Watch: Pyne finds Austin to extend Notre Dame’s lead over Wisconsin

What a pass from Pyne

Down to their third-string quarterback in Drew Pyne, Tommy Rees the offensive coordinator didn’t bat an eye. Rees had confidence in his quarterback and didn’t abandon the pass with a short lead. He allowed Pyne to throw it around and it payed off.

The third-stringer went 5/5 and found Kevin Austin for the score to extend Notre Dame’s lead to 24-13 over the Badgers. Who would have thought that Pyne would have played, let alone made big plays along the way. Not many of us thought that would happen but it just did and Drew Pyne has made Irish nation extremely proud.

Watch: Jay Bramblett flips the field for Notre Dame with huge punt

What a punt!

In this defensive back-and-forth battle with Notre Dame and Wisconsin, there have not been many offensive highlights. Yes, the Irish scored on a perfectly throw pass from Jack Coan to Kevin Austin but that’s the only score of the game so far at halftime.

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How about the punter for the Irish Jay Bramblett. He blasted this punt 73-yards to completely flip the field for the Irish and put the Badgers in bad field position. It is plays like this that win games when both of the offenses are struggling. Take a look below at Bramblett’s massive punt right before the half.

Notre Dame vs. Wisconsin: Second-Quarter Analysis

This is looking better.

We’ve reached halftime of this Shamrock Series game, and we still don’t have a clear direction of where this is going. There have been some plays that had potential to turn the tide, but they mostly haven’t meant much. We say “mostly” because Notre Dame has been able to separate itself from Wisconsin a bit as it holds a 10-3 lead.

The Irish began the second quarter with a long possession, converting on two third downs and one fourth down, the latter of which came on a Kyren Williams run against a tough Badgers run defense. That defense came alive once the Irish reached the Badgers’ 30-yard line as Jack Coan found him swarmed by Badgers on every play during that series of downs. Faced with a fourth-and-14 after a C.J. Goetz sack, Jonathan Doerer came on to attempt a 51-yard field goal after missing from 39 in the first quarter. This time, he converted to tie the game.

The Badgers nearly went three-and-out on their first possession of the quarter but for a roughing-the-passer call against Kyle Hamilton of all people. It turned out not to matter because on the next third down, Cam Hart came up with an interception near midfield. Coan nearly gave the ball right back two plays later on a Leo Chanel interception. That turnover was wiped out when Noah Burks was called for pass interference, allowing the Irish to keep the ball.

The negated turnover ended up costing the Badgers more than only the ball. The drive culminated in the game’s first touchdown as Coan found Kevin Austin for a 36-yard completion. There was a review to determine whether Austin maintained control of the ball as he fell in the end zone, but it didn’t take long to confirm the ruling.

Both teams went three-and-out on their next drives, but it led to a big play on special teams for the Irish. Jay Bramblett punted the ball a career-high 72 yards to pin the Badgers at their own 9. That, in turn, led to the Badgers failing to pick up a first down and punting once again. Having the lead and with little time remaining, Coan opted to take a knee, and that’s all she wrote for the first 30 minutes.

Watch: Coan finds Austin as Notre Dame finds endzone first against Wisconsin

Touchdown Austin for the lead!

It looked like the Badgers had stopped the Irish with a interception, but a flag came out and kept the Irish drive alive. The pass interference call didn’t change possession for Notre Dame and just a few plays later, quarterback Jack Coan found wide receiver Kevin Austin down the left sideline for a 36-yard touchdown reception.

It was a perfectly thrown ball from Coan, and after a quick review from the referees to make sure that it was actually a catch by Austin, they kept the call on the field as a score for the Irish. The second quarter has been all Notre Dame, as they’ve scored 10-points and taken a 10-3 lead over the Badgers.

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 at Florida State: Third-Quarter Analysis

That’s more like it.

If Notre Dame’s season opener against Florida State has proven anything thus far, it’s that this team can respond to adversity. Every time the Seminoles have done something impressive, the Irish have responded. The reward for that persistence is a 38-20 Notre Dame lead after three quarters.

After a fumble recovered by the Irish on the second-half kickoff was overturned by replay, the second such instance of the game, the Seminoles took advantage of their good fortune when Jordan Travis threw a long pass that Ja’Khi Douglas caught. With nothing but open field in front of him, Douglas outran Houston Griffith to score a 60-yard touchdown that gave the Seminoles a 20-17 lead. Only three plays, and the Irish suddenly were behind, though they caught a break when the snap was mishandled on the extra-point kick.

The sudden deficit was no problem for Jack Coan, who responded almost as quickly. A 29-yard pass to Kevin Austin set the Irish up nicely in Seminole territory. Two plays later, Coan found Austin again, this time, on a nice catch for a 37-yard touchdown.

Florida State’s next possession lasted only two plays as Kyle Hamilton snuffed it out by intercepting Travis for the second time in as many quarters. The Irish moved backwards but converted on third-and-17 when Coan hit Kyren Williams for a short completion, then watched Williams zigzag his way through the Seminoles’ defense on a 55-yard gain. After Coan found Austin again on a 17-yard pass to set up first-and-goal, Williams eventually caught another pass on third down and was able to cross the pylon with defenders surrounding him, giving him a 6-yard touchdown and Coan his fourth touchdown pass.

The Seminoles went four-and-out when they took the ball back, and a Clarence Lewis interception on the final play gave the Irish the ball on the Seminoles’ 33-yard line. Braden Lenzy had a 24-yard completion on the first play of the possession, which ended on a 1-yard touchdown run from Chris Tyree. Florida State got all the way to the Irish’s 1-yard line on their next possession before the third quarter ended.

Watch: Notre Dame retakes lead with Austin TD reception

The Irish take the lead back!

The idea was that if Kevin Austin could find his way onto the field that he could be a game changer. Well, he’s found his way at least for tonight as quarterback Jack Coan found Austin on a 3rd & 1 for a 37-yard score.

It was a huge play as Florida State took their opening series and turning a 60-yard touchdown pass to take a 20-17 lead over the Irish. It was short lived as Austin made the Seminoles pay for man-to-man coverage going into the endzone. Watch below as Austin finally cashes in on his untapped potential with the score to give the Irish the lead back.

Does it finally come together for Kevin Austin at Notre Dame in 2021?

What are your expectations for Kevin Austin this fall?

Perhaps no receiver with six career receptions in the history of college football has been discussed as much as Kevin Austin has now for years at Notre Dame.

At 6-2 and 215-pounds, the former four-star prospect enters his senior year (still has three years of eligibility remaining) as Notre Dame’s starting boundary receiver.

Austin debuted in 2018, compiling five receptions while appearing in 11 games and recording five receptions.  Unfortunately, he’s only recorded one since.

Austin was unofficially suspended for the 2019 season before returning to the team in 2020 where a broken foot in fall camp sidelined him until early October where he played against Louisville and Florida State before re-injuring his foot the following week and missing the remainder of the year.

It’s got to be tough to deal with missing the time Austin has but earlier this week he was quick to thank his support system for helping get him through things.

“…my teammates, my coaches, my family. They’ve always told me that I have a chance to be here and I have the opportunity to be here, said Austin, “So, just taking that every single day and always being able to compete, it’s always been the way to be.”

Austin then shared his excitement about returning to game action this Sunday night.

“Oh, I’m very hungry and excited to get after it, for sure. I’ve been waiting a long time and it’s a great opportunity to finally be here and be in the moment. I just got to take it by the rails and just keep going with it.”

As for what we can expect for just his second game with the Irish since 2018?

“A lot of explosive plays. Believe that. A lot of explosive plays.”

Austin and the Irish open 2021 at Florida State Sunday night in a game that can be seen on ABC.

Related:

Notre Dame depth chart for Florida State game

FIW staff predictions for Notre Dame in 2021

The 40 former Notre Dame players on NFL rosters entering 2021

 

Five breakout candidates for Notre Dame in 2021

These 5 could have big time years for the Irish

In college football there is plenty of turnover each year, with players leaving to the NFL, entering the transfer portal or an unfortunate injury ends their playing career earlier than they anticipated. With that turnover comes new opportunities for other players to breakout. Here are 5 Notre Dame players who could make a big impact this fall.

Notre Dame spring game: Five questions that could be answered

Who steps up this afternoon?

The final taste of football is upon us, this weekend is the culmination of Notre Dame’s spring practice ending with the Blue and Gold game.

Heading into the season, there will be plenty of question surrounding the program, the biggest is undoubtably the quarterback position. Find out five question that could be answered during Saturday’s controlled scrimmage.