Offensively, Notre Dame scored enough to win and when the
clock reads all zeros, as long as you have more points than your opponent, that’s
all that matters. Notre Dame’s three-headed
monster of Atkinson, Riddick and Wood combined for a total of 95 yards on 28
carries and a lone touchdown, which was apparently good enough but left fans
tasting vanilla. The passing game did
not offer much excitement either. The
Irish used only (I say only because Kelly said we would need the media guide to
follow all the receivers they would be using) four receivers, completing 11 of
19 passes for a total 145 yards with zero touchdowns. All-American Tyler Eifert had one catch, to which
Kelly stated “he is a tight end and will also be used to block.”
Kyle Brindza made special teams respectable by kicking two
field goals of 33 and 39 yards.
Defensively, Notre Dame needed to contain Denard Robinson
and did so. Normally, when an opposing quarterback
rushes for 90 yards that does not speak well of your defense, but in this case
it does; no touchdowns and limiting Robinson to a rushing average of 3.5 yards
per carry is impressive (especially when he gets 26 carries and his running
backs only get 15 combined). The defense
also kept his passing game in check, 13 of 24 for 138 yards with no touchdowns
is a solid performance by the Irish defense, but the three sacks and four
interceptions really speak volumes. For
the second week in a row there is no argument that the defense won the game. With three sacks, five tackles for a loss,
one fumble recovery and five interceptions (two by Te’o), the defense provides
the excitement fans want and the wins we need.
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