College Football Week Five: Returning The Fight To The Fighting Irish

Dean Hybl by Correspondent Written on October 04, 2009
SOUTH BEND, IN - OCTOBER 03: Jimmy Clausen #7 of the Notre Dame Fighting Irish throws a pass against the Washington Huskies on October 3, 2009 at Notre Dame Stadium in South Bend, Indiana. (Photo by Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images) (Photo by Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images)

It was another interesting weekend of college football as several ranked teams received unexpected challenges while a couple teams solidified their place in the rankings.



Putting the Fight Back in the Fighting Irish

I’m not ready to call the 2009 Notre Dame Fighting Irish a good team, but they are definitely entertaining.

Now 4-1 following a 37-30 overtime victory over the University of Washington, the last four games for the Irish have been decided by a total of 17 points with all of them going down to the wire.

Except for in the 38-34 loss to Michigan when the Wolverines scored in the final seconds to pull out the win, Notre Dame has been able to make big plays when it counts.

That is a far cry from a year ago when Notre Dame finished 7-6 and seemed to always fall just short in crunch time.

I’m sure that the legions of Notre Dame faithful across the country are ready to claim the return of the “Golden Dome Aura”, and I suspect the Irish will probably inch back into the top 25 this week.

But Charlie Weis has fooled us before. Just last season Notre Dame also started 4-1 before losing five of their next seven games to stumble into the Hawaii Bowl with a 6-6 record.

The Fighting Irish seem to have a much more consistent offense than a year ago as they have scored more than 30 points four times and scored 24 points in the fifth. A year ago they had five games with more than 30 points, but also were held in single digits three times, including a shutout loss at Boston College.

In his third season as the quarterback, Jimmy Clausen has emerged as a dark horse Heisman candidate. He is completing 65 percent of his pass attempts and thrown 10 touchdown passes with just one interception.

It won’t be long before we learn whether Notre Dame is a legitimate top 25 team.

After a bye week, they will host USC in what could prove to be the most significant game in the tenure of Charlie Weis as coach of the Irish.

USC is still very good, but they are not the offensive and defensive juggernaut that they have been in recent years. If Clausen can continue his magical season, the Irish could pull out the victory and re-emerge as a national championship contender.

After USC, the Fighting Irish don’t play another game against a top 25 team and could very easily roll through the rest of their schedule without another loss.

If that did happen, then instead of questions about whether Charlie Weis will keep his job for another year, the questions would shift to whether Notre Dame deserved a shot at the national title.

However, if the Irish struggle against USC, it could be much harder to run the table and then Weis may have his neck back in the noose.

I’m really not sure if Notre Dame can beat USC, but no matter what happens, you can bet they will be fun to watch.

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written on October 04, 2009 Opinion

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