Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Marshall shocks Notre Dame

Late pick-six seals it as Freeman becomes the first Irish coach to lose his first three games.

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SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Steven Gilmore returned an intercepti­on 37 yards for a touchdown late in the fourth quarter and Khalan Labron ran for 163 yards as Marshall shocked No. 8 Notre Dame 26-21 Saturday, making Marcus Freeman the first Fighting Irish coach to lose his first three games.

Freeman was asked whether his inexperien­ce coaching was a factor in the poor start.

“If it’s my experience as head coach, and I don’t know if that’s a reason why, or the lack of execution? But it starts with me, right? It starts with me as the head coach and looking at myself and saying, ‘What do I have to do to help this football team and really look at everything we’re doing?’ Because the performanc­e isn’t where we needed to be,” he said.

Gilmore, the brother of Stephon Gilmore of the Indianapol­is Colts, picked off a pass by Tyler Buchner with 4:35 left, raced to the end zone and then jumped into the stands where Marshall fans celebrated.

“Obviously, a phenomenal day,” second-year Marshall coach Charlie Huff said. “I’m really proud of the way they competed. I’m really proud of their competitiv­e spirit, the consistenc­y of what we needed to do to come out with a win.”

Marshall (2-0), the first Sun Belt Conference team to play at Notre Dame Stadium, beat a team ranked in the top 10 for just the second time in school history. The Thundering Herd beat No. 6 Kansas State 27-20 in 2003.

The Irish had a streak of 42 straight wins against unranked opponents snapped. Freeman also said after the game that quarterbac­k Tyler Buchner was replaced in the closing minutes because of a shoulder injury but didn’t know the severity.

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