I'm fairly confident in saying the first team o-line is the best o-line our d-line will see all season. I will cut them some slack if they have trouble getting a pass rush with just the 4 man front
Jac Collinsworth does incredible player interviews, he is on top of his game right now.
Meant as in a comparison of a running qb with less than great arm
Why do you feel the need to say this stuff
All repworthy posts gentlemen!
I really believe we have position groups that are really competing at "higher levels" for Power 5 football. And I am amazed, because I find myself wondering if they wouldn't even look massively better save their opposite position group looks so stout. This is what I keep coming back to when Kelly harps on leadership and competition.
This is the same problem I had yesterday. The op was just talking in general about the two quarterbacks, in that they both had the reputation of being run first quarterbacks, with a less than satisfactory throwing arm. Help me if I am spitballing, but I think the whole point of his analogy, (I won't call it a comparison), was that if Florida can win a National Championship with a Tebow, why can't Notre Dame with a Zaire? I think this would be a wonderful topic for discussion.
But what happened? Right away any similarity to the point the original poster was making disappeared! By the third post, the original poster was allegedly comparing the arm of the two quarterbacks. I love most of you like brothers, but I have to say I read, and reread the original post, and from the time the responder to the OP twisted things, not one comment made was based upon what the OP said!
I am sure some of you find that process fulfilling and necessary, even ego-gratifying, but frankly, in a general overarching sense I am getting tired of those that revel in this process, wasting my time. In the final analysis, instead of it coming off as intelligent and informative, it comes off to me (and quite a few others, I would wager) as a boorish, overstepping of healthy boundaries and a huge waste of time. Some of us can only visit occasionally, for short periods; I know many have this constraint, which is why quick hits was such a big hit. Hopefully, we can get back to ND football not a comparison of penises by guys that have the nagging feeling of being undersized.
And I will take responsibility for occasionally talking out of my ass, which is also a waste of time. But I think there are enough examples of when I have been called on my mistakes that I fess up, and offer thanks, publically, and with reps. There are others here that do it even better than me, (a source of my inspiration.) And there are yet others who just don't make mistakes. So I really am down the list, but am trying to be the best I can, and genuinely me.
Also, Jac Collinsworth's interview of KeiVarae Russell is one of the finest college player football interviews I have ever seen! I cannot decide whether It is KeiVarae's intelligence, passion, or clear spoken communication, or Jac's way of "sitting on the same side of the table," (ability to relate to and communicate with) athletes, and his ability to focus on what his interviewee is saying to continue to put carefully delivered, pertinent questions over the plate, from start to finish! I think that interview was a special thing, though!
As far as Jac's look goes; I really don't pay much attention to that. In general, in life if I did that, I would bee much poorer, as I wouldn't have the rich collection of friends and acquaintances that make almost every day a keeper! (In spite of myself!) I always wondered if that kind of critical process about something so superficial isn't why people become "old before their time!"
Based on what? 95 yards throwing against LSU?
Interesting point, Malik's first start was against LSU. After ND lit them up LSU still finished as the number nine defense, third against the pass. They were the number one defensive team in the SEC during the regular season if I am not mistaken, and only Mississippi State and Auburn scored more points against them than Notre Dame. In fact, Notre Dame scored more points against them than did Alabama, Texas A&M and Arkansas.
If ND hadn't had the defensive injuries and played competent defense, with the offensive performance they turned in, the Irish would have dominated LSU with the best of them!
So I think with his first start, coupled with what he has shown in practice and spring games, (especially with Malik's past reputation for not being a practice player) we can make some general assumptions about what Malik will do for the Irish offense.
Because remember, he was bustin' every chance he got! His early season running touchdown was the longest running play from scrimmage for how long? And how manageable was the situation against USC when he was dropped in? And how well did he do playing mistake free?