Blue and Gold Illustrated

Sept. 30, 2023

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

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BLUEGOLDONLINE.COM SEPT. 30, 2023 31 N otre Dame fans s h o u l d n 't r u s h the field when the Fighting Irish beat the No. 6 team in the coun- try. This is the proudest program of them all. Knute Rockne would roll over in his grave if he knew thousands of shirtless students were pouring onto the (ar- tificial, wait, what's that?) turf at the house he built just because they beat a quarterback making his second ca- reer road start for a team that, by the eye test and based on re- sults early this season, isn't as good as the ones they've had in years past in Columbus. And yet, as time ticked closer to triple zeros and a considerable share of police forces popped up around the perimeter of the playing surface, which is gener- ally the universal sign for a field storm- ing, it felt like that was exactly what was going to happen at Notre Dame Stadium on Saturday night. The No. 9 Irish would beat the No. 6 Buckeyes and anyone and everyone brave enough to hop the stone fencing in the face of South Bend's finest were going to celebrate with their favorite players where 60 minutes of action took place over the course of three-plus nerve-wracking hours. Yeah, well, about that. Notre Dame needed to win the dang game first. It didn't. The Buckeyes beat the Irish, 17-14, on a touchdown scored with one lonely sec- ond sitting on the clocks in the stadium. Each one of those 0:01s stared every single Notre Dame fan in the face as an insult, a reminder that once they turned into 0:00s all in attendance would have no choice but to go home and sulk in an- other loss to a top-10 team. There have been a lot of those in the last three de- cades. Since 1994, Notre Dame is 4-20 against top-10 teams while also playing as a top-10 team itself. New head coach in Marcus Freeman, same old Notre Dame. "It hurts because we didn't play our best," Freeman said. "I keep saying it. It's not about [Ohio State] as much as it is about us and playing at our full po- tential. That's what we're chasing, and that's why I'm disappointed. "If we would have made a couple more plays, the result would have been different. But we didn't. It's not that we gave the game away, it's just that we didn't reach our full potential. That's the disappointing part." If Ohio State truly is one of the best teams in the country as the Buckeyes have been for about a decade now, Notre Dame was just one goal line stop away from taking down a legit national title contender. But we don't know if OSU is one with Kyle McCord at quarterback like it was with CJ Stroud, so let's pump the brakes on any "Notre Dame showed it can play with anybody in the country" narratives for now. The truth is, Notre Dame did not deserve to win. Let's cut to it. The Irish had their chances. That's one of the first things Freeman said in the opening statement of his postgame press conference. They just did not make winning plays when winning plays needed to be made. There were two turnovers on downs on offense, and there was not getting off the field on third-and-7 to set up the first score of the game on a short Ohio State field goal just before halftime. O h i o S t a te r u n - ning back TreVeyon Henderson scored on a 61-yard touchdown when graduate stu- dent linebacker Marist Liufau lost contain and took himself out of the play. Graduate student kicker Spencer Shrader missed his only field goal attempt in a three- p o i n t l o s s. G ra d u - ate student safety DJ Brown had the ball hit him in both hands for what could have been a game-sealing interception on a drive that ultimately ended in the game- winning touchdown for the opposition. Those are veteran players literally let- ting the game slip through their fingers. Don't forget about the elephant in the room. Notre Dame only had 10 players on the field on back-to-back goal-line tries for the Ohio State offense from the 1-yard line. The Buckeyes punched in the winning score on the ground on the second of those, pounding the ball right in the direction of where the Notre Dame player who was nowhere to be found would have been parked. That was the cherry on top of a blunderful sundae made with spoiled milk. It was what officially sent Irish fans home without an opportunity to pose for an Instagram photo on the in- terlocking ND logo at midfield. Knute, nothing to see here. "We didn't play the entire game just the way we would have liked to," Free- man said. "…There are just a couple plays you wish you could redo. But you can't." ✦ GOLDEN GAMUT TYLER HORKA Tyler Horka has been a writer for Blue & Gold Illustrated since July 2021. He can be reached at thorka@blueandgold.com Notre Dame had its chances to beat the Ohio State Buckeyes, but the Fighting Irish didn't do enough in the end to deserve a victory. PHOTO BY CHAD WEAVER Notre Dame Shows It Still Struggles In Big Games

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