Notre Dame vs. USF: First-Quarter Analysis

Notre Dame is off to a much better start against USF than it was against Duke.

Notre Dame is off to a much better start against USF than it was against Duke. On their first two possessions, the Irish were blessed with a short field after a face-mask penalty and a 21-yard punt following a three-and-out for the Bulls. So they barely had to break a sweat on their way to a 14-0 lead after the first quarter, which ended with them very close to another score heading into the second.

Ian Book looked very comfortable early on as almost every play he had in the quarter went for positive yardage. He capped the first drive, which began at the Notre Dame 46-yard line, with his first rushing touchdown of the season. The aforementioned short punt allowed the Irish to start their second possession in Bulls territory. Braden Lenzy cut the field in half with a 21-yard reception, and the Irish continued to march until Chris Tyree ran into the end zone from 1 yard out, giving him the first touchdown of his collegiate career.

USF threatened to make it close after Johnny Ford ran 42 yards to open the next drive. But the Irish defense held on the next series and then snuffed out a fake punt that was poorly designed from the beginning. So it goes with Charlie Weis Jr. calling the plays for the Bulls. That’s not too harsh of a statement, is it?

Tale of the Tape: Leading Rushers – Kyren Williams vs. Kelley Joiner

If you want a real difference between Notre Dame and USF, look at their respective running games.

If you want a real difference between Notre Dame and USF, look at their respective running games. Kyren Williams had his coming-out party against Duke, rushing for 112 yards and two touchdowns in his first start for the Irish. He also caught a pass from Ian Book and gained 75 yards, so he also led the Irish in receiving yards. It’s clear who the main guy is in Notre Dame’s backfield.

After its season-opening win over The Citadel, USF has Kelley Joiner as its leading rusher. Despite an impressive number of yards a carry and a touchdown, he was caught in the middle between Johnny Ford and Noah Johnson as far as carries. So the Bulls relied on a balanced rushing attack between three players. Against a team like the Irish, that could mean fresh bodies the entire way.

Remember that USF is coming off a game in which it ran more than it passed. Hey, if you have more than one guy who can do the job, feel free to use them all. The question is whether all three of them can outproduce Williams or if Williams can prove that quality trumps quantity.