Tuesday, November 11, 2008

A Decided Schematic Advantage

It’s been a while since I ranted a bit about Fat Charlie and his Pathetic Irish, but after reading Senator Blutarsky's take on this, I figured it was time to pull one together. The one sentence that should incent any college football fan is this:

If Notre Dame beats Navy and Syracuse and loses, as expected, to USC on the road, the Irish will finish 7-5. That should be good enough for them to earn an invitation to the Cotton Bowl, Gator Bowl or Sun Bowl…
First of all, no way the Cotton Bowl selects a 7-5 Notre Dame team over LSU or Ole Miss or any other SEC team. The point is most likely moot as the Gator Bowl would surely jump at the chance to bring Fat Charlie to Jacksonville.

Secondly, I just don't get why people are still obsessed with Notre Dame. They haven’t won a bowl game since 1993. They haven’t been competitive in a bowl game since 1998. They're a whopping 5-4 this season playing almost exclusively with the players Weis has brought in, though I'm sure it's somehow still Tyrone Willingham's fault the Irish suck again this season. Despite all that, the Irish are on TV every weekend, and actually have special exceptions written into some bowl contracts, including the BCS games.

In his tenure at Notre Dame, he has exactly one win that you can look back and point at and say, “Nice win there coach” and that’s the 41-17 beatdown of Penn State in 2006 when the Nittany Lions finished 9-4. Other than a win over a 7-5 Michigan in 2005, there’s hardly a win worth mentioning. To put a little more perspective on it, Pat Forde has this to say in his latest Forde Yard Dash:
After once again playing piñata for mighty Boston College, Weis is now 1-16 in his past 17 games against teams that finished the season .500 or better -- or, in the case of 2008 opponents, currently are .500 or better. That lone point of pride in those 17 games: a seven-point win last month over Stanford, which presently is 5-5 but easily could end up 5-7 and wipe that victory off the books.
Greg Couch of the Chicago Sun-Times references that same PSU victory in 2006 as Weis' only accomplishment at Notre Dame and also offers these gems:
...the most-hyped coach in college football history has been one big failure. Never has so much hope and hype been built from hot air. But when you sell yourself on spec, as Weis did, sooner or later, the finished product comes in.

Under Weis, Notre Dame has never beaten a good team.

In the Sagarin computer national rankings, Notre Dame is ranked behind James Madison.
Let’s take a closer look at Notre Dame’s offensive numbers from last year, the 3rd year that the Fighting Irish had their Decided Schematic Advantage over everyone they played:

2007 Notre Dame:
Scoring Offense: 16.4 ppg
Total Offense: 242.3 ypg
Passing Offense: 167.0 ypg
Rushing Yards: 75.25 ypg

For those of you struggling to grasp how pathetic those numbers, here’s how they compare to the 2008 Tennessee team:

2008 Tennessee:
Scoring Offense: 16.0 ppg
Total Offense: 267.1 ypg
Passing Offense: 162.8 ypg
Rushing Yards: 104.3 ypg

So, the offensive genius designed an offense that managed 25 less yards per game than the Vols are averaging this year. The Irish aerial attack last year did manage to put up nearly 5 more passing yards per game than the current Jonathan Crompton/Nick Stephens debacle in Knoxville this season. And the Vols are doing this against (mostly) SEC defenses, while the Irish played the Service Academies and mid-tier Big 10 teams.

***Update: Another stellar column from Jason Whitlock***

For those of you who are interested in joining the millions of "Huge Notre Dame Fans" out there, please refer to the following flow chart:

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

That "How to Become a Notre Dame Fan" graph is the funniest thing I've seen in weeks. It's so fun to watch the Irish utterly fail.

The Dead Guy said...

I wish I could claim it as my own, but I believe it was a BC fan that came up with it.

If Navy can somehow pull the upset this weekend for a second year in a row, I think it's safe that Fat Charlie will be taking some serious heat. But with that ridiculous unwarranted, unmerited contract ND signed him to, there's no way he's out after this year.

blackink said...

Thing is, are we sure that Notre Dame can do better at head coach? I'm thinking that's one of the reasons Urban Meyer passed on the gig. The days of top-flight recruits wanting to play in South Bend might be coming to an end.

I mean, given the choice, wouldn't you want to go somewhere where the weather is warmer and the girls are hotter?

The Dead Guy said...

Blasphemy! Notre Dame is obviously the premiere program in the entire country. Remember? They had the Horsemen and Joe Montana and Rocket Ismael. And they won a bowl game at some point in the 90s. All their games are on TV and slobbering idiot Lou Holtz promotes them at every turn.

Anonymous said...

Weis's buyout, which comes from a contract they gave him on the virtue of a close loss to SoCal, is supposedly over $10 million. Incredible.

The strangest part of the Notre Dame discussion is the amount of credence analysts give to his recruiting classes. How can it not be painfully obvious that his classes are highly overrated? They typically get a couple of true bluechips like Clausen along with guys who get four or five stars b/c ND takes them but would only get three if they went somewhere else. If ND were really getting such great classes, they'd already be winning. It doesn't take long for true talent to show--look how quickly Alabama and Miami have reversed recent trends with only one or two premier classes. Of course, the Tide and Canes also have much better coaches than ND, so that might be part of it.