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Friday, November 7, 2025

Week 8: See How We Are

Hey Mr. DJ, won't you hear my last prayer?
Hey ho, rock 'n' roll, deliver me from nowhere..


Dateline:  Flint Lake, IN


You have all heard how I believe The Universe occasionally speaks to Jerrence, yes?  

Despite his best efforts to ignore it. 

Well it happened again this week, this time inside the Valparaiso Cinemark theater, watching the new Bruce Springsteen flick, "Springsteen:  Deliver Me From Nowhere" --  a title which, Jerrence realized after seeing the film, described exactly how he felt after last Saturday's ND - BC football game.

The film, which is quite terrific, is about a particularly dark, depression-addled period in The Boss's life -- post Born To Run / Darkness On The Edge of Town / The River success but pre the mega-stardom of the mid-'80s -- that led directly to his "Nebraska" album, a stripped down recording made in his bedroom that no one expected -- or necessarily wanted -- other than him.  

At one point Springsteen / Jeremy Allen White declares, "I'm lost."  

How can we go 3-10 on 3rd down against these guys?!
Well, join the Mike Denbrock Club, Boss -- because that's exactly how the team, especially the offense looked for much of the game.

"Open All Night" represents probably the most optimistic song of the album's 10 songs -- which isn't saying much. 

But that, too, is fitting from an ND perspective. Saturday was undeniably a soul sucking three hours but they won, something a few of other playoff teams aspiring couldn't do -- so, hey, we live to fight another day. 

And look what followed immediately Bruce's debacle:  "Born In The USA" -- #1 literally everywhere in the world.

Quote of the Week



"If you have three kickers, 
you don't have one... "
        
    Marcus Freeman



Yes, he actually said that.  Without a hint of irony.

Word of the Month

Used in a sentence paragraph:  The pit in Jerrence's stomach grew deeper with each self inflicted wound Notre Dame would gift wrap to Boston College.  

"They're not really going to actually lose this game, are they?" he wondered.

When he could breath normally again... minutes after the clock ticked to :00 (thank you Jeremiyah Love)... he knew this was three hours of his life he wasn't going to get ever back.  It triggered a fast inventory of other things he really, really didn't like, like:

1) Old people driving in the passing lane
2) Colonoscopy prep
3) Attempting to fold a fitted sheet
4) Witnessing ACC officiating

But mostly, Notre Dame playing down to its clearly inferior opponents.  That had to be near the top of the list.  It was something he'd seen across many of the coaches in the post-Lou Holtz Era.  

Jerrence knew what the French might describe as ennui ( where boredom meets despair), Jerrence found the Germans -- a culture that could find the darkness in any occasion -- had a better word for his post-game attitudinal malaise, Weltschmerz.   He wasn't depressed, just sad and tired.

Game 8 Thoughts


I was wrong!
Self destruction's got me again.



In the wake of the unfolding NBA gambling scandal, one could be forgiven if the thought crossed your mind -- ever so briefly because, you know, perish the thought -- someone in the ND program got themselves into some significant financial trouble, got approached by someone who said, "We really need ND not to cover this week..." and voila! 

I jest of course.  Still... 

---------------------------------

Here's also a few other quick bites that came to mind watching the game


1.  CJ  It seems to me that lost amongst the weeping, wailing and gnashing of teeth over ND's performance was this:  Carr played a pretty damn good game. 18-25 for 299 yards and 2 TD's is not nothing.  And after the internet's overwrought concern about his mediocre USC showing, he looked really solid.  

One thing about his long passes I've noticed:  when he misses, he misses long.  Which is to say, its almost always going to be an incomplete pass, not an INT.

2.  Style points    I happen to believe in the concept -- and Saturday represented a missed opportunity that I don't think the BCS Playoff Committee will give ND a pass on again.

The fact is, between the kicking horror show and Price's fumble, we left 13 points on the table. 25-10 should've been 38-10.   Someone, somewhere, would still bitch about not covering the spread but the optics would look soooo much better.

3. Kicking
.   A short, perosnal story:  everybody knows I was a placekicker in HS.  I was pretty good, not great.  I made a few kicks that ended up representing the winning margin and subsequently got way more credit than I probably deserved.

I also missed a few kicks. At least one that was a game decider.  And I was devastated.  Felt I let the whole team down.  The coaches had to talk me out of a very deep funk. Even when I missed less consequential kicks, I was bummed -- it was the ultimate buzz kill after the offense worked hard to get in the position to come away with some points.  And then you don't.  Not good.

So seeing the ND kickers' jocular sideline demeanor after their misses -- and God knows what the context was -- I just didn't understand.  To say the optics weren't good would be a massive understatement. 

I've always likened the public opinion of kickers to that of the Franco-American relationship.  They tolerate the U.S. until they need us to save them from the Germans; then you LOVE us.

Kicking-wise right now, France would be thinking, "Hey America, we're good. Poland has said they'd help us..."

4. Coaching.   Nature or nurture?  Chicken or egg?  When it typically comes to assigning blame -- recall the adage, "Success has many fathers but failure is an orphan" -- we have the perennial debate, is it the coaches or the players (most) at fault?  

This is a game that I'm willing to look squarely at the coaches, particularly Freeman / Denbrock / Biagi.  That was not a team that looked very prepared -- either for BC loading up to stop the run (well, duh) or the skill set of their 2nd QB.  

I do find it funny how no one seems to be calling for Chris Ash's head anymore. 

Buddy's Buddy


Typically, I am loathe to cite someone for a single act, good or bad.   It seems recognition should be about some consistency of excellence.  

This week, consistency was in obvious short supply, except if you're talking about dumb ass penalties.

So by the beginning of the 4th quarter... with ND up by only one score... with a group of kickers who couldn't hit the ocean if they were teeing it up on the beach... and pinned back almost on the their own goal line, things didn't look super comfortable.

Enter Superman.

:14 and 94 yards later, Jerrence exhales for the first time in about two hours.


And while you're sprinting down the sidelines, looking for your positions coach to tell him 'I told ya so' was an interesting touch, Jeremiyah Love....


I'm more than a bird, I'm more than a plane
I'm more than some pretty face beside a train
And it's not easy to be me...



RE-PETE (A shameless, illegal lift of Pete Sampson's weekly mail-bag)



If you're like me, you've got questions about the path forward to a BCS Playoff berth.

Other than the famous Al Davis mantra of 'just win, baby'.

Well, Pete Sampson has, if not answers, an educated opinion about what it all means with a month still to play out... 

Still, best not to invest too much time or energy for a couple weeks...  as the saying goes, "a lot of ball game left."

-----------------------------------

Are the Irish a lock to make the field at 10-2?

Probably? And this is where Freeman’s “wasted time” comment holds the most weight. With four weeks remaining in the regular season plus championship weekend, there are too many permutations to figure out whether the Irish would definitely make the CFP with 10 wins or merely be almost certain to make it. (The Athletic’s model places Notre Dame’s odds to make the field at 81%)

There are enough matchups in the SEC among teams trailing Notre Dame in the rankings to imagine one of those programs jumping the Irish. If #11 Texas wins out against #5 Georgia, Arkansas and #3 Texas A&M, it’s easy to envision the Longhorns vaulting the Irish. Similar story for #13 Oklahoma, which closes with No. #4 Alabama, #20 Missouri and LSU. It’s harder to make a case for #16 Vanderbilt, which finishes with Auburn, Kentucky and #25 Tennessee.

However, #7 BYU heads to #8 Texas Tech this weekend, with the loser certain to fall below Notre Dame. #9 Oregon also heads to #20 Iowa on Saturday. If the Hawkeyes upset the Ducks, there’s a good chance Notre Dame jumps Oregon next week.

But because of the current CFP selection criteria, where the five highest-ranked conference champions receive automatic bids, Notre Dame was actually the last at-large team into the field on Tuesday. Virginia, ranked #14 by the committee, made it as the highest-ranked ACC team. Memphis wasn’t ranked in the Top 25 at all, but the Tigers took the slot as the projected top Group of 5 program.

Yes, it’s very likely Notre Dame will be back in the CFP at 10-2. It’s just not quite a stone-cold lock.



Source: The Athletic
November 5, 2025

Cocktail of the Month


A New England-based horror story?

This story / cocktail comes as close as one is ever going to get to mirroring the anxiety-inducing performance we saw last Saturday night. 

And only one day removed from Halloween.  

How fitting.


THE LEGEND OF SLUSHY HOLLOW
("The Legend of Sleepy Hollow" 
by Washington Irving (1820)


An essential entry into the canon of American horror, this short story details the trials and tribulations of the superstitious Ichabod Crane.

Consider the delightful autumn ambiance of harvest parties, ghost stories, and a terrifying specter with a severed head. 

If this isn't enough to send shivers down your spine, then try this frosty take on grog.

            
Yield:  1 serving


-- 2 oz. dark rum
-- 1 oz. water
-- ½ oz. freshly squeezed lime juice
-- ½ oz. honey or simple syrup


-----------------------------


1. Combine water, dark rum, lime juice and honey or simple syrup in a blender. Add a generous amount of ice cubes to the blender.

2. Blend the ingredients until you achieve a slushy consistency. Add more ice if needed to reach the desired texture.

3. Pour the slushy grog into a glass.

Source:  The Turn of the Screwdriver
50 Dark & Twisted Literary Cocktails
By Iphigenia Jones

Schedule 202


August
31                @Miami             L      

September 
                                                  
13                Texas A&M         L                      
20               Purdue                W                   Corrigan brother reunion!                      
27                @Arkansas        W                   Soooiiieeee! 

October  
                                                                                                     
4                 Boise St.              W                    Alumni Hall Reunion weekend, Union Pier MI        
11                NC State              W
18               USC                      W                     "Lincoln, We Hardly Knew Ye" (wussy)                    

November 

 1                 @BC                    W
 9                Navy                  
16               @Pitt                          
23               Syracuse                                               
29              @Stanford                                                              

December

19-20      PLAYOFF GAME!

  

Wager 2025

First BCS Playoff ranking out and ND clocks in at #10 -- and in spitting distance of hosting a 1st round game.

One would think that ought to be incentive enough to keep these kids focused over the last four games, yes?  And yet, one can't shake the feeling that, after eight games, fully 2/3 of the season, this team is not last year's team, as much as we'd like 'em to be.  

So color me still a little uncertain as to how substantive this team is...


If I had known then 
What I know now...




Wins

ND Equivalence

Domer

12

The Joker



"Do I really look like a guy with a plan?"

----- 

Ledger's Joker is mercurial, charismatic and a complete psychopath.


Utterly unforgettable.


 Just as a Notre Dame undefeated, on-their-way-to-a-national championship-season would be. 


 

Kevin C.

John P

John L

Brian M 

JP 

Bryan G  

Raz 

Dave M

Tim B.




11

Otto



"Don't call me stupid!"
-----
Ex-CIA operative Otto lives at the intersection of dangerous and moronic.

An 'Otto season' for ND would be a rollercoaster -- a lot of fun with youth at some key positions, and likely more than it's fair share of 'that wasn't very clever' moments.

Gutsch , Sloane
Daryl
Jim S. 
Peter 
Tim 
Ted
Bill
Jim B
Pat B
George
Alex, Feif
Garrett
Spit the Elder
10

Hans Landa


 "That's a bingo!"

-----

Jew hunter Landa -- equal parts chillingly pathological and  pragmatic, this character would probably represent a 10-win regular season that might make you sick to your stomach but ultimately pretty satisfied.

 

Jerrence, 

Mike C,  

Tim C.  

Mark U. 

Jerry P. 

Jerry C.  

Mike B.

Brian W. 

Jim T.

Mike GBose

Jerry W

Lini, Randy  

Greg

Kyle W. 


9

RP McMurphy



"I'm a goddamn marvel of modern science."

-----

What's the residual emotion from Cuckoo's Nest?  Sadness.


RP, a guy who sees things clearly but can't get out of his own way.


When it doesn't end well, one is left thinking what could've been. 


Like a 9-win season. 

 

 

Matt

Alvin

8

Jason Bourne



"I don't know who I am.  Or where I'm going.  None of it."

------

An apt summary of an 8-win ND season.  A lot of difficult questions ultimately unanswered.


Still, the Bourne trilogy rocks and JB is The Man. 



 

7

John Wick



"I'm thinking I'm back..."
-----
For many, ND winning only 7 games would be akin to someone shooting their dog -- and requiring appropriate payback.

And like with John Wick, rationale requiring very few words of explanation.  

 

6

Maximus


"Are you not entertained!"
------
Probably not, if ND only won six games... but that's not the point here:  it probably says a lot about me that the final ranked character is the most moral, selfless one of the bunch.



 




Sports Imitating Art. 


The Falling Man, by Auguste Rodin, 1882


Schadenfreude of the Week.


2/3 of the season in the books and now the games -- everyone's games -- get super interesting.  Those longtime proponents of an expanded playoff, feel free to pat yourself on the back and say "I told you so!"

And while everything has a heightened excitement about it, it does not come with a similarly increased level of clarity as it pertains to ND's chances.

So let provide primer for this week's games, provided by someone who's done more thinking about this than me (!):  

--  Miss St. over #5 Georgia, 12 (ESPN)
--  #3 Texas A&M over #22 Missouri, 3:30 (ABC)
--  Iowa over #9 Oregon, 3:30 (CBS)
--  Auburn over #16 Vandy, 4 (SECN)
--  Wake Forest over #14 UVA, 7 (ESPN)
--  Cal over #15 Louisville, 7 (ESPN2) 
--  LSU over #4 Alabama, 7:30 (ABC)

There will be a quiz.  

*  Irish fans should root for unbeaten Texas A&M to remain unbeaten because a win over Missouri would eliminate the Tigers from being a contender to be the 5th SEC team in the field. 
    -- The same goes for Vanderbilt if the Commodores fall to Auburn.

*  Alabama and Georgia may not be knocked out by losses this weekend, but in the big picture, the consequences of those losses would greatly reduce the possibilities of both the SEC getting a 5th bid and the ACC getting a 2nd.

*  If Oregon loses, all of a sudden there are possibilities where those three spots reserved for the Big Ten could become two.

*  A Virginia loss would go a long way toward the ACC ending up as a 1-bid league and so, to a lesser extent, would a Louisville loss.

But I digress.  This week's honorees:
-----------------------------------------------

1.
  Miami.  One can say this now that ND has appeared inside the first BCS Playoff ranking... but despite it's being in ND's best interest for both the Hurricanes and the Aggies to keep winning, if one of them has to go down -- and it's clear that Miami has accepted that challenge --  it couldn't happen to a more appropriate bunch. 

2.
  Georgia Tech.   This year's mystery "how / when did they get good?" team...

3.  Vandy.  
Like a root canal, this one hurts but it's seemingly necessary.  We live in an age where (I think) we'd all like to see Vanderbilt becomes respectable -- wouldn't it be nice to have one SEC program take academics seriously -- but just not too respectable.  

Sorry Clark Lea but we needed you to lose. And maybe one more time.. .



Terry's Tools.


New and improved (?)
I consider this The Calm Before the Storm.

The more the intensity, of the playoff picture increases... 

The more the 'win or lose your job' pressure hits coaches smack in the face... 

The better the odds for someone doing -- or saying -- something poorly thought through.

I can't wait. 

As The Joker once opined...


-------------------------------------------------


1)  Officiating .   We've been whinging about the abysmal refereeing for over a month now.  Interesting to hear this week coach Swinney go off on them.  Call it sour grapes -- Clemson is having a nightmare season -- but he's not wrong.  

As Mike Gordon inquired this week, how do you get an offsides call on a shift?!  I think Dabo would like to know that too.

If you have the time, give this a listen: EXTREMELY insightful.  (And depressing -- don't expect things to get better.)



2). Antonio Brown.  The NFL's most stable athlete from 2010-20 is back in the news and it's,
um, not good.  

Shocker, I know. 

When you say, "Extradited..."
Mr. Brown was arrested in Dubai -- because that's where you go when you've got nothing to be worried about back in the US... 

Well, he's been charged with one count of attempted second-degree murder with a deadly weapon, facing up to 15 years in prison.  

Brown claimed he had been jumped and attacked. No arrests were made at the time of the incident, which was captured on video and made a stir on social media. 

Following an investigation, it was determined that Brown ran toward the alleged victim and fired shots after the initial fight had been broken up.


Name of the Week


It occurs to me that, lest anyone think this section is all about making fun of anyone's name... let me disabuse you of that notion.

I come here to celebrate, not to mock.

The fact is, most of this blog's audience were born in an age of fairly limited creative choices.

In my family, one's full name had to include that of a saint, although how my dad argued ND coach, St. Terry Brennan, still remains a mystery.  

And what exactly was the fascination with the name "Jerry" in 1957?!  But I digress.

Today is not like the 50's.  Or even the 1980's or '90s.  Creativity and acceptance abounds in a world that's much more globally connected.  Probably more so than many people would prefer.

And that acceptance begins at home:  looking at the ND roster for a candidate.

Even a cursory glance at the roster provides for some sneaky good candidates:  G'Bran, Drayk, Kyngstonn, Dallas, Scrap... 

But for the combination of exotica + on field excellence, the leader in the clubhouse has to be:
                                                           
                                           Boubacar Traore  

Only a redshirt sophomore, after a 2024 season ending injury... through eight games, he's got a team-leading 6.5 sacks and probably represents one of the keys to ND's defense living up to its playoff-level potential.

That's all well and good but I like his name because I bet his friends get to call him 'Boob' without PC-fueled recrimination.

Trivia


Q. What became the most-requested song on FM radio stations in the United States in the 1970's despite never having been commercially released as a single there? 

A)  MacArthur Park (Richard Harris)

B)  Stairway to Heaven (Led Zeppelin)

C)  Bohemian Rhapsody (Queen)

D)  Whiter Shade of Pale (Procol Harum)

------

(Last blog's answerCat Stevens was the beneficiary of the song, "Morning Has Broken" that became a worldwide ecumenical movement, starting out as a pagan folk tune, then becoming a Christian children's hymn, only to end up as a hit for America's most famous Muslim singer.



Final Thoughts


Yet another example of the Cosmos reminding me of the BC game...

It's not as fun as you thought it would be... 









Friday, October 31, 2025

Week 7: Rudy Can't Fail

Oh my God, you can't believe
It's happening again... 


Dateline:  Merzouga, Morocco


Jerrence sat upon his faithful steed, a dromedary named Steve, looked out over the vast Sahara and contemplated his surroundings.  Geographically, he was only a Carnevale 3-wood from the Algerian border and like Lincoln Riley in South Bend, he wasn't sure he'd ever be back this way again.  

And that brought to the fore many existential thoughts for this new Berber warrior.

But also like coach Riley and his feelings toward Notre Dame, he wasn't sure he wanted to be back -- as a mode of transportation goes, Steve was not the most comfortable of rides and Jerrence was beginning to tire of the monochromatic palate of the desert.

Finally, even if Morocco was considered, relatively speaking, 'Muslim Lite', it was still Muslim and he hadn't seen a Gin & Tonic for the past 300 miles.

That wouldn't be a sustainable dynamic.

Still, "Jerrence of Arabia" had a nice ring to it.  And with his screenwriter pal Jerry's help, maybe there could be a reboot of the iconic Peter O'Toole - Alec Guinness film... instead of fighting the Ottoman Empire, they'd have to find a new super villain.

And with the USC game only a day away, the Trojans and Riley would normally be a viable candidate.   Except no one would believe they'd be even remotely threatening outside of the Pacific Time Zone.


Quote of the Month




"Unbelievable..."
        
    Todd Blackledge


Even before Mr. Blackledge uttered that surely spontaneous remark after seeing Lincoln Riley call a pass play on 4th and inches in the 4th quarter, deep in ND territory with a game not entirely out of hand (stranger finishes have happened).. I was thinking how much I liked him as an announcer -- in general and specifically of ND games. 

He's objective, balanced and knowledgeable.  There's a reason why he's a part of NBC's Big 10 announcing 'A' team.

And the aforementioned utterance is a perfect example of that:  he was clearly incredulous about the poor play call -- not Riley's first stupid decision by that point -- yet he didn't belabor the point.  

I think that one word said it all.  Boy, I hope we see him again -- maybe for a playoff game?


Word of the Month


Used in a sentence paragraph
:  Jerrence saw the news of the coach's dismissal and wasn't particularly surprised.  

From almost Day 1 of his hire, this seemed an inevitability.

For a program that held itself to a much higher standard, not only were the team's mediocre on-field results worthy of a 'regime change', the reports of the coach's lack of off-the-field commitment surely placed the final nail in his professional coffin.



The rest of the sentient world knew that the
LSU head football coach job was not a 'turn key' sinecure ... certainly not when you're being paid almost $100M to win in the cutthroat SEC where "if you aren't cheatin', you aren't tryin'."  

And if you're not playing for a natty by Year 3, you should calling your agent to understand how ironclad the guarantees are on your contract. 

Did the coach not understand these 'stakes of the game' or did he just not care, Jerrence wondered.  

With the coach being only 64 years old, Jerrence supposed the $50M+ that was still coming to him made that question pretty much moot. 

Game 7 Thoughts


A lot of people won't get no supper tonight
Justice tonight......



With the benefit of hindsight, the outcome to the USC game always seemed pre-ordained.  Practically speaking, the Trojans just do not travel well beyond one time zone.  And then there was the karmic variable, with their coach doing everything to say outwardly 'sure we want to play the Irish' but sending a more subliminal message of 'we can't afford losing to you like we have 6 out of the last 7 times' (soon to be 7 out of 8).

So yeah, it was a case of 'Justice Tonight...'

---------------------------------

Here's also what else came to mind watching the game, with the benefit of a week's distance and some sleep (in no particular order):

1.  CJ  Every game is a new referendum on the first time QB.  Personally, other than the one egregious decision, I thought he was pretty mediocre but not awful (like many have described). 

He still hung tough after that awful mistake.  I didn't hear many people talking how perfect his TD pass to Pauling was.

He was off.  It happens.  He'l probably have other less than perfect games.  He'll play better.

2.  Zone defense   One man's opinion:  we're terrible at it.  Maybe having Leonard Moore cover Makai Lemon everywhere (a seemingly super logical move) screwed everyone else up but I'd be playing man almost exclusively the rest of the way

3. Kicking
.   Oh boy. Recognizing kickers are a different breed... not our clan's finest moment last Saturday night.  What should've been, minimally, a 38-24 game felt a lot sketchier and frankly demoralizing when the O does its job and gets nothing when you blow easy kicks.

Coach Biagi is gonna earn his salary this week.

4. Jadarian.   Two things:  1) KO returns for TD's don't happen that often so one can forgive USC to be kicking to him and not expecting lightning to strike twice... 

And 2) as unquestionably elite as J-Love is, it's becoming increasingly difficult to differentiate Price's skill set from Jeremiyah's.   

They're both really freaking good.


5.  Christian Gray.   I'm giving up on trying to figure out how I feel about this guy.  The NBC announcer referred to him as Mr. 'Feast or Famine' and that seems spot on.  Alledgedly, the NFL scouting world thinks highly of him and Coach Freeman has suggested he's been playing hurt and it's affected his technique.  Okay, if you say so.

Let's hope the bye week gave him suitable time to heal.  'Cause no one's throwing at Leonard Moore so I guess one can expect those throws still to be coming his way... 



Buddy's Buddy

Prior blogs have already addressed how Buddy often looked beyond the obvious for the less flashy attributes a person might have.

And sure, if you had a treat in your hand, you could be a serial killer and he'd have given you a tour of our house.

But that only underscores the human frailties that he shared with all of us.

Bringing us to this week's Bud.  It's not like there wasn't a plethora of candidates, from the drop dead obvious guys like Jeremiyah Love and Jadarian Price... to the less obvious, clutch performers like punter James Rendell. Or even Mr. Gray.


But this week, the nod goes the O-lineman who channeled his inner Quenton Nelson, repeatedly mauling USC defensive linemen -- opening holes where Love or Price weren't even touched before hitting the 2nd level of the D.

On top of that, getting hurt, going off and COMING BACK before finally having to call it quits.

Welcome to the club, Billy Schrauth, this week's Bud. 

Warrior. 
You love the thunder and you love the rain
What you see revealed within the anger is worth the pain




RE-PETE (A shameless, illegal lift of Pete Sampson's weekly mail-bag)



Okay, so we survived the October schedule and the USC game...

Now, if one believes the national punditry, we should coast to 10-2 and a playoff bid.

Probably wise to be a little less assumptive.  But with 7 games under our belts, also worth seeing if one could make some intelligent observations about where the team is.

Intelligent?  Certainly not by me.  That's why I plagiarize Mr. Sampson's column each week!

-----------------------------------

Is Notre Dame’s run defense for real?

Lost in the tumult of that messy start under first-year defensive coordinator Chris Ash is the fact Notre Dame’s run defense might actually be better than last season. Despite losing the spine of the defense, the run defense is allowing a half-yard less per carry and has cut out explosive plays on the ground to almost nothing. The Irish gave up 17 runs of at least 20 yards last season. This year, they’ve allowed just four.

“Because you’re gap sound. Because you’re in a position to make the play, and we’re making the play,” Freeman said. “We’re tackling better. We’re being more stout at the point of attack by our D-linemen. And we’re really just executing what you’re being asked to do at a higher level.”

The defensive line has been good, but the linebacker play might be better. Rotating five players, relying on Drayk Bowen and Kyngstonn Viliamu-Asa but also getting the best out of Jaylen Sneed, the group rates among Notre Dame’s most improved positions from opening night at Miami.

Boston College might be down leading rusher Turbo Johnson Richard, which could set Notre Dame’s defense up for another strong performance on the ground. And if the Irish defense can’t be cracked in the run game, the odds of Notre Dame winning out go way up.

Credit Ash for building out Notre Dame’s run defense over the past two months, but Freeman believes the success story starts with the roster itself.

“I don’t want to say it’s not tactical,” he said. “We’ve done some things tactically to help us improve, but again, it’s still about the execution of what we’re doing tactically.”

Source: The Athletic
October 31, 2025

Cocktail of the Month


A little backstory:  Before the Corrigans met up in Morocco, we chose a thematic book to read and discuss... call it an 'on the road' book club.

The book we chose was "The Caliph's House: A Year In Casablanca" by Tahir Shah. The story, ostensibly a true one, is about a guy who moves his family to Morocco, harkening back to his youth growing up there, and the hijinx that ensue when he tries to renovate an old palatial estate that's fallen on hard times.  

Why was it in disrepair?  Mostly due to the widespread belief that the house was inhabited by Jinns -- mischievous, occasionally malevolent, spirits -- which the citizenry, especially in the home building industry, take seriously.   The book / cocktail below therefore makes perfect thematic sense.

As an aside, when the family gathered to discuss the book, mine was the highest grade within the group.  Which suggests had I gone into the teaching world -- Professor Jerrence -- I'd have been VERY popular.

I'd like you all to take a minute and consider that particular alternative universe.  You're a sophomore at ND and you need to -- you don't want to -- take an English Lit course and you see "Introduction to Historical Fiction" taught by... me.   The mind reels, oui? 


WET AND WYLDING HALL
(Wylding Hall)
by Elizabeth Hand (2015)


Let's go back to the 1970s with the fictional acid-folk band Windhol-low Faire as they attempt to record their new album at the crumbling country house Wylding Hall. 

Things do not go as planned. 

If you're ready for a slow-creeping dread that crawls up your spine, then settle in with this novella and a delicious drink.      


            
Yield:  1 serving



-- 2 oz. light rum
-- ½ oz. raspberry syrup (store-bought syrup or make your own by combining equal parts sugar, water, and fresh raspberries)
-- ½ oz. curaçao
-- ¾ oz. freshly squeezed lime juice
-- orange slice or twist, for garnish 
-- raspberry or cherry, for garnish




-----------------------------

1.  Add ice cubes to a cocktail shaker to chill the ingredients.
2.  Add the light rum, raspberry syrup, and curaçao into the shaker.
3.  Squeeze lime juice into the shaker.
4.  Shake the ingredients vigorously for about :10 to :15.
5. Strain the contents of the shaker into a rocks glass or a coupe glass filled with ice.
6. Garnish with the orange slice or twist on the rim of the glass with the raspberry or cherry on top of the drink.

Source:  The Turn of the Screwdriver
50 Dark & Twisted Literary Cocktails
By Iphigenia Jones

Schedule 202


August
31                @Miami             L      

September 
                                                  
13                Texas A&M         L                      
20               Purdue                W                   Corrigan brother reunion!                      
27                @Arkansas        W                   Soooiiieeee! 

October  
                                                                                                     
4                 Boise St.              W                    Alumni Hall Reunion weekend, Union Pier MI        
11                NC State              W
18               USC                      W                     "Lincoln, We Hardly Knew Ye" (wussy)                    

November 

 1                 @BC
 9                Navy                  
16               @Pitt                          
23               Syracuse                                               
29              @Stanford                                                              

December

19-20      PLAYOFF GAME!

  

Wager 2025


Now 5-2 with arguably only two tricky games left -- Navy (losing Saturday night, at home, on NBC I don't think so) and at Pitt (maybe but a freshman QB who's good but unlikely to be the Second Coming Of Dan Marino)... 

...and understanding that these are kids, anything is possible, still feeling pretty good about the 10 win possibilities... 


Wins

ND Equivalence

Domer

12

The Joker



"Do I really look like a guy with a plan?"

----- 

Ledger's Joker is mercurial, charismatic and a complete psychopath.


Utterly unforgettable.


 Just as a Notre Dame undefeated, on-their-way-to-a-national championship-season would be. 


 

Kevin C.

John P

John L

Brian M 

JP 

Bryan G  

Raz 

Dave M

Tim B.




11

Otto



"Don't call me stupid!"
-----
Ex-CIA operative Otto lives at the intersection of dangerous and moronic.

An 'Otto season' for ND would be a rollercoaster -- a lot of fun with youth at some key positions, and likely more than it's fair share of 'that wasn't very clever' moments.

Gutsch , Sloane
Daryl
Jim S. 
Peter 
Tim 
Ted
Bill
Jim B
Pat B
George
Alex, Feif
Garrett
Spit the Elder
10

Hans Landa


 "That's a bingo!"

-----

Jew hunter Landa -- equal parts chillingly pathological and  pragmatic, this character would probably represent a 10-win regular season that might make you sick to your stomach but ultimately pretty satisfied.

 

Jerrence, 

Mike C,  

Tim C.  

Mark U. 

Jerry P. 

Jerry C.  

Mike B.

Brian W. 

Jim T.

Mike G, Bose

Jerry W

Lini, Randy  

Greg

Kyle W. 


9

RP McMurphy



"I'm a goddamn marvel of modern science."

-----

What's the residual emotion from Cuckoo's Nest?  Sadness.


RP, a guy who sees things clearly but can't get out of his own way.


When it doesn't end well, one is left thinking what could've been. 


Like a 9-win season. 

 

 

Matt

Alvin

8

Jason Bourne



"I don't know who I am.  Or where I'm going.  None of it."

------

An apt summary of an 8-win ND season.  A lot of difficult questions ultimately unanswered.


Still, the Bourne trilogy rocks and JB is The Man. 



 

7

John Wick



"I'm thinking I'm back..."
-----
For many, ND winning only 7 games would be akin to someone shooting their dog -- and requiring appropriate payback.

And like with John Wick, rationale requiring very few words of explanation.  

 

6

Maximus


"Are you not entertained!"
------
Probably not, if ND only won six games... but that's not the point here:  it probably says a lot about me that the final ranked character is the most moral, selfless one of the bunch.



 




Sports Imitating Art. 

The Art of Conversation, by René Magritte, 1963

Fun fact:  The Castellini's took the Corrigan's to a private Magritte exhibit at The Art Instiitute* several years ago so don't tell me Our Man Lini is not a Man of Culture.

* Okay, Judy probably invited us. 

Schadenfreude of the Week.


I think it's been well documented -- almost entirely by me -- that I don't know jack sh*t about football and mostly what you get from me is something I read somewhere else, ergo NOT AN ORIGINAL THOUGHT (something I haven't had since 1977 when, as Secretary / Treasurer of Grace Hall I boldly suggested, in order to combat the rampant elevator vandalism problem, that we de-stack the Grace tower and create a ranch style dorm in the green space between the dorm and the library...

Of course I was roundly mocked for such ahead-of-the-curve thinking.  Innovation is almost always misunderstood by the less evolved.  And immature young males can be so cruel. 

Cretins. 

But I digress.

The point is this:  I have no idea any more who to root for that advantages ND's chances of making the 12-team BCS Playoff.  I think if they they just win out they out to be fine but...

...whatever.  Let's talk in mid-November. 

-----------------------------------------------

1.
  USCFirst of all, I'm so happy for my SoCal 'friends and family':  my brother Mike and Jay / Dave M., Joe S... I know how much the rivalry matters to each side's alumni / fans -- so f*ck you, Lincoln and Jenn Cohen for wussying out on this.

That said...
"Same as it ever was..."



2.
  LSU.   With Kelly's dismissal, consider this an exorcism.  The next time LSU makes this section, hopefully, it's when they lose a meaningful game that actually matters to Notre Dame's fortunes.


3.  Oklahoma & Missouri.  
These two, on the other hand, do still have some practical relevance for ND's path to the playoff.   If only for another week or so.

It's beginning to look a lot last last year
Where you just can't close.
Take a look at your games ahead
You're basically walking dead... 


Think what you will of the SEC conference, the guys who create the SEC Shorts content are undeniably REALLY clever.

Terry's Tools.


New and improved (?)
The more the world changes, the more things appear to stay the same.

Technology advances at an exponential rate, pity that human intelligence, decision making, good taste and common sense are not following at an equal pace.

One man's opinion: idiots still abound.

And I think this blog section shows empirical evidence to support that claim.

-------------------------------------------------


1)  Officiating .   It's easy to be generous when one ultimately wins these games but this is, at least, the 4th home game (WTF?!) where there have been some ridiculously egregious calls (or non-calls).  One assumes that Bevacqua sends these into... where?... each week.  


That's not a a hold -- it's a text book tackle!  And how is that not PI -- the DB isn't even looking!

But this gotten beyond concerning... 

2). Louvre Security.  You may have read about the recent robbery of $100M worth of jewels that got lifted last week, from arguably the world's most famous museum.  Embarrassing, no? 

Well, as Kay Corrigan was always fond of saying, "God doesn't close a door that He doesn't open a window..."  Or something like that.

While the museum's officials subsequently announced a $100m update on their security system -- me thinks a little late -- check out this ad from an 'involved' participant.  In America, you'd probably lose your job for this cheekiness but I LOVE it. 

Who says the Germans don't have a sense of humor... lets hope the French do too. 



3)  Jeff Landry.    This week ,Lousiana's governor said, " I can tell you right now, (LSU athletics director) Scott Woodward is not selecting the coach. Hell, I'll let Donald Trump select it before I let him do it."

"I didn't get a harrumph out of you..."

"I can promise you we're going to pick a coach and we're going to make sure that coach is successful," Landry said. "We're going to make sure he's compensated properly and we're going to put metrics on it because I'm tired of rewarding failure in this country and then leaving the taxpayers to foot the bill."

Opined ND beat writer, Tim Prister:  Oh really. How are you going to make sure the coach is successful? You have ability to intuitively perceive and guarantee you're going to pick the right coach? And you're going to make sure you don't get fleeced like Texas A&M and LSU did? Wow. He should then be able to bottle that and sell it to other schools competina for national championships. 

How exactly does that work?

Governor Landry, putting the 'small' in small government.

Name of the Week


Nature or nurture?

Does one make the name or does the name drive a person to live up to their moniker?

This week's candidate challenges that question -- once again coming from the roster of our upcoming opponent, Boston College, and should be a name that one hears called with relative frequency on Saturday.

                                                           
                                                                          Turbo Richard  


The dictionary defines a  "turbo" as a device that uses exhaust gases to force more air into an engine, increasing its power and efficiency. 

Given how awful the Eagle's offense is, he might be the only thing that represents a threat:  431 yds riushing on 88 carries, a near 5 yds/carry average.

Turbo indeed.  Look for #2 on Saturday. 

Trivia


Q. Who wrote a song that was a worldwide ecumenical movement, starting out as a pagan folk tune, then becoming a Christian children's hymn, only to end up as a hit for America's most famous Muslim singer? 

A)  Snoop Dog

B)  Cat Stevens

C)  SZA

D)  Dua Lipa

------

(Last blog's answer:  At a 1968 press conference, John Lennon and McCartney named Harry Nilsson --- friend and drinking buddy -- as their favorite American artist.

Everybody's talkin' at me
I don't hear a word they're sayin'...



Final Thoughts

You leave the country for a couple weeks and come back to find...

-- Dave Marcel on the cover of ND Magazine
-- Kevin Maher featured in a Walgreen's Viagra knockoff article

Uh?



As the philosopher Ferris Bueller once observed, "Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it."

True dat.