![]() ![]() Michigan ended up winning, but struggled down the stretch. Q: Last year we discussed what the impact of this game could mean for both schools. Kelly creates an environment where the players want to come to work, where they can balance fun and their football duties, and they don't feel suffocated doing so. Likewise, the pool table and air hockey table and video games in the player's lounge, where there was just chairs and flat-screens before. It's all extremely corny and cheesy - and it's exactly the sort of stuff that 19-to-21-year-old football players buy into. The Irish now have "Mental Monday" and "Perfect Practice Thursday" and "Focus Friday." They have an "Irish creed" and "Irish commandments" listed in the locker room. Q: Besides the obvious, what has changed at Notre Dame from under former coach Charlie Weis to current coach Brian Kelly?īH: I think it's best summarized this way: Kelly is a college coach. It's too much of an advantage - Floyd versus a patchwork secondary - not to attack often. I'm going to guess that Kelly will devise a way to get Floyd the ball underneath, or just resolve to throw it up in his general vicinity and expect that the first-round NFL Draft pick talent can outduel the marginal Michigan cornerback he's battling against. ![]() It was odd that Floyd went more than a quarter without registering a catch against Purdue, which said to me that teams first and foremost want to run a safety his way and keep the ball out of his hands. Is that where Notre Dame can be most effective this week?īH: Considering that no Notre Dame receiver has ever had more yards against Michigan than the 131 Floyd had last year, yes. Q: Michael Floyd, when he's healthy, makes opposing secondaries look bad. That might make it easier for Michigan defenders to sit back a bit and keep the Irish in front of them. On offense, I know we didn't see the full extent of the Brian Kelly attack - but I'm also not sure it was that Kelly "held something back." It's more likely that Kelly feels the players can't handle the full menu just yet. It's going to be whether a five-man rotation on the defensive line can hold up for four quarters. I don't know how the attrition, if any, will play out in late October and November, but then this is Week 2. Even when two starters went down against Purdue and were out for most of the game, the Irish defense held up. What's the biggest question you still see overall with this Notre Dame team?īH: Defensive depth and how extensive the offensive repertoire will be. ![]() Q: The Irish offense answered a lot of questions Saturday. ![]() It's whether Michigan can finish drives off that will determine how this goes. I see the Irish just trying to contain and corral more than attack for big plays, and then attempting to tighten up in the red zone. But read-option is what Michigan does, so you have to assume Notre Dame will be better prepared for it. That said, when Purdue went with a bit of read-option last weekend, it caught the Irish off guard, and Marve actually did run for a fourth-down touchdown out of a read-option play. Notre Dame won't make blitzing on every down a priority this year, so the chance for gaping holes that lead to backbreaking fourth-down touchdown runs are not high. Marve was, generally, well-contained in the pocket, but Robinson just moves much, much better. Denard Robinson is a different animal than Robert Marve. Brian Hamilton of the Chicago Tribune Q: How does Notre Dame deal with Michigan starting quarterback Denard Robinson? Is it anything close to what it had to deal with a week ago against Purdue?īrian Hamilton: The short answers: Tackle better (well, some players, anyway), and not really. ![]()
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