Not to second-guess the coaches, but it almost seemed by the end of the year we'd be better off rolling someone else out there. I'm assuming opposing teams were well aware by this point and he was a bit of an afterthought.
Yeah. First of all, it's remarkable that the team was able to basically re-tool into a midfield driven team with only Doyle to initiate and still win the ACC regular season crown, make a final 4 after earning the #1 seed, and finish 12-3 overall. It's really sad that the best team Notre Dame ever had got nipped by injuries... it'd be like Jerian Grant spraining his ankle right before the ACC tournament. You're stuck watching a team battle through adversity instead of stomping the opposition.
The idea was to keep Kavanagh on the field as a decoy. This is certainly a decent strategy, as it occupies the opponent's best longpole on him giving Doyle a better matchup against their #2 defender. It worked... until today. Denver -- having played Notre Dame before -- plugged in the tape of what he did to them out there (where he was electric with 4+2 against their All-American defender) and compared it to his play against Towson and Albany and knew beyond a shadow of a doubt that he was hurt and would be ineffective. No amount of keeping his injuries hush-hush can dispel what is that easily visible on film. So Denver put Burgdorf on Doyle and the offense sputtered until they let Perkovic play hero ball.
The craziest thing about Kavanagh's injuries is that it basically eliminated two players from ND's offense. Wynne lived off of having two dodging threats at attack that could both feed him if teams made sloppy slides. But without the ability of Kavanagh to run by defenders, Wynne's value dried up too.
Just a perfect storm of classic Notre Dame luck. The more things change, the more they stay the same.