Blue and Gold Illustrated

Oct. 23, 2021

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

Issue link: https://comanpub.uberflip.com/i/1418303

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 28 of 55

www.BLUEANDGOLD.com OCT. 23, 2021 29 N otre Dame head coach Brian Kelly is making quarterback switches as frequently as a baseball manager changes pitchers. He's bringing in relievers because the starters keep putting themselves in jams. Notre Dame found itself in a messy one at Virginia Tech Oct. 9. Ineffective graduate student starter Jack Coan got an early hook, pulled in favor of electric freshman Tyler Buch- ner three drives into the game. Buchner dazzled at first, but ran out of gas as his outing progressed. Coan, against all expectations, became the closer who slammed the door shut. He helped No. 14 Notre Dame (5-1) pilfer a 32-29 victory from Virginia Tech (3-2). Only fitting the latest and wildest edition of Irish quarterback relief pitch- ing took place at a venue that blares Me- tallica's "Enter Sandman" — also the anthem of one of baseball's greatest all- time closers. "We had to go to the bullpen," Kelly said. "Enter [Yankees Hall of Famer] Mariano Rivera today. Enter Sandman. [Jack] closed it out for us." Enter another 14 days of quarterback questions as Notre Dame heads into its off week. Even with the excitement of this latest two-quarterback venture still fresh, Kelly admitted postgame there's a lot left to sort out. Six games into the season, he is still looking for the right answer. "We're trying to figure this thing out, too, as we go," Kelly said. "That's why I'm so proud of the guys who hung in there. I wish it wasn't this hard, but it is right now, and we're battling through it." Notre Dame is 5-1 despite little quar- terback clarity. The Irish can thank their defense, which bent but didn't break and held Virginia Tech to 4.5 yards per play. They can thank Buchner, whose run-game presence and improvisational skills woke up an offense that spent the first quarter asleep at the wheel. They can thank Coan, who didn't check out after his second in-game removal in as many weeks and led the tying and go- head scoring drives. "Jack is a stone-cold killer," graduate student linebacker Drew White said. "He's got that look in his eyes. Lot of confidence. It says a lot when he goes in at the end of the game." Ideally, Coan never would have left. After playing three quarterbacks in the 24-13 loss to Cincinnati Oct. 2, Kelly and Notre Dame wanted to pick a direction and stay the course. They chose Coan, despite his benching the prior week and the offense's increasing stagnant perfor- mances with him directing it. That direction lasted all of three drives. In came Buchner — and not just for his usual pre-planned cameo — to provide a hopeful spark. He did, at first. He led two touchdown marches that gave Notre Dame a 14-13 halftime lead after it fell behind 10-0. Stretch a reliever too far, though, and he runs out of stamina. Buchner completed just one of his final six pass attempts. He connected with Virginia Tech defenders twice, one of which turned into a 26-yard return for a touchdown by redshirt ju- nior cornerback Jermaine Waller. Buch- ner hobbled off the field after his second interception and didn't return. Coan reentered with Notre Dame trail- ing 29-21 and 3:55 left on the clock to fix it. He fired a 15-yard completion to freshman running back Logan Diggs on an angle route, hit graduate student wide receiver Avery Davis over the middle for 23 yards and found senior wide receiver Braden Lenzy for 17 yards to set up first- and-goal. He connected with Davis for a four-yard touchdown two plays later. After Notre Dame's defense forced a stop, Coan completed two passes to march the Irish into field goal range for graduate student kicker Jonathan Do- erer, who booted a 48-yarder for the lead with 17 seconds left. "He was decisive," Kelly said. "The ball came out of his hands. The reads were correct. It looked like it was shoot- ing fish in the barrel with the timeli- ness of the ball coming out of his hands, compared to what it was earlier." Not just compared to earlier in the game, but in the last few weeks. Notre Dame's offensive structure doesn't mesh with a quarterback with limited mobility if he's not a near-flawless passer. Coan has been far from perfect since an im- pressive opener at Florida State. Are two drives enough to change that reality? Are they a preview of what's next or an outlier? He might have the chance to prove they were no fluke, because Buchner doesn't appear to be reliable enough as a passer to take the reins right now. The plan for sophomore Drew Pyne is un- clear after he didn't play a snap coming off a flawed but still intriguing second half against Cincinnati and a strong 2021 debut versus Wisconsin. The game of quarterback roulette doesn't appear to be over. The ques- tions surrounding the position aren't quieting. Notre Dame doesn't want to keep falling for the flavor of the week, but there hasn't been a flavor yet that lasts more than a week. "I can't in all good consciousness say, 'All right, he's the starter or he's the starter,'" Kelly said. "You know where we're at. We're stringing this together the best we can." The good news for Notre Dame is it's not lacking thread with which to string. ✦ 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 Head coach Brian Kelly noted after his team's thrilling 32-29 comeback win that he was trying to figure out the quarterback situation, but still did not have any clear answers. PHOTO BY KEN MARTIN QB Saga Produces Thrilling Win, More Questions

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Blue and Gold Illustrated - Oct. 23, 2021