Tag Archives: Andrew Hendrix

Notre Dame Football 2012: Tommy Rees Proves Why Keeping Him off Field Is Tough

When Tommy Rees was arrested back towards the start of May, we thought it might make the Fighting Irish quarterback race a two-man game.

When he was reinstated to return to workouts, it seemed that perhaps the quarterback would be in the mix to start with Everett Golson and Andrew Hendrix.

Now, with the one game suspension handed down and the Fighting Irish in camp; Tommy Rees is still not in the mix to start, technically. The South Bend Tribune reports that the reps are being split between the Golson and Hendrix:

Junior Andrew Hendrix and Golson split roughly 80 percent of the reps, with Kiel gobbling up virtually all of the remaining ones — a pretty representative split by Kelly's estimation.

Rees is not even getting many reps at practice as the Fighting Irish prepare for their Dublin opener against the Navy Midshipmen. So no, the quarterback is not in the mix to start. At least not the opener.

However, reading a bit more of the Tribune’s practice notes will expose that Rees is still sitting in a position to wrestle the job back once he’s cleared to play in week two:

But for Hendrix, Rees is the go-to guy when he has questions about quarterback play. It has never crossed his mind to reach out to willing Irish legends at the position.

“There’s no one who knows this offense better than Tommy,” he said.

Rees is still in the catbird seat when it comes to knowing what he’s doing out there on the field. That mental edge might be all he needs to get back on the field over Hendrix or Golson; whichever wins the job to start the year.

While Everett Golson is the high-ceiling guy that many Irish fans are hoping wins the job; he is also the up-and down-electrifying athlete that will drive a coach crazy with big mistakes. Hendrix is a guy who got the job done at times a season ago but has still been truly unable to beat out Tommy Rees for the job.

Rees is proving himself invaluable, even without playing a major role in the battle. Brian Kelly has paired up Rees with Golson for training camp, and even Golson sings the praises of the suspended Irish quarterback:

“It is awkward,” Golson admitted of the stream of pointers Rees has offered. “And I praise Tommy for that, because honestly, I don't know if I could really do that. But Tommy is a great guy, going through what he had to go through.

“So many times we'll be talking in the room, and he'll be like, 'If you need anything, I'm here for you.' That's how it is for this whole unit. Though it's competition, we help each other out.”

Essentially, Tommy Rees is the veteran who knows the playbook backwards and forwards, and while Irish fans, and perhaps Brian Kelly, want the higher ceiling Everett Golson to win the gig; it is going to be something to watch from week two going forward.

While it is nice for Tommy Rees to get his teammates on the same page, he'll be proving his knowledge of the offense with reps once the Irish return from Dublin. Expect to see his comprehension of the system push him right back into starting contention soon enough. 

Read more Notre Dame Football news on BleacherReport.com

No. 25: Notre Dame

There’s past, there’s present and there’s future, and nowhere else do all three commingle more than at Notre Dame. Such is life in South Bend, where every nook and cranny – from Rockne to Leahy, Ara to Holtz – serves as a reminder, and an often painful one at that, of the program’s newfound place among college football’s perennial underachievers. If it’s not one thing it’s another; if it’s not penalties it’s turnovers, if not the defense it’s the quarterback. It’s getting tiresome, and for no group more so than the current Irish – those players who constitute this year’s team, who have battled against not only U.S.C., Michigan and Michigan State but also the annual perception that when push comes to shove, Notre Dame is not going to live up the hype. Well, you have two options when you get shoved against a wall: you can either run away and hide, with your tail between your legs, or you can push back.

Conference
Independent

Location
South Bend, Ind.

Nickname
Fighting Irish

Returning starters
14 (8 offense, 6 defense)

Last year’s ranking
No. 15

2011 record
(8-5, 0-0)

Last year’s
re-ranking

No. 33

2012 schedule

Sept. 1
vs. Navy (in Dublin, Ire.)
Sept. 8
Purdue
Sept. 15
at Michigan St.
Sept. 22
Michigan
Oct. 6
vs. Miami (Fla.) (in Chicago)
Oct. 13
Stanford
Oct. 20
B.Y.U.
Oct. 27
at Oklahoma
Nov. 3
Pittsburgh
Nov. 10
at Boston College
Nov. 17
Wake Forest
Nov. 24
at U.S.C.

Last year’s prediction

Let’s pump the brakes just a little bit: Notre Dame’s not built for a national title run even with this schedule. This year’s team lacks optimal depth, for starters, but there are lingering questions at quarterback — this above all else — and along the interior of the defensive line. But those are survivable issues, as I think Kelly is going to land improved quarterback play regardless of which candidate assumes the starting role. So what’s the ceiling? I can see 10 wins, and don’t scoff. I hesitate to say 10-2, but I think nine wins is very much in the cards. Just think: that’s only a two-game improvement in the win column from last year’s regular season, and that’s not a huge amount. It’s an exciting time for Notre Dame. This time, I think the excitement is justified.

2011 recap

In a nutshell Turnovers. How many lost games? Giveaways led to South Florida’s upset — one that looked worse and worse as the year worse on — in the season opener. Giveaways allowed Michigan to hang around long enough to post its fourth quarter comeback. Giveaways broke Notre Dame’s heart in U.S.C.’s 14-point win. Giveaways blew any chance the Fighting Irish had of knocking off Stanford in Andrew Luck’s final game in Palo Alto. And giveaways allowed Florida State to take and hold the lead in the fourth quarter in the Champs Sports Bowl. So where would Notre Dame have been had it been to control its turnovers? It meant the difference in at least two defeats; with those wins — South Florida and Michigan, let’s say — Notre Dame is playing in a B.C.S. bowl. Instead, the Irish notched eight wins for the second consecutive season under Brian Kelly.

High point A 31-13 win over Michigan State on Sept. 17. At the time, it was a much-needed win after the disastrous 0-2 start. Two months later, it remained Notre Dame’s finest win on the season — by a wide margin.

Low point There were no moral victories; there haven’t been moral victories in South Bend in, well, a century. But the 31-17 home loss to U.S.C. stings more than most: as many have suggested, the Irish did not leave it all on the field in the fourth quarter.

Tidbit There’s nothing that defines this team’s offensive efforts under Kelly more than this fact: Notre Dame is 13-2 when gaining more rushing yards and 3-8 when gaining fewer rushing yards than its opposition. The two losses when gaining more yards came last fall, against Michigan in September and Florida State during bowl play. Two of the three wins when gaining fewer yards on the ground came last fall, against Air Force and Navy – which skews this a bit, as win or lose, N.D. is not going to be as successful on the ground as the service academies. Kelly’s offensive mindset is simple, almost to the point where his philosophy jibes with the program’s past legends despite his system’s bells and whistles: Kelly wants Notre Dame to run the football effectively and limit turnovers.

Tidbit (300 losses edition) Notre Dame’s loss to F.S.U. in the Champs Sports Bowl was the program’s 300th career defeat, making the program the last of those select few programs in the 800-win club to lose 300 games. Michigan lost its 300th game in October of 2009; Oklahoma to B.Y.U. in that’s year opener. Ohio State’s 300th loss came against Florida in the 2006 national title game. Alabama’s came against Auburn in the 2005 Iron Bowl, which makes reaching the milestone doubly painful. Nebraska, like Ohio State, suffered its 300th loss in the national title game – against Miami in the 2002 Rose Bowl. Finally, Texas lost its 300th game against Texas A&M in 1999.

Former players in the N.F.L.

34 RB Armando Allen (Chicago), OT Jordan Black (Washington), CB Robert Blanton (Minnesota), S Sergio Brown (New England), S David Bruton (Denver), TE John Carlson (Minnesota), QB Jimmy Clausen (Carolina), TE Anthony Fasano (Miami), LB Darius Fleming (San Francisco), WR Michael Floyd (Arizona), RB Jonas Gray (Miami), OT Ryan Harris (Denver), LS J.J. Jansen (Carolina), DE Ethan Johnson (Kansas City), CB Terrail Lambert (Oakland), DT Derek Landri (Philadelphia), DT Trevor Laws (St. Louis), S Kyle McCarthy (Kansas City), OG Eric Olsen (New Orleans), QB Brady Quinn (Kansas City), OG Trevor Robinson (Cincinnati), TE Kyle Rudolph (Minnesota), LB Brian Smith (Tampa Bay), S Harrison Smith (Minnesota), OT Chris Stewart (Arizona), WR Maurice Stovall (Detroit), C John Sullivan (Minnesota), WR Golden Tate (Seattle), DE Justin Tuck (New York Giants), CB Darrin Walls (Atlanta), DT Ian Williams (San Francisco), OT Sam Young (Buffalo), S Tom Zbikowski (Indianapolis).

Arbitrary top five list

M.L.B. players from Notre Dame, 1995-present
1. 2B Craig Counsell (1995-2011).
2. RP Brad Lidge (2002-present).
3. RP John Axford (2009-present).
4. RP Aaron Heilman (2003-11).
5. SP Jeff Samardzija (2009-present).

Coaching

Brian Kelly (Assumption ’83), 16-10 after two seasons with the Fighting Irish. His ascension to college football’s premier spot was justified: Kelly compiled a 34-7 record in three seasons at Cincinnati, a period that included a pair of conference championships. He won the Big East Coach of the Year award in each of his three full years with the program. Kelly followed up a 10-win debut season with an 11-3 mark in 2008, which included the program’s first Big East title and B.C.S. bowl berth. Cincinnati took another sizable step forward in 2009, running through the regular season undefeated and making a claim to playing for the national championship. None can doubt the distinct impression Kelly left on the Cincinnati program after replacing current Michigan State coach Mark Dantonio prior to the 2007 International Bowl. Kelly had taken the job 34 days prior to the bowl game, and instead of merely taking that last month to familiarize himself with the program – or even staying away until the end of the season – Kelly determinedly installed his offensive philosophy, something that was undoubtedly key to Cincinnati’s strong finish in his first full season in charge. He has gained a well-earned reputation as a program builder, something that drew him national attention during his three-year stint at Central Michigan (2004-6). The Chippewas, who had won more than three games only once in the previous four years, improved in each of Kelly’s seasons, from 4-7 in 2004 to 6-5 in 2005 to a 9-4 mark and a MAC championship in his final season. Before moving up to the F.B.S. with C.M.U., Kelly was the coach at Division II Grand Valley State for 13 seasons, winning back-to-back D-II titles in 2003-4. Overall, Kelly brings a 187-68-2 career record into his 23rd season coaching on the N.C.A.A. level.

Quarterbacks to watch

The question isn’t whether Tommy Rees will be Notre Dame’s starter coming out of fall camp, as that’s already been decided: Rees, along with senior linebacker Carlo Calabrese, was suspended for the season opener after committing what Kelly called “a set of poor decisions” in an altercation with police following an off-campus party in May. Rees, said Kelly, “can attempt to climb the depth chart following the conclusion” of his suspension – and I’ll take the liberty of reading between the lines: Rees is not going to be Notre Dame’s quarterback in 2012.

It’s a good thing, regardless of his 12-4 mark as the Irish’s starter. Rees is a riddle; he’s by every measurement a game manager – though I hate that phrase – but he’s also far too careless with the football, as we saw last season. By its definition, managing a team’s offense entails not turning the ball over with abandon, yet Rees has failed to give Notre Dame this level of reliability in the passing game. His failures became more pronounced once N.D. handed him the starting role on a full-time basis, and even more so once Kelly brought in two of his own quarterbacks, Andrew Hendrix and Everett Golson, whose skill sets dwarfed what Rees brought and brings to the table for this offense. Now that Kelly has added yet another premier recruit, incoming freshman Gunner Kiel – the nation’s top-ranked quarterback prospect, according to most recruiting services – the writing is on the wall for Rees; his suspension only ensures that his run as Notre Dame’s starter has come to an end.

So the Irish are left with three quarterbacks: Hendrix, Golson and Kiel. You can write off the latter as an option for the season opener, if not for this entire season. As of today, Kiel is running a fairly distant third in the competition – third among candidates still under consideration, and he’ll dip to fourth once Rees resumes normal activities following the Navy game. In reality, it’s a two-man competition between Hendrix and Golson, and the winner heading into Navy not only holds the edge to start all season, as you’d think, but also to be Notre Dame’s starter for the next three seasons.

Will it be Hendrix or Golson? The former played in five games last fall, beginning with Air Force, and gave this offense a bit of a jolt throwing the football against Stanford. But Hendrix’s strength is as a runner, as we saw a year ago, and while his legs pushed him into a nice role over the final month it was clear that the sophomore needed some substantial fine-tuning as a passer – and it remained clear during Notre Dame’s spring game; Hendrix has a rocket, but his touch and his accuracy leave much to be desired.

It’s going to be Golson against Navy, barring the unpredictable: an injury, a huge step forward from Kiel, a strong month from Hendrix. He spent last season running Notre Dame’s scout team, and doing it well, ramping up the expectations that he could shift into a starting role during spring ball – and as an aside, it seems as if the only guy more popular than the backup quarterback is the true freshman quarterback running the scout team. What Golson has, based on a small sample size, is great feet, a strong arm and the ability to give N.D. several different looks in the running game. He can run the option, for example, which Kelly couldn’t do with Rees under center. What I like about Golson is that he can improvise: he can step outside the box, perhaps make something out of nothing, and can give N.D. a different sort of quarterback from those lead-footed pocket passers that have been in vogue since 2005.

It was a small sample, but Golson was also the only N.D. quarterback not to throw an interception during the spring game. Think that’s not important to Kelly? Asked about his turnovers during the scrimmage, and the interceptions from Rees and Hendrix in particular, Kelly replied, “we’ve seen that movie before.” He’s tired of it; this offense can no longer afford to battle turnovers. So when N.D. has a chance to go with a more poised passer with solid footwork in the pocket and the running ability to give this offense a different look on the ground – Kelly should choose Golson as his starter. It’s going to be interesting, if not exciting.

Players to watch

Kelly’s arrival has led to a dramatic improvement in the running game, rapidly turning one of the nation’s weakest rushing teams into the program’s best in a generation. Last fall, behind a stronger offensive front and a deep backfield, N.D. averaged 160.4 rushing yards per game on 4.8 yards per carry, the latter the program’s best mark since 1996. That the Irish ran the ball so effectively despite encountering more than a few hurdles in the passing game reflected well on Kelly’s system, for one, and highlights the idea that this offense can be even more dynamic on running downs if Kelly can land greater consistency from his new starting quarterback.

I can see two areas of concern, however. The first is the staffing change: Notre Dame replaced Ed Warinner, who left for the same position at Ohio State, with former Tennessee assistant Harry Hiestand. Hiestand came under some fire in Knoxville, and some of the negativity was justified; while Tennessee’s line was young, last year’s group was the primary reason behind the team’s complete inability to run the football. A second concern revolves around personnel, as N.D. will break in new starters on the strong side of the line – and guard Trevor Robinson and tackle Taylor Dever did a nice job opening up holes on the ground last fall.

One thing the Irish need is a healthy Braxton Cave at center; he missed the final four games of last season with a foot injury. With Cave in the lineup, N.D. can move senior Mike Golic Jr. over to right guard, where he’ll battle – and likely win out – sophomore Nick Martin for the starting job. It would be surprising to see anyone but junior Christian Lombard take over for Dever at right tackle, though Tate Nichols, another junior, has great size for the strong side. Nichols’ issue thus far has been injuries, which have placed him behind Lombard in the pecking order.

The Irish’s best lineman is junior left tackle Zack Martin, a two-year starter who continues to blossom into one of the nation’s most unheralded protectors on the blind side. He and junior guard Chris Watt help give N.D. a very nice left side, essentially creating a mirror image of last year’s front – while Martin was Notre Dame’s top lineman, the right side of the line was stronger overall. One thing to like about this front: it’s the deepest yet under Kelly. It’s also the most experienced, not only in terms of career starts but in its familiarity with his system. The line will be the best of Kelly’s tenure.

And the running game will continue to improve as a result. N.D. lost a valuable weapon in Jonas Gray, who flourished in the system, but the cupboard isn’t bare. For one, the Irish bring back a starter in Cierre Wood (1,102 yards and 9 scores), the program’s first 1,000-yard back in five years and a steady option as a receiver coming out of the backfield. The Irish will also keep Theo Riddick (38 receptions for 463 yards) at running back; he made the move from receiver for the final two games of last season.

There’s also sophomore George Atkinson III, who held a slight role in the offense last season but broke out during the spring game, rushing for 124 yards and adding another 54 receiving yards. And once he recovers from an ankle injury, former U.S.C. transfer Amir Carlisle will add further depth to the equation; Carlise received a waiver from the N.C.A.A. that will allow him to play this season.

As in the running game, you’ve seen Kelly’s teams take a sizable statistical leap on the defensive side of the ball: Notre Dame ended last season ranked in the top 30 nationally in both scoring and total defense. But there’s still significant room for improvement, especially when it comes to stopping the run, and the Irish must make another leap without five of last season’s starters, including three from the secondary. What bodes well for this group’s chances this season is the fact that it will be entering its third season running defensive coordinator Bob Diaco’s 3-4 scheme; it’s obvious that the light turned on at times last fall, though the Irish remained too inconsistent for Diaco’s taste.

Another good sign is the team’s youth up front. Despite being young, last year’s line held opponents to only eight touchdowns on the ground, the program’s second-fewest since 1990. One of those youngsters is gone, however: Aaron Lynch, the team’s best edge rusher, transferred to South Florida after last season. That adds some pressure onto ends Kapron Lewis-Moore (32 tackles, 4.0 for loss) and Stephon Tuitt (30 tackles, 2.0 sacks), with Tuitt moving outside to end on a permanent basis after shuffling inside and out a year ago. While getting a full season out of Lewis-Moore will help, Notre Dame is still lacking an end who can bring pressure on passing downs – Tuitt and Lewis-Moore are prototypical, 300-pound ends, but that size does limit what each can do on passing downs.

But they’ll be anchors against the run, and the Irish do have some linebackers who can rush the passer from the second level. One new addition to watch at end is Jarron Jones, who, like Lewis-Moore, is big enough to move inside when Diaco opts to move into a four-linemen formation. Notre Dame brings back nose guard Louis Nix III (45 tackles, 4.5 for loss), an 11-game starter last fall, but one of the most pleasing developments from spring ball was the steady play of junior Kona Schwenke, who moved inside from end and showed himself capable of shouldering the load in the middle. Between these two and incoming freshman Sheldon Day, the Irish have great depth at nose guard.

These interior linemen will be asked to push the pocket, attack the ball-carrier and control the line of scrimmage. Most of all, however, they’ll be told to occupy blockers – because occupied blockers means a clean Manti Te’o (128 tackles, 13.5 for loss, 5.0 sacks), and a clean Te’o means trouble for opposing offenses. There’s not much to add about Te’o, the sideline-to-sideline menace who will easily net all-American honors and a cupboard full of national hardware; instead, simply consider Notre Dame’s defense without Te’o, had he opted to forego his final season of eligibility and enter the N.F.L. Draft. That he didn’t gives Diaco and the Irish one more season with the star of this defense – a player who can change the complexion of a game with one play, and a linebacker who completely and radically alters the overall tenor of this defense from his spot at inside linebacker.

Calabrese was viewed as a likely contributor alongside Te’o in the middle; while Rees is no longer in the picture at quarterback, Calabrese should move back into the rotation following the season opener. The starter at the second inside linebacker spot is junior Dan Fox (48 tackles), a former special teams contributor who held down the top spot for every game of last season. Outside, the Irish bring back junior Prince Shembo (31 tackles, 2.0 sacks) but must replace Darius Fleming, who did a nice job bringing some heat on passing downs. Shembo swaps sides, moving into Fleming’s role, so he’ll need to be more explosive. On the other side, Notre Dame will go with junior Danny Spond. One player to watch is sophomore Ishaq Williams, a high school defensive end recruited solely for his ability to be a potential game-changer as a pass rusher. If Shembo falters, Williams will move into the starting lineup.

The warning signs are there in the secondary. Last year’s group, one paced by three senior starters, took a horrible nosedive after a nice debut under Kelly and this staff. In September, Notre Dame will look to reverse this slide while breaking in a new cast of characters – and very new, when it comes to cornerback. The good news is that there’s experience and depth to spare at safety, where the Irish put forth a two-deep composed only of seniors and a second level brimming with new additions from the recruiting trail. After splitting time at one safety spot last fall, seniors Zeke Motta (40 tackles) and Jamoris Slaughter (45 tackles, 1 interception) will be Notre Dame’s full-time starters. Behind this pair are seniors Dan McCarthy and Chris Salvi, followed by the rookies – led by Elijah Shumate, a New Jersey product who looks like a player.

The issue is at cornerback, where Notre Dame’s starting pairing of juniors Lo Wood and Bennett Jackson combined to make 26 tackles last fall, with more than a few coming on special teams. This is a concern, and a pretty large concern at that, the biggest one facing this team’s personnel heading into September. What the Irish don’t have is any incoming cornerback help, with most of last year’s class devoted to safety, so it’s going to be Wood, Jackson, sophomores Josh Atkinson and Cam McDaniel and redshirt freshman Jalen Brown – come hell or high water. You can raise the red flag: Notre Dame is inexperienced at cornerback, if hopeful that Brown can make an impact, and has question marks surrounding its ability to bring consistent pressure on passing downs.

It seemed as if David Ruffer’s season ran off the rails early, when his missed field goal against U.S.F. proved to be the difference in that painful loss; whatever the reason, he simply wasn’t the sort of never-fail kicker the Irish saw for parts of 2009 and all of 2010. Ruffer’s replacement, fittingly enough, will be the player he replaced three years ago: Nick Tausch, who made 14 of 17 tries that fall, moves back into the starting lineup. While Tausch lacks a big leg, Notre Dame can turn to sophomore kickoff specialist Kyle Brindza in a pinch. Brindza can also handle punts if needed, though Notre Dame does return senior Ben Turk, who had a nice second half to last season. Atkinson III is a weapon on kick returns, but the Irish must get more on punts – last year’s team gave up this side of the field position battle.

Position battle(s) to watch

Wide receiver It won’t be solely on the receivers to replace Michael Floyd, the all-American target who led the Irish in receptions, receiving yards and touchdowns in each of the last two seasons. What N.D. will do is spread the ball more evenly throughout its entire formation, not only at receiver but also to its tight ends and running backs – where a player like Riddick, with his receiver background, could really be a difference-maker. The lead options in the backfield include Riddick and Wood (27 receptions), if not also Atkinson III, who showed some flash catching the football during the spring. These three will see a larger role in the passing game with Floyd out of the picture.

As will Notre Dame’s tight ends, though it will be hard for Tyler Eifert (63 receptions for 803 yards) do more for this offense than he did a year ago, when he led all F.B.S. tight ends in receptions en route to all-American honors. But increased depth at the position should allow Kelly to use more multiple-tight end formations, teaming Eifert with Ben Koyack, Alex Welch and Troy Niklas – the latter a converted linebacker – to give N.D. a number of different looks in the intermediate passing game.

But someone needs to be Notre Dame’s go-to target, though Eifert is the chains-mover on third down. The options include junior T.J. Jones (38 for 366), the team’s top returning receiver, as well as senior Robby Toma (19 for 207), who had a very nice final month to last season. Senior John Goodman should round out the starting trio, giving Notre Dame some nice size; Jones and Toma are not overly big. But depth at receiver is an issue, especially with injury issues surrounding Luke Massa and Daniel Smith. To help give Kelly an adequate rotation, N.D. needs a breakout year from redshirt freshman DaVaris Daniels and some help from one of the four incoming freshmen, led by Davonte Neal.

Game(s) to watch

Six true home games, four road games, two games played at a neutral site. It’s your typical Notre Dame schedule, complete with a few sure-fire wins – though not too many – and loaded with several games against teams with national title aspirations. How the Irish navigate this schedule hinges entirely on whether they take care of business against the bottom half; Notre Dame must win games against Navy, Purdue, Miami, Pittsburgh, Boston College and Wake, as doing so leaves some wiggle room against the five or six opponents with 10-win potential. So who will the Irish – you know, people from Ireland – root for in the season opener? On one hand, you have the Fighting Irish. Then there’s Navy, and the founding father of the American Navy, John Barry, was born in County Wexford, which is about 75 miles down the road from Dublin.

Season breakdown & prediction

In a nutshell Is Notre Dame ready to turn the corner? Not with this schedule, no. In terms of its personnel, Notre Dame has issues at cornerback, where the lack of proven options is troubling, and must formulate a plan for getting pressure on the quarterback on third down. On offense, the issue is simple: N.D. has weapons – including in the passing game, where a more balanced approach will offset Floyd’s departure – but must cut down on its turnovers; as we saw last fall, this offense, or any offense, cannot reach its full potential if it doesn’t protect the football. In short, teams like Michigan State, Oklahoma and U.S.C. are going to hard for Notre Dame to handle.

But there are signs here, signs that the Irish are close to breaking through, and they can’t afford to be overlooked – despite the idea that the Irish head into every September with heightened expectations. I think that Golson provides an entirely different mentality on offense, both in terms of his ability to avoid pressure in the pocket to the added quirks he allows Kelly to pursue on the ground. The offensive line is the best of Kelly’s tenure; so will be the running game. The Irish won’t be as dynamic throwing the football without Floyd, but don’t look for the passing game to suffer as a result: Notre Dame will place even greater emphasis on its tight ends and running backs, which should open up more room for players like Jones, Toma and Daniels. There’s a fine blend of experience, athleticism and potential throughout the front seven, and there’s Te’o, the best linebacker in college football.

So what’s a successful season, all things considered? The team’s youth points towards a stumble or two; the tougher schedule locks Notre Dame into four losses during the regular season, in my mind – but no more, leaving the Irish at 8-4 heading into the postseason. But judging by how Kelly has approached this roster, most notably in his handling of the quarterback situation, paints this fall as a building season – not a rebuilding season, but one where Notre Dame gets on the same page, accumulates experience and prepares to take off in 2013. Laugh, if you’d like. But keep in mind the idea that N.D. would have won at least nine games last fall had it done a better job protecting the football. The Irish are close. This schedule might not lead to an improvement in the win column, but if you look closely, you see a Notre Dame program that has made genuine and meaningful improvement in nearly every facet of the game over Kelly’s two seasons– you see a program almost ready to push back.

Dream season Notre Dame loses at Michigan State early and against at Oklahoma in October, but a season-ending victory at U.S.C. puts the Irish in a B.C.S. bowl – and knocks the Trojans out of national title contention.

Nightmare season Turnovers continue to plague this offense, leading Kelly to play all four quarterbacks in an effort to stem the bleeding. The lack of options at cornerback spells doom against the better passing teams on this schedule, dropping Notre Dame down to 6-6.

In case you were wondering

Where do Notre Dame fans congregate? As expected, you can’t log on the Internet without bumping into at least one Notre Dame Web site. Here are a few to check out: One Foot Down, ND Nation, Irish Envy, UHND.com, Irish Illustrated, Gold Helmet and Irish Eyes. I’m sure I’m missing a few, so list them below. As readers have pointed out, Irish Sports Daily and Her Loyal Sons might be the best options of all.

Notre Dame’s all-name nominee OT Dan Furlong.

Word Count

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Up Next

Who is No. 24? The next team’s leading returning tackler attended the same high school as a television producer whose credits include an hour-long series whose star, on the side, performed in a rock group that included the former drummer for a band that had a single top the Billboard charts for two weeks in the summer of 1968.

Notre Dame Football: Why Tommy Rees Will Lose Starting Job to Andrew Hendrix

The No. 24 (per USA Today’s Coaches Poll) Notre Dame Fighting Irish will attempt to make their third consecutive bowl game in 2012, but they will be doing it with Andrew Hendrix under center instead on Tommy Rees.

Rees would’ve been the starting quarterback for the Fighting Irish in Week 1 against Navy in Ireland if he never got arrested in May. Instead, he’ll be watching from the sidelines—or at home—since Notre Dame decided to suspend him for the season opener.

Rees was a solid starting QB in his sophomore season last year, throwing for 2,871 yards and 20 touchdowns. His completion percentage improved by four percent compared to his freshman season and he definitely looked more comfortable running the offense.

He and former receiver Michael Floyd led Notre Dame to the Champs Sports Bowl, but eventually fell to Florida State, 18-14.

Notre Dame head coach Brian Kelly has yet to announce who will replace Rees in Ireland, but Andrew Hendrix is a safe bet.

Hendrix is joined by Everett Golson, Gunner Kiel and Charlie Fiessinger as the other quarterbacks on the official Notre Dame roster, but only Hendrix has any experience.

Hendrix played in five games for Notre Dame last season, including its bowl game, where he replaced Rees. On the year, he was 18-for-37 passing with 249 yards, one touchdown and two interceptions. Those aren’t great numbers, but they could easily be improved with consistent playing time that will come in 2012.

Despite the experienced Hendrix, ESPN’s Matt Fortuna believes that Golson will end up taking the spot start against Navy. Fortuna writes that Golson has from now until September 1 to prove that he’s the better option and that his dual-threat ability could be what gives him an edge.

ESPN’s Joe Tessitore and Brian Griese both acknowledge that Golson is a good option, but that Hendrix has the upper hand. They note that Kelly is going to look for a QB who won’t turn the ball over, since Rees was notorious for throwing picks and putting the ball on the ground from time to time as well.

In order for Hendrix to win the Week 1 job, he needs to prove how consistent he can be. Every pass needs to be accurate and every pitch on an option play needs to be there in time. There can’t be any lapses in judgment. He needs to look and be confident running the Notre Dame offense.

For Hendrix to win the starting job once Rees returns in Week 2, he has to have a good game against Navy and lead the Fighting Irish to a victory—and not a nail-biter, either. Throwing for around 250 yards with two touchdowns and no interceptions could convince Kelly to give him the ball against Purdue in Week 2.

Consistency is the answer to Notre Dame winning football games in 2012 and Andrew Hendrix will be the quarterback leading them to victory.

Read more Notre Dame Football news on BleacherReport.com

And so it begins: BK talks 2012 season

Brian Kelly doesn’t officially kick off the 2012 football season until tomorrow, when his opening press conference takes place before the start of training camp. But that didn’t stop talk of the quarterbacking race from starting early. Joining WSBT’s Sportsbeat with Darin Pritchett and Eric Hansen, Kelly answered questions from fans all across the country…

And so it begins: BK talks 2012 season

Brian Kelly doesn’t officially kick off the 2012 football season until tomorrow, when his opening press conference takes place before the start of training camp. But that didn’t stop talk of the quarterbacking race from starting early. Joining WSBT’s Sportsbeat with Darin Pritchett and Eric Hansen, Kelly answered questions from fans all across the country…

Notre Dame Football: What Each Prospective QB Brings to the Table

No, I don’t know who’s going to be Notre Dame’s starting quarterback on Sept. 1 against Navy in Dublin (although it became slightly clearer on Tuesday). What I do know is that each of the four quarterbacks competing for playing time are very different, each bringing his own unique skill set to the position.

The start of fall camp on Saturday will allow the quarterback battle to continue where it left off after April’s Blue-Gold Game when sophomore Everett Golson was the most impressive, displaying the big-play ability that has made him a fan favorite.

What makes the decision so difficult for head coach Brian Kelly is that what one quarterback excels at, others struggle with, and vice versa. Let’s look at what Fighting Irish quarterbacks offer.

Begin Slideshow

Counting down the Irish: 25-21

It’s time to unveil the beginning of our annual Top 25 list, counting down the best players on the Irish roster. It’s an especially interesting list, and the group polled had some outstanding, yet very different, takes on who makes up the upper echelon of the Irish roster. Last year, the top 15 players on…

Notre Dame Football News: Blue-Gold Stats, Golson Makes Strong Case, Recruiting Update, Montelus Commits

Notre Dame Fighting Irish

Notre Dame Fighting Irish News

Notre Dame Blue vs. Gold: Individual Statistics

All In Choosing, developing, and trusting the team’s best option at quarterback in 2012 will define the Brian Kelly era in South Bend.

Video: Brian Kelly & Players Interviews with Brian Kelly, Kona Schwenke, Everett Golson, Jamoris Slaughter, Theo Riddick, Andrew Hendrix, George Atkinson, Tommy Rees & T…

Notre Dame Football: Everett Golson Makes Strong Case in Blue-Gold Game Going into Notre Dame’s Blue-Gold game to end the spring football season, most of the talk was on the four-man quarterback race between Tomm…

Blue-Gold Recruiting Updates Tons of recruiting updates have come in already from Saturday’s Blue-Gold Game. The biggest news came early with the commitment of Massachus…

Montelus Finishes OL ClassNotre Dame has been telling John Montelus that the Irish wanted him to complete their 2013 offensive line recruiting class for some time now and after getting his first look at campus this weekend

Irish will be looking for a quarterback this spring

Brian Kelly’s offenses at Central Michigan and Cincinnati were known for big numbers, especially when it came to the production of his quarterbacks.

Kelly hasn’t received big numbers from his quarterbacks in his two seasons at Notre Dame, and the spring focus for the Irish will be on finding a guy who can consistently produce at the position.

It’s a four-man battle royal at quarterback. There’s returning starter Tommy Rees, who has a good grasp of the offense but can’t seem to avoid mistakes (22 career interceptions). There is sophomore Andrew Hendrix, who played in five games last season and showed more as a runner than as a passer. There is redshirt freshman Everett Golson, who is short (he’s listed at 6 feet) but athletic and was highly productive in high school in Myrtle Beach, S.C. And there’s true freshman Gunner Kiel, a strong-armed early enrollee.

Full story on Rivals.com

Both Notre Dame QBs have full arsenal at disposal

Notre Dame will use two quarterbacks in the Champs Sports Bowl. So, in preparing for Notre Dame, that’s what Florida State did, too.

“What we did in practice was use two different quarterbacks and try to help us get ready,” Seminoles linebacker Nigel Bradham said Tuesday.

“You definitely have to stay on your toes. Each one of them has certain tendencies they’re good at. We have to acknowledge that as a defense and go with it.”

If there is even the slightest wrinkle in the Irish’s plan to deploy Tommy Rees and Andrew Hendrix, it’s that both now have the full offensive playbook at his disposal. According to Irish coach Brian Kelly, gone are the specialty packages for Hendrix, who earlier this season entered games as a change-of-pace option.

“We’re going to play them both,” Kelly said. “Getting them in the game – I don’t think we have to worry about, ‘We’ve got to be in this part of the field’ and ‘The game has to be like this.’ We just play them. Both of them have the ability and are prepared to go in there and play. We’re just going to go in there and we’re committed to playing both quarterbacks.”

Continue Story on Chicago Tribune

Andrew Hendrix is ready to run the entire Notre Dame offense

The evolution of Notre Dame QB Andrew Hendrix hasn’t been a gradual process. It started that way, with the sophomore quarterback getting his first snaps in situational packages, running the option and throwing the occasional high-percentage pass as he worked into the game plan as a complementary part to quarterback Tommy Rees.

Then the Stanford game happened.

It was there Hendrix was all but thrown into the fire, caution left behind with Dayne Crist all but out the door and Rees battered and ineffective in the first half against a Cardinal defense that harassed and confused the Irish starting quarterback.

A funny thing happened when Hendrix stopped running his small handful of plays and worked his way through a bigger chunk of Kelly’s playbook. The Irish offense looked better, especially with a running threat from the quarterback keeping the Cardinal defense honest.

Continue on Inside the Irish

Notre Dame QB Golson eyeing 2012

Everett Golson didn’t need anyone telling him directly that he would not take the field for Notre Dame this season. By Week 2 or 3, when his practice snaps weren’t increasing, the freshman quarterback pretty much figured out the scenario on his own.

“Maybe it would be in my best interest to redshirt,” Golson recalled, coming to grips with his situation.

“This experience really humbled me,” quarterback Everett Golson said of redshirting this season.

The reality that Golson would not be playing this season became public knowledge when sophomore Andrew Hendrix debuted against Air Force on Oct. 8, the official announcement that, at least at that moment, Golson was no higher than fourth on Notre Dame’s depth chart.

Continue Story on ESPN

Luck passes Elway, No. 4 Stanford beats Irish

STANFORD, Calif. (AP) — Andrew Luck walked back into the overcrowded home locker room at Stanford Stadium, greeted by hugs and handshakes and serenaded with a chant that suited him just perfectly.

“Macho, Macho man!” teammates bellowed, singing the lyrics to the Village People’s famous song. “I want to be a Macho man!”

Only one has earned that title on The Farm.

Luck set the school record for the most career touchdown passes and eclipsed his own single-season mark, throwing for 233 yards and four scores to lead fourth-ranked Stanford past No. 22 Notre Dame 28-14 in his home finale Saturday night.

Luck topped John Elway’s record of 77 touchdown passes and helped the Cardinal (11-1) build a 21-0 halftime lead. He has thrown for 80 touchdowns in three years – while it took Elway all four – and 35 this season.

“There’s no player in America like Andrew Luck,” Stanford coach David Shaw said. “Forget about the stats. Forget about the comparisons of other guys. It doesn’t matter.”

Luck of the Irish? Forget it.

Luck is on Stanford’s side.

The victory likely vaulted the Cardinal into consideration for an at-large BCS bowl bid for the second straight year – with the Fiesta Bowl among the leading possible destinations – but they will not play for a major championship this season. The lone loss to Oregon put the Ducks in the Pac-12 title game out of the North Division and crushed Stanford’s dreams of a national title.

“I think one loss, that’s great,” said Luck, who turned down a chance to be the NFL draft’s top pick this year. “We’ve been on a 23-2 run for a while, I think it’s pretty impressive. We put ourselves in position to be in a good bowl game, and that’s what we wanted to do.”

Notre Dame’s stumbled at the finish line again.

Tommy Rees threw an interception, lost a fumble and took a bruising blow to the ribs for Notre Dame (8-4) before getting benched. Andrew Hendrix threw for 192 yards and a touchdown and ran for another score in a second-half rally for the Fighting Irish that came up short.

Keeping Stanford close gave the Irish little satisfaction.

“We didn’t come here for second prize,” said Notre Dame coach Brian Kelly, who would not name a starting quarterback for the bowl game. “We got off to a slow start and battled against it. To me, the scoreboard showed 28-14 and that’s not good enough. The slow start put us in a tough position.”

Stanford coach David Shaw shined the spotlight on his program and his quarterback’s Heisman Trophy campaign with a calculated rip of the “flawed” BCS system this week. The Cardinal’s play matched his words for 30 minutes.

A sloppy second half almost took everything else Stanford had worked for this season.

Kelly benched Rees in favor of Hendrix to start the third quarter, and the move pumped some life into a stagnant Irish offense. Notre Dame took advantage of pass interference and roughing the passer penalties for its first score.

Hendrix threw a 6-yard TD to Michael Floyd to slice Stanford’s lead to 21-7 halfway through the third quarter. Floyd finished with 95 catches on the year, breaking the single-season mark of 93 set by Golden Tate in 2009.

The Irish were driving for another score when Hendrix overthrew a receiver, the ball was tipped and intercepted by Michael Thomas. When Notre Dame regained possession, Hendrix was sacked by A.J. Tarpley for a 13-yard loss that sent another drive tumbling.

“Consistency is the one thing I have struggled with the most,” said Hendrix, who completed 11 of 24 passes.

Only room for one quarterback to steal the show.

Luck quickly connected with Coby Fleener for a 55-yard TD pass to extend Stanford’s lead to 28-7 with 5:40 remaining to put the game out of reach. Fleener also caught a 28-yard TD in the first half that gave Luck every major school touchdown record.

Stanford’s Senior Day belonged to the redshirt junior.

Luck lobbed a fade to the short corner of the end zone to complete a 3-yard score to Levine Toilolo, giving Stanford a 7-0 lead in the first quarter. Even he had to hold back a smile running to the sideline to a swarm of well-wishes from teammates for the records-tying toss.

But Luck lost his rhythm when a back-side blitzer closed the pocket, and he tossed a short pass that Darius Fleming intercepted and returned 35 yards. Notre Dame took over at the Stanford 10 after a 15-yard penalty on Fleener for a horse collar.

Stanford stifled the Irish on consecutive plays and forced a 20-yard field goal that David Ruffer missed wide right.

Luck followed with a 28-yard TD pass to Fleener. The tight end dragged cornerback Robert Blanton the final 10 yards into the end zone, sealing Luck’s marks in the school record book.

“I think it’s something I’ll be able to tell my kids and grandkids when I’m watching Andrew on TV someday,” Fleener said. “He’s got my Heisman vote.”

© 2011 The Associated Press

Notre Dame’s offense hits growth spurt

Long before the Notre Dame Stadium crowd temporarily solved its happy tedium by doing the wave, before reserves from both teams turned the 29th meeting between Air Force and Notre Dame into a Playstation copyright infringement, there was an unmistakable bolt of progress.

In a game flush with historical footnotes, it was the here and now of the Irish offense that buoyed the postgame mood of second-year ND coach Brian Kelly.

No, it wasn’t a statement game, but Notre Dame’s 59-33 bludgeoning of Air Force Saturday had the feel of an ultimatum to it.

Against an admittedly overmatched Falcon defense, wide receiver Theo Riddick re-emerged, running back Jonas Gray continued his renaissance, starting quarterback Tommy Rees distanced himself from his turnover-prone days and the concept of the change-up QB finally showed up.

Not only did sophomore quarterback Andrew Hendrix make his collegiate debut Saturday, he made a splash in the highest-scoring game (combined by both teams) in Notre Dame Stadium history and the most prolific output by an Irish team since Lou Holtz hung 62 on Rutgers 15 years ago in his final home game as ND’s head coach.

Full story at South Bend Tribune

Irish have experience on offensive line

SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP)—Everywhere Trevor Robinson looks, he sees familiar faces. And for the veteran Notre Dame guard, that’s really a good thing.

For Notre Dame to get where it wants to go this season—a BCS bowl—the Irish will rely on an offensive front that returns four starters. On the day before camp began last week, Coach Brian Kelly quickly pointed to the line as one of the team’s strengths.

“There are times where it’s tough for an offensive lineman to be a team leader. Just by the nature of what you do,” Robinson said. “It’s kind of a point we want to get to. We know we can be successful and we want to be the group that takes the team to success.”

Robinson, who has made 27 starts as he enters his fourth season, will be joined by three other returning starters—center Braxston Cave and tackles Zack Martin and Taylor Dever. The only missing piece from last season is left guard Chris Stewart, who played a year ago while attending law school and has used up his eligibility.

The Irish have veterans ready to step in for Stewart in fifth-year senior Andrew Nuss, who played in 13 games a year ago and can also play tackle, and Chris Watt, who can play guard or center.

“This is the most continuity we’ve had from year to year since I’ve been here,” Robinson said, crediting the system that Kelly implemented upon his arrival in December 2009. “Everything was different and now everything is almost the same. … Where we are now compared to where we were last year, it’s really night and day.”

The Irish allowed only 20 sacks through 13 games a year ago in a spread offense in which the quarterback is often moving.

Robinson and his buddies will be blocking for the likes of Cierre Wood and Jonas Gray when the season opens Sept. 3 against South Florida. On Wednesday, the Irish put on their pads and concentrated on the running game.

Kelly said it was obvious that his two most experienced quarterbacks, Dayne Crist and Tommy Rees, were ahead of sophomore Andrew Hendrix and freshman Everett Golson in this segment of practice. Kelly hopes to announce his starter after the first 19 practices, which would fall around the third week of August.

“Everett and Andrew would obviously show better if we were just playing faster,” Kelly said. “And right now Dayne and Tommy have shown the ability to play smarter, getting into the right run checks, making sure that we’ve got the right plays called. … Those guys have pushed themselves up a little bit because of the way we are playing right now.”

© 2011 The Associated Press