The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Irish hope to ride Book’s arm to second straight CFP berth LINE TIME

- By John Fineran

SOUTH BEND, IND. >> For Notre Dame to reach its second straight College Football Playoff, it may have to run the table behind quarterbac­k Ian Book.

“When you step into being the quarterbac­k at Notre Dame, high expectatio­ns come with it,” said coach Brian Kelly, who has twice in nine seasons directed teams to 12-0 regular seasons only to come up short of delivering the school’s first national title since 1988.

Last season, the 6-foot, 212-pound Book completed 68.2% of his passes for 2,628 yards and 19 touchdowns while leading the Fighting Irish to the playoff, where they lost 30-3 to eventual national champion Clemson in the Cotton Bowl semifinal.

Upon his return to campus last winter, Book said he immediatel­y went to work, including on making difficult and tight downfield passes. Book was rewarded when he was named one of the team’s seven captains.

“Being able to wear the ‘C’ on your chest is a big deal,” Book said. “I’m ready to lead. We know what it takes to get to the playoff. We just have to work on the details.”

Kelly has seen the improvemen­ts in Book both as a player and leader and seen how his teammates have responded.

“Ian’s personalit­y is not one where he’s going to get many speeding tickets,” Kelly said. “There’s a confidence throughout the entire unit starting to breed, and we’re seeing that because of Ian.”

Sophomore newcomer Jarrett Patterson takes over at center between four holdovers, tackle Liam Eichenberg and guard Aaron Banks to his left and guard Tommy Kraemer and tackle Robert Hainsey to his right. Experience­d running backs Jafar Armstrong and Tony Jones Jr. return in the backfield, while Book has an experience­d wide receiver corps with Chris Finke, Chase Claypool and Michael Young. Big things were expected from junior tight end Cole Kmet, but he suffered a broken right collarbone early in fall camp and is expected to miss anywhere from four to 10 weeks. His spot will be shared by sophomore Tommy Tremble and junior Brock Wright. combined for 14.5 quarterbac­k sacks.

“We have a lot of talent on defense and the blueprint how to get back,” Kareem said.

They will be good, too, in the secondary despite losing All-America cornerback Julian Love. Senior Troy Pride Jr. moves into Love’s boundary spot and senior safeties Alohi Gilman and Jalen Elliott had 162 tackles, 12 passes defended and four forced fumbles between them.

Kelly and defensive coordinato­r Clark Lea have been searching for the right combinatio­n at linebacker where Te’von Coney and Drue Tranquill had a combined 209 tackles, including 18.5 for losses.

“Our linebackin­g corps has something we haven’t had in a while and that’s speed,” Elliott said. “We have some guys who can really run.”

Junior Jeremiah OwusuKoram­oah has been impressive at the rover position, allowing last year’s rover, grad student Asmar Bilal, to utilize his quickness at linebacker. When Bilal lines up at the weakside spot, junior Drew White has been impressive in the middle with his physicalne­ss to free up junior tackles Myron Tagovailoa-Amosa and Kurt Hinish.

Kyle Hamilton, a 6-foot-4, 210-pound safety who enrolled just before summer camp, has been the most impressive member of Notre Dame’s 22-player freshman class with five intercepti­ons in the first six preseason practices. of 196 PATs) and punter Tyler Newsome (44-yard career average) will be key. Jay Bramblett, an early enrollee last spring, is averaging almost 40 yards per punt in practice. Junior Jonathan Doerer, who was inconsiste­nt with his kickoffs last fall and this spring as the only placekicke­r, is battling newcomer Harrison Leonard to succeed Yoon.

 ?? MICHAEL AINSWORTH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Upon his return to campus last winter, Notre Dame quarterbac­k Ian Book immediatel­y worked on his leadership skills and also making the difficult and tight downfield passes.
MICHAEL AINSWORTH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Upon his return to campus last winter, Notre Dame quarterbac­k Ian Book immediatel­y worked on his leadership skills and also making the difficult and tight downfield passes.

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