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SouthSideChiDomer

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You guys realize 90%+ of undergrads already live on campus for three years right?

And athletes all have their "on campus" room and then are never there... been that way since I was there.

SBT article said 15% of juniors and 2% of sophomores live off campus. Those numbers are probably slightly lower than actual because I think it counts athletes who have both as living on campus and I know there are some students who have family that own condos or townhouses that live at both. Either way, it shouldn't be that big of a deal for athletics, but its interesting to see the blowback from students who won't be effected by it.
 

stlnd01

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And athletes all have their "on campus" room and then are never there... been that way since I was there.

And their roommates - if they're not athletes doing the same thing - basically get a single. Not bad
 

Irish Insanity

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Thanks for sharing that. First time I've seen it. First time I've seen The Herd since he's moved. And probably the first time I've agreed with anything Gottlieb had to say.

Sent from my LG-H871 using Tapatalk
 

IrishSteelhead

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Ganeday just had an O/U for ND wins at 7.5. Pollack, Desmond, and Herbie said over, Corso and Bear said under.
 

IrishFanJMercy

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Yes he does, and I'd be surprised if he doesn't come back.

He's going to be the leader of a good defense next year.

Having him back is huge, so basically we only will lose Martini and Morgan? Everyone else comes back and we also add some talented Freshman?! I wouldn't be surprised if some guys have redshirt sophmore years like Hinish or the other DT playing this year thats a freshman
 

beryirish

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Yes he does, and I'd be surprised if he doesn't come back.

He's going to be the leader of a good defense next year.

I hope both him and Jay Hayes come back. Wish Morgan had another year and that he'd be willing to take it.

If the passing game doesn't take off i'm thinking ESB will be a sure stay for another year.
 

Whiskeyjack

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Didn't know where else to share this, so I'm posting it here. The Week's Matthew Walther just published an article titled "Football is great":

I like to think of myself as a very casual fan of America. I do not vote or say the Pledge of Allegiance or stand for the National Anthem except when I am afraid of scandalizing companions who wouldn't understand my decision, which is grounded in a certain 1973 Supreme Court decision. Nor am I a huge believer in progress. As far as I am concerned every century since the 10th has been radically worse than the one that came before it.

The exception to all this is sports. Here I am comfortable being absurdly jingoistic and applauding progress.

America should be given her due. We have a short and mostly unedifying history almost entirely lacking in the romantic appeal of virtually any other nation (including Canada), barely any meritorious literature, and very little attractive architecture. But we did invent jazz and the Banquet Beer and Terminator 2 and all the best games.

We may not be artistic geniuses in this country, but we are very good at taking other people's stuff and making it better. Sometimes we even manage to make it perfect — like we did with football.

Football's predecessor is soccer, which is not a sport per se; it is an activity best suited to entertaining very small children, like playing with Play-Doh or making castles out of popsicle sticks and glue. It's easy to understand why it's popular: its "rules," if you can call them that, are absurdly simple, and all you need to play is a generic round ball.

Football, on the other hand, is soccer as it might have been if peasants in medieval England had had more time and guile on their hands; the difference between chasing a randomly chosen vaguely spherical object into a gap between posts and the autumnal stratonic glory of football is like the difference between a yurt and Strawberry Hill. Soccer is like checkers, which anyone can play even though it is simple and boring; football is like chess, which anyone can play but even genius-level intellects can sink their lives into studying.

As you have surely noticed, football is under attack in America today. It's too dangerous or too boring, and the NCAA and the NFL are not nearly woke enough for a certain kind of snooty coastal fan.

This is all nonsense. Football is great.

All of the best would-be arguments ever made against football are, to my mind, exacting descriptions of its appeal. Malcolm Gladwell once dismissed it as a "dumb and violent 19th century game." That's like saying jazz is "dumb and loud early 20th century music." Of course it is. That's why it's great. As George Carlin, who preferred baseball, famously put it:

Football has hitting, clipping, spearing, piling on, personal fouls, late hitting, and unnecessary roughness. … In football the object is for the quarterback, also known as the field general, to be on target with his aerial assault, riddling the defense by hitting his receivers with deadly accuracy in spite of the blitz, even if he has to use shotgun. With short bullet passes and long bombs, he marches his troops into enemy territory, balancing this aerial assault with a sustained ground attack that punches holes in the forward wall of the enemy's defensive line. [George Carlin]

What more do you need to say? Football is a varied, engrossing, mentally and physically demanding pastime; it is tag, Risk, kickball, and the Commentarii de Bello Gallico all rolled into one. It is also a ready-made mythology for a young country devoid of legends. In the United States it is impossible to revere much of our history because we are too close to it; it is easier to have romantic attachments to a remote past — and even easier to channel all these instincts into something essentially meaningless, to take anger and factionalism and the desire to triumph over one's enemies into a Saturday or Sunday afternoon spent outdoors and leave them there.

What I find baffling is the idea that this game is not a suitable one for children. President Obama, perhaps the biggest football fan to occupy the Oval Office since Richard Nixon, declared in 2014 that if he had sons he probably would not allow them to play. Participation in youth football has been declining steadily for years. Some of this can be chalked up to smartphones and video games, but coaches acknowledge that fears about head injuries have made many parents wary of allowing their sons to play.

When I was in elementary school we played football every day at recess until there was snow on the ground, generally tackle football as long as the recess ladies weren't paying attention. They usually weren't — or so we thought: Probably they just understood that we were having fun and didn't feel the need to interfere. At the same age, my favorite books were The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood and The Three Musketeers. I liked Spielberg movies a lot. My mind ran on legends, fantasies, visions, enchantments. There was no conceivable distinction between nerds and jocks: Luke Skywalker and John Elway were both glorious heroes.

My mother would not have had an easy time convincing me that I shouldn't want to play Pop Warner, much less schoolyard pick-up football, because however romantic, it was also dangerous. After all, danger and romance were basically the point.
 

NDMIA

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Watch: Colin Cowherd Says He Wouldn't Even Let Brian Kelly Into His Living Room To Recruit His Son

I know Colin Cowherd is right around the top of the list in the media world for pandering for clicks, but I thought I'd give this Notre Dame-bashing some checks. Here are some facts that Colin might not be thinking about when trashing Notre Dame or saying he wouldn't let them in his living room.

1. Championships
Non-Consensus from Major Selectors - 22 Notre Dame (1st), 20 Alabama (2nd)​
Claimed by School - 16 Alabama (1st), 11 Notre Dame (2nd), 11 Michigan (2nd)​
Poll Era 1936-Present - 11 Alabama (1st), 8 Notre Dame (2nd)​
2. Winning
Most Wins - 938 Michigan (1st), 897 Notre Dame (2nd)​
Win Percentage - .731 Michigan (1st), .728 Notre Dame (2nd)​
3. Academics
Forbes 2017 Best Colleges Ranking (FBS) - 1 Stanford, 2 Duke, 3 Navy,
4 Rice, 5 Army, 6 Notre Dame​
Largest Endowments (FBS) - 1 Texas, 2 Stanford, 3 Texas A&M, 4 Michigan,
5 Northwestern, 6 Notre Dame​
4. Coaching
Most Wins Active FBS Coaches - 231 Brian Kelly (1st), 212 Nick Saban (2nd)​
Best Win Percentage (Min. 100 Games) - .847 Urban Meyer (1st), .823 Lance Leipold (2nd), .823 Chris Petersen (3rd), .775 Nick Saban (4th), .765 Dabo Swinney (5th), .738 Mark Richt (6th), .737 Gary Patterson (7th), .720 Brian Kelly (8th)​
5. Attendance
Longest Sell Out Streak FBS - 356 Nebraska (1st), 257 Notre Dame (2nd)​
Largest Stadiums in FBS - 107,601 Michigan (1st), 80,795 Notre Dame (17th)​

Obviously this is totally biased but Notre Dame has some stats that are showing it to be a pretty damn good program. Oh, and they are the only team in college football with an exclusive national tv contract.
 
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koonja

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Watch: Colin Cowherd Says He Wouldn't Even Let Brian Kelly Into His Living Room To Recruit His Son

I know Colin Cowherd is right around the top of the list in the media world for pandering for clicks, but I thought I'd give this Notre Dame-bashing some checks. Here are some facts that Colin might not be thinking about when trashing Notre Dame or saying he wouldn't let them in his living room.

1. Championships
Non-Consensus from Major Selectors - 22 Notre Dame (1st), 20 Alabama (2nd)​
Claimed by School - 16 Alabama (1st), 11 Notre Dame (2nd), 11 Michigan (2nd)​
Poll Era 1936-Present - 11 Alabama (1st), 8 Notre Dame (2nd)​
2. Winning
Most Wins - 938 Michigan (1st), 897 Notre Dame (2nd)​
Win Percentage - .731 Michigan (1st), .728 Notre Dame (2nd)​
3. Academics
Forbes 2017 Best Colleges Ranking (FBS) - 1 Stanford, 2 Duke, 3 Navy,
4 Rice, 5 Army, 6 Notre Dame​
Largest Endowments (FBS) - 1 Texas, 2 Stanford, 3 Texas A&M, 4 Michigan,
5 Northwestern, 6 Notre Dame​
4. Coaching
Most Wins Active FBS Coaches - 231 Brian Kelly (1st), 212 Nick Saban (2nd)​
Best Win Percentage (Min. 100 Games) - .847 Urban Meyer (1st), .823 Lance Leipold (2nd), .823 Chris Petersen (3rd), .775 Nick Saban (4th), .765 Dabo Swinney (5th), .738 Mark Richt (6th), .737 Gary Patterson (7th), .720 Brian Kelly (8th)​
5. Attendance
Longest Sell Out Streak FBS - 356 Nebraska (1st), 257 Notre Dame (2nd)​
Largest Stadiums in FBS - 107,601 Michigan (1st), 80,795 Notre Dame (17th)​

Obviously this is totally biased but Notre Dame has some stats that are showing it to be a pretty damn good program. Oh, and they are the only team in college football with an exclusive national tv contract.

Colin Cowerd is a moron and is the biggest joke of a journalist since Skip Bayless.

Colin is entertaining and great at carrying on a show. His thoughts aren't worth d!ck, though.
 

BGIF

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What you need to know one month from the first CFP rankings
At 4-1, USC has no margin for error. FPI gives the Trojans just a 26.5 percent chance to win Oct. 21 at Notre Dame. If they don't, they're likely done.
 

ab2cmiller

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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Notre Dame is tied with Miami at No. 1 nationally in rushing TDs allowed (one). <br><br>Canes have played just four games. Irish have played six.</p>— Irish Illustrated (@PeteSampson_) <a href="https://twitter.com/PeteSampson_/status/916859416120524801?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">October 8, 2017</a></blockquote>
<script async src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 

Veritate Duce Progredi

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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Notre Dame is tied with Miami at No. 1 nationally in rushing TDs allowed (one). <br><br>Canes have played just four games. Irish have played six.</p>— Irish Illustrated (@PeteSampson_) <a href="https://twitter.com/PeteSampson_/status/916859416120524801?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">October 8, 2017</a></blockquote>
<script async src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

So how good at rushing are the teams we've played thus far vs. the canes competition?

ND
Temple - 120
Georgia - 11
Boston College - 71
Michigan State - 53
Miami (OH) - 83
North Carolina - 95


Miami
B-CU, non FBS (131?)
Arkansas State - canceled
Toledo - 61
Duke - 34
Florida State - 105
 

Old Man Mike

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These sorts of early in-season stats are always "interesting" to me since the bad ratings of opponents just might have something to do with the fact that they played US.

I also believe that Notre Dame really takes it out of most opponents, and they limp afterwards for a while.
 

dwshade

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So how good at rushing are the teams we've played thus far vs. the canes competition?

ND
Temple - 120
Georgia - 11
Boston College - 71
Michigan State - 53
Miami (OH) - 83
North Carolina - 95


Miami
B-CU, non FBS (131?)
Arkansas State - canceled
Toledo - 61
Duke - 34
Florida State - 105

Good lord, when is the last time you've seen FSU that low in rushing yards?
 

Dizzyphil

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So how good at rushing are the teams we've played thus far vs. the canes competition?

ND
Temple - 120
Georgia - 11
Boston College - 71
Michigan State - 53
Miami (OH) - 83
North Carolina - 95


Miami
B-CU, non FBS (131?)
Arkansas State - canceled
Toledo - 61
Duke - 34
Florida State - 105

What exactly do these numbers represent?
 

Dizzyphil

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My supposition is that it's each team's ranking in running yards.

I could be wrong, though.

Ok... I thought there for a second, the Irish held GA to 11 rushing yards....

I know I had some Jameson watching the game...
 

ozzman

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so the same guy that said we'd get blown out by Georgia by 20, Greg McElroy just picked us as #3 at the end of the season and in the playoff. He thinks we win convincingly this weekend and proceed to run the table...
 
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