We all read Tom Layden's article on the Football
Program's problems. For the great majority of the article, Layden
points out how admissions standards at Notre Dame keep out top athletes
that the football program could use. He devotes a lesser amount of
time to the question of how and why Notre Dame would put together such
a ridiculous schedule and expect a national championship, or even a competitive
team. A conspicuously small portion then devotes to the question
of does Notre Dame have the right head coach. Looking at any ND message
board, it becomes more than apparent that opinions are fierce on one side
or another. CNNSI's board on reaction to the article reveal that
college football fans in general have a vast range of viewpoints on why
mediocrity has set in.
Layden tries to stay as objective as possible while
bringing up some very good points. There is qualitative and quantitative
evidence that all three are problems. Anyone who doubts that Saracino
is an arrogant jerk is nieve at best. Anyone who thinks that the
academic restrictions put on potential recruits does not hurt to a point
must take another look at their focus. Anybody who thinks that after
Malloy's comments, the questionable (at best) schedules that
have been approved by Wadsworth and Beauchamp were not a factor in their
separation from the football program must also believe that the federal
government cares about privacy. However, Layden's quest to leave
many more questions than answers in keeping the objectivity of his piece
intact glossed over the seeds of why Irish fans, students, and alumni are
in such an uproar.
I will deal first with the academic question.
Did the school raise the bar for incoming athletes in '91? The Irish
administration has to stop assuming that the public is a bunch of complete
and utter morons, and admit that the above is indeed the truth. This
started seemingly in '96, when after a loss ot Ohio State Lou Holtz complained
that he was beaten with the athletes he wanted in the first place (it actually
started earlier internally). Since, because of the drop off in play
since '93, many have raised the issue.
This issue has little to do with the supposed drop
off in talent. Whether there has been a decline or not (and this
will be discussed later on), can someone please give me a reason for Holtz
to lie? Holtz quit after '96 without a bad word to say about the
university, and even refused to be interviewed for the Layden article.
The reason is because he loves Notre Dame as much as anyone else can claim
to, and he does not want the University's image tarnished. Layden
interviewed several Holtz era assistants, including Skip Holtz, Jay Hayes,
and several others who refused to have their names revealed. All
either claimed or hinted that admissions stiffened its stance. Again,
what is their reason for lying? None, on the other hand, admissions
has every reason to deny obvious facts; if they did it would place a great
deal of pressure on the department, as a good deal more blame would
already be presented to an office which has taken a great deal of criticism.
The schedule
Many have said that if Davie has only three losses next season, it would be considered a success, and Layden points out that the Irish "could be very good and start 2-3." While I'm not going to defend Wadsworth's bone headed schedules, or the fact that A&M and Nebraska were scheduled back-to-back (I wish I could get an explanation for that). let's take a look at this year's schedule from the viewpoint of ten years ago. It's 1990. Purdue is a perennial Big Ten doormat. Michigan State struggles to stay over .500 year after year. USC is a team loaded with talent but short on performance (some things never change...). Navy, Air Force, Rutgers, and Stanford are considered cream puffs. West Virginia and Boston College might be good once every five years or so. In other words, a solid schedule with two big games. It's one of the problems with scheduling ten years in advance, but if anyone wants the Irish to join a conference, please speak up now. And Holtz played some murderous schedules, but never complained once, and found ways to struggle through them.
The Talent Debate l
Yeah, I know we are all sick and tired of this, but
as long as the losing continues, it will not go away.
It started after '93, with the coincidence (maybe,
maybe not) that the last year Holtz got his way with recruiting was, plus
four, the last year the Irish were considered a title contender.
After that year, the draft started to show fewer and fewer Irish players
being picked. NFL personnel men screamed (and still do) that there
has been a clear talent plunge. College football experts (and I use
the term experts VERY loosely) pinpointed the lack of success on
lesser athletes. They too, know that the late 80's early 90's teams
played similarly tough schedules. And since they cannot criticize
coaches (how many times did DiNardo's @ss get kissed last season?), talent
must be the problem.
Talent, per se, is a product of recruiting.
Whether or not your players are drafted into the NFL is another story.
Recruiting says whether you actually have talent or not. Developing
talent is another story, and is a product of coaching. If you look
at the football in this form, Holtz certainly had less talent after '93.
Despite the raise in standards, Holtz simply continues his wait-til-the-last-minute
recruiting practices, and it immediately caught up with him. Despite this,
Holtz had teams playing at National Championship level in '95 and '96,
and probably would have been more successful had he noticed that an overrated
reject who was totally unfit for the offense was under center.
Davie inherited this, a team with less than stellar
talent, and Davie's first recruiting class was average at best. He
hired two big time assistants, who have so far proved to be complete busts,
and took on the hardest coaching job in sports (please name another that's
worse) with no head coaching experience. After a 7-6 campaign in
his first season, analysts screamed how Holtz left the "cupboard bear."
His 9-3 second campaign seemed to prove this, while few pointed out that
the defense was still full of more open holes than Pebble Beach and could
not seem to put any type of rush on the passer (a situation that has existed
since '94 , with the exception of the the '96 defense, which was sometimes
solid but inconsistent). Oh by the way, Davie in the interim had
proved that recruiting well with the raised standards was possible by landing
recruiting classes in '98 and '99 which can be called no less than elite.
The talent, finally, would soon be here.
So we come to last year. Everyone had high
hopes for the Irish, as Coletto was finally gone. Superman himself Kevin
Rogers was running the offense, and the talent level was clearly rising.
Yes, the schedule was tough, but no one was expecting a national title,
just improvement from '98. After all, those two recruiting classes
were only freshman and sophomores. Finally, a team was here to be
excited about.
Then Rome collapsed. Irish fans from coast
to coast screamed at the tope of their lungs how bad the clock management
was against Michigan and Purdue, and had to sit and listen to Davie talk
about how courageous his team was for pulling a win against a bad team,
that happened to be NAVY! Many who believed in the talent gap before
could see that despite any reputed lack of talent, there was no way in
hell that the cupboard so bare, or the circumstances so intense, that 5-7
is acceptable. The murmurs turned to screams at the end of the season
as losses to BC, Pitt, and Stanford sealed the season, and athletic director
Wadsworth acted non-chalantly as if nothing really bad had happened.
Calls for Davie's and Wadworth's head began to become more than Malloy
could stomach, and one of the two was fired.
Back to the issue. On the other hand, coaching
can often overcome talent. Kansas State receives what are looked
on as average athletes every year, but finish in the top ten. Nebraska
recruiting halls are never ranked in the top ten, and name me a NFL star,
or even starter from NU since 1990 (if you can please email
me)? Was Oregon State really a bowl team last year? Does Wisconsin
ever bring in a big name player (besides Ron Dayne, who was on all top
25 lists)? These schools are to name a few.
The debate will end this year. Davie and Mattison
have less than three months to put together a decent defense or both of
them are gone. Going into the fall, the Irish will have four High
School FIRST TEAM All-Americans starting on defense: Clifford Jefferson,
Grant Irons, Gerome Sapp, and Tony Driver. Additionally, Brock Williams
and Tony Weaver were on most top 100 prospects list. Anthony Denman's
the best player on the defense right now, and the other four (save Legree)
have proved they can play.
The offense features a backfield that is as talented
as anybody in the nation. The line, which returns four starters, is questionable
at best and must prove last year was an aberration and not the norm.
The projected wide receivers, Givens and Hunter, were top fifty prospects
three years ago. In other words: the ball is in your court Bob.
Of course, this is all being over analyzed because
and only because this is Notre Dame. USC has had this talent/coaching
problem for years (say fifteen or so...), only their admissions are not
a problem, and you will have to search long and hard to find any flack
that Paul Hackett is receiving outside Pasadena. LSU had the same
problem for the last two years but it only received minor publicity.
Why on earth Davie wants to keep his job is beyond me and most others,
especially after rumors that the alumni association raised the money and
offered Davie a buyout to get Tom O'Brien in (would that happen at any
other school?).
Whatever, or whoever causes this debate, it will
not end until the Irish start winning, If Saracino or any other academic
half wit that works for the university thinks that Notre Dame can someday
compete with Harvard, Yale, Stanford, and Princeton for the nations elite
minds, and the fading out of the football program in a similar way to Army
or Harvard will only be a secondary issue, they need to be kicked in the
head.
Do I agree or disagree with Layden's article?
Did he really make a defined point? Did I really make a point?
Is there something to agree or disagree with? The only thing that
I am sure of is that if there is a record of 9-2 next year none of these
questions will matter.
Questions? Comments? Think I'm wrong about all of this?