Mike Elko - Defensive Coordinator

Huntr

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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Worth noting on the whole pay scale for assistants at Notre Dame point.<br><br>Brian VanGorder was paid among the Top 10 defensive coordinators in college football while at Notre Dame.<br><br>Safe bet Mike Elko was too.<br><br>Notre Dame will pay. But it won’t pay at the top top of the market.</p>— Irish Illustrated (@PeteSampson_) <a href="https://twitter.com/PeteSampson_/status/949102464397135873?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">January 5, 2018</a></blockquote>
 

NDinBoston

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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Watch us rebuild this thing again....☘️</p>— Nick Coleman (@NDotCole_24) <a href="https://twitter.com/NDotCole_24/status/949097396012830720?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">January 5, 2018</a></blockquote>
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loomis41973

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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Watch us rebuild this thing again....☘️</p>— Nick Coleman (@NDotCole_24) <a href="https://twitter.com/NDotCole_24/status/949097396012830720?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">January 5, 2018</a></blockquote>
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1 coach is not a rebuild.

Is he trying to tell us something?
 

NDinBoston

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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Some news in this story: per source, before he left for A&M, Elko verbally agreed to a new contract with ND in excess of $1.5M. Would have been highest paid assistant in ND history. Then A&M won bidding war. <a href="https://t.co/Zy3TuRpIQi">https://t.co/Zy3TuRpIQi</a></p>— Mike Vorel (@mikevorel) <a href="https://twitter.com/mikevorel/status/949105706938109952?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">January 5, 2018</a></blockquote>
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">When <a href="https://twitter.com/CoachMikeElko?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@CoachMikeElko</a> was pondering whether to come to <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/NotreDame?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#NotreDame</a> 13 months ago, he watched enough film to convince himself that the Irish could be great again. On defense and beyond. ... They still can. <a href="https://t.co/RggqdNypZf">https://t.co/RggqdNypZf</a></p>— Eric Hansen (@EHansenNDI) <a href="https://twitter.com/EHansenNDI/status/949104223173660673?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">January 5, 2018</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

SOUTH BEND — Amidst the avalanche of reaction, overreaction and the social media equivalent of a wake for someone or something that didn’t actually die, came a sobering voice of resolve.

“Part of the business,” tweeted future Notre Dame safety Derrik Allen, minutes after the news that Notre Dame first-year defensive coordinator Mike Elko was bolting for Texas A&M was confirmed by Irish head football coach Brian Kelly Thursday afternoon.

“Sign to a place ’cause of their cultures and beliefs,” the tweet continued, “not because of a coach.”

The 6-foot-1, 204-pound four-star recruit from Marietta, Ga., who signed with 20 other prospects during the new early national signing period (Dec. 20-22), didn’t have much company in his opinion Thursday, from either current or future Irish players initially, more so when the shock and hurt started to fade hours later.

But the tone of his message brings the kind of practicality to the bold, jilting headline that Kelly already must be immersed in …

It’s all about how you move on.

And Kelly’s next move must be every bit as astute as his decision to hire the complete stranger from Wake Forest 13 months ago.

Which starts with an open mind.

Eventually the ninth-year Irish head coach will have to prioritize how important is it to keep the same scheme Elko introduced (a 4-2-5 with a rover) versus, say, something as philosophically jarring as a move back to the 3-4.

And if his preference is to keep the scheme similar, does longtime assistant and defensive line coach Mike Elston rise to the top of the list of candidates? Does linebackers coach Clark Lea, who came to ND last winter with Elko from Wake, have a better handle on it?

Can Kelly find someone who checked all the boxes that Elko did — tactician, motivator, elite recruiter, master talent evaluator, visionary?

Can Kelly lure a top-tier safeties coach to advance and evolve the position group that Elko coached and the one that is teeming with both promise of an infusion of talent and more room for improvement than any position group on a team that finished 10-3 and will likely end up no lower than 12th in the final polls?

The one thing Kelly won’t have to ask himself is what went wrong.

There was no philosophical rift between Kelly and the 40-year-old New Jersey native, no personality clash. The move was driven by economics, it would seem, more than anything else.

According to a source familiar with the process, Texas A&M twice came after Elko after hiring Florida State head coach Jimbo Fisher on Dec. 1 to head the Aggies program and giving him a guaranteed 10-year contract worth $75 million to do so.

The most recent rebuffed overture from the Aggies coaxed a new contract from ND for Elko, which he verbally agreed to. One source described the compensation as putting Elko in the top 10 highest paid defensive coordinators in the country and having the highest salary for an assistant in Notre Dame history.

Another put it in excess of $1.5 million a year, which, per USA Today’s data base for assistants’ salaries, would have put him behind only Clemson's Brent Venables ($1.7 million) and the man who flirted with and turned down Texas A&M Wednesday night, LSU’s Dave Aranda.

It took a four-year guaranteed contract at $2.5 million per season for Tiger head coach Ed Orgeron to hold onto already the highest-paid assistant in college football and one that, per the Baton Rouge Advocate, will trump the salaries of 62 percent of the FBS head coaches from 2017.

Elko’s deal with the Aggies, per the source, will average $2 million per year, and probably could have gone higher if Notre Dame wanted to prolong the bidding war.

There’s also a chance Lea, if he is not ND’s next defensive coordinator, will be Texas A&M’s next linebackers coach, but that situation is still evolving and Lea is certainly valued by Kelly.

Also evolving, and probably much more complicated with Elko’s departure, are the impending decisions of junior nose guard Jerry Tillery and junior linebacker Te’von Coney on whether to jump into the 2018 draft pool with wide receiver Equanimeous St. Brown.

St. Brown, a junior, declared for the NFL Draft Thursday, hours after Elko’s decision leaked. Junior running back Josh Adams is also weighing an early entry, with Jan. 15 the deadline to decide.

The two defensive players may have to forge ahead before they know what a return to Notre Dame in 2018 might look like.

And there are so many moving parts to finding Elko’s replacement, not the least of which is that the best short-term solution and the best long-term one might not be the same person.

The 2018 Irish team, better situated for a playoff run than the one that rallied past LSU (21-17) Monday at the Citrus Bowl in Orlando, Fla., would probably benefit from continuity. That goes for both the scheme and the face and voice that’s demanding the buy-in of it.

There are arguments in either scenario that would point to Elston as deserving a long look. It’s not about the loyalty of rewarding a man who held together ND’s 2017 recruiting class through a 4-8 season or settling into a comfort zone.

It’s that he has shown the potential of delivering in all the areas Elko did, even as a coordinator in an admittedly small sample size.

As Notre Dame’s interim defensive coordinator for the final eight games of 2016, following the late September firing of Brian VanGorder, Elston’s defenses held opponents below their season averages in points 75 percent of the time in scoring and 87.5 percent of the time in yardage, while facing teams in the top third nationally in total offense 37.5 percent of the time.

Elko’s numbers were very similar — 76.9 percent of the time in both yardage and points over 13 games, and facing the top third in total offense 38.5 percent of the time.

VanGorder’s numbers, by comparison, were 53.3 percent in points, 43.3 in yardage and playing the upper-third offenses 26.7 percent of the time.

Thirteen months in any job is too short to forge a legacy but not too brief for impact. Lasting impact.

When Kelly first contacted Elko about coming to Notre Dame, the Ivy League grad who grew up in a trailer park, parked himself in front of his iPad and watched enough film to convince himself that Notre Dame football could be great again.

On defense. In this decade. In meaningful January games. In sustainable fashion. And that’s why he came.

That vision, that possibility is still very much alive. Now Kelly just has to find a way to make that home run hire.

Again.
 
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NDMIA

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Pete Golding - UTSA - 8th PPG FBS, 7th Total Defense ALABAMA
Orlondo Steinauer - Fresno State - 9th PPG, 16th Total Defense
Scottie Hazelton - Wyoming - 13th PPG, 21st Total Defense
Danny Gonzales - SDSU - 15th PPG, 11th Total Defense ARIZONA ST
Kevin Kane - Northern Illinois - 26th PPG, 18th Total Defense

This is just a list of defensive coordinators at smaller schools who had statistically good defenses. Pete Golding is a massive rising star but he was hired two weeks ago by Bama. Maybe if we offered D-Coordinator spot to him he’d come but doubtful. Steinauer at Fresno State is pretty big time but no idea who ND will go after.
 

BabyIrish

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Screw Mike Elko. It's obvious the relationships he built with these kids the last 12-13 months meant nothing to him. Nothing. What a lousy person to represent ND. I hope Bama runs the ball down your damn throats and you're fired in 2 years.
 
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dmort

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The next DC I would bet is already DC in the SEC.Its going to take more than $1.5m to land a solid DC. I hope Kelly makes a push for pay increases for his remaining key staff.
 

stlnd01

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According to a source familiar with the process, Texas A&M twice came after Elko after hiring Florida State head coach Jimbo Fisher on Dec. 1 to head the Aggies program and giving him a guaranteed 10-year contract worth $75 million to do so.

The most recent rebuffed overture from the Aggies coaxed a new contract from ND for Elko, which he verbally agreed to. One source described the compensation as putting Elko in the top 10 highest paid defensive coordinators in the country and having the highest salary for an assistant in Notre Dame history.

Another put it in excess of $1.5 million a year, which, per USA Today’s data base for assistants’ salaries, would have put him behind only Clemson's Brent Venables ($1.7 million) and the man who flirted with and turned down Texas A&M Wednesday night, LSU’s Dave Aranda.

...

Elko’s deal with the Aggies, per the source, will average $2 million per year, and probably could have gone higher if Notre Dame wanted to prolong the bidding war.

Honestly, if this is accurate, I don't blame Swarbrick one bit for letting him walk. If Elko got an offer from A&M, used it to leverage a sizable raise from Notre Dame - which he agreed to - and then a week later jumped to A&M when they came back at him with more money, he just looks like a mercenary.
At some point coaches have to commit to the program too.
 

NDRock

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Screw Mike Elko. It's obvious the relationships he built with these kids the last 12-13 months meant nothing to him. Nothing. What a lousy person to represent ND. I hope Bama runs the ball down your damn throats and you're fired in 2 years.

Agree. Don't really think I can root for the guy. Him going to A&M to join up with Jimbo makes it even easier to root against.
 

Sherm Sticky

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Well it looks like ND did all they could do...So again I don't think ND could have gotten in a bidding war with TAMU that would never end because A&M would always make the deal sweater.

So I now go back to the point that this is on Elko. ND was going to make him the 3rd highest paid assistant coach in America, but that wasn't good enough for him. Elko is about the money. Not the relationships he built for 1 for 1 year.
 

loomis41973

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Honestly, if this is accurate, I don't blame Swarbrick one bit for letting him walk. If Elko got an offer from A&M, used it to leverage a sizable raise from Notre Dame - which he agreed to - and then a week later jumped to A&M when they came back at him with more money, he just looks like a mercenary.
At some point coaches have to commit to the program too.

Agreed.
 

Sherm Sticky

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Honestly, if this is accurate, I don't blame Swarbrick one bit for letting him walk. If Elko got an offer from A&M, used it to leverage a sizable raise from Notre Dame - which he agreed to - and then a week later jumped to A&M when they came back at him with more money, he just looks like a mercenary.
At some point coaches have to commit to the program too.
Agree...a job whore. No integrity. You got a raise, so finish your contract for the remaining 2 years.

Honestly it's better it happened now then 12 months from now...
 
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Sherm Sticky

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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Some news in this story: per source, before he left for A&M, Elko verbally agreed to a new contract with ND in excess of $1.5M. Would have been highest paid assistant in ND history. Then A&M won bidding war. <a href="https://t.co/Zy3TuRpIQi">https://t.co/Zy3TuRpIQi</a></p>— Mike Vorel (@mikevorel) <a href="https://twitter.com/mikevorel/status/949105706938109952?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">January 5, 2018</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>


<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">When <a href="https://twitter.com/CoachMikeElko?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@CoachMikeElko</a> was pondering whether to come to <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/NotreDame?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#NotreDame</a> 13 months ago, he watched enough film to convince himself that the Irish could be great again. On defense and beyond. ... They still can. <a href="https://t.co/RggqdNypZf">https://t.co/RggqdNypZf</a></p>— Eric Hansen (@EHansenNDI) <a href="https://twitter.com/EHansenNDI/status/949104223173660673?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">January 5, 2018</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

SOUTH BEND — Amidst the avalanche of reaction, overreaction and the social media equivalent of a wake for someone or something that didn’t actually die, came a sobering voice of resolve.

“Part of the business,” tweeted future Notre Dame safety Derrik Allen, minutes after the news that Notre Dame first-year defensive coordinator Mike Elko was bolting for Texas A&M was confirmed by Irish head football coach Brian Kelly Thursday afternoon.

“Sign to a place ’cause of their cultures and beliefs,” the tweet continued, “not because of a coach.”

The 6-foot-1, 204-pound four-star recruit from Marietta, Ga., who signed with 20 other prospects during the new early national signing period (Dec. 20-22), didn’t have much company in his opinion Thursday, from either current or future Irish players initially, more so when the shock and hurt started to fade hours later.

But the tone of his message brings the kind of practicality to the bold, jilting headline that Kelly already must be immersed in …

It’s all about how you move on.

And Kelly’s next move must be every bit as astute as his decision to hire the complete stranger from Wake Forest 13 months ago.

Which starts with an open mind.

Eventually the ninth-year Irish head coach will have to prioritize how important is it to keep the same scheme Elko introduced (a 4-2-5 with a rover) versus, say, something as philosophically jarring as a move back to the 3-4.

And if his preference is to keep the scheme similar, does longtime assistant and defensive line coach Mike Elston rise to the top of the list of candidates? Does linebackers coach Clark Lea, who came to ND last winter with Elko from Wake, have a better handle on it?

Can Kelly find someone who checked all the boxes that Elko did — tactician, motivator, elite recruiter, master talent evaluator, visionary?

Can Kelly lure a top-tier safeties coach to advance and evolve the position group that Elko coached and the one that is teeming with both promise of an infusion of talent and more room for improvement than any position group on a team that finished 10-3 and will likely end up no lower than 12th in the final polls?

The one thing Kelly won’t have to ask himself is what went wrong.

There was no philosophical rift between Kelly and the 40-year-old New Jersey native, no personality clash. The move was driven by economics, it would seem, more than anything else.

According to a source familiar with the process, Texas A&M twice came after Elko after hiring Florida State head coach Jimbo Fisher on Dec. 1 to head the Aggies program and giving him a guaranteed 10-year contract worth $75 million to do so.

The most recent rebuffed overture from the Aggies coaxed a new contract from ND for Elko, which he verbally agreed to. One source described the compensation as putting Elko in the top 10 highest paid defensive coordinators in the country and having the highest salary for an assistant in Notre Dame history.

Another put it in excess of $1.5 million a year, which, per USA Today’s data base for assistants’ salaries, would have put him behind only Clemson's Brent Venables ($1.7 million) and the man who flirted with and turned down Texas A&M Wednesday night, LSU’s Dave Aranda.

It took a four-year guaranteed contract at $2.5 million per season for Tiger head coach Ed Orgeron to hold onto already the highest-paid assistant in college football and one that, per the Baton Rouge Advocate, will trump the salaries of 62 percent of the FBS head coaches from 2017.

Elko’s deal with the Aggies, per the source, will average $2 million per year, and probably could have gone higher if Notre Dame wanted to prolong the bidding war.

There’s also a chance Lea, if he is not ND’s next defensive coordinator, will be Texas A&M’s next linebackers coach, but that situation is still evolving and Lea is certainly valued by Kelly.

Also evolving, and probably much more complicated with Elko’s departure, are the impending decisions of junior nose guard Jerry Tillery and junior linebacker Te’von Coney on whether to jump into the 2018 draft pool with wide receiver Equanimeous St. Brown.

St. Brown, a junior, declared for the NFL Draft Thursday, hours after Elko’s decision leaked. Junior running back Josh Adams is also weighing an early entry, with Jan. 15 the deadline to decide.

The two defensive players may have to forge ahead before they know what a return to Notre Dame in 2018 might look like.

And there are so many moving parts to finding Elko’s replacement, not the least of which is that the best short-term solution and the best long-term one might not be the same person.

The 2018 Irish team, better situated for a playoff run than the one that rallied past LSU (21-17) Monday at the Citrus Bowl in Orlando, Fla., would probably benefit from continuity. That goes for both the scheme and the face and voice that’s demanding the buy-in of it.

There are arguments in either scenario that would point to Elston as deserving a long look. It’s not about the loyalty of rewarding a man who held together ND’s 2017 recruiting class through a 4-8 season or settling into a comfort zone.

It’s that he has shown the potential of delivering in all the areas Elko did, even as a coordinator in an admittedly small sample size.

As Notre Dame’s interim defensive coordinator for the final eight games of 2016, following the late September firing of Brian VanGorder, Elston’s defenses held opponents below their season averages in points 75 percent of the time in scoring and 87.5 percent of the time in yardage, while facing teams in the top third nationally in total offense 37.5 percent of the time.

Elko’s numbers were very similar — 76.9 percent of the time in both yardage and points over 13 games, and facing the top third in total offense 38.5 percent of the time.

VanGorder’s numbers, by comparison, were 53.3 percent in points, 43.3 in yardage and playing the upper-third offenses 26.7 percent of the time.

Thirteen months in any job is too short to forge a legacy but not too brief for impact. Lasting impact.

When Kelly first contacted Elko about coming to Notre Dame, the Ivy League grad who grew up in a trailer park, parked himself in front of his iPad and watched enough film to convince himself that Notre Dame football could be great again.

On defense. In this decade. In meaningful January games. In sustainable fashion. And that’s why he came.

That vision, that possibility is still very much alive. Now Kelly just has to find a way to make that home run hire.

Again.
Lax, Lucci, Whiskey and TTommy want to know your thoughts if the above is infact the truth?
 

NDinBoston

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Honestly, if this is accurate, I don't blame Swarbrick one bit for letting him walk. If Elko got an offer from A&M, used it to leverage a sizable raise from Notre Dame - which he agreed to - and then a week later jumped to A&M when they came back at him with more money, he just looks like a mercenary.
At some point coaches have to commit to the program too.

Of course we don't know all details yet, but based on what we think we know, I agree with you 100%. We'll see how this plays out as more details are available.

I choose to focus on how ND moves forward i.e. new hire process, recruit reaction, current player reaction, etc...

I say. Play pissed. Coach pissed. Recruit pissed. Root pissed. Turn this into a positive. Us against them. Whatever works for you. Just don't be losers about it.
 
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irishff1014

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Of course we don't know all details yet, but based on what we think we know, I agree with you 100%. We'll see how this plays out as more details are available.

I choose to focus on how ND moves forward i.e. new hire process, recruit reaction, current player reaction, etc...

I am not saying that we should have the top paid assistant coaches but we should be damn near the top.
 

FDNYIrish1

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Texas A$M was not going to give up here guys. They would have blown up the market even further. This is not NDs fault if they offered and he verbally agreed. His word means shit obviously, but they would have kept coming.
 

Irish#1

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So much for the theories of ND administration not caring about improving the FB program.
 

NDdomer2

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I'm glad these 18-24 yo's have greater perspective than the fan base
 

NDMIA

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I think there are a lot of factors involved in Elko’s decision to leave. 1) He got $1.8M compared to $1.5M. 2) No State Income Tax in Texas. Now it 100% could be completely about making ~$350K more per year than at ND. Or there could be Elko’s family didn’t fit into the community. Maybe his kids didn’t like their school in South Bend. Maybe his wife didn’t love the area. Maybe Elko and Lea didn’t feel quite that cozy with the other staff members. Maybe he just loves Texas and wanted to live there. There are many many many different factors that go into someone’s decision to change jobs. I’ve had it personally and so have most people on this board. Now if it’s just about the money then he belongs at Texas A&M and thank you for your service during a 10 win season and thanks for getting us another top 10 recruiting class. If it’s for other reasons we don’t know then the same still holds true. Nick Saban has seen Kirby Smart leave, Jeremy Pruitt leave, Kevin Steele leave, Gary Gibbs leave, Chris Coach leave, Dean Pees leave and Alabama keeps chugging along without a drop in production. I think the positives of Elko being in South Bend for one season outweigh the negatives. He recruited like an animal, we won 10 games, and our defense improved like crazy. All this departure means is Brian Kelly can make another dynamite hire outside of his circle of friends. After all this, would you want 1 year of Elko or one more season of BVG....
 

NDinBoston

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I think there are a lot of factors involved in Elko’s decision to leave. 1) He got $1.8M compared to $1.5M. 2) No State Income Tax in Texas. Now it 100% could be completely about making ~$350K more per year than at ND. Or there could be Elko’s family didn’t fit into the community. Maybe his kids didn’t like their school in South Bend. Maybe his wife didn’t love the area. Maybe Elko and Lea didn’t feel quite that cozy with the other staff members. Maybe he just loves Texas and wanted to live there. There are many many many different factors that go into someone’s decision to change jobs. I’ve had it personally and so have most people on this board. Now if it’s just about the money then he belongs at Texas A&M and thank you for your service during a 10 win season and thanks for getting us another top 10 recruiting class. If it’s for other reasons we don’t know then the same still holds true. Nick Saban has seen Kirby Smart leave, Jeremy Pruitt leave, Kevin Steele leave, Gary Gibbs leave, Chris Coach leave, Dean Pees leave and Alabama keeps chugging along without a drop in production. I think the positives of Elko being in South Bend for one season outweigh the negatives. He recruited like an animal, we won 10 games, and our defense improved like crazy. All this departure means is Brian Kelly can make another dynamite hire outside of his circle of friends. After all this, would you want 1 year of Elko or one more season of BVG....

Awesome points. I don't think the direction should be to bash Elko. I think as fans we should recognize the business aspect of this - assuming ND did all they could here -
and focus on moving forward as a winning institution/program/fan base.

Thanks for your important perspective.
 
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