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Notre Dame Fighting Irish Defense Still Playing Hide and Seek After Purdue Win
Michael Caterina-Imagn Images

Listen, Fighting Irish fans, we need to talk. Yeah, Notre Dame walked away with a 56-30 victory over Purdue on Saturday, and sure, that scoreboard looks prettier than a South Bend sunset. But if you squinted hard enough during the first half, you might’ve thought you were watching a basketball game with all those points flying around.

Notre Dame’s Defensive Struggles Continue to Haunt South Bend

Here’s the brutal truth that’s harder to swallow than cafeteria food: this Notre Dame defense gave up 30 points to a Purdue team that’s about as threatening as a paper airplane in a hurricane. The Boilermakers are projected to finish somewhere near the basement of the Big Ten, yet they managed to light up the Irish defense like a Christmas tree.

Head Coach Marcus Freeman didn’t sugarcoat it when he met with reporters after the game. His explanation sounded like a man trying to solve a Rubik’s Cube blindfolded while riding a unicycle. “It was a marriage of the front and coverage,” Freeman said, which is coach-speak for “our defense looked like strangers at a wedding reception.”

The numbers tell a story that would make any defensive coordinator reach for the antacids. Notre Dame has surrendered 97 points through three games this season. Last year? It took eight games to hit that unfortunate milestone. That’s not defensive improvement; that’s defensive regression with a capital R.

Second Half Adjustments Show Promise For Fighting Irish

Credit where it’s due, though – Notre Dame has shown they can make halftime adjustments better than a GPS recalculating after a wrong turn. The defense tightened up considerably after the break, which gives hope that this isn’t a completely lost cause.

Freeman’s postgame analysis revealed the core issue: coordination between pass rush and coverage. When you bring five rushers, the quarterback shouldn’t have time to order a pizza, let alone find open receivers. When you drop seven into coverage, your front four better generate pressure, or you’re asking for trouble.

The coach admitted to overthinking during one particular drive, cycling through cover one, cover two, cover three, and cover four like he was channel surfing. “Then you’re doing nothing,” Freeman said, which is refreshingly honest for a coach who could’ve easily deflected blame.

This article first appeared on Total Apex Sports and was syndicated with permission.

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