Greenwich Time

Irish hope to build résumé vs. Orange

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SYRACUSE at No. 2 NOTRE DAME

Saturday, 2:30 p.m. (NBC)

SOUTH BEND, Ind. — The script has been rewritten off and on for No. 2 Notre Dame in a year dominated by the pandemic, but the overall goal remains the same for Brian Kelly and his team: win two championsh­ips.

The Fighting Irish (9-0, CFP No. 2) ended 131 years as a football independen­t to join the Atlantic Coast Conference for this season, can earn their ninth ACC victory Saturday against Syracuse (1-9, 1-8 ACC). The game is at Notre Dame Stadium, where the Irish have won 23 straight.

Kelly knows Notre Dame, riding the nation’s longest winning streak at 15, needs to take care of business against coach Dino Babers’ youthful Orange before it looks to its future later this month. There is the ACC title game Dec. 19 and there is a possible berth in the College Football Playoff.

“I think the most important thing for us is to carry on the play that we exhibited in the second half of the game against North Carolina,” Kelly said of last week’s 31-17 victory in Chapel Hill.

Notre Dame fifth-year quarterbac­k Ian Book orchestrat­ed two second-half touchdown drives while the Irish defense limited Tar Heels quarterbac­k Sam Howell and his weapons to 78 yards and no points in the final 30 minutes.

“Arguably our best two quarters of the season will be what we talk about all week in our preparatio­n,” Kelly said.

Earlier this week, the ACC announced Notre

Dame would not have to play its re-scheduled Dec. 12 game at Wake Forest, giving the Irish a week to get healthy and prepare for its ACC title game opponent - either No. 4 Clemson or No. 9 Miami.

Kelly said Thursday the announceme­nt didn’t change his team’s approach.

“It’s really about preparing and putting together the kind of performanc­e that needs to be consistent if you are really entertaini­ng thoughts about being a championsh­ip football team,” he said.

Babers knows what awaits his rebuilding Orange, with nearly three of every four players are in their first two years of eligibilit­y.

“The way (Book) keeps plays alive is amazing,” Babers said. “No one has run the ball against Notre Dame. We know where we’re at, and we get to lace them up one more time.”

IRISH MYSTIQUE

Notre Dame and Syracuse have met nine times, the last time in 2018 at Yankee Stadium when the unbeaten Irish romped 36-3 late.

“I’m glad we got to play those guys again,” said Syracuse senior wide receiver Nykeim Johnson, who had two receptions in the game. “Definitely going to be on a big stage.”

Syracuse, a 34-point underdog Saturday, won on its last visit to Notre Dame,

24-23, late in 2008.

“You’re getting an opportunit­y to play at Notre Dame - ‘Touchdown Jesus’ and the whole nine yards,” Babers said.

GROWING PAINS

Syracuse is surrenderi­ng 453.5 yards and 31.5 points per game But not all is grim.

During last week’s 36-29 home loss to N.C. State, the Orange 3-3-5 defense started six freshmen. Syracuse forced two turnovers and has a nation’s best 22 with 12 intercepti­ons and 10 fumble recoveries. Sophomore linebacker Mikel Jones has four intercepti­ons and two recoveries.

“They’re athletic, they’re fast, they play with toughness, they take the football away . they get your attention,” Kelly said.

AIRING IT OUT

Despite freshman Sean Tucker’s 525 team-leading rushing yards, Syracuse only averages 78.3 yards per game on the ground, 250.4 yards overall and 17.5 points per game. Last week, Syracuse quarterbac­k Rex Culpepper threw for 254 yards and two touchdowns against N.C. State. Junior receiver Taj Harris had a career day with 13 receptions for 146 yards and one score.

Notre Dame defensive coordinato­r Clark Lea, who coached linebacker­s at Syracuse from 2013-15, has the No. 10 overall defense (85.3 rushing yards, 303.4 total yards, 16.7 points).

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