vinnymac2402
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That catch Robinson had was just digesting filthy. Man that guy got some damn hands
O'Malley turns to an old standby, a 10-point list, for the first of many observation columns regarding Saturday's two-hour open practice inside the Loftus Sports Center.
Notre Dame has spent 11 of its 12 spring practices to date inside due to unseasonably cold temperatures in South Bend. Saturday morning, the entire session was made available to the media's gaze.
Here's a recap from the 50-yard line of Meyo Field:
#1 Statement of the Day
Stealing the show at running back was junior Cam McDaniel, who offered nothing spectacular, but found a way to churn for gains of six yards (all leg drive after contact), 12 yards (power and a low base through the heart of the first team defense), and finally a drive-capping touchdown in today's end-practice scrimmage.
McDaniel isn't the team's most explosive back. He's not the quickest, the best pass-catcher, the most elusive, and he might not be the strongest. But he possesses bits of every skill necessary to be a quality running back for Notre Dame.
#2 -- George Atkinson can take a hit
First, sophomore Elijah Shumate cleaned up the junior runner on the sidelines, this after a 12-yard gain on a swing pass to the right side. With Matthias Farley wrapping Atkinson's feet, it was Shumate who came in for a vicious blow on the sidelines, no more than 8 feet away from my feet.
Shumate later drilled Atkinson on a stretch run to the right, though it was a false step that caused Atkinson to buckle that aided Shumate's tackle in space. Later in the scrimmage, just one snap after the first string defense gave up a full-field touchdown pass, senior nose guard Louis Nix blew through the line and engulfed and slammed Atkinson to the turf, effectively ending his day.
(Atkinson appears fine, but Kelly noticed the repeated beating and removed him for the final minutes.)
#3 -- Golson's flick of the wrist
The points belonged to C.J. Prosise, but it was junior quarterback Everett Golson's sprint to the sidelines and last millisecond throw to a cutting Prosise just inside the right hash that broke down the Irish secondary. With Farley falling at his feet, Prosise collected the pass, cut inside, and out-raced cornerback Keivarae Russell the final 60 yards for the score.
Golson is the only quarterback capable of such a play Under the Dome since Jarious Jackson in the late 90s.
#4 -- Robinson Can Go Get It
He might not catch 10 passes this year. He might not catch five (Chris Brown didn't). In fact, he might not see the field, but early enrollee wide receiver Corey Robinson is a pass-catching machine. The downfield star of our brief practice viewings to date, Robinson again registered the day's best reception, this time a diving, juggling, one-handed 35-yarder down the right sidelines past junior Josh Atkinson. (Robinson earned some time with trainer Rob Hunt and a wrap on his arm as a result, returning later to scrimmage.)
Some day, Irish fans will see such pass-catching prowess from the 6'5" fluid weapon on Saturdays.
#5 -- Koyack, Seek and Secure
Asked last week to evaluate his weakness as a first-time regular last season, junior tight end Ben Koyack immediately noted: "Blocking in space."
Saturday Koyack found starting Dog 'backer Danny Spond near the right hash, engaged the physical defender, and shoved him toward the sidelines before depositing him out of the play on Atkinson's aforementioned swing pass that netted 12 yards.
With Troy Niklas, Alex Welch, and Koyack, Notre Dame could have three quality veteran tight ends ready for 2013.
#6 -- Kona Schwenke
It was often second string vs. second string, but senior backup Kona Schwenke was a force inside during scrimmage and 11-vs.-11 tag-off work. Schwenke forced a fumble by WIll Mahone, made three stops at or near the line of scrimmage, and appeared in my notes four times in what couldn't have been more than 12 total snaps.
That's exactly what the Irish need from their No. 2 nose behind Nix.
#7 -- Ishaq Explosion
The hit of the day belonged to either SHumate (Atkinson) or Nix (Atkinson), but Ishaq Williams' in-space annihilation of WIll Mahone on a shovel pass to the left side can't be overlooked. Mahone had no chance because early enrollee freshman Mike Heuerman either missed a check from the quarterback (Tommy Rees) or simply couldn't get to Williams in time.
Most of us only saw the end result: a massive #11 exploding through Mahone before he had a chance to make a football move in space.
#8 -- Ailing in April
Senior linebacker Dan Fox (shoulder), senior cornerback Bennett Jackson (shoulder), senior cornerback Lo Wood (Achilles), junior RB/Slot Amir Carlisle, and sophomore safety Nicky Baratti (shoulder) are three two-deep/starting candidates that won't/shouldn't appear in next Saturday's spring game.
Expect Kelly to error on the side of caution with Wood (the others are definitely out) and evaluate the quintet for their respective jobs over the summer and in August camp.
Just eight months removed from ACL surgery, expect senior tight end Alex Welch to play at least briefly next weekend. Sophomore wide receiver Chris Brown (hamstring) took part in today's scrimmage. I wouldn't be surprised if he's cleared, though time on the sidelines seems more valuable than a few meaningless snaps in a game that means nothing by the time summer conditioning begins.
#9 -- Daniels: As good as he wants to be…
A leaping, one-handed grab with his left arm barred by the defender.
A leaping, juggling, "I-have-no-idea-how-he-caught-that touchdown secured just prior to slamming to the turf.
Three pass interference penalties drawn during the scrimmage (one made irrelevant because he caught the contested pass anyway).
Junior wide receiver DaVaris Daniels ranks as Notre Dame's top (future) NFL prospect on the offensive side of scrimmage. But he's not the top college wide receiver, in fact, at this point he's noticeably behind polished senior T.J. Jones.
But that doesn't have to be the case by September, October, or November 2013.
#10 -- Old Reliable(s)
There aren't many certainties in the Irish offense but you can take the following to the bank: T.J. Jones, Zack Martin, and Everett Golson will begin, and end 2013, as three of the four most reliable players on the offensive side off scrimmage.
Daniels is the obvious candidate to fill out that quartet, with Troy Niklas, Chris Watt, Amir Carlisle, George Atkinson and a host of others showing the promise to that end.
But one takeaway from Notre Dame's spring session 2013, despite all reports of players on the rise or their vast potential and variable performance ceilings is this: Jones, Martin, and Golson are three commodities you can take to the bank.
i am hoping for some good arguments with this one:
i like DD. what he is not, is the second coming of michael floyd, i think as many were hoping he would be.
i like him. but, from the beginning it's been a work ethic problem to go along with measurables and the hope for great things.
please--give me reasons to not lose that "want" for him to be (close to) great.
as of now--im huge on robison and prosise. yes. i am drinking the non-proven kool aid.
If Redfield gets through the learning curve pretty quick, I think he will pass up Farley on the depth chart before August 31st. That would give us a very impressive and athletic pair of safeties
Plus Russell and Jackson at corner. Unbelievably athletic secondary! If we can solve ILB this defense will be the single most feared unit in the country for quite some time.
Some folks around here are what you might consider "romantics".
You think the Spond thing is bad? Go check the McDaniel thread...
Wasn't it established that Farley and Collinsworth were the short side safeties, and Shumate, Baratti, and Redfield would be wide side safties? I am just trying to keep all of this straight!
FS has been Farley and Hardy
SS has been Shumate and Collinsworth
Baratti has been hurt but he backed up Farley last year and I believe Redfield to be a FS
2. Elijah Shumate, safety: The 6-0, 213-pound sophomore played an outside linebacker/safety hybrid in high school, then played cornerback out of necessity as a freshman last season.
He’s back at the position for which he was recruited, and is pushing hard toward the top of the depth chart. Shumate took all of the No. 1 reps Saturday at one of the safety spots, with Matthias Farley at the other.
“He is what we thought he was in terms of a tackler,” Kelly said. “He’s a very good tackler, sure tackler. He’s physical. What all this is going to be about (is) picking up the nuances. The spring has been really good for him. He’ll have to continue to take steps forward in the summer.”
Fellow sophomore Nicky Baratti, limited this spring following shoulder surgery, and redshirt junior Austin Collinsworth, still shaking the rust from nine months away from football, figure to challenge in August.
But if Shumate can expand his knowledge base of the defense to go along with what he’s already shown, it’s going to be tough to move him out of the top spot.
Fine terminology doesn't really matter but in every practice this spring first unit has been Farley and Shumate, second unit has been Hardy and Collinsworth behind them respectively
Farley
Shumate
Hardy
everyone else at this point.
Farley is making up for this lack of speed/athleticism with brains and knowledge of where to be and leading.
Shumate is the most athletic, talented back there, and has great ball skills. Still lacks knowning where to line up and had to get reset by Farley a few times. But his hips/back pedal are very smooth.
Hardy - just flows all over the field with ease. Doesnt have the best ball skills, but gets from point A to point B very easy. Look like he is gliding around out there. Makes good decisions.
Tommy looked bad.
Not doubting you, but I'm surprised by Hardy. Thought it would be Collinswprth and Barratti in the 2 deep. Great to see him excelling back there.
Baratti isnt practicing so im not sure what he brings.
-- Prosise, Carlisle, George Atkinson III, Cam McDaniel and Collinsworth all got some work catching kickoffs, as did Justin Utupo. That’s 281-pound defensive end Justin Utupo, who is slated to be an up man on kickoffs.
Tommy looked bad.