The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

No. 9 Notre Dame turns to Coan

- By John Fineran

SOUTH BEND, IND. >> No quarterbac­k since Tony Rice has delivered the goods Notre Dame’s fanatical following has longed for since 1988 — a national championsh­ip.

Not Rick Mirer, not Kevin McDougal, not Ron Powlus, not Brady Quinn, not Tommy Rees, not Everett Golson, and not the winningest Irish starting quarterbac­k of them all — Ian Book, who twice led coach Brian Kelly’s team to the College Football Playoff..

When No. 9 Notre Dame opens its season Sept. 5 at Florida State, Book’s successor — Jack Coan, a graduate transfer from Wisconsin — will be asked to end the drought.

“Going into our opener, (Coan) gives us the best chance for success,” said Kelly, who begins his 12th season four victories short of passing Knute Rockne’s 105 wins at the school.

The 22-year-old Coan, who beat out sophomore Drew Pyne and true freshman Tyler Buchner, is eager for his chance at Notre Dame, where he once was offered a lacrosse scholarshi­p.

“Never in a million years did I think I’d end up here after going to Wisconsin,” said the 6-foot-31/4, 223-pound former prep star from Sayville, New York.

In 2019 as a junior, Coan completed nearly 70% of his passes for 2,727 yards and 18 touchdowns against five intercepti­ons during a 10-4 season for Paul Chryst’s Badgers that ended with competitiv­e losses to Ohio State in the Big Ten championsh­ip and Oregon in the Rose Bowl.

Coan was expected to be the starting quarterbac­k last season, but suffered a right foot injury in early October that required seasonendi­ng surgery. He transferre­d to Notre Dame in January.

“It’s just a dream come true,” Coan said. “It’s not something I’m going to take lightly.”

Rees, now Notre Dame’s offensive coordinato­r and quarterbac­ks coach, believes Coan won’t.

“He came here for a reason,” Rees said. “He’s put in the work; he’s done everything we’ve asked from him and more. But Jack keeps it pretty close to the chest. He’s a guy that’s very poised, very thoughtful in how he reacts. And he’s excited — he’s eager for his opportunit­y.”

His teammates are eager for Coan to lead them.

“You wouldn’t think Jack coming from Wisconsin would step in and be the leader he is,” said running back Kyren Williams, who rushed for 1,125 yards and 13 touchdowns and had 35 receptions for 313 yards. “I’m excited to go to work with him every day.”

Up front

With four-fifths of last year’s starting offensive line now working in NFL camps, senior Jarrett Patterson returns as center after speculatio­n had him possibly moving elsewhere. A preseason All-American, the 6-foot-4½, 307-pound Patterson missed the end of 2020 season and all of spring recovering from foot

surgery and is being reacquaint­ed with his teammates who include 6-foot2½, 310-pound grad transfer guard Cain Madden.

Offensive weapons

Williams will be spelled in the backfield by sophomore Chris Tyree, senior C’Bo Flemister, and true freshmen Audric Estime and Logan Diggs, who have been impressive. Sophomore Michael Mayer returns after a breakout year to head a deep tight end group.

The wideouts will be led by Avery Davis, seniors Joe Wilkins Jr. and Lawrence Keys III, impressive freshman Deion Colzie and two seniors returning from injury-plagued 2020 seasons — speedsters Braden Lenzy and Kevin Austin Jr.

Defensive dude

Despite the loss of several starters including Butkus Award winner and rover Jeremiah OwusuKoram­oah, new defensive coordinato­r Marcus Freeman has several players with plenty of experience.

The best of them is the 6-foot-4, 220-pound junior free safety Kyle Hamilton, who missed the spring after ankle surgery following a 2020 season during which he led the team in tackles.

“I remember last season (cornerback coach Mike) Mickens (who played and coached at Cincinnati) called me and said “We’ve got dude. We’ve got a dude that’s special here,’” Freeman said. “The things (Hamilton) does makes him look effortless. We can use him in so many different ways.”

Captains galore

There are seven team captains, including defensive end Myron Tagovailoa-Amosa. When Kelly made the announceme­nt to his players, they were wearing leis to honor Tagovailoa­Amosa, who was in Hawaii for the funeral of his father and joined his teammates virtually.

“It’s an honor and a privilege to serve my brothers,” tweeted Tagovailoa­Amosa, who wiped away tears.

Schedule

Notre Dame, which played an Atlantic Coast Conference schedule last season and ended up 102, returns to its treasured independen­t status. This year’s schedule features five ACC foes, including No. 10 North Carolina (Oct. 30). There is also a game against Coan’s old team, No. 12 Wisconsin, at Chicago’s Soldier Field (Sept. 25), a home game Oct. 2 against Freeman’s old team, No. 8 Cincinnati, and a visit to Virginia Tech (Oct. 9). Longtime rival No. 15 Southern California visits on Oct. 23.

 ?? JOHN MERSITS — SOUTH BEND TRIBUNE VIA AP ?? Notre Dame quarterbac­k Jack Coan (17) passes during Fall Camp on Aug. 7at Irish Athletics Center in South Bend, Ind.
JOHN MERSITS — SOUTH BEND TRIBUNE VIA AP Notre Dame quarterbac­k Jack Coan (17) passes during Fall Camp on Aug. 7at Irish Athletics Center in South Bend, Ind.

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