The Morning Call

Notre Dame trying to say goodbye to the narrative

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ARLINGTON, Texas — Playing a Rose Bowl game deep in the heart of Texas is anything but normal. Top-ranked Alabama being in a College Football Playoff semifinal game is nothing new.

The SEC champion Crimson Tide (11-0) are in a familiar position despite the chaos of playing during the pandemic. No. 4 Notre Dame, which finished runner-up in the ACCafter temporaril­y giving up its cherished independen­t status, gets another playoff chance two years after a big thud in the same stadium.

“We’re going to keep knocking at the door. We don’t listen to the narratives about what Notre Dame can and can’t do,” Fighting Irish coach Brian Kelly said Thursday. “We’re just excited that we’re going to keep banging at this door and we’re going to get through.”

These Irish (10-1) go into the relocated Rose Bowl on New Year’s Day as three-touchdown underdogs against Alabama and the Tide’s Heisman Trophy finalists, quarterbac­k Mac Jones and receiver DeVonta Smith. The game was moved to AT&T Stadium from its traditiona­l home in Pasadena because of COVID-19 restrictio­ns in California that would have kept family — and any other fans — from attending.

When the Cotton Bowl at AT&T Stadium was a semifinal two years ago, Notre Dame lost 30-3 to eventual national champion Clemson in its only previous CFP appearance. The No. 2 Tigers, who avenged their only loss by beating the Irish 34-10 in the ACC title game, play Ohio State in this season’s other semifinal Friday night at the Sugar Bowl.

The semifinal winners are scheduled to play Jan. 11 in suburban Miami, where eight seasons ago in the BCSnationa­l championsh­ip game Alabama trounced Notre Dame 42-14 in the last meeting between the storied programs.

“Even after going undefeated that year, we lost in the national championsh­ip game, and wewerelook­ed at as not a very good football team,” Kelly said. “We needed to look at the things that could help us grow. And we’ve been doing that each and every year.”

Notre Dame is still trying to catch up with Alabama, which is in a CFP semifinal for the sixth time after missing the final four for the only time last year. The Tide are 4-0 at the home of the NFL’s Dallas Cowboys, including 38-0 over Michigan State five seasons ago on the way to a national championsh­ip. They wonanother title, their fifth overall under coach Nick Saban, three seasons ago.

“We just want to take advantage of where we’re at,” said Jones, the junior who has thrown for 3,739 yards and 32 touchdowns with four intercepti­ons in his first full season as the starter. “We’re finally where we want to be.”

Missing in the middle: Alabama will be without All-America center Landon Dickerson, a team captain whois recovering from surgery after injuring his knee late in the SEC title game.

Skill sets: Alabama’s offense has Heisman finalists Jones and Smith, plus a big-scoring, dual-threat tailback in Najee Harris, who has rushed for 1,262 yards and 24 touchdowns, and caught 32 passes for 316 yards and three more scores. Smith has 98 catches for 1,511 yards and 17 TDs. Jones has completed 76.5% of his passes for 3,739 yards with 32 touchdowns and four intercepti­ons. Ian Book, a fifth-year senior and two-time captain, is Notre Dame’s winningest starting quarterbac­k at 30-4. He has thrown for 2,601 yards and 15 TDs, with 430 yards and eight scores rushing. Sophomore running back Kyren Williams has 1,061 yards rushing with 12 TDs, and Javon McKinley has four 100-yard receiving games.

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