in terms of recruiting rankings?  And which ones soared beyond the little hype the may have been surrounded by?

And which didn’t even play quarterback in college?

Here are the top 25 Notre Dame quarterback recruits since 2000 according to the 247Sports composite ranking system.

Watch: Notre Dame quarterback commit CJ Carr at Elite 11 Regional camp

The Irish have a elite quarterback option in their 2024 recruiting class

If there is one position holding back [autotag]Notre Dame[/autotag] from joining the elite’s of college football, it’s at quarterback.

Head coach [autotag]Marcus Freeman[/autotag] has found a one-year stop-gap answer in transfer [autotag]Sam Hartman[/autotag], but after what we saw during the Blue and Gold game, the depth behind him isn’t great.

You know who is great? Irish commit [autotag]CJ Carr[/autotag]. The 6-foot, 3-inch and 195 pound signal caller is the 5th quarterback and 41st overall player in the 2024 class according to the 247Sports composite.

Yes, the Irish had had higher ranked commits at the position ([autotag]Jimmy Clausen[/autotag], [autotag]Dayne Crist[/autotag], [autotag]Gunner Kiel[/autotag] and [autotag]Brandon Wimbush[/autotag]), but none has the skill set that Carr possesses.

Want proof? Check out the video below as Carr earns himself an invite to the Elite 11 finals, the top camp for quarterback prospects.

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Notre Dame makes top 5 for the best tackle in the country

A potentially huge addition to the ‘22 class

The 2022 recruiting class for Notre Dame is shaping up to be one of the best in recent memory. The class of ‘13 was a fantastic group, ranking inside the top 5 in the country, with the ‘08 version pacing the field after finishing second in the nation. The current class has the same ranking as ‘08 class held, which included Michael Floyd, Kyle Rudolph, and Dayne Crist.

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The momentum is building and the Irish are still certainly in the mix for the best offensive tackle in the country Zach Rice. The Virginia native dropped his top 5 and Notre Dame was included.

The plan is for Rice to visit each of his final schools for an official when the NCAA finally ends the long dead period. At six-foot-six-inches and 282-pounds, the tackle has a very good last group of schools to choose from.

Jeff Quinn, Notre Dame offensive line coach, and Brian Kelly, has their work cut out for the to beat the current college football power powerhouse, Alabama, the Midwest power Ohio State, his home state school in Virginia and another ACC foe in North Carolina.

A commitment from Rice would certainly be a cherry on top of the Notre Dame recruiting class and the Irish are hungry to make that addition.

 

Notre Dame Football: The maddest I’ve ever left Notre Dame Stadium

With reports out that Notre Dame will be squaring off with South Florida on September 19, flashbacks immediately came to me from the epic disaster that was that Saturday afternoon.

I’m happy to say I’ve been able to spend countless hours in ballparks, arenas and stadiums across this entire country.  I’ve seen my teams pull upsets, clinch championships and suffer plenty of heartbreaking and blowout defeats.

I’ve never been as mad leaving a game in my life as I was on September 3, 2011, though.

With reports out that Notre Dame will be squaring off with South Florida on September 19, flashbacks immediately came to me from the epic disaster that was that Saturday afternoon.

After a 1-3 and 4-5 start in 2010, Notre Dame won their final three regular season games, including their first win over USC in nearly a decade, before obliterating Miami (FL) in the Sun Bowl.

The improvement the team made that year was clear and the hype began to follow the Irish a bit as the entered the season ranked 16th overall in the nation.

To open that season South Florida came to town and pretty much everything that could wrong, went wrong for Notre Dame that day.

As Dayne Crist was about to put an exclamation point on the opening drive with a touchdown, Jonas Gray fumbled and saw Kayvon Webster run it back 96 yards for a South Florida touchdown.

Early in the second quarter the Irish were again about to get on the scoreboard when a Crist pass deflected off of the hands of TJ Jones and was intercepted in the end zone for a Bulls touchback.

Theo Riddick would get in on the action before halftime as he muffed a punt that was recovered by USF and led to a Bulls field goal and their eventual 16-0 halftime lead.

Rains and thunderstorms would come and Notre Dame would finally wake up a bit behind Tommy Rees who threw for nearly 300 yards off the bench, but five turnovers did the Domers in that afternoon and my blood still boils thinking about how dumb that loss was.

Notre Dame out-gained USF that day 508-254.  For the most part they dominated.

Unfortunately that included in the turnover department where the Irish finished with five to USF’s zero.

It was a dumb loss, maddening and quickly deflated the high hopes of 2011 while the lightning delays only made matters worse.

I’ve never walked out of a stadium so mad about what I had just watched in my life.  I’m glad life has changed my perspective on sports a bit since.

A week later things would only get worse as the Irish would gift Michigan a game that still makes no sense.

With Duke and South Florida to start the season this year, Notre Dame fans will see those names and remember a few awful memories from September home games in somewhat recent seasons.

Let’s hope that this time USF’s new head coach Jeff Scott is the one turning purple on the sideline, and not Brian Kelly.

If for some god-forsaken reason you’d like to re-live that 2011 contest you can do so here, courtesy of “The Vault: ND on NBC”.

Related:  The eight teams Notre Dame football has played but never beaten (hint – a team mentioned in this piece is on the list)