Blue and Gold Illustrated

Oct. 31 2020

Blue & Gold Illustrated: America's Foremost Authority on Notre Dame Football

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32 OCT. 31, 2020 BLUE & GOLD ILLUSTRATED N otre Dame players stretched out in the corner of the Heinz Field lower bowl Saturday night, masked up and toting grab-and-go meals in a moment of relaxation. A well-earned one, at that, after head coach Brian Kelly revealed earlier how he challenged them this week. Kelly issued an entreaty more demanding than extra practice or more up-downs. "We have to elevate our play if we want to have any chance of getting to our goal, and that is to win a champi- onship," he said after the 45-3 romp over Pitt that pushed Notre Dame to 5-0 and 4-0 in the ACC. In other words, the 4-0 start wasn't good enough. It was as if he heard the message board chatter and angst after last week's 12-7 win over Lou- isville. Above all, he loudly hinted he's well aware the biggest regular- season game of his tenure is on the doorstep, one that will shape Notre Dame's championship opportunities and bring reality to their aspirations. Kelly's way of acknowledgement: Telling his team the display from the prior month wouldn't win that game and win a title. So reach back and find more. Take it to someone. Turns out, his plea was one Notre Dame had an easy time meeting. "We're not interested in just win- ning football games," Kelly said. "We're interested in being a champi- onship football team, and just play- ing to win games is not good enough anymore. We need to elevate our compete level, we need to coach bet- ter. We need to play better." You'll be hard pressed to find a starker contrast to his "winning is hard" credo seven days earlier. Com- plete opposites. Notre Dame's domi- nant day was his team's response to the new outlook. If Nov. 7 against Clemson is the final exam, another airtight defensive effort and 19.5 yards per completion Saturday was passing a mid-term. The win was Notre Dame's 29th straight over an unranked team, the second-longest active streak nation- ally, but that mark will fall on deaf ears if the Tigers leave South Bend with a victory. For all the warranted discussion about Notre Dame's over- all health and stability, its ultimate goals and reasons they haven't been reached them are still top of mind. "There's a lot more on the table for us to go and get," fifth-year senior wide receiver Ben Skowronek said. Through four games, Notre Dame hadn't shown enough to think top- pling the top-ranked team was fea- sible. Kelly more or less told his play- ers that, while emphasizing his belief Notre Dame at its best is good enough to beat Clemson. Results didn't match potential. Time was running out to make them meet, and instead of turn- ing to some day-by-day cliché, he came right out and accepted it. "It's risky because in some instances, people would say, well, you're looking ahead," Kelly said. "Well, we are look- ing ahead a little bit. We needed to get this football team to understand that they are really good." Maybe dismantling a disintegrat- ing Pitt team didn't change much in regard to the exhaustive "what does it mean for Clemson" outlook, but it's hard to say a 42-point win altered it for the worse. Notre Dame had a receiver emerge when it needed one most. The expected game-breaker this year, junior Kevin Austin Jr., re- broke his foot in practice Thursday and will miss the season. His injury came just when he was on track for an every-down role and had put the first fracture behind him. Enter Skowronek, the owner of 110 catches and a proven threat in the Big Ten at Northwestern. He hadn't been that through a month with Notre Dame, with a hamstring issue as a factor. Against Pitt, he twice made contested catches in single coverage and ran both in for a touchdown — 107 yards between them. Austin's injury threatened to turn a weakness into a sinkhole. Skow- ronek gave hope the receiver position can be serviceable. Freshman tight end Michael Mayer can boost Notre Dame's passing offense, too. His five- catch, 73-yard day on eight targets is the type of performance Notre Dame should strive to get from him each week. He's too talented not to involve. "Come out, play loose and make plays," Skowronek said. "That was our focus as an offense. Not worried about the score, but win your indi- vidual matchups and make plays." It sounds a lot like the chorus after last week's defensive performance, when players credited a simple game plan that allowed them to avoid thinking and just line up and go. Trust and believe they're better than who is across from them. That has been the case in every game so far this year. It seems to be in every game except one on the schedule. For the one exception, Notre Dame needs to go into it feeling like it is in- deed the better team and with results to support it. "Attack all the time because we're going to need to look like this down the road if you want to fulfill any of your goals," Kelly said. "So it was re- ally less about who we were playing and more about how we played." Maybe not about who Notre Dame was playing on this night, but cer- tainly about who it will have to play and beat to reach its goal. ✦ 'We Are Looking Ahead' ENGEL'S ANGLE PATRICK ENGEL Patrick Engel has been a writer for Blue & Gold Illustrated since March 2020. He can be reached at pengel@blueandgold.com Notre Dame head coach Brian Kelly challenged his team to elevate its play, and the Irish responded with a resounding 45-3 win over Pitt. PHOTO BY CHARLES LECLAIRE, USA TODAY SPORTS/COURTESY ACC

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