SOUTH BEND, Ind. -- "Patrick tends to follow Brian," says Brian Coughlin of his two sons, who are both walk-on wide receivers on the Notre Dame football team.When Brian went out for wide receiver at Brother Rice High School in suburban Chicago, Patrick followed. When Brian was elected class president his senior year of 2005-06, Patrick ran for and won that office in 2006-07.
Brian matriculated at Notre Dame in 2006. Patrick ventured to South Bend the following autumn. Brian moved in to Dillon Hall. Patrick followed. Brian chose accounting as his major. Patrick selected accounting as his major.
In the spring semester of his sophomore year, Brian tried out at wide receiver as a walk-on. And made it. One year later, Patrick followed suit.
As the brothers Coughlin sat with a reporter earlier this week, wideout Golden Tate ambled past. "Hey, give me a shout-out!" Tate teased.
Brian, a senior, and Patrick, a junior, realize that they will never be the next Golden Tate. That, even though both suit up for home games, they may never see as much game action in a Notre Dame uniform as Rudy did (especially if the Irish keep playing nailbiters). But they cherish the chance to run routes each day with the likes of Tate and Michael Floyd, or to catch passes thrown by a future pro such as Jimmy Clausen.
"When you see the plays these guys make every day in practice, you admire them even more," says Brian, who sports a 3.65 GPA (Patrick's is a 3.82, proving that he does not always follow big brother).
"It's cool to get to practice every day with a guy like Michael Floyd," says Patrick. "But last week, I was on scout team for special teams and saw that I'd be blocking Manti (Te'o). That was a little unnerving."
Three sets of siblings inhabit the football roster at Notre Dame. Senior captain Kyle McCarthy, a a safety, who leads the Irish in tackles, is two years ahead of younger brother Dan, also a safety. Mike and Jake Golic are underclassmen whose famous dad, Mike Sr., was the keynote speaker at Friday night's pep rally.
Brian and Patrick Coughlin are the least-known pair as well as the only ones not on scholarship. They don't seem to mind. Nor does their father.
"On Christmas day, the day after the Hawaii Bowl, we were all hanging out on the beach," says Brian, Sr., "Golden Tate walked up. He set his towel down next to mine and said, 'Hey, Mr. Coughlin'. I said, 'Good game yesterday, Golden'. Then we high-fived. I never thought I'd be spending a Christmas like that."
In a few hours from now, Brian Coughlin, No. 24, will be one of approximately 25 seniors, both scholarship and walk-ons, who will run through the tunnel at Notre Dame Stadium a final time. And next year Patrick, No. 29, will follow.











Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Weis continues to infuriate me with his obsession with giving Robert Hughes the football in the red zone. We're having trouble running in the red zone to begin with, but add Hughes' slow feet to our inability to dominate the line close to the UCONN's end zone and it looks like Weis is scared of scoring a touchdown.
say bye bye weis . he just needs to go. we need a coach with a set of b*lls in notre dame
The Fat Man must go...move forward with the program and a new coach
Fire him already don't let him even coach last game !!!
How about Joe Montana. I think he's ready for a coaching job!
heard montana house is for sale !maybe moving to S.B.
Stay Charlie I love to watch notre overrated dame lose!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
It's understandable how frustrated ND fans are, and Charlie Weis will be gone after the season. The question is who is going to fill in and why would he be better. ND doesn't have the lure it once did for kids. They have a hard time recruiting out of the South and need to stop pulling over hyped kids from Southern California. I don't buy the challenging academics excuse, either. They need a proven coach, like the guy from Iowa and I heard Bob Stoops might even be interested in the job (someone confirm this). Also, what about Steve Sarkisian the Washington Coach. I know it's early but he has a way with kids and he actually beat SC with a less talented team. Urban Meyer would change the program around but he wouldn't make it what Florida is now, and he would be stupid to leave Florida this soon and leave that much money and talent on the table.
Certainly not gonna lament the passing of the Age of Blunder that was the "Weis Era". Give him credit for bringing out the NFL-draftability of Quinn and Clausen; nobody can really argue that he has a skill in bringing out the best in his QBs. There's more to a good college coach than that, of course, and Weis ain't got it.
I'd kinda like to see Harbaugh send off Charlie the same way Jimmy Johnson did 24 years ago when Miami bid Gerry Faust a fond farewell with a 58-7 pounding. Stanford destroys USC in SC's house, SC handles ND at ND - one can only imagine the possibilities when ND plays at Stanford next week. Maybe when Harbaugh gets asked why he ran up the score, he can drop Jimmy's semi-famous line: "It's not my fault your team sucks!"
Well, at least the proceeds of the Go Daddy/Popeye's Chicken Bowl will help pay some of CW's buyout.
maybe notre dame fans would like rich rodriguez from michigan to coach. notre dame fans are nothing but whiners.
Na Na Na Na
Na Na Na Na
Hey Hey Hey
Goodbye