Woooo-Hoooo....spring ball and hope springs eternal!!!
Get your TiVO's ready for the season previews....no one is going to predict ND at better than 8-4 in 2008....and even then it would only be Herbsteit that gives them that much chance....10-2 regular season is VERY achievable in 2008....loss to USC at LA is pretty much a safe given (although I would not expect another routine ass-kicking this time out), and leaving room for a toe-stub loss the rest of the way (maybe UBiCH or scUM, but hopefully not either of those two) I am not sniffing glue or eating strange fungii to see 10-2and BCS or Gator Bowl on Jan 1, 2009! I think we need a good old fashion Irish football version of Obamania around here....someone cue the angelic choir for background music!!!! I DO NEED A PILLOW....
The douche-bags around the press and internet (Hansen, Forde, May, Fowler, FUCUM apologists or obnoxious UF-fans. UBiCH fans, and scUM fans, et. al.) will be spending as much time as possible trying to dump on ND's program and predicting gloom and doom as possible. I think its depressing to see the state of the program deteriorated to the point that a subset of Irish fans could easily be called the Golden Doomers these days and would be all to willing to join the chorus of the naysayers!!! It will all make for tasty crow to serve up video clips of the pre-season tripe to these media-asshats espeically in December!!! (Like the human-penis Mark May's 2005 pre-season proclamations of 0-7 or 1-6 were at the end of that campaign and BCS birth - still one of my favorite clips from the Oldie 2005 season highlight video!)
Much like 2005, they will all be dead wrong!!!!
The O-line WILL improve exponentially in 2008. Wenger out played Sullivan at center in his limited appearances. Sam Young will become a force in his third year of playing time (and as long as he stays healthy will start to get serious All-American discussion). Chris Stewart will find a way to get on the field - hopefully at RG - giving the Irsih a right side of the line that can be real road-graders and a "go-to" short yardage play set that has been lacking in the past 3-4 years. Give the ball to Hughes behidn the big uglies and grind out the 3-4 yard, time consuming drives and short yardage plays that make the defense respect the run - thus opening things up for Clasuen and effective play-action passing instead of jail-break blitzes that meet at #7! I look for Romine to beat out Duncan or Duncan to make huge strides that enable him to be a viable LT.
Speaking of Clasuen, he WILL be in the running for post-season awards as the best sophomore passer in the country (even overtaking Bradford at OU in the discussion!) - and his "renaissance" will be a lead story on SportsCenter in the week heading into the BC game, as people marvel at how improved he is (mainly due to being healthy and actually getting a chance to step into a pocket - instead of fleeing for his life on every snap)! Many stories will credit much of this turnaround to his health, but the true #1 source will be the emergence of the Irish O-line and running game AND his health.
The defensive backfield - led by Walls, Bruton and quality contributions from McCarthy (or Brown), Gray and McNeil will be ball hawking and hard-hitting. There will be more plays like Darrin's INT-return against PSU and fewer WRs and TEs running free through the secondary. By season's end, both Bruton and Walls will be getting All-American mentions and pro-scouts will be circling Darrin to entice him to leave school early...There will be hard hits and athletic INT grabs and electrifying returns. It will be fun to watch Irish pass defense again - for IRISH fans instead of for the opponents!!!
Ian Williams is going to become a stud - a bona-fide national stud, the kind of player that, you know, Notre Dame can't attract. His performance in 2007 was one of the most over-looked aspects of the season. His productivity in limited minutes was certainly something to be hopeful about for 2008 and beyond. Add in a rotation of Newman and Mullen to get Williams a blow and the anchor of the 3-4 this season can come from the NT sucking up blockers and disrupting plays once more.
On the pass rush, OLB Smith and Neal will start to be more consistent producers in their second full seasons. There will be more contributions from the likes of Mo Richardson and John Ryan and Pat Kuntz at DE and even a few memorable plays for freshmen like Johnson, Flemming or Filer. The fewer times the freshmen have to play, the better the prospects of the pass rush for the season
Several freshmen (and sophomores like Allen and Tate) will also ignite the ND special teams as Weis uses a few of Beamer's VT tactics to get athletes around the football in special teams situations - especially athletes who can make a play but may lack 'field experience' to be full-time contirbutors. I look for at least 3-4 game changing moments (returns, forced turnovers or blocked kicks) that turn the tides or open the floodgates!
To me, the biggest question mark is not the O-line or the DBs or even the DL depth....those things are KNOWN and being addressed by the staff and the players vis-a-vis position battles and influxes of younger talent to push older players to better performance that even they know they are capable of at this point...no, to me the biggest question mark is the kicking game. The difference between 8-4 and 10-2 could boil down to something like a 35-45 yard FG that is either attempted and made, attempted and missed or so iffy a proposition that the coach again feels the need to forgo the very attempt itself. Part of that is also Weis needing to learn not only from his own past mistakes, but also from the failures of Bellicheck the memntor (see SB 43, passing on FG attempt to go for a 4th and 13 and then losing by 3...). If the Irish can identify or develop a kicker of better than average accuracy from 35 - 45 yards out, then I will be very comfortable with my opening salvo of a 10-2 season as an outcome...