Notre Dame at Boston College: Second-Quarter Analysis

It took a little longer than anyone would have like, but Notre Dame slowly is finding its rhythm against Boston College.

It took a little longer than anyone would have like, but Notre Dame slowly is finding its rhythm against Boston College. Of course, no Irish fan truly will rest until those 1993 demons have been vanquished. For now, they’ll be happy that their team has a 31-16 lead going into halftime.

Phil Jurkovec continues to be on a mission, as evidenced by a 34-yard completion to Jaelen Gill in which he barely avoided taking a sack on third-and-15. Two plays later, he took the ball himself for a 17-yard gain. The Irish’s defense locked down after that, but Aaron Boumerhi kicked a 31-yard field to break a 10-10 tie. The Eagles then tried to really seize momentum with an onside kick and nearly were successful but for a block that took place before Isaiah Pryor was able to touch the ball.

Given new life, the Irish’s offense made the most of it. Ian Book had a 20-yard run, then completed a 48-yard pass to Avery Davis from midfield. C’Bo Flemister only needed 2 yards to put the Irish back ahead with a touchdown. Near-disaster had turned into great fortune.

After the Irish’s defense forced a three-and-out, a fair-catch interference allowed the offense to begin its next possession at midfield. Book went right back to work, finding Javon McKinley twice for first downs. He then gave Ben Skowrenek his second touchdown of the game from 13 yards out. That made it clear that the Irish were intent on pouncing on anything that would give them an extra opportunity or advantage.

The Eagles weren’t ready to go into the locker room quietly, however. Jurkovec found Gill for a 40-yard completion on the following possession to set up a 35-yard field goal on Boumerhi. They then looked poised to get even closer after Chibueze Onwuka forced a Kyren Williams fumble that Isaiah McDuffie recovered. But that chance was wiped out when their own fumble was recovered by Daelin Hayes.

Out of that, Book was able to guide one final drive to end the second quarter. He mainly kept it on the ground with the longest play being a 16-yard run he executed himself to set up first-and-goal with time almost gone. After spiking the ball, he found Skowronek again, and the receiver completed the hat trick with a 4-yard touchdown catch.

Talk about a tale of two halves of a quarter.

Notre Dame at Boston College: Second-Quarter Analysis

It took a little longer than anyone would have like, but Notre Dame slowly is finding its rhythm against Boston College.

It took a little longer than anyone would have like, but Notre Dame slowly is finding its rhythm against Boston College. Of course, no Irish fan truly will rest until those 1993 demons have been vanquished. For now, they’ll be happy that their team has a 31-16 lead going into halftime.

Phil Jurkovec continues to be on a mission, as evidenced by a 34-yard completion to Jaelen Gill in which he barely avoided taking a sack on third-and-15. Two plays later, he took the ball himself for a 17-yard gain. The Irish’s defense locked down after that, but Aaron Boumerhi kicked a 31-yard field to break a 10-10 tie. The Eagles then tried to really seize momentum with an onside kick and nearly were successful but for a block that took place before Isaiah Pryor was able to touch the ball.

Given new life, the Irish’s offense made the most of it. Ian Book had a 20-yard run, then completed a 48-yard pass to Avery Davis from midfield. C’Bo Flemister only needed 2 yards to put the Irish back ahead with a touchdown. Near-disaster had turned into great fortune.

After the Irish’s defense forced a three-and-out, a fair-catch interference allowed the offense to begin its next possession at midfield. Book went right back to work, finding Javon McKinley twice for first downs. He then gave Ben Skowrenek his second touchdown of the game from 13 yards out. That made it clear that the Irish were intent on pouncing on anything that would give them an extra opportunity or advantage.

The Eagles weren’t ready to go into the locker room quietly, however. Jurkovec found Gill for a 40-yard completion on the following possession to set up a 35-yard field goal on Boumerhi. They then looked poised to get even closer after Chibueze Onwuka forced a Kyren Williams fumble that Isaiah McDuffie recovered. But that chance was wiped out when their own fumble was recovered by Daelin Hayes.

Out of that, Book was able to guide one final drive to end the second quarter. He mainly kept it on the ground with the longest play being a 16-yard run he executed himself to set up first-and-goal with time almost gone. After spiking the ball, he found Skowronek again, and the receiver completed the hat trick with a 4-yard touchdown catch.

Talk about a tale of two halves of a quarter.

Jaelen Gill granted immediate eligibility to play at Boston College

Former Ohio State H-back Jaelen Gill received welcome news Wednesday, receiving a waiver for immediate eligibility at Boston College.

Former Ohio State wide-receiver/hybrid back Jaelen Gill has been granted immediate eligibility by the NCAA. Gill was thought to be in contention for the hybrid back/wide-receiver position headed into this fall in Columbus, but announced a decision to transfer just after spring ball was cut short because of the COVID-10 pandemic. He then transferred to Boston College, with former OSU defensive backs coach turned BC head coach Jeff Hafley.

Under the NCAA’s undergraduate transfer rules Gill was supposed to sit out a year but has received a waiver so he will be immediately eligible for whatever version of a college football season we see this year.

Gill celebrated on Twitter Wednesday.

It does appear as though Ohio State and Ryan Day were extremely cooperative and helpful in getting the decision Gill and Boston College wanted.

He should be an immediate high profile target and dangerous weapon for the BC offensive coaches. And with the glut of talent at the wide receiver position at Ohio State, this is probably one of those win-win situations for both programs and individual need.

 

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Former Ohio State H-back Jaelen Gill will transfer to Boston College

While we knew Jaulen Gill was going to transfer, we didn’t know where. Taking to Twitter, the running back committed to Boston College.

While we knew Jaelen Gill was going to transfer because of an earlier announcement, we didn’t know where.

Taking to Twitter, the running back committed to Boston College. The Eagles are coming off a 6-7 season and will have to climb past Clemson and others to conquer the ACC.

Hoping that Gill can be the answer, the former four-star recruit could transition back to running back at Boston College. Gill was the No. 2 all-purpose back in the Class of 2018.

After switching to a slot receiver while at Ohio State in what seemed like an attempt to gain more opportunity, Gill seemed to fall victim to the numbers game at the position.

Master Teague served as the team’s backup running back last season while the plethora of talented receivers took any opportunity from Gill. With skilled running backs and receivers inbound, Gill saw the end of the tunnel and wanted something different.

That said, he entered the transfer portal and, according to his tweet, is now on his way to Boston College.

Gill did redshirt his freshman season so he will have an extra year to prove himself. Being a highly touted recruit coming out of high school, Gill should have the skill to take the Eagles to a new level. However, unless he receives a waiver from the NCAA, he’ll have to sit out the 2020 season because of undergraduate transfer rules.

We wish Gill the best in his time at Boston College.

 

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Ohio State hybrid wideout Jaelen Gill to enter transfer portal

Ohio State appears to be losing one of its hybrid wide receivers. Jaelen Gill will reportedly enter the transfer portal.

It’s the gift that keeps giving — or never stops taking — depending on how you look at it.

According to sources close to the situation that spoke to Letterman Row, Ohio State hybrid wide-receiver Jaelen Gill will be entering the transfer portal.

The news is a little surprising because Gill showed flashes of his potential and turned heads in spring last season. All of that potential never really materialized last season though. The 6-foot, 195-pounder from Westerville, Ohio, caught just six passes for a total of 51 yards and one touchdown.

Now, it appears he’ll be getting a fresh start elsewhere.

You never know what goes on behind the scenes, but it’s clear that Ohio State has a very deep and talented wide receiver room. It has one of the best recruiting hauls ever assembled in Columbus already on campus, plus there’s returning talents like Demario McCall, Garrett Wilson, and Chris Olave. It could be that Gill saw the writing on the wall and believed it hard to get his chance to shine with so much talent on the roster.

Gill will have three years of eligibility remaining but will have to sit out a year unless he obtains an exception from the NCAA, or a rule chance occurs. No further information has come to light with potential destinations or timing of a decision, but we’ll keep tracking the situation.