- snitzoid
My condolences to all you poor bastards tailgating at ND!
Have you no faith? Stop talking like a member of the Tribe. It is TOO worth driving to South Bend in congested traffic to waste a beautiful day getting sh-tfaced in the parking lot and watching a bunch of woke, overeducated Californians hand your ass to you.
On the other hand, it beat reliving the Potato Famine.
Notre Dame suffers another embarrassing home loss, falling to Stanford 16-14 to drop to 3-3: ‘We’ve got to be better’
By Tom Coyne
Associated Press
Oct 16, 2022 at 12:16 am
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Tanner McKee passed for 288 yards, Casey Filkins scored a touchdown and Joshua Karty kicked three field goals as Stanford ended an 11-game losing streak against FBS opponents, beating Notre Dame 16-14 on Saturday night.
The Cardinal (2-4), who blew a two-touchdown lead against Oregon State a week earlier, put the game away when safety Jonathan McGill broke up a Drew Pyne pass on fourth-and-7 from the Notre Dame 25-yard line with 1 minute, 4 seconds left. It was Stanford’s first win against an FBS opponent since beating then-No. 3 Oregon 31-24 in overtime on Oct. 2, 2021.
“We needed that. We really did,” Stanford coach David Shaw said. “Early in the week, I anticipated it being really tough to get our guys going again and it was not.”
Shaw said the Cardinal didn’t let the near-miss against Oregon State make them give up hope.
“As difficult as last week’s loss was in the fourth quarter, our guys felt it, they felt like they were close,” he said. “They felt we didn’t need to scrap everything, didn’t need to change everything.”
After the game, the Cardinal ran to the end of the field where their fans were and celebrated.
Notre Dame running back Sam Assaf leaves the field after the Irish lost to Stanford 16-14 on Saturday in South Bend, Ind.
Notre Dame running back Sam Assaf leaves the field after the Irish lost to Stanford 16-14 on Saturday in South Bend, Ind. (Nam Y. Huh/AP)
It was the second embarrassing home loss of the season for the Irish (3-3). They were beaten 26-21 by Marshall in the second game of the season but had won three straight since. Notre Dame coach Marcus Freeman said it comes down to execution.
“We weren’t running the ball effectively,” he said. “We also weren’t throwing the ball as effectively as we wanted. It wasn’t a lack of effort in the game. It wasn’t a lack of preparation. But it’s not correlating over to the results you want, so you have to look at what you are doing and how you are doing it and figure out a better way to do it.”
The Irish offense couldn’t get much going against a Stanford team that entered the game 111th in scoring defense, giving up 32.6 points per game. Freeman said the Irish weren’t surprised by anything the Cardinal were doing.
“I need to make sure we look at ourselves and say, ‘What aren’t we doing?’ " he said. “The game plan is to run the ball and try to capitalize off of the aggressiveness of their defense and try to take some shots.”
Notre Dame scored touchdowns on back-to-back possessions in the second half but fumbled the ball away on their next possession.
Stanford safety Jonathan McGill, right, recovers a fumble in front of cornerback Ethan Bonner, left, and Notre Dame wide receiver Jayden Thomas during the second half Saturday in South Bend, Ind. Stanford won 16-14.
Stanford safety Jonathan McGill, right, recovers a fumble in front of cornerback Ethan Bonner, left, and Notre Dame wide receiver Jayden Thomas during the second half Saturday in South Bend, Ind. Stanford won 16-14. (Nam Y. Huh/AP)
Stanford scored its lone touchdown on its first possession, driving 66 yards in eight plays, capped by a 2-yard Filkins run. Karty then kicked field goals of 45, 43 and 43 yards.
McKee was 26-of-38 passing for 288 yards, and the Cardinal had a 385-311 yards advantage in total offense.
“This is far from the end product,” McKee said. “We have to keep on getting better and use this as a steppingstone.”
Pyne was 13-of-27 passing for 151 yards for the Irish with a fumble. He threw a 41-yard touchdown pass to Tobias Merriweather, and Audric Estime had a 10-yard scoring run as Notre Dame overcame a 13-0 deficit to take a 14-13 lead but couldn’t hold on.
Pyne took the blame for an inconsistent performance.
“I’ve got to go out there and do my job, execute, deliver the ball, get us in the right protection,” he said. “I’ve got to see the defense. I just need to go out there and execute.”
It appeared the Irish might have a short field to work with when officials ruled McKee had fumbled, but the call was overturned when replay showed his knee was down. The Cardinal took a 16-14 lead on Karty’s 43-yard field goal with 10:20 left.
The Irish were driving on their next possession, but Estime fumbled at the Stanford 25-yard line on a hit by Kendall Williamson. Jonathan McGill recovered at the 21.
“It’s just frustrating, man. It’s frustrating,” Freeman said. “We’ve got to be better.”
“I was trying to just get out of the pocket and create something. The guy dragged me down,” Pyne said. “You can’t take a sack in a two-minute operation.”
Numbers game
Notre Dame hasn’t scored a touchdown and has been outscored 27-6 in the first quarter in six games this season. ... Stanford ended a three-game losing streak to the Irish to claim the Legends Trophy. ... David Shaw improved to 6-5 against the Irish. ... Notre Dame had just 106 yards of offense in the first half.
“The first half, defense played so well, best half of football we’ve played all year,” Shaw said. “Not just kept them out of the end zone, not just a shutout, but getting off the field on third downs, getting in the quarterback’s face, getting pressure on the quarterback, rallying in the running game.”
The takeaway
Stanford: The Cardinal, who suffered a last-minute defeat against Oregon State a week ago after leading 24-10 heading into the fourth quarter, struggled but managed to hold on.
Notre Dame: The Irish couldn’t execute when they needed and repeatedly let Stanford get extra yards.