I'm glad the players aren't happy with mediocrity when some of the fans are.
Hyperbole much?
No one ever said that they were happy with mediocrity.
I'll try to use small words, and speak slow, to try to explain my position on the subject:
I think that the goal should be double digit wins, every year. But there's a difference between goals and expectations. Goals are what you hope will happen over the course of the season, and are possibilities. Expectations are what you expect to happen. In other words, what is not only possible, but likely. The likelihood of winning 10+ games changes from year to year, based on the strength of your schedule, your strengths, and your weaknesses. Notre Dame SHOULD have elite talent every year, but they don't. Some kids just don't pan out; Sam Young, Terrail Lambert, or James Aldridge. So, if you are setting realistic expectations, you have to take into account how players are performing, or not performing. You can't just go off of recruiting class rankings, and say, "We have elite talent on the field, because of our recruiting class rankings." When I look at playing Stanford, at Stanford, with Tommy Rees at QB instead of Everett Golson, I figure that the odds of ND winning that game are lower than with EG. So my expectations are that we will probably lose, but it sure as hell doesn't mean that I am happy about it. Take Louis Nix out of the equation, and my odds on us winning that game drop even more precipitously.