Northern Illinois head coach Thomas Hammock raves about Xavier Watts, Marcus Freeman

Hammock continues to show love to the Irish

This week we have seen something that we don’t normally see from opposing coaches, a friendship was formed.

While Northern Illinois did upset Notre Dame last Saturday, the two head coaches have seemingly established a quick bond. Not only did [autotag]Thomas Hammock[/autotag] share information with [autotag]Marcus Freeman[/autotag], but on Friday he took to social media and raved about the Irish coach and safety [autotag]Xavier Watts[/autotag].

Hammock quoted a post singling out the stars almost tip-drill interception, saying “they showed those types of plays on tape which means they are coached extremely well.” The NIU coach didn’t need to go out of his way to say anything, but you can see the two have each other’s backs.

It’s become very clear the two coaches are extremely friendly, and hopefully it’s not just a one-sided relationship.

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There’s an interesting development involving Notre Dame, Northern Illinois and Purdue

What do you think of this?

It’s no secret that coaches share information with others, and that might be the case for Notre Dame and Northern Illinois.

The Huskies are coming off an upset of the Irish in Notre Dame Stadium, and now it looks like the two coaches are exchanging information after an interview on Pardon My Take.

NIU head coach [autotag]Thomas Hammock[/autotag] told them that he’s been sharing information about Purdue with [autotag]Marcus Freeman[/autotag]. “I want him to do well, for obvious reasons, and just because we competed, don’t mean we can’t help each other or try to assist each other, to make each other better,” he told the podcast.

Pro Football Focus ranks Notre Dame higher than either major poll
COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS – AUGUST 31: Head Coach Marcus Freeman of the Notre Dame Fighting Irish looks on prior to the game against the Texas A&M Aggies Kyle Field on August 31, 2024 in College Station, Texas. (Photo by Jack Gorman/Getty Images)

While the Huskies haven’t played Purdue since 2013, it highly unlikely what Hammock will help with would make much of a difference on the field this weekend. In my eyes, this has more to do with how to prepare your team, establishing culture and general coaching ideas.

It’s great to see the two form a friendship, although the Irish wish it was under different circumstances.

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Minnesota head coach P.J. Fleck has thoughts on Notre Dame’s loss to Northern Illinois

Fleck still loves his alma mater

Notre Dame football’s loss to Northern Illinois this past weekend sent waves across all of college football.

Texas head coach Steve Sarkisian used the upset as motivation for this team, showing his players clips of them game and letting them know they have to earn everything on the field.

Former Huskies wide receiver and current Minnesota Gophers head coach [autotag]P.J. Fleck[/autotag] had a bit of a different response. His college roommate is current NIU head coach [autotag]Thomas Hammock[/autotag], and he went on to explain how he has built the program starting with they were in their playing years. Fleck was extremely complimentary of his former classmate, and the success they have had.

Mandatory Credit: David Banks-USA TODAY Sports

It’s unfortunate for the Irish that they were on the wrong end of this upset, and they’ll need to address all those issues this week as they prepare for an angry Purdue team. Hopefully, Notre Dame gets back to its winning ways on Saturday.

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WATCH: Former Wisconsin assistant goes viral with postgame interview after upset over Notre Dame

Former Wisconsin assistant goes viral with postgame interview after upset over Notre Dame

Former Wisconsin assistant Thomas Hammock was at the center of the college football world on Saturday.

His Northern Illinois Huskies went on the road and beat No. 5 Notre Dame, 16-14, pulling the upset of the year in college football — arguably the biggest win in Northern Illinois program history.

Related: Takeaways from Wisconsin’s uninspiring Week 2 win over South Dakota

Hammock is in his sixth season at the helm at Northern Illinois. His 26-33 overall record with the program includes a 0-6 2020 campaign and a 3-9 2022 season. But it is highlighted by a 9-5 2021 season that included a win in the MAC championship game. The Huskies most recently finished 2023 at 7-6.

Overall, he has stabilized the program in the middle of the MAC, which is far from the place in the sport occupied by Notre Dame. The Fighting Irish entered Saturday ranked near the top of the nation after a Week 1 road win at Texas A&M.

Northern Illinois’ win on a last-minute field goal in South Bend, Indiana, is the perfect David vs. Goliath upset that help define college football. His postgame interview only added to the terrific story:

https://twitter.com/ChaseDaniel/status/1832556348925735067

There is a Wisconsin connection here. Hammock coached for the Badgers from 2003-04 as a graduate assistant and from 2011-2013 as their running backs coach. He coached a few well-known Wisconsin running backs during his time with the program: Montee Ball, Melvin Gordon and James White.

The former Wisconsin assistant is finding success at Northern Illinois despite the current age of college football making it more challenging for programs at the Group of Five level. His upset over Notre Dame and subsequent viral interview is a perfect reminder that college football is about much more than which SEC team will win the College Football Playoff this year.

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Northern Illinois coach Thomas Hammock’s stirring interview after upset Notre Dame

Thomas Hammock was emotional after his Huskies upset Notre Dame

Northern Illinois of the MAC went into South Bend on Saturday and stunned Notre Dame and the college football world, 16-14.

After the upset, coach Thomas Hammock of the Huskies delivered a fantastic, emotional, passionate interview.

Ex-Ravens RB coach Thomas Hammock leads Northern Illinois to upset win over Notre Dame

Former Baltimore Ravens running back coach Thomas Hammock leads Northern Illiniois to upset win over Notre Dame

A former Ravens running backs coach will spend the next calendar week in the news after leading a MAC program to a shocking upset over Notre Dame.

A native of Jersey City, New Jersey, and graduate of Northern Illinois, Thomas Hammock was the Ravens’ running backs coach from 2014 to 2018. Still, on Saturday, the first African American head coach in Northern Illinois history led the Huskies to an upset win over Notre Dame, 16-14, in South Bend, Indiana.

https://Twitter.com/PFF_College/status/1832552004226338981

Northern Illinois quarterback Ethan Hampton was 10 of 19 passing, for 198 yards and one touchdown, while Huskies running back Antario Brown had 20 carries for 99 yards, as the Mid-America Conference favorite held Marcus Freeman’s Irish offense to 14 points on the afternoon.

Former Duke quarterback Riley Leonard was 20 of 32 for 163 yards and two interceptions in a disappointing outing.

https://Twitter.com/NBCSports/status/1832553523180913064

Hammock began coaching at the University of Wisconsin, serving as a graduate assistant for the Badgers from 2003 to 2004. The following season, he was named the running backs coach at Northern Illinois, reuniting with his former head coach, Joe Novak. In Hammock’s first season as running backs coach, Garrett Wolfe logged 1,580 yards and 16 touchdowns in nine games as the Huskies won the MAC West Division and appeared in the MAC Championship Game for the first time in school history.

Hammock spent three seasons at Minnesota as the Gophers running backs coach before spending his final season as co-offensive coordinator. In 2011, he was hired as running backs coach for Wisconsin, where he coached standouts like Montee Ball, James White, and Melvin Gordon until 2014 when the Baltimore Ravens hired Hammock as their new running backs coach.

Hammock has been at Northern Illinois ever since.

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NIU’s head coach on playing at Memorial Stadium ‘we didn’t handle it well at all’

Northern Illinois Football Head Coach Thomas Hammock met with the media following his team’s 35-11 to Nebraska on Saturday night.

Northern Illinois Football Head Coach Thomas Hammock met with the media following his team’s 35-11 to Nebraska on Saturday night. He started his press conference by talking about the physicality of the game.

“We thought it would be a physical contest and it was. I thought our defense hung in there and played their butt off throughout the whole game. We did not do enough offensively to stay on the field long enough. I think we had six drops in the first half in critical moments that put us behind the sticks but we have to find a way to be more efficient on offense and reward our defense for the way that they are playing. Credit to Nebraska, strong and physical team. We had every inclination of what it was going to look like and it was. We have to go back and study the tape and try to improve.”

After 63-10 drubbing, NIU head coach says Michigan is built to beat Ohio State

Right now, Ohio State looks very, very beatable.

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ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Thomas Hammock wasn’t about to mince words when it came to the loss at The Big House on Saturday: his team got beat. Sometimes that’s going to happen when you run into a buzzsaw.

The thing is, nobody expected Michigan football to be a buzzsaw in 2021. After a moribund 2020 campaign, though this particular game was expected to be the one where the Wolverines had the best chance to win decisively, Northern Illinois surprised in Week 1, upsetting Georgia Tech before hanging close in Week 2 with Wyoming.

The spread, betting-wise, saw Michigan as a 27.5-point favorite, but that spread was long beat by halftime — and then the Wolverines added 28 points in the third quarter alone.

Hammock, the Huskies head coach, has been around the bend with some solid teams, whether it be his 11 years of Big Ten experience at both Wisconsin and Minnesota, or with the Baltimore Ravens where he spent 5 years coaching under John Harbaugh. So, in his eyes, there was no shame losing to Michigan on Saturday.

“Obviously, I spent seven years in the Big Ten and have a pretty good gauge of the level of competition and talent in that conference,” Hammock said. “When I look at the tape, this is a (dominant) football team. I’m not gonna take anything away from them. They beat us soundly in all three phases.”

Of course, being in the Mid-American Conference, NIU isn’t exactly facing a murderer’s row now that it embarks upon its conference schedule. Its nonconference featured the aforementioned Georgia Tech and Wyoming before the trek to Ann Arbor, and Hammock made no bones about the fact that Michigan is the best team on its schedule.

“This will be the best team we play,” Hammock said. “I wouldn’t be surprised, if they stay committed to style that they play, that they’ll win a lot of football games. Obviously, it’s a team that we can emulate (in our program) to play physically, smart, and talented in all three phases. Hat’s off to them.”

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The more encouraging thing, at least for Michigan fans? What he’s seen — both on tape and in the game on Saturday — is that the maize and blue are finally building something that can contend with the scarlet and grey, in that they are doing everything in their power now to beat the Buckeyes come Nov. 27.

And they’ve done that by becoming a physical, run-first team. Prescient considering that Ohio State’s defense looks like the opposite of physical at the moment. The Buckeyes did stop the run for the first time this season against Tulsa, but surrendered 428 yards through the air. The 41-20 score wasn’t indicative of how close OSU’s game against the Golden Hurricane really was.

“I think they built their team to beat Ohio State,” Hammock said. “What I see on tape, they built their team to beat Ohio State. You’re not gonna out-athlete Ohio State, so what they said is we’re gonna get dirty. Credit to them, because they stay committed to that.”

NIU did have some offensive success via the ground game, having accumulated 162 yards rushing with an average of 4.5 yards per carry. However, it only was able to muster 46 yards through the air — shocking if for no other reason than the Huskies are led by Rocky Lombardi, who aired it out in Michigan State’s upset win in 2020.

Hammock felt like he knew how to attack the Wolverines to some degree — which wouldn’t be totally surprising, given that he was on the same Baltimore staff as new defensive coordinator Mike Macdonald until he took over the NIU post in 2019. But Macdonald’s commitment to keeping offenses guessing appears to be working, even on those who know him most.

“Mike is obviously going to mix things up week-to-week,” Hammock said. “They tried to play (Aidan Hutchinson) opposite the tight end, which is different this game. They were obviously trying to prepare four the open side run game, had a nice couple blitzes, blitz patterns they tried to show that they didn’t show on tape. I told our offense those things. We tried to minimize it as best as possible. Our quarterback did a great job doing protection checks.”

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As for Lombardi, while he certainly has no love for Michigan given his tenure in East Lansing, he agrees with his head coach that the Wolverines are head and shoulders above any other team he’ll have seen all year.

“That’s a really good team,” Lombardi said. “I think you’ll see throughout the season what that team’s capable of. We really moved the ball pretty decently in the run game, had a couple of opportunities in the pass game. It wasn’t an overall awful game, total awful day for the offense. I think there’s some things we can build on. Like Coach Hammock said, that’s the best team we’ll play the rest of the season — by a lot.”

But why didn’t NIU attempt to replicate the same game plan that worked so well for Lombardi in 2020? Why not test the corners, throw deep, and let your receiver make a play?

Lombardi not only spoke on the improvement of the corners — Vincent Gray and Gemon Green, the latter of whom had an interception nearly returned for a touchdown — but how the defensive scheme puts the defensive backs in a more advantageous position when it comes to big plays downfield. What’s more, he was aware that Michigan was letting them run the ball, so with passing essentially not an option, they did what they could.

“They run a completely different scheme, first of all,” Lombardi said. “Obviously the scheme’s completely different, which helps them a little bit. It’s just another year, so they keep improving, I’m sure. They look better on film than they did last year. The scheme, like I said, definitely helps them out out there in coverage. They don’t like to give up very many deep shots, to answer your deep shot question from earlier — they won’t give us that. They weren’t giving us a zero box, so we were able to run the ball — and we did. Take what you can get.”

The Northern Illinois game wraps up Michigan’s nonconference schedule as Big Ten play will start in earnest come Week 4, when the Wolverines host a resurgent Rutgers Scarlet Knights team that comes to Ann Arbor with a 3-0 record.

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