Las Vegas Review-Journal

Buckeyes have Irish up first in matchup of title hopefuls

No. 5 Notre Dame debuts coach, QB vs. No. 2 Ohio St.

- By Mitch Stacy

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Notre Dame coach Marcus Freeman won’t get a gimme in his first season opener, no tasty cupcake served up at home so the Fighting Irish can tune up and send everyone away happy.

Instead, Freeman must take No. 5 Notre Dame and a new starting quarterbac­k into Ohio Stadium amid a crush of hype and over 100,000 inhospitab­le fans to play the No. 2 Buckeyes.

If the 36-year-old Freeman can engineer a Saturday night upset of heavily favored Ohio State, he will become an instant legend at a place that deals in legends. If not, at least he will come away with a decent idea of how the Irish measure up.

“Any competitor, you want an opportunit­y to go and play against the best,” Freeman said. “There’s no better way to see where we’re at as a football team.”

The former Ohio State linebacker insisted this week he was “pretty emotionles­s” about his return to the Horseshoe for the first time as a head coach. No time for that. He’s consumed with getting the Irish ready.

“You spend time wondering what do you have to do to make sure the team is prepared. That’s where my focus is,” said Freeman, who was elevated to the top job at Notre Dame in December after Brian Kelly left for LSU. “It’s all in the preparatio­n.”

For the Buckeyes, still edgy from a loss to Michigan that blew up their championsh­ip hopes last November, it’s a prime-time opportunit­y to show off a loaded, high-scoring offense led by Heisman Trophy contender C.J. Stroud, and find out whether a new coordinato­r has resolved some of the defensive issues that showed up in big games last season.

“I think coming off of last year, there are no big heads,” Ohio State coach Ryan Day said. “I mean, this team is hungry. This team has been hungry. It’s been great. We’ve got to win this first game. They know that. We’ve got a lot to prove.

“The nation,” he said, “will be watching.”

Eye on quarterbac­ks

Stroud, in his second year as Ohio State starter, is a projected firstround NFL draft pick who hopes to pick up where he left off along with top receiver Jaxon Smith-njigba and running back Treveyon Henderson, both Associated Press preseason All-americans.

“He’s been there, done that,”

Smith-njigba said of the quarterbac­k. “He’s ready. We have confidence in him.”

Tyler Buchner gets his first career start for Notre Dame. He’s a dual-threat guy who in his first year split time with Jack Coan, often in packages that utilized him as a ball-carrier. Buchner will no doubt be looking for Michael Mayer, one of the best tight ends in the country and the top returning receiver for the Irish.

Buchner — like Stroud, a native California­n — insisted he’s got enough experience in big games to not be intimidate­d.

“I like to have the idea that my confidence will stay the same no matter the external factors,” he said. “I try to keep it level at all times, try not get too high or too low. But I’d say, honestly, since spring ball, through camp and to now, my confidence has just gone up and up. I feel like I’m in a good spot.”

 ?? AJ Mast The Associated Press ?? Notre Dame quarterbac­k Tyler Buchner makes his first career start Saturday, and it’s no easy task: against No. 2 Ohio State at the Horseshoe in Columbus, Ohio.
AJ Mast The Associated Press Notre Dame quarterbac­k Tyler Buchner makes his first career start Saturday, and it’s no easy task: against No. 2 Ohio State at the Horseshoe in Columbus, Ohio.

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