Thoughts on Notre Dame’s depth chart ahead of Ohio State

Plenty of take aways from the seasons first depth chart

As in each year of college football, a new group of stars emerge from one season to another. This season will be no different and for Notre Dame, there are more then a few players who could make a significant leap in the eyes of college football fans everywhere. Here are a few observations on Marcus Freeman’s first regular season depth chart.

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The Athletic’s Sampson suggests an All-American transfer on Notre Dame’s radar

This would be a perfect match

The transfer portal has been a predominant way for many schools to fill holes at big positions. For Notre Dame, this past season was the contribution Jack Coan, the graduate transfer from Wisconsin, who was instrumental in the success of this years team.

As for next year, a massive hole will need to be filled, as star safety Kyle Hamilton has already declared early for the NFL. Yes, DJ Brown played fantastic and could return while Houston Griffith has exhausted his eligibility. There is a hole at safety for next year that will need to be filled.

How about an All-American replacing another All-American as The Athletic’s Pete Sampson recently suggested? Northwestern star safety Brandon Joseph has entered the portal and with the need for the Irish at the position, it makes complete sense for Marcus Freeman to purse the soon to be former Wildcat star.

It remains to be seen where Joseph will end up, but he would be welcomed with open arms in South Bend.

5 stars: The best and worst of Notre Dame’s win over UVA

The best and worst for the Irish today against UVA

The Irish went into Charlottesville and controlled the game from the opening kickoff and handily defeated Virginia 28-3. It was a very sound performance from the Irish, and even though the score wasn’t as high as we have seen in recent weeks, was plenty against this Cavalier team. There was some good, 5 stars, and some bad, 1 star, in today’s performance and continue reading to find out who earned their stars tonight.

5 Stars: The Best and the Worst of Notre Dame’s win over North Carolina

Who played well? Who didn’t?

It was a four-quarter slugfest, with the Irish not making any mistakes, ending up on top of visiting North Carolina. When you score 44-points, the expectation is that you should win and that’s exactly what happened. This game was closer than you would have expected given the Tar Heel’s record, and that means there were a few things that didn’t go well for the Irish today. Find out who did well, 5-stars, and who didn’t, 1-star, during Saturday’s 44-34 victory against North Carolina.

Notre Dame vs. North Carolina: Fourth-Quarter Analysis

Lots of points, and they led to another win.

Both Notre Dame and North Carolina have loads of talent. One of them has lived up to expectations, and the other has not. That was reflected by how Saturday’s game at Notre Dame Stadium turned out. The Irish won, 44-34, in their highest-scoring game of the season.

The Irish (7-1) were somewhat on their heels as the Tar Heels (4-4) were driving as the fourth quarter began. However, an incomplete pass by Sam Howell on third down set up a punt that downed the Irish at their own 9-yard line. Despite the long field to start, only one play was needed as Kyren Williams, who was back in action after suffering a third-quarter injury, took a handoff, made a nice move to the left, then executed a perfect stiff arm to run 91 yards for a touchdown. Mike Tirico told the NBC audience that it was the Irish’s play of the year, and it was hard to argue against it.

DJ Brown intercepted Howell on the first play of his next drive and returned the ball 15 yards into the red zone. After Avery Davis ran for 12 yards, another Irish touchdown appeared imminent. The Irish tried to punch it in on the ground, but the Tar Heels’ defense held. Jonathan Doerer kicked a 20-yard field goal to put the Irish up by two full scores.

Perhaps inspired by his defense’s effort, Howell went back to work. By mixing runs and passes, he was able to get the offense into field-goal range. However, he wasn’t satisfied with that, and he evaded a bunch of Irish defenders while running 31 yards for a touchdown. An Irish victory no longer appeared so certain.

Needing a response, the Irish’s offense did everything it could to get one. Jack Coan completed a pair of passes for first downs, and Williams had a couple of nice runs, one of which went for 20 yards. Eventually, the Irish had a third-and-long on which they drew a pass interference to give them first-and-goal. They once again failed to find the end zone in this situation, but they milked the clock down to the point where Doerer made a 21-yard field goal with 1:37 left.

Out of timeouts and needing more than one score, the Tar Heels marched down the field quickly. They made their way into the red zone and spiked the ball with 23 seconds left. On the next play, Howell was met by Jordan Botelho and threw the ball out of the box and was called for intentional grounding. He completed one more pass short of the goal line, and that was all she wrote in South Bend.

That game had a lot of action, and the Irish came out on top. Who would have it any other way?

Watch: Notre Dame’s DJ Brown picks off North Carolina’s Sam Howell

DJ Brown with the pick!

Both Notre Dame and North Carolina had played very clean football, no turnovers for either team. That changed very quickly under a minute into the fourth quarter. The Irish had just extended their lead to 38-27 on Kyren Williams amazing touchdown run that went for 91-yards.

The Tar Heels had their backs against the wall and quarterback Sam Howell felt like he needed to make a play. Well, Irish safety DJ Brown felt the same way and stepped in front of a Howell pass and picked it off. The replacement for star Kyle Hamilton was having a quiet night but not anymore.

Five keys to Notre Dame defeating North Carolina

What do you think will decide the game for the Irish?

The Tar Heels have massively underachieved this year, playing themselves to a 4-3 record and right out of the polls. This seems like a Mack Brown old Texas team, tons of talent but wildly inconsistent however extremely dangerous. Find out below five keys for the Irish to contain the Tar Heels and avoid an upset at home.