Report: ACC Moving Forward Attempting to Play Football in 2020

There were rumors that the Pac-12 would be just behind the Big Ten and cancel their season as well, but instead we sit at at almost 6:00 pm. ET on Monday and there has been no official word of any additional cancellations.

It’s a roller coaster ride of a day yet again in college football.  It began with the Big Ten seemingly cancelling their season before they came out with leaks that said previous reports were incorrect.

There were rumors that the Pac-12 would be just behind the Big Ten and cancel their season as well, but instead we sit at at almost 6:00 pm. ET on Monday and there has been no official word of any additional cancellations.

We do have a new report out however that one Power Five conference is going to attempt to play football this fall.  Pat Forde of Sports Illustrated is reporting this evening that after meeting today, ACC athletic directors are “moving forward in an attempt to play”.

Notre Dame has obviously joined the ACC for the 2020 season and for those hoping there is football in 2020, it’s a bit of good news.

It’s worth noting that there is no guarantee of anything with that, just that an attempt will be made to play.  If anything it’s good news for the chances of college football in 2020 that an attempt is reportedly still being made to play.

This is going to be a crazy week and I feel like the reports and backtracks are only going to speed up before they slow down.

As always, stay tuned as we’ll have it all covered for you at Fighting Irish Wire.

Where Notre Dame ranks in 2020 preseason Amway Coaches poll powered by USA TODAY Sports

The preseason Amway Coaches poll is out. Where does Notre Dame and their opponents for 2020 rank? Find out here!

What a day.

First we get Notre Dame’s 2020 football schedule finally released, we have to say goodbye to the Navy game for the first time in almost a century and now we have a sure-sign of the dog days of summer and college football approaching as the Amway Coaches poll powered by USA TODAY Sports has been released.

Who gets the No. 1 ranking?  Where does Notre Dame come in?  And where do Notre Dame’s opponents for 2020 check-in?

It’s all below:

Preseason Amway Coaches Poll:

  1.  Clemson
    2.  Ohio State
    3.  Alabama
    4.  Georgia
    5.  LSU
    6.  Oklahoma
    7.  Penn State
    8.  Florida
    9.  Oregon
    10.  Notre Dame
    11.  Auburn
    12.  Wisconsin
    13.  Texas A&M
    14.  Texas
    15.  Michigan
    16.  Oklahoma State
    17.  USC
    18.  Minnesota
    19.  North Carolina
    20.  Utah
    21.  UCF
    22.  Cincinnati
    23.  Iowa
    24.  Virginia Tech
    25.  Iowa State

Notre Dame sneaks into the top ten and is scheduled to face two teams appearing in the preseason top 25:  No.1 Clemson and No. 19 North Carolina.

If ranked No. 1 on November 7, Clemson will be the first top-ranked team in the nation to come to Notre Dame Stadium since USC in the famed 2005 “Bush Push” game.

Notre Dame will kickoff the 2020 season when they play host to unranked Duke on September 12.

67 days until Notre Dame football returns

Continue the countdown to Notre Dame football today by reliving a memorable run from a forgettable game and year as we hit 67 days to go!

Check one more day off the calendar as we have just 67 more to go until we get Notre Dame football officially back in our lives.  We’ll be breaking down plenty of position battles, starting spots and everything regarding the 2020 Fighting Irish football team.

Yesterday we counted down by looking at the Notre Dame/Pitt rivalry that has been played 68 times.  Today we look back at a memorable run before a forgettable collapse.

67: Josh Adams touchdown run length against Virginia Tech in 2016

Already leading 24-21 late in the third quarter against Virginia Tech, 4-6 Notre Dame was looking to have a chance to perhaps get into a bowl game if they could finish that win off and then get an upset at USC a week later.

Josh Adams then took a handoff at his own 33 yard line and ran 67 yards in a sign of things to come for the Irish in 2017, as he put Notre Dame up 31-21.

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The bad news was that Notre Dame couldn’t finish the deal and wound up falling to 34-31 and ultimately finished the year just 4-8.

It was an impressive highlight for Adams however who found the end zone 21 times that year and 41 times with Notre Dame.

Related – Way too early game-by-game predictions for Notre Dame football in 2020

Notre Dame adds Virginia Tech transfer to continue family tradition

Dara Mabrey is leaving Virginia Tech for Notre Dame, following the path her older sisters set before her. Find out the player ND is getting!

Niele Ivey has done wonders in the recruiting world early in her run as head basketball coach at Notre Dame but we get the feeling she received a decent amount of help from her staff, perhaps from one assistant coach in particular after the Irish gained a transfer guard on Thursday night.

Virginia Tech transfer Dara Mabrey announced she’ll be transferring to Notre Dame on Thursday night.  She follows in the footsteps of her sisters Marina and Michaela who have both previously played at Notre Dame while Michaela is currently a member of Ivey’s coaching staff.

Virginia Tech went a combined 43-21 in Mabrey’s two seasons in which she averaged 11.9 points per game.  The Irish get help in their outside shooting immediately as Mabrey shot 41.2% from beyond the arc in her two seasons in Blacksburg.  Her 80 treys

Did Notre Dame Deserve a Spot in the ’18 College Football Playoff?

Deshaun Watson set Twitter on fire Wednesday by dismissing Notre Dame as a 2020 national title contender.

Deshaun Watson set Twitter on fire Wednesday by dismissing Notre Dame as a 2020 national title contender. One reply to the tweet came from the user @LudoBags, who sang the oft-repeated refrain from the anti-Irish crowd that the football program should just join a conference like almost everyone else.

I retorted by explaining how Michigan kept the Irish out of the Big Ten for years and had no reason to seek entry again. Little did I know that I had gotten myself into a two-day debate with this person over Notre Dame’s independence and the apparent unfair advantage that’s granted it when it comes to the College Football Playoff.

I won’t explore the conference argument because it’s been done to death. Nor will I show the whole conversation I had with @LudoBags because it’s not really worth it. I will, however, show you a couple of tweets that highlight how @LudoBags is so married to the idea of conferences and conference championship games that it’s simply unacceptable for any program to have the opportunity to play for a national championship without them.

Notre Dame’s schedule is not as custom as @LudoBags might think. Five ACC games a year through 2037, plus the annual meetings with USC, Navy and Stanford, mean only a third of the schedule is up for grabs. To complete the season, most of the remaining four games are taken up by other Power Five opponents. When that happens, chances are you’re going to have a high strength of schedule, and when you run the table in that case, it’s hard for the CFP committee to ignore you.

OK, so Notre Dame’s 30-3 loss to Clemson in the 2018 Cotton Bowl wasn’t the program’s finest hour. But that doesn’t mean it didn’t belong. Aside from the fact that it was the third seed out of four in that year’s CFP, it really did earn that spot. It just so happened that it was the Tigers’ year, and their dominance against Alabama in the title game proved it.

According to Sports Reference, Clemson and Notre Dame were ranked 19th and 20th, respectively, in strength of schedule. For the record, Alabama was third, and Oklahoma finished eighth. Georgia, the first team out, was sixth in strength of schedule but suffered its third loss of the season to the Tide in the SEC title game, and three of the four teams that made the playoff, including the Irish, entered the field undefeated. Ohio State was the second team out thanks largely to ranking 31st in strength of schedule in spite of a Big Ten title and matching the Sooners’ 12-1 record.

Of Notre Dame’s 12 regular-season games in 2018, four came against teams that were ranked at the time the Irish played them. They opened with a win over a Michigan team that was ranked fourth going into the final three weeks of the regular season. Stanford was at its highest ranking of the season at seventh before losing to the Irish, and Virginia Tech was ranked for four of the first five weeks until the Irish dealt it a home defeat that helped send it into a tailspin. The Irish also defeated Syracuse in November when the Orange had their season-high ranking at 12th.

Notre Dame also played schools that weren’t ranked when they played them but were at some point in the season. In 2018, Pittsburgh, Northwestern, Florida State and USC all got love from the AP. Add it all up, and that’s eight opponents the Irish couldn’t sleep on, or two-thirds of their schedule. By comparison, Clemson also had eight of its pre-CFP opponents ranked at some points, though only two were ranked when they played the Tigers.

So @LudoBags, spare me your tweets about Notre Dame getting dominated when a national title is on the line or that their independence should disqualify them from the opportunity. The journey always outweighs the destination. As the only Power Five independent, the Irish have to show the world twice as hard that they deserve a seat at the head table, and you know what? They did in 2018.

If hating Notre Dame’s independence gets you through the day or helps you sleep at night, you do you. Nothing is going to change anytime soon, and Irish fans are perfectly OK with that. The Irish require no validation by being a conference member, and they require no preaching from an outsider who hates them because the program and fan base don’t share their beliefs about the top level in college football. They’ve been independent since 1887, and they know what’s best for them, so what do you know?

87 Days Until Notre Dame Football Returns

87 days until we get Notre Dame football back. Don’t miss this memorable Notre Dame moment as we continue the countdown!

In 87 days we’ll gladly all welcome Notre Dame football back when they take on the Navy Midshipmen in Annapolis.  In the meantime, we have rosters to break down, opponents to preview and position battles to discuss.

For now though we’ve got to look at where the number 87 ends up being relevant in Notre Dame football history.  For this one we didn’t have to go back all that far.

87: Yards on the final drive in Notre Dame’s 2019 comeback win over Virginia Tech

Trailing Virginia Tech 20-14 with just 3:22 to play, Notre Dame needed a drive for the ages in order to escape with a victory on November 2, 2019.  And that’s exactly what Ian Book, Jafar Armstrong and Chase Claypool among others helped create.

[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ncsX71lEWKE&w=560&h=315]

After an embarrassing loss to Michigan a week earlier, this win was the first of six straight to end the year.  It moved the Irish to 6-2 on the season as they’d eventually finish up 11-2 after a blowout win over Iowa State in the Camping World Bowl.

Notre Dame Recruit Tristan Bounds Uses Loophole to Visit Campus

Much has been made about how much Notre Dame has been hurt by its inability to recruit players during the COVID-19 outbreak.

Much has been made about how much Notre Dame has been hurt by its inability to recruit players during the COVID-19 outbreak. The university’s location puts it at a disadvantage. Still, that didn’t stop one recruit from stopping by campus anyway.

Tristan Bounds, a three-star offensive tackle who’s part of the 2021 recruiting class, has eight schools at the top of the list. The pandemic had prevented him from visiting four of them, including Notre Dame. But Bounds, the 39th-ranked offensive tackle in his class according to 247Sports, made the trek to campus Tuesday, one day after he visited Michigan. Though the dead period has been extended to June 30, a loophole allows recruits to visit colleges as long as they aren’t accompanied by or in contact with anyone affiliated with the football program during their trip.

Bounds, who measures at 6-foot-8 and 280 pounds, plays for Choate Rosemary Hall in Wallingford, Connecticut, still has to make visits to Boston College and Texas. So far, he also has set foot on Virginia Tech, Virginia, Maryland and Vanderbilt. It’s a lot of traveling, but nothing the student at a boarding school over 300 miles from his home in Bethesda, Maryland, can’t handle.

Jeff Quinn, the Irish’s offensive line coach, offered Bounds a scholarship May 1, the day Notre Dame was revealed to be on Bounds’ list. The Irish emerged as a late contender for his services. However, his visit to campus means they’re still in the hunt.

 

Pressure is on for Some Notre Dame Rivals in 2020

Which teams have the most pressure on them entering 2020? A few Notre Dame regulars made a recent list on 247Sports that we discuss here.

Notre Dame is a place where there always has been and always will be pressure to win a lot of football games on an annual basis.  Expectations are high again for the 2020 season for Notre Dame but coming off of three-straight ten-plus win seasons at least takes away some of the pressure for the Irish as the 2020 campaign approaches.

That’s not the case for a few Notre Dame rivals however who have coaches that need to win big and soon.

247Sports recently listed their ten college football teams under the most pressure to win in 2020 and although Notre Dame was not listed, some regulars on the Fighting Irish schedule were.  The following are what 247Sports National Analyst Bud Elliot had to say about each of the schools that semi-regularly show up on Notre Dame’s schedule.

The Four Teams:

Notre Dame Offers 2022 Florida Star Safety

Brian Kelly and Notre Dame became the 19th team to offer safety Devin Moore a scholarship Thursday. Find out more about the 3* safety here

Notre Dame continued their recent run of extending scholarship offers to the recruiting class of 2022 Thursday when they extended an offer to Naples, Florida safety Devin Moore.

Moore is listed at 6-2, 175 and attends Naples High School.  Notre Dame became the 19th football program to extend a scholarship offer to Moore, who also received offers from Nebraska and Virginia Tech in the last week.

Moore is listed as a three star safety according to 247 Sports.  They also rank him the 21st best safety in the 2022 class.  Notre Dame joins the likes of Florida, Florida State, Miami, Michigan, Mississippi State, Nebraska, South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia Tech who are among the 19 total schools to have offered him.

For more information you can watch Moore’s sophomore year highlight tape here.

Notre Dame Out as Top DB Cuts List to 10

Donovan McMillon cut his potential schools to 10 and Notre Dame did not make the cut. See who did though for a top safety in the 2021 class.

2021 top ten safety Donovan McMillon of Canonsburg, Pennsylvania (Peters Township) has narrowed his list of potential schools to ten and Notre Dame appears to be out as a potential landing spot.

Notre Dame had offered the eighth ranked safety on 247Sports on February 7 but did not make the cut wen McMillon announced his top ten on May 1.

He may not ever play a game for Notre Dame but McMillon does deserve props for the use of the old NCAA Football video game in his announcement.

Currently Notre Dame sits with one safety commit in the 2021 cycle, that being three-star Justin Walters of Bolingbrook, Illinois.