‘Straight beast mode’: The highlights that explain the incomparable Jalen Carter
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adminATHENS, Ga. — When defending national champion Georgia lost 15 starters to the NFL draft after winning its first title since 1980 last season, the Bulldogs weren’t expected to be nearly as good this year.
Georgia had five defensive starters selected in the first round of the draft, so surely it couldn’t be as good on that side of the ball again.
But the Bulldogs who did come back knew their defense was in good hands with defensive tackle Jalen Carter anchoring the middle. His rise to stardom from the shadows of his former teammates is a big reason Georgia is back in the College Football Playoff for the third time in coach Kirby Smart’s tenure.
“He’s straight beast mode,” Georgia cornerback Kelee Ringo said. “His strength is his combination of strength, speed and size. You just don’t see that too often. Taking on double-teams or grabbing guys with one hand, he throws them out of his gap and goes and make plays. He’s a force, and it’s a great thing knowing I’m playing complementary football with his pass-rushing skills.”
As No. 1 Georgia prepares to play No. 4 Ohio State in Saturday’s College Football Playoff semifinal at the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl in Atlanta (8 p.m., ESPN), the Bulldogs hope Carter adds to his growing list of greatest hits, which goes back to his early days as a football and basketball player in Apopka, Florida. His impressive highlight reel at Georgia is the reason he’s considered a potential No. 1 pick in the 2023 NFL draft.
For those who know Carter best, watching him sack and then pick up LSU quarterback Jayden Daniels in the SEC championship game wasn’t all that surprising. They’ve seen him do too many amazing feats to keep count.
“Jalen is crazy,” Georgia linebacker Jamon Dumas-Johnson said. “He’s unblockable. He keeps doing what he’s doing, he’ll be top three going into the draft.”
The Catch(es)
When Anthony Fieldings first saw Carter, he knew the impressive sixth grader had to play on his Apopka Raptors tackle football team and 7-on-7 squad, Next Level.
“I went and talked to his mom about coming and playing tackle football with us,” Fieldings said. “He was just an exceptional talent before all of this. You could tell he was going to be special. He was just different than most kids, even when he was very young.”
In middle school, Carter played several positions for the Raptors, including running back, cornerback, receiver and outside linebacker. When an opposing wideout was lighting up Apopka’s secondary, Fieldings shut him down by lining up Carter against him. When the Raptors needed a big play on offense in the AAU 14-under national championship game against the Pensacola Browns in the eighth grade, Fieldings inserted Carter at quarterback, and Carter threw a 70-yard touchdown.
“It was literally just like flicking the wrist [and throwing] on a dime,” Fieldings said.
Carter’s first viral football moment came on Feb. 2, 2019, when he was playing 7-on-7 against the Central Florida Knights. On a video of the play posted to Carter’s Twitter account, a woman, believed to be his mother, Tonique Brown, can be heard saying, “Talk to ’em, Jalen.” Carter spoke loud and clear with a spectacular one-handed catch for a touchdown.
— Jalen Carter (@breadmanjalen) February 2, 2019
When Carter arrived at Miami’s junior day recruiting event the next day, according to Fieldings, then-Hurricanes coach Manny Diaz asked him, “What are you doing catching touchdowns on people’s heads?”
“We couldn’t believe they’d already seen it,” Fieldings said.
Nearly a year later, in another 7-on-7 game against Seminole Elite, Carter grabbed another victim, resulting in another viral video — and a flabbergasted videographer.
— Jalen Carter (@breadmanjalen) February 1, 2020
The Nutcracker
Former Apopka High coach Rick Darlington first met Carter at a football banquet for an eighth-grade team in 2015. While Carter was pretty big for his age, Darlington wasn’t immediately awestruck. In fact, Carter started his high school career on the freshman team –until he participated in a practice drill the Blue Darters fondly called the “Nutcracker.”
“It’s basically a version of the Oklahoma drill that everyone has done for 100 years,” Darlington said. “He really stood out in that, so we moved him up off the freshman team.”
Carter played H-back on the varsity team and was used primarily as a blocker in its single-wing offense. He was devastating from the beginning, helping the Blue Darters finish unbeaten in the regular season.
— Jalen Carter (@breadmanjalen) September 28, 2018
Darlington said Carter started to blossom as a sophomore in 2017. In a scene straight out of “The Blind Side,” Carter blocked an opponent into the fence surrounding the playing field. In a playoff game against eventual Class 8A state champion Mandarin High in 2018, Carter took a direct snap on an end-around play and leaped over a defender. It wasn’t the only time he did it in high school.
Jalen Carter is headed to the G! ??
@jalen2rawcarter | @FootballUGA | #CommitToTheG ? pic.twitter.com/lcFQu7ViVR
— Hudl (@Hudl) May 22, 2019
“We didn’t play him on defense as much as we should have,” Darlington said. “That was my fault. We played him mostly on offense. He was just a freaky talented athlete. I know he’s a great defensive lineman in college, but he could 360 dunk a basketball and probably had the best hands I’ve ever seen on a guy that size. He wasn’t your typical athlete; he was a great athlete in a lineman’s body.”
A position change
When Darlington left Apopka after the 2018 season, the Blue Darters hired Jeff Rolson, their former defensive coordinator, to replace him. One of Rolson’s first decisions was moving Carter to the defensive line.
“When I came back, we moved him to defensive tackle because that’s what he is,” Rolson said. “I coached defense, so obviously I thought he’d be very impactful for us. We played him at tackle and end. Wherever we felt like we needed to take something away, that’s where we put him. He was very dynamic, to say the least.”
Rolson got a glimpse of what Carter could do on defense in a spring jamboree game against Raines High of Jacksonville in 2019.
“I’d never seen anything like it,” Rolson said. “Jalen was just unblockable, with sacks, pressures, tackles behind the line, tackling perimeter plays from the interior. It was just a half of football, but it opened my eyes quickly. You’re not going to get the same [effort] in practice, particularly in the spring, that you might get in a game, and he wowed me. He just raised the level of everybody around him.”
As a senior, Carter had 64 tackles and 12 sacks, helping Apopka High reach the Class 8A state championship game. He split double-teams. He terrorized opposing quarterbacks. He even punted for the Blue Darters.
By the time Carter was done playing at Apopka, he was being compared to legendary Blue Darters star Warren Sapp, an All-American at Miami and a Pro Football Hall of Famer with the Buccaneers and Raiders.
Even Sapp was impressed. Responding to a tweet about Carter in 2017, Sapp wrote, “I was a TE and 225 lbs. That Kid is a Monster! #BetterThanMeInHighSchool.”
The dunk
Alex Marshall, director of the Raptors Elite basketball program outside Orlando, is convinced Carter would have played in the NBA if he hadn’t focused on football. Carter started playing for the Raptors in the seventh grade. Marshall had to move him up an age level because he was so much bigger than everyone else.
“He was just too athletic and too skilled,” Marshall said. “We moved him up from 13U to 14U, and he still dominated. He was just a complete athlete that could get to any spot on the floor that he wanted and do whatever he wanted. Just as he is doing in football, he was doing in basketball. He could have easily done the same in basketball.”
In 2016, Carter got two new coaches — Jason Williams, who was famously known as “White Chocolate” during his NBA career, and Corey Sawyer, an All-American cornerback at Florida State, who played six seasons in the NFL. Their sons were Carter’s teammates for five seasons.
Like Williams, Carter was a little flashy on the floor. During a game against the Florida Bay Hawks in 2018, Carter was loafing on defense in hopes of getting a breakaway dunk. Carter got the ball, and Marshall couldn’t believe what he saw from the sideline.
Lol pic.twitter.com/v5CM0zWuXR
— Jalen Carter (@breadmanjalen) April 14, 2018
“I thought he was going to miss it, but he kept elevating and continued to go up,” Marshall said. “And then he spun in the air, and I was like, ‘I know he’s not doing this. There’s no way!’ Then he just destroys the rim. I could not believe it. Even seeing it, it was hard to believe it. He’s just so graceful. Even with all of that muscle, how do you get all of that weight off the ground like that? I’m still perplexed. He’s one of a kind.”
How good would Carter have been if he had focused on basketball?
“Oh, gosh, he could have been a high-Division I kid,” Marshall said. “He’d be like a Zion Williamson, there’s no doubt about it. You see the dunk. He’s doing the same stuff Zion does.”
The step
By the beginning of Carter’s senior season at Apopka, he had grown to 6 feet, 3 inches and 301 pounds. He was the top-ranked player in the state of Florida and the No. 12 prospect overall in the 2020 ESPN 300.
For a prospect so highly regarded and coveted, Carter’s recruitment was rather mundane. On May 19, 2019, he announced his top three schools: Alabama, Clemson and Georgia. The next day, he committed to the Bulldogs. He made it official with Georgia on the first day of the early signing period.
During practices before the Under Armour All-America Game, Carter justified the hype. While the roster included future college stars, like Ole Miss running back Zach Evans, LSU receiver Kayshon Boutte, Oregon cornerback Dontae Manning, Auburn running back Tank Bigsby and Michigan tailback Blake Corum, ESPN national recruiting director Tom Luginbill remembers Carter as one player standing out. More than anything else, Carter’s combination of power and quickness impressed Luginbill the most, along with his incredibly quick first step.
Jalen Carter is going to be a PROBLEM pic.twitter.com/7qDU8NJvUD
— Brooks Austin (@BrooksAustinBA) January 25, 2020
Carter had four tackles and one tackle for loss in the game, and his work during practice that week earned him MVP honors for his team.
The touchdown
As good as Carter was in high school, he still had to wait his turn to make a big impact at Georgia. He joined a defensive line that included future NFL draft picks Travon Walker, Devonte Wyatt and Jordan Davis.
Carter played in 10 games as a freshman in 2020, starting against Florida and South Carolina. He finished with 14 tackles, three tackles for loss and 13 quarterback pressures. His biggest moment that season came against Tennessee — on offense. He caught a 1-yard touchdown from quarterback Stetson Bennett early in the fourth quarter of a 44-21 victory over the Volunteers. Carter lined up at fullback, and Bennett found him on a play-action pass.
Jalen Carter may be a defensive lineman, but he’s got the hands to bring in a touchdown. pic.twitter.com/Zci3qUDWWp
— CBS Sports (@CBSSports) October 10, 2020
“Some of the most amazing stuff to me has been at fullback and playing offensive positions,” Smart said. “He is a devastating blocker. He carried the ball in high school. [He] just has phenomenal athleticism for a guy that has size. He has balance and body control.”
More evidence: In a 37-0 rout of Arkansas in 2021, Carter blocked three Razorbacks on Kendall Milton‘s 1-yard touchdown run.
JALEN CARTER BLOCKED THREE GUYS AT ONCE ? @GeorgiaFootball pic.twitter.com/4Bg3erBWOx
— SEC Network (@SECNetwork) October 2, 2021
The clothesline
As a sophomore in 2021, Carter was coming off the bench, with three future NFL first-rounders still ahead of him. As Georgia’s season transpired, however, pro scouts and opposing coaches were beginning to whisper that Carter might be better than any of them.
In a 62-0 rout of Vanderbilt, Carter stuffed tailback Rocko Griffin for no gain on first down, then did this on second:
.@breadmanjalen A BULLY ?
Watch live on SECNetwork: https://t.co/JgIUPVBVtg pic.twitter.com/ZZbyqC9mPN
— Georgia Football (@GeorgiaFootball) September 25, 2021
NFL scouts and opponents weren’t the only ones suggesting Carter was the best player on Georgia’s historically good defense. So were some of his teammates. Carter finished the 2021 season with 37 tackles, 33 quarterback hurries and three sacks. He blocked a field goal late in the third quarter against Alabama in the College Football Playoff National Championship. The Bulldogs outscored the Crimson Tide 20-9 in the fourth quarter to end their long title drought.
“He’s a dominant player,” said Walker, who was the No. 1 pick in the 2022 NFL draft by the Jaguars. “He’s one of those guys that can wreck the whole game, the whole interior. He’s a hard worker and if he puts his mind to do something I feel bad [for] whoever’s in his way.”
Walker suggested Carter’s best work has come during Georgia’s practices, after an offensive lineman has challenged him.
“I can just remember times when, like say for instance, somebody just pissed Jalen off during the middle of practice,” Walker said. “And, I mean, it got ugly fast. [If] somebody might say the wrong thing to him, he’ll just go probably bull rush him or just hit him with a quick move. Make it a little easy. Effortless.”
Wyatt, who was the 28th pick of the draft by the Packers, compares Carter to Titans Pro Bowl defensive tackle Jeffery Simmons.
“He’s like a freak of nature,” Wyatt said. “He’s younger than me, but I was always learning stuff from him while I was in college. He’s got the attitude, the effort and he loves the game. He always wants to win. When I compare him to somebody, it’s someone like Jeffery Simmons — someone that’s strong and can almost move guys without effort.”
The lift
Coming into the 2022 season, Georgia was counting on Carter to be the anchor of its rebuilt defense, which had the most defensive players selected in the first round from one school in the common draft era (since 1967).
Carter played well in the Bulldogs’ biggest games this season. After missing two contests because of a knee injury, Carter had a sack, tackle for loss and two forced fumbles in a 27-13 victory against then-No. 1 Tennessee. His sack and strip of Volunteers quarterback Hendon Hooker helped the Bulldogs take a 14-3 lead.
Turned all the way ? #GoDawgs pic.twitter.com/dVhtVZRviS
— Georgia Football (@GeorgiaFootball) November 5, 2022
After helping Georgia finish 12-0 in the regular season for the second straight year, Carter was again dominant in a 50-30 win against LSU in the SEC title game, finishing with four tackles, six quarterback pressures and one sack.
The highlight of his career might have occurred late in the first half, when Carter chased down LSU’s Daniels and picked him up until the whistle blew. While holding Daniels with his left arm, Carter lifted his right hand. He flashed No. 1 with his finger, as if to remind everyone who was the defending national champion and which player should be the first pick in next year’s NFL draft.
.@breadmanjalen is a grown man ?
?: Watch live on CBS#GoDawgs | #SECChampionship pic.twitter.com/0bmwWAIyZo
— Georgia Football (@GeorgiaFootball) December 3, 2022
“It’s just how he throws other guys around like they’re just little kids that just impresses you,” said former Georgia safety Lewis Cine, a first-round pick of the Vikings. “Watching that LSU game, you see how he just picked the guy up like he was a little kid. You’re just seeing that kind of stuff, in practices, too. He’s just a freak.”
Added Walker: “That’s him every day.”
As memorable as that play was, Smart said Carter stuffing Tigers tailback Josh Williams for no gain on fourth-and-1 from the Georgia 5 might have been more important.
Looks up “Built Different”
?: Watch live on CBS#GoDawgs | #SECChampionship
— Georgia Football (@GeorgiaFootball) December 3, 2022
“They’re driving. They’re getting ready to score,” Smart said. “They decide to go for it on fourth-and-1. And he knocks two people back into the ball carrier and makes the tackle. And there’s probably not a bigger play in that game in terms of momentum that one person can make. He’s the only guy on our team that could make that play, and he made it.”
The Bulldogs are hoping Carter makes a few more plays in the College Football Playoff.
Additional reporting by Rob Demovsky, Michael DiRocco and Kevin Seifert.
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Report: Ex-O’s P Matusz died of suspected OD
Published
3 hours agoon
January 14, 2025By
adminFormer Baltimore Orioles pitcher Brian Matusz died last week of an apparent drug overdose, according to a Phoenix police report obtained by the Baltimore Banner.
The police report said Matusz’s mother found him in his home on Jan. 6 when she went to check on him. The report states that Matusz, who was 37, was on his back on a couch with a white substance in his mouth and aluminum foil, a lighter and a straw on the floor near his hand.
There were no apparent injuries, trauma or signs of foul play, according to the police report. But as part of the death investigation, Matusz’s body was taken to the medical examiner in Maricopa County.
Matusz, the No. 4 pick in the 2008 MLB draft, spent almost his entire eight-year career with the Orioles. He pitched in 279 games for Baltimore, making 68 starts.
He eventually became a reliever and was most known for his success against Hall of Famer David Ortiz, who went 4-for-29 (.138) with 13 strikeouts in his career against Matusz.
Matusz pitched in the 2012 and 2014 postseason for the Orioles and was traded to the Atlanta Braves in May 2016 and released a week later.
He signed with the Chicago Cubs, where he pitched in the minors except for one three-inning major league start on July 31, 2016.
Matusz’s pitching career ended in 2019.
Sports
Despite numerous injuries, Notre Dame hasn’t been broken yet
Published
4 hours agoon
January 14, 2025By
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Adam Rittenberg, ESPN Senior WriterJan 14, 2025, 07:00 AM ET
Close- College football reporter; joined ESPN in 2008. Graduate of Northwestern University.
MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — Of all the players gathered outside Notre Dame‘s locker room late Thursday night recapping a historic win, offensive lineman Charles Jagusah might have been the unlikeliest to be standing there.
Jagusah wasn’t supposed to be in uniform at Hard Rock Stadium, recounting his performance in Notre Dame’s 27-24 victory against Penn State in the College Football Playoff Semifinal at the Capital One Orange Bowl. After he tore a pectoral muscle early in training camp, his season had been declared over before it could truly begin. The injury to Jagusah, projected as the team’s starting left tackle, was Notre Dame’s first major health setback, but would be nowhere near its last.
The only way Jagusah would have a chance to contribute this season would be for Notre Dame to reach the CFP and make a deep run. For that to happen, the Irish would need to overcome a staggering amount of injuries, some season-ending, to players who, unlike Jagusah, would have no chance of returning. The injury wave didn’t spare the offense or defense, and it hit some of the team’s biggest stars as well as important role players.
“Losing-sleep injuries,” defensive coordinator Al Golden called them. “You’re talking about massive players.”
But none has been massive enough to divert Notre Dame from its playoff push, which will continue Monday night in Atlanta against Ohio State in the CFP National Championship Presented by AT&T.
Most teams that make a run as deep as Notre Dame’s point to a decent-sized dose of good fortune. But when it came to injuries, the Irish had very little luck on their side. So how did they get all the way to the national championship game?
AFTER A TUESDAY practice in November, ahead of Notre Dame’s game with Army at Yankee Stadium, Golden knew he was seeing a first in his 30-year coaching career.
“I have not been a part of anything where we lost the caliber of guys that we’ve lost,” he told ESPN. “It just speaks to the leadership of Coach [Marcus] Freeman, the leadership of our captains and the unity of the group. Obviously it’s been next man up for quite some time.”
Every player and coach in college football cites a “next man up” mentality, recognizing its necessity and inevitability in a violent sport, but also making the reference with their fingers crossed. Those same coaches and players know that most injury-plagued teams are eventually sunk, unable to plug all the holes.
Jagusah was the first significant setback for Notre Dame, but others followed. The team responded to its Week 2 home loss to Northern Illinois by thrashing Purdue 66-7 in West Lafayette, but the victory came at a cost. Starting center Ashton Craig tore his left ACL, while Jordan Botelho, a starter at the vyper defensive end spot, suffered a right knee injury. They went out on consecutive series in the second quarter.
Boubacar Traore stepped up in Botelho’s absence and led Notre Dame in sacks (three) and tackles for loss (five) by the end of September. But the redshirt freshman injured his left knee in a Week 5 win over Louisville and was lost for the season.
The biggest injury loss came two weeks later, as cornerback Benjamin Morrison, a freshman All-America selection in 2022 who earned second-team AP All-America honors in 2023 and was a semifinalist for the Thorpe Award, sustained a hip injury against Stanford. He also needed surgery and would be out for the season.
“You’re talking about some of the best at their positions,” Golden said. “And then some of the younger guys, you don’t know how good they’re going to be, but they’re going to be good, Boubacar and obviously Jordan Botelho.”
As the injuries on defense piled up, linebacker Jack Kiser felt a mix of sympathy and resolve. Some units would melt down, or at least regress, after losing a playmaker like Morrison, but not Notre Dame.
“I don’t think that’s ever even been an option for this program,” Kiser said. “It’s always been, ‘Hey, we’re devastated if someone got an injury, but someone has an opportunity. Can you elevate this team and make this team better and take advantage of that opportunity?'”
The answer, repeatedly and resoundingly, has been yes. True freshman cornerback Leonard Moore, a three-star recruit, entered the lineup for Morrison and now leads the team in pass breakups, while adding two forced fumbles and two interceptions.
Junior Tuihalamaka and Donovan Hinish, who each had only 10 tackles in 2023, stepped into bigger roles on the line. They have combined for 68 tackles, 7.5 sacks and 10 tackles for loss.
“There really wasn’t a point where someone went down, where I was like, ‘Ah, we’re done,'” standout safety Xavier Watts said. “I’ve got the confidence in all of my teammates.”
A Notre Dame defense hammered by injuries has been the biggest reason behind the team’s national title push. The Irish lead the nation in takeaways with 32 and rank second nationally in points allowed at 14.3 per game, trailing only Ohio State.
“Just press forward,” Golden said of the team’s philosophy. “Don’t bitch, don’t make excuses, and next guy, carry the flag.”
SHORTLY BEFORE SURGERY to repair his pectoral muscle, Jagusah met with Freeman, who told the second-year player that he could be available for a potential CFP run if Notre Dame made the field for the first time in four seasons.
“At first it kind of didn’t feel realistic, but as I got closer and closer, I just kept pushing, and I’m like, ‘Yeah, I can do this,'” Jagusah said. “It’s a credit to everybody for keeping me engaged.”
As the team played into mid-December, then late December, then early January, Jagusah’s chances to not just see the field but log meaningful snaps increased. There he was at the Orange Bowl, playing guard instead of tackle, filling in for injured starter Rocco Spindler. Like others had done in replacing those lost to injury, Jagusah stepped up, pulling to clear out defensive end Dani Dennis-Sutton on quarterback Riley Leonard‘s touchdown run, and decleating Penn State safety Jaylen Reed on another pull.
“It shows you how much credit my teammates deserve,” Jagusah said. “In the grand scheme of things, I didn’t really do much today. They got us here. They did all the heavy lifting, everybody, all year long, grinding, and I get to reap the rewards.”
Jagusah’s preseason injury began what has been a season-long shuffle for Notre Dame’s offensive line. Craig started the first three games before his injury, which prompted Pat Coogan, who started throughout the 2023 season at left guard but entered this fall as a backup, to take over at center. At guard, Billy Schrauth has started games at both spots, with Spindler and Sam Pendleton also earning starts.
Notre Dame had stability at tackle with Aamil Wagner on the right side and Anthonie Knapp, a true freshman who emerged following Jagusah’s injury, on the left. Jagusah made his season debut on special teams against Georgia in the CFP quarterfinal at the Sugar Bowl, then replaced Spindler against Penn State.
“Coach Freeman always says the future is uncertain, so you can’t worry about the future,” Jagusah said. “Sure, we’ve had weeks where a lot of guys are banged up and you’re thinking, ‘Oh, crap, how are we going to make this work?’ But it’s about preparing every single day. Whatever five guys we put out there, they’re all going to do great.”
Jagusah’s story underscores how Notre Dame’s roster depth and resilience have been tested, even during the CFP. Notre Dame’s first highlight came from Jeremiyah Love, who raced 98 yards to the end zone in a first-round game against Indiana. Love had injured his right knee in the regular-season finale at USC and had been battling an upper-respiratory bug in the days leading up to the Indiana contest. But he still delivered the longest run in CFP history.
The Irish beat Indiana 27-17, a score closer than the game actually was, but also lost defensive tackle Rylie Mills, their leader in sacks (7.5) and tackles for loss (8.5), to a season-ending knee injury. Mills had propped up a line that had lost Botelho and Traore, as well as starting tackle Howard Cross III, a second-team AP All-America selection in 2023, for most of November.
In the CFP semifinals, Notre Dame trailed Penn State 10-0 when Leonard’s head hit the turf, sending him to the injury tent to be evaluated for a potential concussion. Backup quarterback Steve Angeli, who hadn’t played outside of mop-up time all season, came in and hit his first five pass attempts, helping set up a field goal before halftime.
Love’s status for the semifinal had been in doubt after he aggravated his knee injury against Georgia and left the game in the third quarter. Despite wearing a brace, Love gave Notre Dame its first lead with one of the more iconic runs in recent school history, wrestling free of four Penn State defenders and reaching the ball across the goal line. He later showcased his signature hurdle in elevating over Penn State’s Kobe King.
Jeremiyah Love refuses to go down on a Notre Dame TD
Jeremiyah Love breaks multiple tackles to give Notre Dame a 17-10 lead over Penn State.
Notre Dame fittingly won the game on a field goal by Mitch Jeter, who played through a hip injury for much of the season, missed two attempts in the Northern Illinois loss and hit just 1 of 5 attempts in the final five regular-season games.
“I don’t think that me or this team would be where we are without all those trials and tribulations, injuries and sicknesses and all that type of stuff,” Love said. “Everybody on this team is relentless. [Me] playing through injury, playing when I was sick, anybody on this team will do that same thing because we love each other.”
EVERY TEAM EMPHASIZES relentlessness and resilience, and players stepping up for each other. But what separates the Irish, who have actually delivered on those promises, from teams that can’t follow through?
“It’s because we’ve been at the very bottom of the bowl,” Kiser said. “We’ve been as deep as you can be, and felt the biggest pain that a team could feel, and it brought us closer. We understand how to face adversity now because of it.”
Notre Dame’s loss to Northern Illinois was a setback that, during the four-team playoff era, almost certainly would have eliminated the Irish from consideration. The result also brought back memories of Freeman’s first season, which included home losses to Marshall and Stanford.
But rather than letting the NIU loss carry over, or fretting about what it could mean down the line, Notre Dame strung together wins, even while losing key players.
“You better live your life six inches in front of your face,” offensive coordinator Mike Denbrock said. “Coach Freeman brings it up a lot: Win the interval. Just win this interval — this, right here. We’ve been able to maintain that mentality, regardless of the amount of chaos that’s going around.”
In the afterglow of the Penn State victory, Golden said Notre Dame “needed every little bit of that mettle to win that game.” The Irish will need more, though, to beat an Ohio State team with a talent edge and few major injuries outside of its offensive line.
Knapp sustained a high ankle sprain against Penn State that will keep him out for the championship game. Spindler’s outlook is more promising but not fully known, Freeman said Sunday. Jagusah likely will have a significant role against Ohio State, perhaps at the position he was pegged to play back in the summer.
The Irish are used to playing without a full deck. Whoever takes the field at Mercedes-Benz Stadium will, in their eyes, be enough to win a championship.
“This is a tough football team,” Denbrock said after the Penn State win, standing several feet from Jagusah. “They just keep playing. They don’t flinch, they don’t care what the circumstances are. God bless ’em, it’s fun to be a part of.”
Sports
College Football Playoff 2024-25: Championship first look
Published
4 hours agoon
January 14, 2025By
adminThe first 12-team College Football Playoff is down to the final two contenders: Notre Dame and Ohio State.
The seventh-seeded Fighting Irish and eighth-seeded Buckeyes will meet Jan. 20 at Atlanta’s Mercedes-Benz Stadium for the CFP National Championship Presented by AT&T. Whichever team wins will end a championship drought. Notre Dame aims for its first title since 1988. Ohio State’s lull isn’t nearly as long, as the Buckeyes won the first CFP championship a decade ago, but given how consistently elite they are, it seems like a while.
Notre Dame’s Marcus Freeman and Ohio State’s Ryan Day are also aiming for their first championships as head coaches, and Freeman’s past will be in the spotlight. Freeman and the Irish lost to the Buckeyes and Day in each of the past two seasons. But after a masterful coaching job this season, Freeman now will face his alma mater — he was an All-Big Ten linebacker for Ohio State under coach Jim Tressel — with everything on the line. Day, meanwhile, can secure the loftiest goal for a team that fell short of earlier ones, but never stopped swinging.
Here’s your first look at the championship matchup and what to expect in the ATL. — Adam Rittenberg
When: Jan. 20 at 7:30 p.m. ET. TV: ESPN
What we learned in the semifinal: Notre Dame’s resilience and situational awareness/execution are undeniably its signature traits and could propel the team to a title. The Irish have overcome injuries all season and did so again against Penn State. They also erased two deficits and continued to hold the edge in the “middle eight” — the final four minutes of the first half and the first four minutes of the second half — while dominating third down on both sides of the ball. Notre Dame can rely on front men such as quarterback Riley Leonard, running back Jeremiyah Love and linebacker Jack Kiser, but also on backup QB Steve Angeli, wide receiver Jaden Greathouse and kicker Mitch Jeter. These Irish fight, and they’re very hard to knock out.
X factor: Greathouse entered Thursday with moderate numbers — 29 receptions, 359 yards, one touchdown — and had only three total catches for 14 yards in the first two CFP games. But he recorded career highs in both receptions (7) and receiving yards (105) and tied the score on a 54-yard touchdown with 4:38 to play. A Notre Dame offense looking for more from its wide receivers, especially downfield, could lean more on Greathouse, who exceeded his receptions total from the previous five games but might be finding his groove at the perfect time. He also came up huge in the clutch, recording all but six of his receiving yards in the second half.
How Notre Dame wins: The Irish won’t have the talent edge in Atlanta, partly because they’ve lost several stars to season-ending injuries, but they have the right traits to hang with any opponent. Notre Dame needs contributions in all three phases and must continue to sprinkle in downfield passes, an element offensive coordinator Mike Denbrock has pushed. And they finally did start seeing results against Penn State. The Irish likely can’t afford to lose the turnover margin, although they can help themselves by replicating their third-down brilliance — 11 of 17 conversions on offense, 3 of 11 conversions allowed on defense — from the Penn State win. — Rittenberg
What we learned in the semifinal: The Buckeyes have a defense with championship mettle, headlined by senior defensive end Jack Sawyer, who delivered one of the biggest defensive plays in Ohio State history. On fourth-and-goal with just over two minutes remaining, Sawyer sacked Texas quarterback Quinn Ewers, forcing a fumble that he scooped up and raced 83 yards for a game-clinching touchdown, propelling Ohio State to the national title game. The Buckeyes weren’t perfect in the Goodyear Cotton Bowl Classic, and they struggled offensively for much of the night against a talented Texas defense. But Ohio State showed late why its defense is arguably the best in college football, too.
X factor: The play two snaps before the Sawyer scoop-and-score set the table. On second-and-goal from the Ohio State 1-yard line, unheralded senior safety Lathan Ransom dashed past incoming blockers and dropped Texas running back Quintrevion Wisner for a 7-yard loss. After an incomplete pass, the Longhorns were forced into desperation mode on fourth-and-goal down a touchdown with just over two minutes remaining. All-American safety Caleb Downs, who had an interception on Texas’ ensuing drive, rightfully gets all the headlines for the Ohio State secondary. But the Buckeyes have other veteran standouts such as Ransom throughout their defense.
How Ohio State wins: Texas took away Ohio State’s top offensive playmaker, true freshman wide receiver Jeremiah Smith, who had only one reception for 3 yards on three targets. As the first two playoff games underscored, the Buckeyes offense is at its best when Smith gets the ball early and often. Notre Dame is sure to emulate the Texas blueprint, positioning the defensive backs to challenge Smith. Ohio State offensive coordinator Chip Kelly has to counter with a plan that finds ways to get the ball into Smith’s hands, no matter what the Fighting Irish do. — Jake Trotter
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