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Notre Dame is coming to town!

Wow irishfred, don't go all arrogant jackass and then try to walk it back just because somebody accurately points out that in the battle of having done less with more during our lifetimes between these two historical heavyweights ND is far in the lead. Welcoming us to Notre Dame football and its national following. Sheesh. We realize Notre Dame was the shiznit during Ronald Reagan's first career. We weren't there to see it, but we've been told the stories. We also realize that there are groups of Catholics across the country, but primarily in the Midwest, who consider Notre Dame their second favorite team behind their local favorite...some put them first. Congratulations, some people who feel they have no choice but follow your team or enter hell, sometimes still choose to follow your team.

I do remember the late 80's when Lou Holtz had your Irish in contention at the end of the season as opposed to just overrated pre-season rankings. So I have seen your team achieve some success, right before the revelations of Academic fraud. We realize some decades back between Huey Lewis and the News and Nirvana you actually earned some respect. But some might say im getting pretty old. Since then you are merely a Great Lake of Tyrone Willingham tears, Charlie Weiss boogercicles and Bob Davies soaked underwear. In fact, if we are to believe your resume at any point in the last quarter century resembles an elite program we would also have to believe what was written on George O'Leary's resume.

Complaining because NFL scouts aren't given free passes to an NCAA contest? The travesty of it all!!!! It isn't like they are forbidden to enter.

 
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Its getting chippy in this room fellas!

I think we are all ready for game day!

HookEM!

 
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This looks like bad news for the Irish.

Longhorns over the Irish? Five bold predictions for Texas in 2016

The Longhorns will be under the microscope this season.

After finishing below .500 two seasons in a row, all eyes will be on head coach Charlie Strong as he tries to re-ignite the program. But to put Texas back on the map, Strong will need some marquee wins and big-time performances from individual players.

Here are five bold predictions for Texas' crucial 2016 campaign.

1.  Texas upsets Notre Dame to start season: The Longhorns come out and make a statement in a special Sunday edition of ABC college football on Sept. 4. The team looked like a deer in headlights during a 38-3 beatdown to the Irish in South Bend last season. But with a new offensive system in place and another top recruiting class on campus, Texas finally has the firepower to go toe-to-toe with Notre Dame. The Longhorns can start their season with some serious momentum with a victory.

2. The Longhorns finish top-3 in the Big 12: Strong is yet to make a splash in the Big 12 heading into his third year. Texas finished 5-4 and 4-5 in the conference respectively over the past two seasons. But the Longhorns have a chance to push the conference’s elite this season. Texas brings back last year’s impressive freshman class — now with a year under its belt. The group played a big role in signature wins against Oklahoma and Baylor in 2015, and should build off those experiences this year. The Longhorns certainly need to be more consistent in 2016; they can’t fall apart late in contests like they did against California and Oklahoma State last season. This year, Texas will finish games and make the jump to become a conference contender.

3. Shane Buechele becomes the face of the offense: Even as a true freshman, Buechele still looks like the Longhorns’ most seasoned signal caller. He has a knack for hitting his receivers on the numbers and shows the rare ability to make good decisions on the move. Strong has applauded Buechele for his competitive nature and “gym rat†work ethic — he said the freshman had an “unbelievable spring.†And coming from a similar spread system at Arlington Lamar, Buechele already understands offensive coordinator Sterlin Gilbert’s run-and-shoot scheme. Whether he starts against Notre Dame or not, it won’t take long for Buechele to emerge as Texas’ answer at quarterback.

4. Texas leads the Big 12 in rushing: The Longhorns relied on their rush attack last season, finishing third in the Big 12 on the ground. And the power run game may be even more of a focal point in 2016. Texas brings back two physical running backs in junior D’Onta Foreman and sophomore Chris Warren. Both ball carriers boast an impressive combination of size and speed to break tackles and finish runs in the open field — each finished with a touchdown of 90 or more yards last season. The Longhorns also added talent on the offensive line and in the passing game. The improvements should help open up the run and keep defenses from loading the box. With two talented backs and an improved situation on offense, the Longhorns should produce one of the nation’s top ground games.

5. The Longhorns finish top-20 in pass defense: Despite serious issues getting off the field on third down, Texas featured the third best pass defense in the Big 12 in 2015. This year, the Longhorns’ secondary goes one step forward. Sophomore cornerbacks Davante Davis and Holton Hill both bring great size — they are each 6-2 — and ball skills to the outside. On the back end, senior safety Dylan Haines has a nose for the ball and should once again finish near the top of the conference in interceptions. And sophomores P.J. Locke III and DeShon Elliott each flashed playmaking skills playing safety and at the nickel corner spot. With a year behind them, the Longhorns’ young secondary should stifle opposing quarterbacks and force turnovers. In the end, Texas will finish top-20 in the FBS in pass defense

http://sportsday.dallasnews.com/college-sports/texaslonghorns/2016/08/10/five-bold-predictions-texas-2016

 
Bold predictions, indeed!

I want this to be a statement game.

It's time to stop playing around.

 
This is why I'm picking UT for the upset. ND will have an inexperienced defense that will not be use to the pace of the UT offense. I checked ND's schedule and they haven't played anyone that runs the Baylor offense or anything close to it. They have gone against some good QB's, but not a system like Baylor's.

Hopefully, they will be overconfident going against a true freshman QB and they will be worn down by the power of Warren and Foreman and some of the speed that UT has including Heard.

Unproven but talented, Notre Dame's youthful defense could propel—or torpedo—a promising 2016 season

CULVER, Ind. — There's a plot of dirt for equestrian practice on one side of the Culver Academies football fields and the vast Lake Maxinkuckee on the other. But, for the moment, a pile of straw in the middle of everything draws everyone's attention. A one-man blocking sled is positioned such that Notre Dame's linebackers plant their cleats on the unstable, yellow patch as they come out of their stance to strike. This is not ideal. So linebackers coach Mike Elston dryly requests that maybe the apparatus be placed elsewhere to start next time, though he mostly gets the results he seeks despite a less-than-ideal setup.

Like when junior Nyles Morgan, one of the team's new starters at inside linebacker, springs toward the sled and jolts it up sharply. The device shudders and creaks before the 6' 1", 245-pounder releases it and runs by.

"Great punch!" Elston calls out, as Morgan circles back to the end of the line. "Can we do that on a body? Can we do that on a body—that's the question."

Apply that to just about every defender partaking in the now traditional off-site opening practices, and you have a summary of the most important unknown for Notre Dame in 2016. Finding a starting quarterback isn't a problem as much as a chore; either junior DeShone Kizer or senior Malik Zaire can do that job. It's far less easy to be as confident in the defense as a whole, based on the relative newcomers and what's left of a unit that last season ranked 39th in scoring defense, 45th in total defense, 54th in average tackles-for-loss and 109th in turnovers gained. If a dominant group might struggle to maintain excellence after an exodus of NFL-drafted players and reliable leaders … what happens when a crew that was just sort of OK endures that kind of overhaul?

Notre Dame checks in at No. 12 in SI's preseason Top 25

It could depend on what you expect from a Notre Dame defense, in any year. The Irish were ordinary last season and that didn't preempt 10 wins and a playoff run that lasted into late November. But no one shoots for average in August. So defenders say they met more this summer than they had in previous years, studying film and diagramming calls and building camaraderie, hoping that experience in a system offsets inexperience on Saturdays.

"Having an understanding of the defense is more important than the experience at this point," junior safety Drue Tranquill says. "I look back to my freshman year and no one really knew the defense, so no one was able to teach the younger guys and then you saw a lot of mental errors, a lot of different areas where we needed improvement. The experience is going to come."

This is true, because there are games on the schedule for which Notre Dame must field a team. The rest is less assured.
Of the 11 players who composed the first-team defense for the Irish's first practice, only four have started 12 or more games. The lack of an established star anywhere is a bit disquieting; even as it regards the main holdovers, only the most doe-eyed mythologizers would depict them as bonafide game-changers. Defensive end Isaac Rochell has 26 starts and 3.5 career sacks; cornerback Cole Luke has 26 starts and six career interceptions; safety Max Redfield is a former five-star recruit with 22 starts but he finished 2015 in the dog house, sent home from the Fiesta Bowl; and linebacker James Onwaulu has 17 starts at that position (he arrived as a receiver) and eight tackles-for-loss in two years. 

There are players coming back from injury (Tranquill, who tore his ACL in Week 4 last season, and Jarron Jones, who missed all of '15 with an MCL tear). There are players emerging from some obscurity (Morgan, who played in 13 games last fall without a start) and some sprung from total obscurity (cornerback Shaun Crawford and linebacker Asmar Bilal were first-day-of-practice first-teamers who haven't played a snap). Based on production to date, there is not one individual you can count on to be a dominant force.

That leaves room for stars to rise, but it also leaves a team with playoff aspirations in a tenuous spot. Notre Dame, naturally, insists it knows what it is doing. The reasoning: Defensively, it knows what it is doing.

The belief begins with the player standing on a steamy turf field, checking out his headband in the reflection of a visitor's sunglasses. Morgan is evidently the heir to the graduated and garrulous Joe Schmidt both in the role of Mike linebacker—effectively the mainframe for the entire operation—and in the ancillary gig of charismatic unit spokesman. The former consensus top 100 recruit from Crete, Ill., couldn't budge Schmidt from his post for two seasons, but there's a reason the term is understudy. "I'm kind of like the teacher now," Morgan says. "Now I get to see what he had to go through dealing with me."

You thought you had questions about this defense. "I was nagging him, I was bugging him," Morgan says of Schmidt. "He'd be dead tired after running off the field and I'm like, 'Joe! How did you play this fire zone?' He'd be like, bro, I can't breathe right now. I'm like, 'So ... how do you play the fire zone?'"

His curiosity is well founded. Notre Dame won't be in position to make many plays if Morgan doesn't literally get teammates in position to make plays. He is the conduit between the defensive line and the secondary, the primary organizing voice before each snap. "The middle linebacker position is the most difficult position to get down," Irish coach Brian Kelly says, "and he's got it cold." Kelly emphasizes that Morgan, tellingly, has earned the complete trust of defensive coordinator Brian VanGorder. Asked what it's like when VanGorder doesn't trust a player, Morgan is blunt: "He's on your ass. And you will know it."

So it's a start—Notre Dame's new Mike linebacker has achieved silent lucidity.

"First thing I noticed, I pretty much stopped getting yelled at," Morgan says. "Really, as far as making calls and different checks, things like that, (VanGorder) trusts that I can make the call. I don't have these constant reminders anymore, that I used to have all the time. Now it's just, 'He knows what he's doing, lemme leave him alone and worry about someone else.'"

This is in a way the Irish defense's operating principle for 2016: Knowledge will mitigate limited game experience. (Of course, that's what you say when you're short on the experience part.) Hence those summertime meetings organized outside the hours players spent with coaches. "We had a lot of younger guys that were hungry and were coming to us older guys like, meet with us, meet with us, meet with us," Tranquill says. And some would argue that the best way to master a concept is to teach it, a task the veterans now can manage entering Year 3 with VanGorder's scheme. Redfield, one of the defense's few senior presences, agrees.

"We think the young guys are learning faster than we've ever taught the system before."

From atop the bleachers at Culver, it's impossible to verify any of this, with no one wearing pads and with the expected mixed results in various first-day-of-practice exercises. During one small sample of 11-on-11 work, the defense surrenders two completions of 30-plus yards but also notches tackles-for-loss on back-to-back runs. That surely is a give-and-take repeated on many opening days across the country. But Notre Dame's search for clarity on defense has everyone on the lookout for the tiniest of clues in every snap, one way or another.

Maybe from here, the Irish will be a program that can gin up playoff runs without asphyxiating offenses into submission; since finishing second nationally in scoring defense en route to the BCS championship game following the 2012 season, the defense has ranked 27th, 82nd and 39th in that category. In early August, with uncertainty just about everywhere, it seems prudent to aim for being merely reliable, and see where that takes Notre Dame this time. "We have all the pieces to be successful," Morgan says, leaving open for interpretation exactly what success will mean.

http://www.campusrush.com/notre-dame-defense-nyles-morgan-brian-van-gorder-1967082502.html

 
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Bold predictions, indeed!

I want this to be a statement game.

It's time to stop playing around.

Who's playing around? Notre Dame? Trouble in camp? Wow, that would be a tough pill to swallow. Poised to make a run but trip right out of the blocks due to not taking the season seriously.

Glad we don't have that problem. I've never seen this team so stoked about a season since '05.

Nothing said on this board by anyone will have any type of affect of this game whatsoever, in case you were going there.

 
This is why I'm picking UT for the upset. ND will have an inexperienced defense that will not be use to the pace of the UT offense. I checked ND's schedule and they haven't played anyone that runs the Baylor offense or anything close to it. They have gone against some good QB's, but not a system like Baylor's.

Hopefully, they will be overconfident going against a true freshman QB and they will be worn down by the power of Warren and Foreman and some of the speed that UT has including Heard.

Agree, and combine that fast pace with 105 degrees on the field. I think they'll be calling Earl by end of third quarter.

If I were Kelley, and I'm not, but if I were I would consider getting that team to Dallas a week or so ahead of the game for a few days. Practice on a high school field but put those boys in the climate they'll be facing.

It was 106 here in Dallas today. It's 10:30 p.m. right now and it's 95 degrees. Austin is warmer than Dallas is.

 
I just cannot wait until ND wins the coin flip and elects to defer until the second half...

 
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Got my gear for the game.  In for 6.

Go Irish! 

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I just cannot wait until ND wins the coin flip and elects to defer until the second half...
Now this is something I can agree with you on as a Texas fan. I too cannot wait until ND wins the coin flip and elects to defer until the second half and UT wins the game. :)

 
oh lordy Irishfred.

You had to bring back the coin flip screw-up!

I literally cannot think of good comeback at the moment.

 
oh lordy Irishfred.

You had to bring back the coin flip screw-up!

I literally cannot think of good comeback at the moment.
That must feel like opening up a wound that was almost healed, Mayhall.  My apologies in advance.

Hornsalot was provoking me - let's blame him.

It felt like shooting fish in a barrel.  Too damn easy, and a little cheap, perhaps...

We're better than that - my bad...

 
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