Five Stars: The best and worst of Notre Dame’s win against Purdue

The good and bad of Notre Dame’s win over Purdue

An instate rivalry game against a Big Ten team is never an easy task and that’s exactly what happened today. The Irish took Purdue’s best punches and responded for the majority of the afternoon. It obviously wasn’t a blowout, but for the first time this season, it was a solid win with no drama big drama at the end of the game. There still were some good and bad performances today and here they are; the best (5 stars) and worst (1 star) of the Irish’s win over the Boilermakers.

Notre Dame vs. Purdue: Fourth Quarter Analysis

The Irish improve to 3-0 with a very solid fourth quarter

Geoffrey Clark has tapped out, so I’ll be taking us home on the quarter analysis. I’m going to do it a bit differently, just going to take you through my thought’s drive by dive. So here we go.

Finally a little bit of Chris Tyree as Jack Coan finds him on the left sideline for a nice 19-yard gain. Tommy Rees tries to say with the “hot hand” and Tyree gains just 5-yards on his next two carries. Coan finds Avery Davis on 3rd and 5 for 11-yards and a first down. They’ve had a great connection today, unfortunately the only one for the Irish offense. Coan takes a sack on second down, then after a timeout and bad throw to no one on 3rd down. Two trips to the redzone and no touchdowns but Jonathan Doerer barely makes a 30-yard field goal to extend the lead to 20-13. The Irish need to be better inside the 20, field goals don’t win you games.

Special teams has been solid today, the Irish stop the Purdue kick returner Marcellus Mooreat the 20-yard line. It’s been a bad go for the Boilers in the second half on special teams. Time for the defense to step up, the defensive line needs to get pressure on Jack Plummer. Now. Back-to-back incompletions bring up third down and the line gives me what I asked for. Isaiah Foskey and Myron Tagovailoa-Amosa sack Plummer on 3rd down. Massive series for the Irish then you add on a bad punt and great field position for the Irish on Purdue’s 39-yard line.

Need a score here, not a field goal, but to find the endzone. Coan goes deep to Braden Lenzy for the jugular, and it bounces off Lenzy’s hands. The Irish needed that, then on second down Coan is sacked. The Lenzy drop is looming larger now. Coan gets a few yards back on a check down to Williams that sets up a 4th and 9. I hate the punt there but Doerer barely made the last kick and it’s a once score game late. Kyle Hamilton with a huge play grabbing the ball at the 1-yard line after a great Jay Bramblett punt.

Odd move for Purdue as they bring in another quarterback Aiden O’Connell for his first snaps of the game. I don’t know about this move by Jeff Brohm on the 1-yard line. The gamble pays off as O’Connell finds Mershawn Rice for a 27-yard gain. Why Brohm did’t make this change earlier confuses me. Cam Hart makes a great play on the ball, setting up a 3rd and 5. O’Connell tests Hart against David Bell and it’s an incomplete pass. Very well could have seen a pass interference call there. Kyren Williams once again shows why he’s back returning punts, another good one for 23-yards sets up the next Irish drive almost at midfield. Great field position, and it’s clear the Irish are winning the special teams portion of the game.

So, Williams just took over. A fantastic 51-yard run where it looked like he was bottled up, broke a few tackles and was off to paydirt. Huge play as it gives the Irish some breathing room. Massive.

This drive could end the game here and after two incomplete passes it looked like it. O’Connell finds Bell on 3rd down for the first, but Hamilton hits him hard and he’s down. The game has stopped and a somber mood has entered this game. Head and neck injuries are scary, you hate to see this and hopefully Bell is fine. Tough to watch these kind of injuries. They review the play and call it incomplete, tough to get your mind back onto the game after that. Fourth-and-eight and O’Connell slowly scrambles and barely get the 8-yards. Finds Jackson Anthrop to move the chains again, why didn’t Purdue make this change earlier? Thank you Jeff Brohm. Purdue keeps driving and not giving up. Hat’s off to them for not folding late in this one but Hamilton comes up in the clutch once again, picking off O’Connell in the end zone. That should be game.

Kyren Williams and Kyle Hamilton stepped up when the Irish needed them to. The two best players on the team did what they do, make plays. Williams didn’t quite make it over the 100-yard mark for the first time this year, but he had over 130-yards from scrimmage along with two scores. Hamilton had the game-sealing pick, a few tackles for loss and an overall dominant game again. They’re both so damn impressive. Solid win for the Irish today, 1-0 every week so far.

Notre Dame vs. Purdue: Second-Quarter Analysis

Feeling better, Irish fans?

Well, that’s much more like it. Notre Dame suddenly is treating Purdue like the Notre Dame Stadium guest it is, which is not great. Whatever switch needed to be flipped has indeed been flipped, and the Irish look like a good team once again. They hold a 10-3 lead going into halftime.

A real momentum swing happened on a fourth-and-3 from the Boilermakers’ 39-yard line when Jack Coan fired a complete pass to Kyren Williams, who prompted two defenders to collide and allow him to run to the end zone untouched for a 39-yard touchdown and the Irish’s first lead of the day.

After the Boilermakers went three and out, the Irish took over in good field position and decided to go for it on fourth down again. It appeared to fail, but Jalen Graham was called for a hold before the pass, and that kept the Irish’s offense on the field. A pass interference on the next play set the Irish up in the red zone, but they couldn’t reach first-and-goal. Jonathan Doerer promptly drilled a 28-yard field goal, his shortest of the season so far.

Faced with their worst starting field position of the day, the Boilermakers tried a receiver pass with Milton Wright on their next drive. However, NaNa Osafo-Mensah snuffed that out with a sack. A couple of plays later, the Irish started their next drive in Boilermakers territory. Doerer eventually came on to attempt a 45-yard field goal, but the kick sailed as wide left as it could get.

Neither team mounted a serious threat for the rest of the quarter, so that’s where things stand. The question now is whether the second-half Irish look more like the first-quarter or second-quarter Irish. Whichever one that is will determine if they keep their home winning streak alive.

 

Notre Dame vs. Toledo: Fourth-Quarter Analysis

Whew.

Notre Dame will need to clean some things up before the competition really gets fierce. That it struggled so much for a second consecutive week undoubtedly will cause a lot of discussion about how good this team really is. For now, it can settle for a 32-29 win over a Toledo team that came into Notre Dame Stadium with something to prove and did just that even as it just came up short.

On a drive the Irish (2-0) left over from the third quarter, Tyler Buchner got the Irish into field-goal range on a 15-yard run. That set up a 30-yard field goal from Jonathan Doerer to put the Irish back in front. South Bend breathed a little easier.

The Rockets moved backwards on their first possession of the quarter by virtue of both the Irish’s defense and a couple of false starts. That enabled the Irish’s offense to set up shop at their own 45-yard line. Buchner only needed one play to hit Chris Tyree, who began the play in motion before the snap, for a 55-yard touchdown. South Bend breathed even easier than before.

It also took only one play for the Rockets to gain momentum back. Pinned back at his own 11, Bryant Koback took a handoff and found enough holes to gain 67 yards. That ultimately set up a third-and-goal from the Irish’s 8 on which he took a shovel pass to score a touchdown and bring the Rockets within two. A pass on a two-point conversion failed, so the Irish held onto a 24-22 lead.

With time winding down, the Irish focused on the ground game to eat the clock. It worked for a while, getting all the way to the Rockets’ 33. That’s when disaster struck as Desjuan Johnson forced a Kyren Williams fumble, which Zachary Ford recovered at the Rockets’ 27 with less than three-and-a-half minutes to play. Holy cow.

Needing only a field goal to take a late lead, the Rockets’ offense moved enough to set that up. However, it wasn’t needed. On a third-and-1 from the 26, Dequan Finn ran to the left and found enough open field to run into the end zone for a backbreaking touchdown to put his team up, 29-24. With 1:35 left, the Irish needed to make something happen fast.

The drive started well when Jack Coan hit Kevin Austin for a 34-yard reception to put the Irish into Rockets territory. Aided by a couple of penalties, the offense quickly found itself in the red zone and made the most of it. After having his finger popped back in on the sidelines, Coan found Michael Mayer right in front of the end zone, and he marched the short distance with his 18-yard touchdown reception. Needing a two-point conversion to protect the lead in the event of a Rockets field goal, quarterback-turned-receiver Avery Davis had enough time to find an open Williams, who caught the ball to put the Irish up three.

The Rockets had 1:09 to respond with 87 yards of field to work with and suddenly became undisciplined as they took one penalty after another. At one point, they took a timeout to avoid a 10-second runoff. Toledo’s frustrating drive ended abruptly when Myron Tagovailoa-Amosa forced a Carter Bradley fumble that was recovered by JD Bertrand. All of South Bend can exhale.

Will you be able to breathe after that, or is this frustrating? Whatever the case, a win is a win is a win.

 

Notre Dame vs. Toledo: Third-Quarter Analysis

Getting nervous here.

Suddenly, the possibility of Notre Dame dropping its home opener to a Mid-American Conference team is very real. While the Irish defense has held its own against a Toledo offense that still can’t find the end zone, the Irish offense still is searching for answers after three quarters. Those lingering questions better be answered quickly as the Rockets still have a 16-14 lead.

The Rockets went three-and-out on their first two possessions of the second half, and it didn’t matter. Although the Irish got a first down the first time they touched the ball, they moved backwards after that on a sequence that included back-to-back sacks of Tyler Buchner and Jack Coan. The Irish’s second possession began near midfield before stalling out at the Rockets’ 37-yard line. Jonathan Doerer came on to attempt a 55-yard field goal and put his team back in front, but the kick that would have given him his career long went wide left.

The Rockets finally got a first down on their next drive but nothing more. Back on offense, the Irish converted on a pair of third downs to hold onto the ball, and that’s where we stand. Hold onto your hats, folks. This is gonna be quite a finish.

Notre Dame kicker named award winner following game-winner vs. FSU

A great performance means great recognition for the hero

Notre Dame kicker Jonathan Doerer had quite the night Sunday as he connected on all seven of his attempts at Florida State, nailing five extra points, a 48-yard field goal in the game’s second quarter, and the walk-off winner from 41 yards in overtime.

In doing so Doerer was named one of the four national Lou Groza Award Stars of the Week.  Joining him were Gabe Brkic of Oklahoma, Daniel Gutierrez of UNLV, and Alabama’s Will Reichard.

Doerer was the first Notre Dame kicker to kick a game-winning field goal on the final play of a game since Kyle Brindza was good from 32 yards as time expired to beat LSU in the 2014 Music City Bowl.

Related:

Former Notre Dame kicker welcomes Doerer to Game Winners Club

Best photos from Notre Dame-Florida State

5 instant takeaways from Notre Dame’s win over FSU

5 stars: good and bad of Notre Dame’s 41-38 win at FSU

Former Notre Dame kicker welcomes Doerer to Game Winner Club

What Notre Dame game winning field is your favorite of all-time?

Right before Jonathan Doerer stepped up and nailed the game-winning field for Notre Dame at Florida State I received a text from Fighting Irish Wire contributor/football observer/friend Jeff Feyerer, asking which kicker in Notre Dame history I’d want to have right now to make this kick.

My mind immediately went to Nick Setta since he fired off a game winner against Purdue in 2000 while Jeff went with Justin Yoon, the program’s all-time leader in scoring.

It turns out Doerer would have been an acceptable answer as well as he split the uprights and moved Notre Dame to 1-0.

Doerer’s kick moved gave him entry into an exclusive club in Notre Dame football history, the Game Winners Club.

On Monday morning, Setta welcomed Doerer to it via Twitter:

That comes from former Notre Dame kicker Nick Setta who hit the walk-off winner against Purdue in 2000:

Dare I ask which was better?

Setta’s was do-or-die against a team led by Drew Brees who would go onto win the Big Ten and play in the Rose Bowl that year.

Doerer’s was longer and in front of a hostile road crowd.

Too tough for me to choose after being up late, I’ll just say I’m happy both went through the uprights.

[polldaddy poll=10914082]

Related:

Best photos from Notre Dame-Florida State

5 instant takeaways from Notre Dame’s win over FSU

5 stars: good and bad of Notre Dame’s 41-38 win at FSU

 

Watch: Doerer’s walk-off saves No. 9 Notre Dame at FSU

Be honest: did you think he was nailing it?

By now you know what happened.

Notre Dame scored 21-straight points in the third quarter of Sunday’s opener to enter the fourth quarter at Florida State up 38-20.  The Seminoles then came roaring back, tying things up late and forcing overtime.

After holding Florida State to a three-and-out the Seminoles missed their field goal attempt, Notre Dame picked up all of one yard in three downs to set up their own 41-yard attempt for kicker Jonathan Doerer, which he proceeded to nail:

2022 Notre Dame recruiting commitment Holden Staes was in attendance and took video of the game-winning kick.  The silence in Doak Campbell Stadium after it goes through is remarkable:

Related:

5 Instant Takeaways from Notre Dame’s win over FSU

5 Stars: Good and bad of Notre Dame’s season opening win

Notre Dame at Florida State: Overtime Analysis

Whew.

They say it’s better to be lucky than good. We’ll find out as the season goes on if Notre Dame is both. For now, it will be satisfied with a 41-38 overtime win on the road over Florida State.

The Irish (1-0) won the coin toss and chose to defer to the Seminoles (0-1). After handing it off to Jashaun Corbin twice, McKenzie Milton appeared to fumble the ball after losing a bunch of yardage, setting up Ryan Fitzgerald for a 50-yard field goal attempt. Just before the ball was snapped, Seminoles coach Mike Norvell challenged the previous ruling, hoping for it to be changed to an incomplete pass to get Fitzgerald closer. Though Norvell eventually got the ruling he wanted to give Fitzgerald a 37-yard attempt instead, the long wait ended up icing his own kicker, who missed the field goal wide left.

All the Irish had to do was hold onto the ball to set up Jonathan Doerer. They didn’t advance very far, forcing Doerer to kick from 41 yards. Still, it was close enough because Doerer split the upright, and the Irish escaped with a victory that nearly slipped away.

Notre Dame at Florida State: Second-Quarter Analysis

That quarter didn’t start great, but it got better as it went along.

Notre Dame had its hands full with a Florida State team that knew what it was doing. A will-imposing defensive line for the Seminoles and the Irish’s struggles with their own defense were not boding well. However, momentum can be fleeting, and a couple of plays shifted it back towards the visitors. The Irish find themselves up at halftime, 17-14.

The Irish’s first possession of the second quarter found them deep in their own territory, and they ultimately couldn’t advance the ball past the original line of scrimmage. Jay Bramblett’s 38-yard punt meant the Seminoles could start in Irish territory. The Seminoles barely broke a sweat in marching to the end zone. A 21-yard pass to Malik McClain and a 20-yard run by Lawrance Toafili set up a sweeping 2-yard touchdown run by Jordan Travis to give the Seminoles their first lead of the game.

In need of a response, the Irish put together a nice drive led by the running duo of Kyren Williams and Chris Tyree. However, Jack Coan took a sack and lost yardage on another play as the drive stalled at the Seminoles’ 29-yard line. Jonathan Doerer made the offense’s effort worth it by kicking a 48-yard field goal, his first such score of the season.

After that, the Seminoles took back-to-back false starts, showing why they were among the most penalized teams in the country last year. On third-and-8, Travis threw a deep pass, and Kyle Hamilton made him pay with Notre Dame’s first interception of 2021.

Gifted a short field, Coan and the rest of the offense took full advantage. He found Michael Mayer for a 15-yard completion, then threw a 23-yard pass toward the end zone that Joe Wilkins caught on a 50-50 ball. Wilkins barely registered a blip on the radar in 2020, so to see him score a touchdown in the first game of 2021 is rather nice.

Overall, you can’t complain about the scoreboard to this point. Still, this doesn’t appear it will be the cakewalk some were expecting, at least not yet. The offense needs to put together clean drives, and the defense has to impose its will on an opposing offense that has shown signs of regressing. With half the game to play, now is not the time for either unit to let up.