Notre Dame Football: Ian Book Named OPOY

But wouldn’t the most valuable player on the entire team, who also happens to play offense, be the offensive player of the year by default?

At the annual The Echoes Banquet on Friday night, Notre Dame handed out their annual team awards.  Earlier we mentioned that Chase Claypool was the resipiant of the Team MVP award and that we agreed with him getting it seeing as it felt like whenever a huge play was needed, he was called upon.

So assuredly, the Team MVP would be named the Offensive Player of the Year then, seeing as he is an offensive player, right?

Think again.

Ian Book was instead awarded the Offensive Player of the Year.

I guess there is logic in this but I never pretend to understand it.

Just like in the NFL when a player wins Offensive Player of the Year but then a different offensive player wins MVP.  If he wasn’t the best offensive player then how is he MVP?

I have nothing against Ian Book and think he gets a raw deal from a certain percentage of the Notre Dame fan-base simply because he’s not Joe Burrow or Trevor Lawrence.

He’s the quarterback and when the going gets tough he’ll be called on to make a play or a read in order to get the ball in a play-makers hand.  He isn’t perfect but he executes a lot more often than he doesn’t.  That’s worthy of praise.

But wouldn’t the most valuable player on the entire team, who also happens to play offense, be the offensive player of the year by default?

With all of that said and I’m not trying to be funny when I say this, congrats to Ian Book for winning the award even if I think Chase Claypool wasn’t only the most valuable player on the team, but also the best and most valuable player on the offense.

With all that said, winning the award is a clear sign of the respect Book’s teammates and coaches have for him and there is no-doubt value in that, especially when you’re talking about a veteran starting quarterback.

Notre Dame Football: Chase Claypool Named Team MVP

There are cases you could make for perhaps Ian Book or Cole Kmet but what it keeps coming down to for me – when a play absolutely needed to be made – who was asked to make it and delivered the most?

Whenever there was a big play needed in 2019 it felt like you knew where Ian Book and Notre Dame were going with the football.

Find Chase Claypool and let the 6’4” wide receiver make a play.

And seemingly every time he was called upon he answered.

That’s why on Friday night at Echoes, the 2019 Notre Dame Awards Show, Claypool was named team-MVP.

There are cases you could make for perhaps Ian Book or Cole Kmet but what it keeps coming down to for me – when a play absolutely needed to be made – who was asked to make it and delivered the most?

Think of the Virginia Tech game for example.  Before Ian Book’s go-ahead touchdown run, who caught the pass that converted the fourth down to make the touchdown run even possible?

Trailing 3-0 to USC and in the shadow of their own goalposts facing third and seven, who caught the nine yard pass to extend the drive and give the offense some breathing room before eventually marching the rest of the field and taking the lead?

And after a slow start at Stanford in the regular season finale, who was called upon to make the huge touchdown catch just before halftime to put Notre Dame in the lead once and for all?

If you answered Chase Claypool to any of these questions you’re right.

We didn’t even mention his four-touchdown performance against Navy or countless other great showings he had.

So yes, there may have been a case you could make for another player or two, Notre Dame undoubtedly isn’t sniffing 10-2 without Claypool this year.

Notre Dame Football: Reesus Take The Wheel?

Seems like as long as Notre Dame doesn’t get blanked that Rees will get the gig.

The departure of Chip Long as Notre Dame’s offensive coordinator today comes a little bit of a surprise but not necessarily a shock.

As we mentioned earlier today, Notre Dame set a record for points scored this regular season, scoring 37.1 per game but being entirely out-matched by Georgia and Michigan’s defenses was more damning than anything thing else involving the Irish all season.

So per Bryan Driskell’s report earlier today, word is Tommy Rees will essentially have an audition to call plays in the Camping World Bowl to see if he’s fit for the job.

If you’re going to wait that long before ultimately even making a decision, is there really a decision to be made?

Seems like as long as Notre Dame doesn’t get blanked against Iowa State that Rees will get the gig.

This isn’t at all meant as a knock at Rees who has clearly worked his tail off to climb the coaching ladder, but is this the best idea to essentially give him the job without looking long and hard for someone more qualified?

Brian Kelly has done a lot of things well at Notre Dame and for the most part hiring quality assistants and coordinators has been one of them. Guys have left for jobs because they’ve earned them and the Brian Van Gorder type hires have been extremely rare.

But is due-diligence being done if Rees is just handed the keys to the limo?

I can’t help but think of LSU and how quickly their offense turned simply dynamic this season and how they’ll have a Heisman Trophy Winner officially come Saturday night.

I think of Oklahoma’s incredible offense and the now three straight CFP appearances it has made while it has its third different quarterback in three years getting a Heisman Finalist invite this weekend.

The two are extreme success stories but tales of how the coaching replacement who made a world of difference were found.

LSU hiring Joe Brady from the Saints to be their passing game coordinator clearly did wonders for its passing offense, as Brady won the top assistant coach award earlier this week.

Meanwhile Lincoln Riley was promoted to head coach at Oklahoma three short years ago and helped take the squad from being really good to a College Football Playoff regular as the offense went next-level upon his promotion.

Tommy Rees could be the next Lincoln Riley, getting promoted and the offense taking off against any opponent, not just select ones next year. But is that likely?

Or is it more likely you see a guy run something very similar to what Long just did that results in plenty of points overall, but leaves a lot still to be desired against the great defenses?

3, 17, 14.

Those are the point totals Notre Dame has scored in their last three loses, all to quality teams.

37, 34, 62, 30.

Those are the point totals for the four 2019 CFP teams in their respective conference title games last week.

You may love defense and that’s fine because I do too, but ask yourself if this record-setting unit was anywhere near good enough to compete score for score with the likes of LSU, Ohio State, Clemson and Oklahoma this year, or next season under Rees.

The instant reports of him getting promoted and then Northwestern not even giving him a second interview for the same position with them last week makes me not optimistic that if he’s the one, the offense will make any real strides thanks to its coordinator change.

I hope like all getup that Rees comes in and Notre Dame hangs 35+ on everyone in 2020. But unless a new passing game specialist or something of the sort comes along as well, excuse me while I fall short of expecting much different than 2019 offered.

Not that it’s a bad thing, it just seems status quo for a team that has to get fairly creative if it’s to actually end a 31 year title drought that it speaks so loudly about wanting to do.

Notre Dame Football: Chip Long Out as O-C

Notre Dame set a team record for points scored this year, averaging 37.1 per contest. That on its own makes you wonder if there is something more to this story, however,

In what has become news-heavy afternoon it appears Notre Dame will be on the hunt for a new offensive coordinator.

Despite a team-record for most points scored in a season this past fall, Bryan Driskell of Irish Maven reports that Chip Long is out as O-C and that both Notre Dame and Long are ready for fresh starts.

Notre Dame set a team record for points scored this year, averaging 37.1 per contest. That on its own makes you wonder if there is something more to this story, however, it is worth noting that the Irish did combine to score just 31 points against the two best defenses on their schedule this year, Georgia and Michigan.

So who replaces Long?

Tommy Rees is named in the report as a candidate for the job and that some sources have indicated he’ll get an audition by calling plays in the Camping World Bowl.

Personally I’ve got nothing against Rees and he’s clearly been a man on the rise in the coaching world, even if he didn’t get a second interview for Northwestern’s recent O-C opening. Doesn’t just promoting him though seem like the easy way out?

There is a class of offensive stars set to be here, especially in the 2021 recruiting class.

I know that Joe Burrow isn’t coming with whoever the next O-C is, but how do you know the next Joe Brady isn’t out there if you don’t at least go look?

Notre Dame Football: PFF Ranks Irish In Top 10

Notre Dame checks in just ahead of Wisconsin and Penn State who come in at nine and ten respectively while the same Michigan team who beat Notre Dame 45-14 in late October checks in at 11.

Notre Dame football fans have been a bit frustrated and upset that despite going 5-0 in the month of November, their Fighting Irish squad only moved up to the fifteenth spot in this week’s College Football Playoff rankings, two whole spots higher than they were rated five games ago at the start of November.

It won’t get them out of the Camping World Bowl and into the Cotton or Orange Bowls, but there was one place that does see them as a top-ten team in the nation.

Pro Football Focus released their latest PFFELO rankings following Week 14 of the college season and threw some significant praise Notre Dame’s way, ranking them seventh.

In their summary of the 10-2 Fighting Irish, Pro Football Focus offered the following:

It was back to a below-average passing grade for Ian Book, who had previously strung together three quality performances in an otherwise up-and-down 2019 campaign. The Fighting Irish still covered on Saturday thanks to a defensive touchdown with under a minute to go. The Fighting Irish defense didn’t quite live up to lofty preseason expectations, though, as we had them ranked as the top overall defensive unit in the country in the preseason. They have dropped to third in our opponent-adjusted unit ranking and are only represented by one honorable mention on the PFF All-American team. – Pro Football Focus on Notre Dame

I hadn’t previously seen that PFF had Notre Dame ranked as the best defensive unit in the country before the season started but that’s a bit surprising.  Not that the unit wasn’t still very good outside of one awful night, but as we saw replacing the likes of Jerry Tillery, Drue Tranquill and Julian Love was a lot to ask, especially early on.

Notre Dame checks in just ahead of Wisconsin and Penn State who come in at nine and ten respectively while the same Michigan team who beat Notre Dame 45-14 in late October checks in at 11.

I won’t spoil the whole poll, you should check out their site for the full rankings but I will share that their lack of Baylor support at 17 is more than a bit surprising.

 

Watch: Extended Highlights of Notre Dame’s 45-24 Win at Stanford

Since we won’t have a notre Dame game to watch for almost a month why not live in the moment and enjoy extended highlights from Saturday’s win over Stanford?

The next time we see Notre Dame playing a football game it’ll probably be taking place in Orlando just after Christmas.

From then we have to wait to the annual tease that is the spring game before the regular season begins August 29 against Navy in Dublin, Ireland.

In the meantime, how about living in the now? Check out the highlights from Saturday’s regular season finale that moved Notre Dame to 10-2.

The win was Notre Dame’s first at Stanford since 2007 and Brian Kelly’s first victory there as head coach.

How Brian Kelly Saw Ian Book Grow in 2019

Book became the first Notre Dame quarterback to throw for 30 touchdowns in a season since Brady Quinn in 2006.

Ian Book wasn’t fantastic early against Stanford just like most of his teammates but he got stronger as the game went on and wound up throwing for 255 yards on 17 of 30 passing while tossing four touchdown passes.

It wasn’t his best game but it was still pretty solid in the 45-24 Notre Dame victory.

Brian Kelly was asked about Book’s play, specifically his nerves now compared to last year and even the start of 2019 after Saturday’s game.

“He’s a different person now. He was really in a great place. He found a stillness to him that he’s never had before. And he plays the game differently now. His calmness is really about his confidence now and what he can do” Kelly said.

Facing a first and 17 at their own seven, Book made one of his biggest plays connecting with speedster Braden Lenzy for 43 yards.

“I think that’s a big turning point in the game. And they dropped eight but he showed patience in the pocket. We wouldn’t have saw that earlier in the year” Kelly said of the 43 yard gain.

“But I think it just goes to his mindset, his stillness that he has found and the way he plays the game now. It’s been really fun to watch his growth throughout the year.” Kelly added.

Book became the first Notre Dame quarterback to throw for 30 touchdowns in a season since Brady Quinn in 2006.

Book finishes the regular season with 33 touchdown passes and just six interceptions.

Game Ball Awards for Notre Dame’s Win over Stanford

I still think the Irish win Saturday had Isaiah Foskey not blocked the punt late in the first half because Notre Dame was simply too dominant afterwards to think it was only that play.

A look at the final score and you might not think Saturday’s 45-24 Notre Dame win over Stanford and think they dominated for the entire afternoon.

Although domination eventually came on, for 27 minutes or so in the first half things were anything but for the Fighting Irish.

So who gets the reward of the game balls in today’s win that wraps up a 10-2 regular season?

Let’s check it out:

Offense:

I could go a couple different ways here with Chase Claypool scoring twice and providing the go-ahead touchdown or Tony Jones scoring and putting up 90 total yards but to me it was Ian Book that offensively was the biggest star.

Four touchdowns and no interceptions, his ground game wasn’t as strong today but it was just as lethal when it absolutely needed to be, his fourth down run for 26 yards to the Stanford three while still only leading 21-17 was a huge play by the quarterback who Brian Kelly had big-time praise for after the game (more on that, later).

Ian Book: 17/30, 255 yards, 4 TD, 0 INT, 29 rush yards

Defense and Special Teams…

Notre Dame/Stanford: David Shaw Throws A Book of Praise

I’ll be the first to say that Book gets criticized a ton for not being as great as some of the Heisman or national championship contending guys and his performance against Michigan was inexcusable.

However, the young man is still one of the better ones you’ll find in all of college football

Stanford head football coach David Shaw was once widely regarded as among the best in the country and potentially destined for the NFL.

You don’t hear that as much the last two years as Stanford fell from the top-ten to a 9-4 squad last season before regressing to a 4-7 team this year as they enter their final game of 2019.

When meeting the media like he does every Tuesday during the season, Shaw was asked about his next opponent, No. 16 Notre Dame.

As most coaches normally do, he gave a lot of praise to this week’s foe, but saved the most compliments for the Fighting Irish quarterback.

A quarterback that just makes plays, with his legs. I told the team yesterday, I don’t know that there’s many quarterbacks in the country that about half the season he’s led them in passing and rushing. It’s not that there are a whole bunch of designed quarterback runs, it’s just the kid’s got a great feel for football. He pushes up in the pocket and can escape, can buy time with his legs, it’s hard to get your arms around and wrap him up and bring him down. – David Shaw on Ian Book

I’ll be the first to say that Book gets criticized a ton for not being as great as some of the Heisman or national championship contending guys and his performance against Michigan was inexcusable.

However, the young man is still one of the better ones you’ll find in all of college football and with what has gone on at Stanford this year, you can bet Shaw would love to have the stability of Book at his quarterback spot.

Book’s first home-start in 2018 came against then-seventh ranked Stanford last September.

Book shined bright under the lights throwing for 278 yards and four touchdowns while rushing for 47 more yards.

Here’s to hoping he does the same to Stanford on what looks like it’ll be a very sloppy track in Palo Alto.

Notre Dame/Stanford Kickoff Time Announced

Notre Dame vs Stanford kickoff time announced

The 2019 regular season finale for Notre Dame will take place Saturday afternoon at Stanford.

The game will be played on FOX and kickoff at 4 pm E.T.

Stanford has been a big disappointment this year as they’re just 4-7 after losing last night against rival Cal.

If the dominos fall correctly Notre Dame could be playing in the Cotton Bowl for a second year in a row, assuming a win over Stanford on Saturday.

The Irish will be looking for their first win at Stanford since 2007 while Brian Kelly is seeking his first victory in Northern California.