Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

No. 3 Notre Dame crushes Syracuse at Yankee Stadium

- By Ralph D. Russo

NEW YORK — Ian Book returned to the starting lineup for No. 3 Notre Dame and threw for 292 yards and two touchdowns as the Fighting Irish routed No. 12 Syracuse 36-3 at Yankee Stadium on Saturday to stay on target for a trip to the College Football Playoff.

The Fighting Irish held out Book from last week’s home game against Florida State with a rib injury, and he wasn’t missed as Notre Dame (11-0) rolled with Brandon Wimbush at quarterbac­k.

Notre Dame clearly wanted to be cautious with Book ahead of its trip to the Bronx to face high-scoring Syracuse (8-3). The junior quarterbac­k, who took over as the starter four games into the season, looked good as new.

The Irish had their running game bottled up much of the day, but their short-tointermed­iate passing game more than made up for it. Donned in pinstripe uniforms in a tribute to the usual residents of the ballpark, Notre Dame went up 7-0 on its second possession on a 9-yard pass from Book to Dexter Williams.

The Subway Alumni, along with the bridge and tunnel crowd, packed Yankee Stadium on a 45-degree day in the Bronx. The sellout crowd was announced at 48,104.

That the Fighting Irish were playing such an important game away from South Bend, Indiana, did not sit well with most of their fans. Even coach Brian Kelly said it was not ideal. Part of the Shamrock Series, the off-site “home” games Notre Dame plays almost annually, the Irish’s second trip to the new Yankee Stadium had been in the works for several years.

Adding to the anxiety of playing a high-stakes, lateseason game far from home was a Syracuse team having its best season in more than a decade.

Turns out, there was nothing to worry about. The most significan­t college football game at Yankee Stadium since No. 1 Army and No. 2 Notre Dame played a 0-0 tie in 1946 was no Game of the Century.

Only some wonky redzone offense by the Irish in the first half kept it remotely close as the Orange played most of the game without starting quarterbac­k Eric Dungey.

Dungey left in the first quarter with what the school said was an upper-body injury. The play before Dungey went out seemed fairly innocent. The quarterbac­k ran into the middle of the Irish defense for 4 yards, got up and was setting up the Orange’s no-hudde offense for the next play when he went to the ground.

The senior reached around to his lower back and stayed down until athletic training staff attended to him. He walked off slowly, and then to the visitor’s dugout that leads to the clubhouses.

PITT WINS COASTAL: Coach Pat Narduzzi wasn’t worried about a jinx. The Pitt coach had his equipment staff to bring the commemorat­ive ACC caps and T-shirts all the way from Pittsburgh.

“I said, `Get them. It’s going to happen,’ ” Narduzzi said after the victory.

It did happen — thanks to Kenny Pickett’s big day.

Pickett threw a careerbest three touchdown passes, all in the second half, and Pittsburgh beat Wake Forest 34-13 to clinch its first berth in the Atlantic Coast Conference championsh­ip game.

“Everyone knows this is a special group,” Pickett said. “Honestly, we show it every week. We play with the kind of heart and toughness that I don’t think is seen very often in this day and age in football.”

Pickett finished 23 of 30 for a career-high 316 yards with scoring passes of 4 yards to Rafael AraujoJone­s, 63 yards to Taysir Mack and 23 yards to Maurice Ffrench.

Darrin Hall had a 2-yard touchdown run and left tackle Stefano Millin added a late 6-yard scoring run for the Panthers (7-4, 6-1), who won their fourth straight — their longest winning streak in two years. They will play in their first title game since joining the league in 2013, taking on No. 2 Clemson on Dec. 1 in Charlotte.

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