ANN ARBOR, Mich. -- Rich Rodriguez earned his first signature victory at the University of Michigan. Charlie Weis is still in search of his.You have to wonder if the Irish and their head coach just don't have what it takes to win a big game ... even when the opponent is unranked.
Before 110, 278 canary-yellow-clad fans, the Wolverines delivered the kind of thrilling, welcome-to-the-program victory for its head coach that to this day has eluded Weis. As the clock struck 0:00 in Ann Arbor, Rodriguez, who finished 3-9 in his first season at Michigan a year ago, accepted a warm hug from Wolverine basketball coach John Beilein. Weis, standing nearby, had the same "Who stole my cake?" visage etched on his face that you first saw after the Irish fell to top-ranked USC in 2005 ... a game that remains the signature victory of the Weis era (not counting the signature that Weis put to the contract Notre Dame offered him shortly after that defeat).
"Forget cancer," texted a subway alum who is in the midst of her second bout with the dreaded disease just moments after Michigan's Tate Forcier connected with Greg Matthews for the game-winning touchdown pass with 0:11 remaining. "Notre Dame is going to kill me."
Exactly.
The Irish have lost nine in a row under Weis against a higher-ranked team. Their only such victory was in his 2005 debut, at overrated No. 23 Pittsburgh, who would stumble to a 5-6 finish. They have lost their last five contests that were decided by five points or fewer. And they've lost five of their last six games played on the campuses of BCS conference opponents -- the lone victory being at winless Washington last autumn, a team that, it bears mentioning, was coached by Weis's predecessor, Tyrone Willingham.
In short, if it matters, they're in tatters. And if it's close, they're toast.
Irish? Yes. Fighting? Not hardly.
College football, after all, is a game of passion. And momentous victories. You don't lose in September or October and console yourself with thoughts of a wildcard berth. You invest your emotional energy into certain Saturdays, against schools such as Michigan or USC or Penn State, and you hope that you win more of those than you lose. And you certainly hope that if it's the type of game people will be talking about a decade from now, that you won't feel a stabbing pain in your heart when they evoke it.
Such as today's loss. The Irish entered Michigan Stadium with a roster that possessed far more talent, and far more experience, than the Wolverines. And that is extremely rare in this series.
Michigan pinned its hopes on a true freshman quarterback, Forcier, who was starting just his second game. The last time Notre Dame visited the Big House, they relied on a true freshman quarterback who was starting just his second game. And how did that go?
"That might have been the toughest game physically I've ever played in," said Clausen, who was sacked seven times in the 38-0 loss in 2007, earlier this week. "It took me three to four, five days to recover from that game."
Clausen and his younger California counterpart were both brilliant in the game's final stages. Both quarterbacks led their teams to a pair of fourth-quarter touchdowns. Clausen led the Irish back from a 31-20 deficit, throwing for 113 yards and even hooking up with Armando Allen on a Statue-of-Liberty, shades-of-Boise State, two-point conversion play.
But it was Forcier, who a year ago this time was dazzling the bleacher bums at Scripps Ranch High School in San Diego, who was magical. First, with Michigan facing a 4th-and-3 at the Irish 31 early in the fourth quarter, Forcier juked an Irish linebacker and sprinted between the hashmarks untouched for a touchdown. Then in the final two minutes Forcier, who out-Kaepernicked the supposedly most elusive quarterback the Irish will face all season, led Michigan on the type of game-winning drive that forged Joe Montana's legend decades earlier.
And It should never have come to that. Neither Clausen nor Forcier (nor Allen, who rushed for a career-high 141 yards and made every play the Irish needed him to all day) should have been pushed to the brink of heroics on this afternoon. Notre Dame is at last talented, and deep, and experienced, and after being humiliated on this turf in their last visit, you might think motivated.
Instead, the Irish allowed an inferior team still in search of its identity to hang around. In front of 110,278 of their closest friends. Never a good idea.
Fans, and pundits, have a tendency to focus on the final moments of a game. To wonder why the Irish, with the ball and a 3-point lead with less than three minutes to play, attempted two passes that both fell incomplete-and stopped the clock. To ask how come punter Eric Maust can boom a 46-yard punt that rolls into the end zone when the Irish are hoping for a pooch and yet only get off a 28-yarder, under no rush, in the most pivotal kick of the game. To muse about how Forcier showed the pocket presence of a Steve Young or Roger Staubach on Michigan's game-winning drive. How the Irish could allow him to complete five of six passes-the lone misfire being a ball dropped in the end zone-on that drive when it was obvious what was coming.
Such errors are magnified in clarity because they are the last ones committed. The real question is how come the Irish lack the killer instinct truly great teams possess. Two years earlier, in what was mostly a reversal of rosters in terms of talent and tenure, the Wolverines crushed the will of the Irish by halftime. It was 31-0, Michigan, at the intermission and if the buses to back to South Bend were not already idling, the keys were definitely in the ignition.
Earlier this week Weis said that "you won't have to worry about me calling off the dogs" in regards to Saturday's outcome. Instead, the Irish find themselves going home with their tails between their legs.
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Florida quarterback Tim Tebow (15) is congratulated by teammates Jeffrey Demps (2) and John Fairbanks (59) after scoring a first half touchdown against Troy during an NCAA college football game in Gainesville, Fla., Saturday, Sept., 12, 2009. (AP Photo/Phil Sandlin)
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Florida's Jeffery Demps (2) goes for a touchdown as helmet-less teammate Riley Cooper (11) blocks Troy's Bryan Willis (26) during the first half of an NCAA college football game in Gainesville, Fla., Saturday, Sept. 12, 2009. (AP Photo/Phil Sandlin)
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Florida quarterback Tim Tebow, center, looks for a receiver as he is pressured by the Troy defense during the first half of an NCAA college football game in Gainesville, Fla., Saturday, Sept. 12, 2009. (AP Photo/John Raoux)
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Florida running back Chris Rainey (3) runs past Troy cornerback Bryan Willis for a gain during the first half of an an NCAA college football game in Gainesville, Fla., Saturday, Sept. 12, 2009.(AP Photo/John Raoux)
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Florida's defensive end Jermaine Cunningham (49) reaches down to recover a Troy fumble as Troy running back DuJuan Harris (32) looks on during the during the first half of an NCAA college football game in Gainesville, Fla., Saturday, Sept., 12, 2009.; (AP Photo/Phil Sandlin)
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STATE COLLEGE, PA - SEPTEMBER 12: Quarterback Daryll Clark #17 of the Penn State Nittany Lions eludes a tackle by Nico Scott #28 of the Syracuse Orangemen as guard Matt Stankiewitch #54 of the Nittany Lions defends during the first half at Beaver Stadium September 12, 2009 in State College, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Chris Gardner/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Matt Stankiewitch;Nico Scott;Daryll Clark
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Florida wide receiver Riley Cooper catches a 36-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Tim Tebow during the first half of an an NCAA college football game against Troy, in Gainesville, Fla., Saturday, Sept. 12, 2009.(AP Photo/John Raoux)
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Central Michigan quarterback Dan LeFevour, right, scrambles away from Michigan State's Tyler Hoover (91) for a first down during the first quarter of an NCAA college football game, Saturday, Sept. 12, 2009, in East Lansing, Mich. (AP Photo/Al Goldis)
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Troy running back DuJuan Harris, center, is stopped for no gain by the Florida defense during an NCAA college football game in Gainesville, Fla., Saturday, Sept. 12, 2009.(AP Photo/John Raoux)
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Michigan State quarterback rushes on a keeper against Central Michigan during the second quarter of an NCAA college football game, Saturday, Sept. 12, 2009, in East Lansing, Mich. (AP Photo/Al Goldis)
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Weis is competent, even brilliant. His offense hums, as the Irish rolled to 490 yards of total offense today. What remains in doubt is whether he can truly motivate a team. Whether he can be the CEO of a group of overachievers. How many "if it were not for that one play" losses can a program endure before you begin to wonder if the bad breaks are not simply bad luck?
Three years ago, after Matt Leinart stumbled into the end zone to crush the hearts of the Irish and their devoted, many would say deluded, followers, the balm was the belief that there were great days ahead. Those great days? They are still ahead, and no one can say jus t how far ahead, or who will be steering this ship when-or if-they ever arrive. Right now it's even money on the greater likelihood: a Notre Dame national championship or the Second Coming.
Where do the Irish go from here?
"That's a very good question," said Weis. "That's the same question I raised to them [his players] after the game."
Tune in next week.




















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 4)
9-12-2009 @ 9:08PM
greatqb44 said...
Come on!!! They beat Hawaii in a bowl game....He has his signature victory...Oh ya they beat friggin Nevada last week so I guess thats two!!
Reply
9-12-2009 @ 9:15PM
fclarkhia said...
even though I can never forgive him on how he left west virginia, I always knew, if given time, he would make michigan a winner.
Reply
9-12-2009 @ 11:21PM
Bobby Dodd said...
I don't think there is a coach out there that has been as unsuccessful as Charlie Weis has been with ND, and yet still have words like "brilliant" used to describe him. GET OVER IT! Weis is an utter failure at ND.
Willingham was fired for much less.
Fat Charlie is a clown.
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9-12-2009 @ 10:47PM
kleytanic said...
Go Blue!
Reply
9-13-2009 @ 4:42AM
pugz said...
hail to the victors!!!!!!!!!
9-13-2009 @ 9:48AM
big blue said...
Once again, perhaps the MOST over rated college football team in the Country fell apart. Charlie should just take his team out for a good 7 course Irish dinner ( a six pack of beer and a patato) before each game and let them unwind..
9-12-2009 @ 11:26PM
Robert said...
Nice victory for Mich, no doubt about it ND has more talent that Mich but Mich played their hearts out to bring a victory. I live in tenn but I'am and old Mich man. Pistons, red Wings, tigers even the Lions back them all. That is what is called a loyal fan, not just one that jumps on when a team is winning. Go Michigan.
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9-13-2009 @ 12:04AM
dankster312 said...
John - do you think it's about time to suggest that maybe Charlie Weis deserves to be fired a little more than Willingham did? I know I've been trying to convince you of this for four years, but I just love how season after season continues to prove me right.
Reply
9-13-2009 @ 2:29PM
Rick S. said...
Hey dangster312, I don't believe you can remember or think past you're own nose. If you knew anything ABOUT WINNING, YOU WOULD KNOW, that to build a consistant winning program does not happen over night or 1 or 2 yrs. It takes 3-5 yrs to put a good consistant program in a winning mode,sometimes there exceptions to the rules, but very rarely. Now you can cherry pick all you want and nit pick like an old, ignorant, senile, man, that has lost all of his thinking senses. But in the end, you will have to admit, if you didn't have Notre Dame or Charlie Weis to bitch about, you would probably find something else to complain about. GET A LIFE, TRY ACTING WITH SOME CLASS, OR JUST KEEP QUIET, until you finally learn something......
9-13-2009 @ 10:37PM
dalemenard said...
Hey Rick,
It does take several years, so why fire Ty Willingham so quickly? So that Charlie could win a few games with the talent that Ty recruited?? But don't you think 5, yes 5, years is plenty? About time Charlie stopped making excuses!
9-13-2009 @ 12:10AM
Bamagandy said...
Lou, where is your claim to N D being in the BCS bowl game NOW? YOU are a loser LOU just like your old team you could not coach... You Are a joke LOU.... I'm am so happy to hear of your stupid remarks... FIRE THE LOSER LOU, HE IS A JOKE AND ALWAYS HAS BEEN>>>>>> Why do you, espn keep the loser. Oh I now get it you are too losers espn....
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9-13-2009 @ 12:27AM
J CHRISTOPHER said...
Ahhhh...All is rite w/the world, Nutter Dumb came back to the real world and lost to a 3-9 nteam, WHAT!! no NEVADA to beat up on? Jimbo Claussen not the next coming? hey you still have Navy,Airforce.Mansfield,moller and Slippery rock to play Nutter Dumb may win two of those,but claussin had 72 TD passes in his last two games he s the best in the land!! we cant lose, damn refs..they blew it, that last play was an automatic TD for ND refs stole it from ND!! WAAAAAAA!!!!!! BTW Im a florida fan aREALteam!!
Reply
9-13-2009 @ 9:46AM
blackmikea said...
Yeah, Notre Dame's schedule...let's see Florida so far has beat up on Charleston Southern and Troy. ha ha ha ha ha!
9-13-2009 @ 1:06AM
Mr. Squirrel said...
Both Notre Dame and Michigan defenses sucked. Penalties and stupid mistakes is what hurt ND. Not to mention special teams fucking up and letting Michigan get a TD. Other wise ND is the better team but obviously that doesn't matter cause they lost. ND even had the better stats in this game.
Maybe Charlie should just be the offensive coordinator instead of coach. Cause it seems like that's the only thing he's doing right.
I could only prey that ND gets revenge in a bowl game or something.
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9-13-2009 @ 12:38PM
kmt1018 said...
Mr. Squirrel:
I tend to agree with you about the defense. I think this sports writer is way harsh on Charlie Weis - I would trade him for Rich Rod any day of the week and twice on Sunday. Michigan won that game because of Tate Forcier - and his legacy with Michigan began before the Cancer of Rodriguez set in.
9-13-2009 @ 2:11AM
qualitybutcher said...
What happened to the "LUCK OF THE IRISH!"?? Old Knute sure had it, Lou had some, Ara had plenty for an Armeneian. But the recent list of ND coaches, the current set of clownshoes stomping the sidelines included, come up on the short end of the karma stick. ND use to always WIN games like that, just ask one of their loyal legion, they all remember when QB-fill in the blank - led them from 13 down against Blah Blah St. in the Whatever Bowl. I think the problem must be at the top, AD, Prez, Board of Directors, Trustees, whatever because not all the recent ex-coaches were clueless. Talent? Recent NFL drafts have been shallow but they still have quality players. Bad JuJu? Gotta be it Irish fan, you've lost the luck somehow. MichSt next? Gonna be a long year if you can't beat the worst college team in the state of Michigan
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9-13-2009 @ 3:35AM
paulfortea said...
I am a big Notre Dame fan,but I have had rnough of Weis after today,he has had his chance,and after only the second game of 2009,it's starting to look like the same old story as the last few years,unfortunately!Bring on John Gruden!!!!!
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9-13-2009 @ 3:54AM
dvilla3140 said...
Maybe ND could join the MAC. Opps! forgot Central Michigan beat Michigan State Saturday. How about ND scheduling more Division II teams If any D2 teams would lower their standards. ND gets what it deseves!!
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9-13-2009 @ 4:06AM
xrugbypropx said...
all is right withe world now nd lost to the boys in the maze and blue uniforms, and ohio st lost. now we just have to beat the "brown eyes" i mean buckeyes, and the season will be complete. by the way i think that nd is playing joliet catholic next week and i think they are favored over ng. go big blue.
Reply
9-13-2009 @ 10:14AM
Ed said...
I was rooting for an earthquake under the stadium at halftime. Get rid of 110,000 morons and both loser teams in one shot. The only loser here is the rest of the country for having to deal with these two waste of talent teams and there idiot fans for the rest of our lives.