Watching the Syracuse game for a second time I watched both lines. The best I can figure loathing on this site, and everywhere else for the offensive line having troubles is because everyone accepts Herbie's and Fowler's narrative. This is certainly true after the Syracuse game, which according to Herbie and Fowler, was a cut above ND's competition in their first three games, (their own words.) They did not see the same game I did.
They were talking about ND's offensive line woes, and continued woes as ND got 3 first downs on the 95 yard drive by ground and averaged over 5 yards a carry on that drive. In fact the only run I saw that was shorter that five yards was the "delay sneak" by EG which converted a 3rd and two. On that play there was a hole a mile wide. If he had hit it just a little faster he would have gotten serious yards.
The play everyone talks about is the play that Cuse had seven on the line and showed blitze from one direction (overloaded) and came from another. Herbie talked about that play as being on Golson to identify and audible. Who would want to have a quarterback roll out with his back to two uncovered blitzers?
And in fact it resulted in the only sack of the night, and when Golson got to the sidelines, Kelly asked him, per the sideline reporter why he would run that play against the look the defense gave him. (That was the time for a sneak up the middle or an I/S zone run, (had there been anyone in the backfield).
There was another play where Elmer pulled and there was no one in the middle, the defense angled away and the linebacker got hung up somewhere, and Elmer looked kind of funny, like he was blocking air. But he did on that play what the offensive line rarely did last year. He got out of the way and didn't plug the hole. Christian Lombard had a real problem with that, he would pick the wrong guy and end up plugging the hole. I didn't see that mistake once against Syracuse and I am to halftime, (of my second viewing.)
So I say that when people talk down about the talking heads, it is often with good reason. The network owns the narrative and most people accept it. It wasn't true in the game Saturday night. It was just ESPNABC selling their game and priming their ratings, not the actual situation on the field.
And yes, as some have pointed out the running backs have some timing and other issues that really ad to the look of this being a "line problem."