Former Notre Dame LB Jonathan Jones Finds New Home

he’s found a new home at an Ohio-based Mid-American Conference university.

Former Notre Dame linebacker and special teams player Jonathan Jones was previously in the transfer portal but now he’s found a new home at an Ohio-based Mid-American Conference university.

Jones enrolled in classes at Toledo University last week and will spend 2020 as a member of the Toledo Rockets football program.

Jones finished his Notre Dame career with 16 career tackles, playing for the Irish in the last three seasons.

Jones was recruited to Notre Dame from Oak Ridge High School in Orlando, Florida as a four-star linebacker based off of 247’s rankings.  He graduated from Notre Dame in December and will immediately eligible at Toledo.

Report: Jim Whitesell is out at Buffalo

Buffalo is joining the fray as they part ways with their head coach per Jon Rothstein.

This feels like Black Monday the day after the NFL’s regular season ends. There are plenty of changes being made across the collegiate landscape in men’s basketball. Buffalo has joined the coaching carousel according to college basketball insider Jon Rothstein.

Rothstein reports that the Buffalo Bulls have parted ways with Jim Whitesell. Whitesell has been the head coach since 2019 after being promoted from an associate head coach.

In four seasons with Buffalo, the long-time head coach was 70-49 and 45-27 in MAC play. This was the first season in his tenure where Whitesell didn’t finish with a winning record. Prior to joining Buffalo, he was an assistant with Saint Louis from 2011 to 2013 and St. John’s from 2013 to 2015.

This is another program that will have a new head coach in charge of a program when the 2023-24 season tips off in November. Already we have seen St. John’s, Georgetown, and Georgia Tech make moves with their head coaches in the last couple of days.

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MAC releases complete 2023 football schedule

Find out when you can get in on the MACtion in the 2023 season.

The Mid-American Conference, most commonly known as the MAC released the complete 2023 master schedule for the conference and its’ 12 members on Wednesday morning.

Notable non-conference matchups on the schedule include Ohio helping open the 2023 college football season in week zero on August 26 on the road against San Diego State. Then in week one, Buffalo takes on the Wisconsin Badgers in the Badgers’ first game under new head coach Luke Fickell. Toledo, the defending MAC champions travel to Champaign to battle the Illinois Fighting Illini who look to build upon a first successful year under Bret Bielema. Also, Kent State will open the Kenni Burns era by making a trip to the Bounce House in week one to play UCF.

In week two, Ball State will travel to Athens to take on the defending back-to-back Georgia Bulldogs. Week three of the season features Bowling Green traveling to Michigan, Miami (OH) taking on Cincinnati, and Central Michigan traveling to Notre Dame. Last season, the then No. 8 ranked Fighting Irish were upset by the Sun Belt Conference’s Marshall Thundering Herd 26-21.

Other intriguing non-conference matchups include; Northern Illinois vs Nebraska and Western Michigan vs Iowa in week three. Akron taking on Indiana in week four as well as Bowling Green vs Georgia Tech in week five.

Key in-conference matchups on the schedule this year include;  Buffalo versus Bowling Green on October 14, both programs were among the top in the conference last season and will have a chance to once again be at the top in 2023.

Ohio and Buffalo, the top two teams in the MAC East last season face off on November 7 in what could possibly decide the East Division in 2023. Toledo and Eastern Michigan were separated by one game in 2022 and their matchup just one day later on November 8 could also be another decisive game this upcoming season in the MAC’s West division.

Finally, one of the conference’s best rivalries, the Battle of I-75 between Bowling Green and Toledo is scheduled to take place in week 12 on November 14. Both teams should be battling for bowl eligibility in 2023 and the mid-November matchup could have even more on the line with potentially sending one team bowling and the other home for the offseason.

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Notre Dame offensive analyst appears to be on the move

Taylor must have liked what he saw from him…

Former Notre Dame running backs coach [autotag]Lance Taylor[/autotag] was recently named the head coach at Western Michigan.  This came after Taylor spent one season as Louisville’s offensive coordinator.  He had previously worked at Notre Dame from 2019-2021, helping to improve the Fighting Irish backfield.

Taylor is working to assemble his first staff as a head coach and it appears one Notre Dame employee is about to be joining him.  According to John Brice of Football Scoop, Taylor will be hiring Notre Dame senior analyst Trevor Mendelson.  Mendelson played on Marshall’s offensive line before getting into coaching.  He spent time at Wake Forest previous to Notre Dame and is said to have spent the majority of this season working with offensive coordinator Tommy Rees.

Although not a glaring hole, it’s still one that will now looked to be filled by Marcus Freeman and Tommy Rees.

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Watch: Insane play to end Ball State win over Western Michigan

The end of the Western Michigan-Ball State game saw one of the wildest plays in history, which almost worked

Ball State led Western Michigan in the final seconds. The Broncos had the ball down three when all hell broke loose.

Talk about the wildest of endings.

The Ball State team came on the field, thinking the play was dead as Western tried the series of laterals. However, it wasn’t and Western kept the laterals live.

One of the Broncos somehow weaved through dozens of Ball State players and made it to the end zone.

Reports were the ESPN feed cut out before the referee announced the bad news for Western: One of the laterals was deemed an illegal forward pass, so the Cardinals held on for the victory.

2nd & 10 at WMU 49

(0:19 – 4th) Kaleb Eleby pass complete to Skyy Moore for 1 yd to the WMich 38 lat. to La’Darius Jefferson for a loss of 1 yard to the WMich 38 lat. to Kaleb Eleby for no gain to the WMich 38 lat. to Skyy Moore for a loss of 2 yards to the WMich 38 lat. to Mike Caliendo for 1 yd to the 50 yard line WESTRN MICHIGAN Penalty, illegal forward pass (Skyy Moore) to the WMich 38

The victory earned Ball State a spot against Buffalo in the MAC Championship.

Return of the MAC – Schedule released

MACtion is back. See what days you’ll get to see MAC football back in your life this fall!

The MAC is officially back in business for the 2020 college football season.

Sure, it will last only five games for MAC teams but for some of us that enjoy flipping through their televisions on a Tuesday night and finding a live college football game to watch, the MAC’s return fills a football void.

Notre Dame was previously scheduled to play Western Michigan this season before the pandemic wound up forcing the cancellation of that contest.

The MAC today released their 2020 football schedule and it’s unique even by MAC standards.  It goes as follows:

Week 1 – Wednesday, Nov. 4
Buffalo at Northern Illinois
Ball State at Miami University
Eastern Michigan at Kent State
Ohio at Central Michigan
Bowling Green at Toledo
Western Michigan at Akron

Week 2 – Tuesday, Nov. 10
Miami University at Buffalo
Akron at Ohio
Kent State at Bowling Green
Wednesday, Nov. 11
Central Michigan at Northern Illinois
Eastern Michigan at Ball State
Toledo at Western Michigan

Week 3 – Tuesday, Nov. 17
Akron at Kent State
Buffalo at Bowling Green
Ohio at Miami
Wednesday, Nov. 18
Northern Illinois at Ball State
Toledo at Eastern Michigan
Western Michigan at Central Michigan

Week 4 – Saturday, Dec. 5
Ball State at Central Michigan
Eastern Michigan at Western Michigan
Toledo at Northern Illinois
Bowling Green at Akron
Buffalo at Ohio
Kent State at Miami

Week 5 – Saturday, Dec. 12
Central Michigan at Toledo
Northern Illinois at Eastern Michigan
Western Michigan at Ball State
Akron at Buffalo
Miami at Bowling Green
Ohio at Kent State

Conference Championship – Friday, Dec. 18
held at Ford Field, Detroit, MI

College football’s 2020 bleakness continues to grow

The bleakness surrounding college football taking place in 2020 is swelling at an incredible rate this Saturday afternoon.

I hate having to type this as the news and reports that have come out in the last 24 hours paint a very somber picture for the chances of college football actually being played this fall.

NCAA President Mark Emmert gave a grim outlook on college football Friday night.

On Saturday morning the MAC announced they were cancelling all fall sports, including football for the fall.

And now we’ve got countless different college football and athletic reporters passing information along from their unique sources just how bleak the season starting in just a month appears to be.

This from Brett McMurphy of Stadium, who has broken several big-time college football stories before:

Pat Forde of Sports Illustrated has heard similar things as McMurphy:

Ross Dellinger of Sports Illustrated has followed up with his sources in regards to the information Forde provided and he’s hearing more of the same:

I could put tweets up here all day but I’m not sure that would do anybody any good.

College football seems to be hanging by it’s last strand of having even the most remote of chances of being played this fall.

By no means are any of these reports official yet, but it’s certainly starting to feel like a matter of ‘when’ and not ‘if’ they are.

MAC Cancels Football Season. What Does It Mean For The Rest Of College Football?

The MAC has canceled its 2020 football season due to concerns over the coronavirus. What’s next for college football?

The MAC has canceled its 2020 football season due to concerns over the coronavirus. What’s next for college football?


The MAC becomes the first conference to cancel the college football season, at least for the fall.

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The MAC announced on Saturday that it’s cancelling/postponing all fall sports due to the COVD-19 concerns. There’s a thought the league will try to play in the spring, but that’s not a huge part of the discussion at the moment.

The MAC had several issues go against them. The main issue was the concern over keeping the players safe, and part of that came with the cost and the resources to adequately test as needed. The other big problem was the Big Ten’s decision to go to a conference-only schedule.

11 MAC games vs. the Big Ten were affected by the scheduling change. In all, the MAC was expected to lose the paychecks from as many as 21 non-conference games. Every conference is different, but the lost revenue side of those games was devastating.

It might be a bit of a cynical overstatement to say that the MAC would still have fall football if the non-conference games weren’t cancelled, but that certainly – at the very least – tipped the scales. Combine the lost revenue with the massive health concerns, and there was a “what are we doing here?” aspect to the MAC”s decision.

There’s the idea that the MAC will play in the spring. In a perfect world, the rest of college football is able to play and figure out how to do this, and the MAC has the spotlight to itself and gets back some of the lost revenue – and does it all safely – through March and April.

And now all eyes turn to the Power Five conferences. Remember, every conference is different, every conference has a different power structure, and every conference has a different revenue stream for football to work off of. However …

Watch out for the Big Ten. Its season has been hanging by a thread for the last several weeks, and while there seemed to be hope after a schedule was announced, the training camps have changed the dynamic. Many teams aren’t practicing full out over concerns for player safety.

Basically, college football doesn’t have a plan. It didn’t create a real plan over the last four months, it didn’t get creative in figuring out whether or not players could play safely, and the sport kicked the can down the road as far as it can go. Now the season is here, and now the sport is realizing how hard it is to ethically and practically play college football. With that said …

No, the college football season isn’t done yet. Even if the Big Ten decides to follow the MAC’s lead, no matter what the optics, the SEC, ACC and Big 12 will still likely do everything humanly possible to play. However, it’ll be a bad, bad look if other conferences try to push things to the spring and everyone else doesn’t follow suit.

So let’s say the other conferences do play. Get ready for the transfer portal to be loaded with top MAC players. Buffalo RBs Jaret Patterson and Kevin Marks, UB DE Malcolm Koonce and LB James Patterson, Toledo RB Bryant Koback, Western Michigan defensive front seven stars Treshaun Hayward and Ali Fayad, and Miami University OT Tommy Doyle are Power Five starters if they choose to leave.

Through all of this, just remember, this will go by in a hurry. There will be college football again, even if it’s not everywhere for right now.

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