Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Better than final score indicates

Kelly satisfied with No. 4 Irish’s overall play against Cardinals

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SOUTH BEND, Ind. — When it came time to deliver, Notre Dame quarterbac­k Ian Book stopped beating himself up and kept the No. 4 Fighting Irish unbeaten.

“I’m definitely hard on myself, but my job at the end of the day is to get the ‘W,’ ” said Book, whose 13-yard touchdown run late in the third quarter, paired with Kyren Williams’ 127 rushing yards, helped Notre Dame hold off Louisville 12-7 on Saturday.

Williams ran 25 times and had his third 100-yard game of the season as the Irish (4-0, 3-0 Atlantic Coast Conference) won their 22nd straight at Notre Dame Stadium.

It came against an inspired Louisville 3-4 defense that spent most of the afternoon on the field. Notre Dame controlled the clock for 36 minutes, 15 seconds, including a game-ending 14-play drive that burned the final 7:55.

“When the game is on the line, you can count on Ian Book to come up and make big plays for us,” Notre Dame coach Brian Kelly said. “The preparatio­n was outstandin­g, their mindset was great, but when you’re a top-five team, you’re going to get the opposition’s best game, period.”

Book completed 11 of 19 for 106 yards and ran 12 times for 47 yards.

“I felt like I was able to pick myself up and get the energy going,” he said.

The loss was the fourth straight for the Cardinals (1-4, 0-4), who got 118 passing yards and 49 rushing from Malik Cunningham. Javian Hawkins, the nation’s No. 3 rusher coming into the game, was limited to 51 yards on 15 carries.

“I told our guys in our locker room that I was proud of them,” Louisville coach Scott Satterfiel­d said. “We were in this game and had an opportunit­y at the end to get a victory. The guys went out there and competed today.”

The Irish outgained the Cardinals 338-219 and controlled the clock for 21:57 of the first half, running 45 plays and gaining 212 yards to Louisville’s 23 plays for 90.

But all that got Notre Dame was a 6-0 halftime lead on Jonathan Doerer’s field goals of 32 and 30 yards.

The Cardinals opened the second half with an 83-yard touchdown drive, including a 29-yard pass to a wide-open Hawkins at the Irish 1. Cunningham followed with a touchdown pass to Marshon Ford to make it 7-6.

Cunningham completed 16 of 19 passes and also left for a brief time with cramps but returned.

“When you don’t even run 50 plays, it’s hard to get into any rhythm throwing the ball,” Satterfiel­d said. “We only had the ball 45 plays and we threw it 22. We’ve got to do a much better job running the ball.”

The Irish marched up and down the field on three of their four first-half drives, totaling 42 plays and 219 yards. On their third drive just before half, holder Jay Bramblett came up 2 yards short on a faked field-goal attempt at the Louisville 6.

“I don’t even know if aesthetica­lly we looked bad,” Kelly said. “We controlled the line of scrimmage, we controlled the time of possession, we had I think one or two penalties, we didn’t turn the football over.

“I’ve coached a lot of games over 30 years, (and) I don’t know if I’ve been in one quite like this.”

The best play of the first half might have been Book’s 12-yard completion to freshman tight end Michael Mayer, who stiff-armed linebacker C.J. Avery and then leaped over cornerback Kei’Trel Clark to give the Irish a first down at the Louisville 14, much to the delight of the announced crowd of 10,182.

Louisville’s defense came in allowing 475 yards a game and 270.7 yards on the ground. Notre Dame finished with 338 total yards and 232 on the ground.

 ?? AP 2019 ?? Notre Dame quarterbac­k Ian Book completed 11 of 19 passes for 106 yards and rushed 12 times for 47 yards and a touchdown on Saturday.
AP 2019 Notre Dame quarterbac­k Ian Book completed 11 of 19 passes for 106 yards and rushed 12 times for 47 yards and a touchdown on Saturday.

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