Chicago Sun-Times

STORM BEFORE THE CALM?

AFTER IRISH visit WOLVERINES, THERE’S NO TELLING WHEN THE NEXT REKINDLING WILL BE

- By Steve Greenberg

No. 8 Notre Dame and No. 19 Michigan meet tonight in a showdown. When they meet again is anyone’s guess.

From 1978 to 2014, old lions Notre Dame and Michigan squared off 31 times. It wasn’t quite every year, but it was enough to create a rivalry that was often glorious. Given the programs’ rich histories, the world just made a tiny bit more sense when the Irish and Wolverines were in each other’s way.

It still does — which is why so many followers of college football were disappoint­ed to see the temporary cessation of the rivalry in 2015. A home-and-home in 2018 (a 24-17 Irish victory in South Bend) and 2019 has been just what the doctor ordered, but then it’s back on hiatus.

When they’ll meet again is a mystery. No. 8 Notre Dame (-1) at No. 19 Michigan (6:30 p.m., Ch. 7) might be the last these programs see of each other for a long while.

It will be intense. The Big House will be loud. The Wolverines (5-2) and coach Jim Harbaugh need a highprofil­e victory in the worst way. The stakes are even higher for coach Brian Kelly’s Irish (5-1), who can’t lose again if they’re going to have any hope of returning to the playoff.

“Playing at Michigan is always a great challenge and one that our guys are excited about, [especially] being on national television,” Kelly said. “But it’ll be one where we’ll have to execute at a high level, play a physical game, certainly, and handle the elements. Certainly, it will be loud, and certainly, communicat­ion will be very, very important for us.”

Is he right? In a word: Certainly.

The Irish took advantage of an open week in the schedule by working on a nonverbal cadence to take into this game. Quarterbac­k Ian Book and the offense learned the hard way in a loss at Georgia what sort of havoc a raucous, hostile crowd can wreak.

“We’re not going to make that same mistake twice,” Kelly said. “I think our guys are really tuned into understand­ing that the atmosphere will be loud and that you cannot be distracted if you are interested in executing at a high level.”

Look for an impressive bounce-back effort from Michigan receiver Ronnie Bell, whose late drop in last week’s defeat at Penn State was devastatin­g. But the return to full health of Irish running back Jafar Armstrong is a bigger deal, giving the Irish the balance they need to keep the Wolverines — and the crowd — at bay.

Home teams have taken the last five games in this series. That ends in 24-17 fashion — the win of the season for the Irish.

IN OTHER WEEK 9 ACTION:

No. 13 Wisconsin (+14½) at No. 3 Ohio State (11 a.m., Fox-32): It’s hard to know just how damaging last weekend’s stunning loss at Illinois was to the Badgers’ collective psyche. It’s even harder to picture their defense running with receivers Binjimen Victor, Chris Olave and the rest of the Buckeyes’ skill players.

Count on the Badgers (6-1) to punch in at least a couple of touchdowns, because running back Jonathan Taylor is that superb and quarterbac­k Jack Coan has some quality targets. It’s those big plays when the Buckeyes (7-0) have the ball, though, that hit like lightning strikes. Call it 34-20.

No. 5 Oklahoma (-23½) at Kansas State (11 a.m., Ch. 7): You ready for some keen analysis? The Sooners (7-0) are a lot better than the Wildcats (4-2) at scoring touchdowns. The bullies of the Big 12 also have a seven-game win streak in Manhattan. Still, this isn’t a pushover K-State squad. OU wins, K-State covers.

No. 9 Auburn (+11) at No. 2 LSU (2:30 p.m., Ch. 2): I don’t like to throw guarantees around, but this one’s different. You ready?

I guarantee the Tigers will win.

But seriously, folks. Auburn’s 6-1 Tigers have a defense the likes of which LSU’s 7-0 Tigers simply have not encountere­d. A key sack of hotshot QB Joe Burrow here, a turnover there — that’s all it takes for the Tigers to stay in this thing.

Wait, now I’m confused. Burrow (which really should be spelled “Burreaux”) and his boys squeak one out in OT.

No. 6 Penn State (-6½) at Michigan State (2:30 p.m., Ch. 7): The Spartans (4-3) already have failed big conference tests against Ohio State and Wisconsin. Why should they be able to go toe-to-toe with the Nittany Lions (7-0), who appear to have steel in their veins? A puncher’s chance doesn’t cut it this time, either — 24-13 for the visitors.

My favorite favorite: Texas A&M (-10) vs. Mississipp­i State (11 a.m., SEC Network): What we’ve learned about the Aggies is they’re a heck of a lot better at punching down than they are at punching up. Protect quarterbac­k Kellen Mond at least a little bit and A&M pulls away.

My favorite underdog: Kentucky (+10½) vs. Missouri (6:30 p.m., SEC Network): If Sawyer Smith is back at QB, the switch flips and the Wildcats are a more dangerous team. Either way, Mizzou remains the team that lost on the road at Wyoming and Vanderbilt.

Last week: 4-3 straight-up, 3-4 vs. the spread.

Season to date: 40-18 straight-up, 32-25-1 vs. the spread. ✶

 ?? STREETER LECKA/GETTY IMAGES ?? Jafar Armstrong
STREETER LECKA/GETTY IMAGES Jafar Armstrong
 ?? GREGORY SHAMUS/GETTY IMAGES ?? Ronnie Bell
GREGORY SHAMUS/GETTY IMAGES Ronnie Bell
 ??  ??
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 ?? JUSTIN CASTERLINE/GETTY IMAGES ?? Ohio State receivers Chris Olave and Binjimen Victor could worsen Wisconsin’s pain.
JUSTIN CASTERLINE/GETTY IMAGES Ohio State receivers Chris Olave and Binjimen Victor could worsen Wisconsin’s pain.
 ?? CHRIS GRAYTHEN/GETTY IMAGES ?? LSU quarterbac­k Joe Burrow against Auburn’s defense will be the story of the game.
CHRIS GRAYTHEN/GETTY IMAGES LSU quarterbac­k Joe Burrow against Auburn’s defense will be the story of the game.

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