That's the first time ND has played an elite opponent and clearly been the better team. That's nice, after having 36 hours to cool down.
And ND wasn't just better by the eye test to us homers... advanced stats support that ND played better, and OSU's post-game win expectancy was loooooooow.
You could pick out 20 plays from the game, and if you change the outcome of any one of 20, ND likely wins. The same is not true for OSU. You can change the outcome of 20 plays for them, but there's only one play that likely changes the outcome in their favor (the shoe-string tackle on Williams before the 4th-down stop), and that's still AFTER a bunch of shit went against ND.
Disappointing that Parker waited until an obvious "RUN THE FUCKING BALL" situation to let Hartman cook. A 4-minute drill is not the time to get cute. Hopefully he learns from it.
Similarly, disappointing that Al Golden came up with an elite game plan, got his guys to execute in an elite fashion against an elite group of skill players on the other side for 3.75 quarters, and inexplicably became the dumbest DC in the history of the game for a total of like 5 plays.
Blitzing BenMo on the most-telegraphed CB blitz of all time was ugly, and didn't just make the read easy on McCord, it got the kid going, which was the opposite of what needed to happen. I get trying to confuse him at the **best/worst** time, but an obvious CB blitz ain't it. Maybe it's partly on BenMo for showing it, but that seemed intentional. Maybe it's on a different player for not filling the vacuum. Idk. I just know it starts with a poor call by the DC.
The 3rd-and-19 was trash. You had success by using pressure to keep them away from long-developing stuff for the most part, but then let them execute a long-developing concept by dropping 8 in the most crucial situation? Hindsight is 20/20, but ALL OF US were probably calling the "prevent just prevents you from winning" in the moment there.
10 players on the field for the last two plays? That's on the DC making sure his position coaches and GA's have the right personnel groups ready. Everyone wants to lambast Freeman for his shoddy reasoning for not taking a penalty, but the fact is that it's not Freeman's job to count the players prior to every play, and even though he's a defensive-minded HC, he's not a hands-on coordinator like other HC's. He's taken on the CEO role, which is why he takes the brunt of the criticism, and likely KNOWS he sounds like a fool in the presser, when really he's covering for any number of his coaches, GA's, or players.
It could be Golden not clarifying which personnel group he wanted for a unique goalline situation. It could be on him for not having a spread-goalline defense ready in general. It could be on Washington or a GA for not having a DE/DT/LB ready to go on the field. It could be on a player for not paying enough attention to the personnel grouping changing. I'd bet it's a combination of all three in a chaotic, unique situation.
It's not on Freeman in the moment, but it IS on him now to make sure they've got it worked out moving forward. I bet they already have a GA or analyst that's supposed to count the players on every play... if not, they will now lol.