First off, I want to thank everyone that’s been visiting the blog. August was our best month ever at Inside the Irish, and I only expect things to grow exponentially from here as we kick off the season.
Over the next couple of days, I’ll keep the updates coming fast and furious, with video, analysis, live-blogging and just about everything else that’ll hopefully make this the best one-stop shop for all your Fighting Irish football needs.
As you read this, I’ll likely be en route to South Bend, either in the air or in my trusty rent-a-car navigating through the twists and turns of Chicago traffic on the way to South Bend. While posting might be light during my travel, it hasn’t been light for the past few weeks, as we got everybody caught up and ready for the 2010 season.
For those of you new to the party, or in need of a place to catch up, here’s a link to everything that’s been going on the past few weeks as the Irish prepare to face off with Purdue at 3:30 p.m. ET on NBC.
OFFSEASON CHEATSHEETS
After the way last season ended, I wouldn’t blame some of you for taking a step back and thinking about something else for a few months. I’ve got a friend that’s purposely avoided reading anything since last season ended, just so he didn’t get his hopes up again before the season started.
For those of you that slacked on your summer reading, here are your Offseason Cheatsheets, your Du Lac approved crib-sheets to get you caught up on everything you’ll need to know for the 2010 season:
QUARTERBACKS
RUNNING BACKS
TIGHT ENDS
WIDE RECEIVERS
OFFENSIVE LINE
DEFENSIVE LINE
LINEBACKERS
DEFENSIVE BACKS
While that should catch you up on your Irish roster, knowing the opponents on the Irish schedule is also critical. Good thing the past few weeks we’ve rolled out Opponent Previews, a team-by-team breakdown of everybody playing the Irish this season, including the degree of difficulty associated with each opponent.
OPPONENT PREVIEW
Here are my rankings for Notre Dame’s opponents this season, from hardest game to easiest:
1. Southern California Trojans
2. Utah Utes
3. Boston College Eagles
4. Michigan Wolverines
5. Michigan State Spartans
6. Pitt Panthers
7. Stanford Cardinal
8. Purdue Boilermakers
9. Navy Midshipmen
10. Tulsa Golden Hurricanes
11. Army Black Knights
12. Western Michigan Broncos
To show the depth of this schedule, consider that Utah just slid past Pitt in overtime, showing the balance in the meat of this schedule between my second and sixth ranked team. Looking closer at the schedule, if I had a mulligan, I’d probably slide Michigan down a few slots, and switch Navy with Purdue. (Obviously, after the mulligan I took where I slid Purdue down from sixth to eighth.)
When looking at this schedule, it’s easy to see why some people ridicule this schedule, but on closer inspection, it’s also obvious why Phil Steele ranks the Irish slate as the 17th-toughest schedule in the country. Sure, the Irish aren’t playing any top-ten teams, and just a few teams ranked in the Top 25, but top to bottom the schedule is impressive with the top 10 opponents on the Irish schedule games that the Irish can conceivably lose. Just like last year, the Irish find themselves playing a ton of teams in the top forty percent of college football. With talent spread so evenly as scholarship limits and visibility at smaller programs more and more common, games against teams like Nevada, Tulsa and Utah are just as dangerous as traditional opponents like Purdue, Michigan State and Navy.
NEW FOR 2010
Other than the coaching staff, the offensive and defensive philosophy, and just about everything else in the football program, there’s plenty that’s changed between 2009 and 2010 on our end of things. From a technology standpoint, there has never been more ways to watch the Fighting Irish play football.
Between the international agreement with Eurosport to broadcast games in Europe and Asia, iPhone and iPad applications that give you access to broadcasts, a completely new ActionCam overhead cable-camera system for never-before-seen angles, and fully functioning, live simulcasts of the NBC broadcast with HD quality and DVR capabilities streaming live on your computers, there’s never been a better time to be a Notre Dame football fan.
Finally, one last look at the UND.com 2010 Season Primer, which should have you ready for Saturday afternoon.