Archive for the ‘Charlie Weis’ Category

Archive Navigation«1234»
February 21, 2007

Spanning the Dome: 2/21/07

Author: Frankie V | Filed Under Brady Quinn, Charlie Weis, Notre Dame Football, Spanning the Dome

Comments (0) Email This Post Email This Post Printer Friendly Printer Friendly
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

dome-2-21-07.jpgMan is it a slow day.  I’ve been searching for links for at least an hour now and haven’t come up with a whole hell of a lot.  I did find a couple decent links about the combine and Quinn’s draft status and the BGS link is great, but other than that, it was slim pickin’s today.

February 21, 2007

Weis Malpractice Case Ends in Mistrial

Author: Frankie V | Filed Under Charlie Weis, News and Notes

Comments (0) Email This Post Email This Post Printer Friendly Printer Friendly
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

Charlie Weis’s medical malpractice suit against the doctors who performed gastric by pass surgery on him ended in a mistrial today after one of the jurors collapsed. According to the AP Report:

The judge immediately ordered the other jurors out of the courtroom, but some saw Ferguson, Hodin and other doctors who were in the courtroom rush to the juror’s aid.

An attorney for Weis said it was with “great reluctance” that he ask for the mistrial in the case that was expected to go to the jury Wednesday.

“I cannot think of an instance there would be more reason then when a juror has this kind of incident,” attorney Michael Mone said, noting some jurors had seen the doctors attending to the juror.

The case was expected to go to the jury on Wednesday which makes the timing of the mistrial inconvenient for all parties. Weis is apparently still planning on pursuing the case, but it will be interesting to see how the timing of another trial would impact his duties as head coach. With spring practice around the corner and then a month on the road recruiting, there is a rather small window for another trial before the start of the season.

Maybe someone with a better understanding of the court system can comment on how quickly another trial could be set because I have very little knowledge on the courts.

February 21, 2007

Weis Makes Some More Changes to the Staff

Author: Frankie V | Filed Under Charlie Weis, Notre Dame Football

Comments (0) Email This Post Email This Post Printer Friendly Printer Friendly
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

Charlie Weis announced some further re-organization of his coaching staff as reported by the South Bend Tribune.

Corwin Brown, defensive coordinator/outside linebackers coach; Brian Polian, inside linebackers/special teams coach; Bernie Parmalee, tight ends/special teams coach; Tim McDonnell, director of football personnel; Dave Peloquin, director of football development; Nick Mainieri, coordinator of quality control; Patrick Graham, graduate assistant/defense; Kevin Loney, intern/offense.

It had been unclear what, if any, position Brown would assume control of on top of his defensive coordinator duties until today.  Personally, I like that he will be in charge of the outside linebackers considering the lack of a pass rush Notre Dame has generated over the last couple of years.  His knowledge of the 3-4 defense also makes the decision to place him in charge of the outside linebackers makes a lot of sense.

From the looks of these changes, it seems Polian’s role has been reduced.  He was in charge of special teams last year, but it looks like Parmalee is going to have a larger role this year.  He also is only in charge of the inside linebackers which should allow him to focus time on improving the Notre Dame special teams.  The special teams were below average at best last year and would have been horrid had it not been for the great punting of Geoff Price and the decent punt returning from Zbikowski.

Brown was an excellent special teams coach while at UVA and will hopefully pass some of that knowledge onto Polian.  Special teams are one area where you can make the quickest improvements - let’s hope that is true for Notre Dame in 2008.

February 16, 2007

Spanning the Dome: 2/16/07

Author: Frankie V | Filed Under Charlie Weis, Notre Dame Football, Spanning the Dome

Comments (0) Email This Post Email This Post Printer Friendly Printer Friendly
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

dome-2-16-07.jpgSorry for the late posting today, I’ve been pretty sick all day and am just starting to feel better. Anyway, here’s today’s link on a pretty slow day.

February 15, 2007

Spanning the Dome: 2/15/07

Author: Frankie V | Filed Under Charlie Weis, Notre Dame Football, Spanning the Dome

Comments (0) Email This Post Email This Post Printer Friendly Printer Friendly
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

dome-2-15-07.jpgSpecial thanks to RDU_IRISH for today’s great picture of the dome in the snow.

February 14, 2007

Spanning the Dome: 2/14/07

Author: Frankie V | Filed Under Charlie Weis, Jimmy Clausen, Notre Dame Football, Notre Dame Recruiting, Spanning the Dome

Comments (1) Email This Post Email This Post Printer Friendly Printer Friendly
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

dome-2-14-07.jpgWelcome to the Valentine’s Day edition of Spanning the Globe. While I begin to thaw out from the ice storm that just hit, here’s a nice collection of links for today.

February 7, 2007

Meet the Recruits 2007: The Offense

Author: Frankie V | Filed Under Charlie Weis, Jimmy Clausen, Notre Dame Recruiting

Comments (0) Email This Post Email This Post Printer Friendly Printer Friendly
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

I did a couple posts in this format last year and they were well received so I figured I’d go with the same format this year.

Armando Allen - Running Back - (5’10”, 189 - Opa Locka, Florida)
Allen is a running back with great speed that can flat out fly. He was on multiple top 100 lists and probably would be a much higher rated back had he not broke his fibula. Weis mentioned he should be ready for spring practice, and if that’s the case, I think Allen will see the field very, very early. Allen is already a lot bigger than Munir Prince was last year and he might be the first back Notre Dame has had that could take it the distance at any given moment in a long time. As a junior he ran for 1,095 yards and 12 TDs while missing three games with an injury. He also ran a 4.38 40 yard dash at the Army All American Bowl combine last year - the fastest of any prospect there. If he can stay healthy he will be a big time play maker for Notre Dame in the running and return games.

Weis on Allen: “To get Armando up here was very, very important to us because one of the things I felt we really needed to do was bring some more team speed on the offensive side of the ball. This kid can flat out fly. He’s a threat out of the backfield as a receiver. He’s coming off a broken fibula, which made him miss this entire season. But with his rehab, it looks like he’s on schedule to be ready to go for spring ball.”

Jimmy Clausen - Quarterback - (6′3″, 207 - Westlake Village, California)
Clausen comes in with more fanfare than any other recruit in recent Notre Dame history and is almost everyone’s top rated quarterback in this year’s recruiting class. He was the USA Offensive Player of the Year, US Army All American Player of the Year, and Parade Co-Player of the Year. He is already on campus as an early enrollee which will put him right in the thick of the race for the starting quarterback position. He has never lost a game as a starting quarterback with a perfect 42-0 record with 4 straight state championships. One thing we did learn from Weis about Clausen on Wednesday is that he is not injured as it has been speculated on the internet. Rather, Weis just wants him resting his arm until the end of the month because of all the passing he did in high school. There really isn’t much more that can be said about Clausen that hasn’t been said already and in a few short months we will get to see him showcase his wares in the Blue-Gold game.

Weis on Clausen: “The things that stick to me are his touchdown interception ratio and his completion percentage. The kid last year threw 49 touchdowns versus six interceptions in 15 games. He completed just under 68% of his passes. To me, as a quarterback, production and accuracy physically are really what everyone’s judging you from. That and the fact he’s 42 0 as a starter, obviously it doesn’t get any better than that.

Taylor Dever - Offensive Lineman - (6′5″, 275 - Grass Valley, California)
Dever was a late booming offensive linemen that popped up on a lot of top program’s radars during his senior season. Weis mentioned he could play guard or tackle and considering the relative lack of depth at the guard position, its very likely he could end up on the inside of the offensive line. Dever is one of the more underrated recruits in this class for Notre Dame because he didn’t come on strong till his senior year. He ended up with offers from a couple powerhouses like Miami and Nebraksa (ok and Washington too). He moves pretty well for a big name and was justed ranked as California’s 4th best offensive tackle by SuperPrep.com. The official release for Notre Dame lists Dever at 275 lbs but Weis mentioned that is closer to 290 right now which is a good sign.

Weis on Dever: “I think from what we’ve been able to view he was easily one of the best linemen coming off the West Coast. We’re really happy and fortunate to be able to get this guy. This year alone he was credited with 80 pancake blocks and 50 knock downs. I’m not the one doing the stats for the team, but I am the one watching tape. I’m really, really excited about having him.”

Robert Hughes Running Back - (5′11″, 230 - Chicago, Illinois)
Hughes is a big, bruising back who is built like a tank. He was a very important recruit for the Irish and I was generally surprised when he ended up with Notre Dame because I thought he would pick Illinois a couple weeks ago. Luckily for Notre Dame fans he picked the Irish and he is a great fit for this team and this school. He is definitely a “Notre Dame kid” and gives Notre Dame a power back like they haven’t had in years. He made numerous top 100 lists this year after running for 1,780 yards and 22 touchdowns this year. If you look at this kid, he looks more like a college senior than a high school senior. If he can pick up the offense quick enough he will be right in the mix for carries this year. He is the perfect compliment to Armando Allen and I expect Weis to use Hughes and Allen much like Sean Payton used Deuce McAllister and Reggie Bush this year in New Orleans. Hughes is a work horse back who can wear down a defense and get the tough yards. He will be a major force near the goal line as well. Then just as Hughes keeps pounding away at the defense, Weis will be able to bring in Allen to burn the defense on the edges. Weis quote below about Hughes being one of his projects definitely lets us all know he has got big, big plans for Mr. Hughes.

Weis on Hughes: “I love the fact he’s a local kid from here in Chicago. This kid, because he’s a 230 pounder doesn’t mean all he can do is run from tackle to tackle. He can run inside, outside, he can run over you, make you miss. He has very, very soft hands for a guy his size. I’m taking him as one of my projects.”

Duval Kamara - Wide Receiver - (6′4″, 205 - Hoboken, New Jersey)
Kamara is pretty much a consensus top 100 player and top 10 wide receiver. He’s big and can run, and he uses his body well in the air to make the catch. He amassed a total of 125 catches for 2,696 yards and 50 touchdowns throughout his career which are pretty food numbers considering he wasn’t in a pass happy offense. His size will make him a candidate for early playing time if he catches on quickly and shows he can block well - something he was very good at in high school. I said it yesterday in my Cliff Notes blog that he reminds me a lot of Maurice Stovall and Weis echoed those sentiments today.

Weis on Kamara: He reminds me a lot of Mo, to tell you the truth, when you look at him, the way he acts, carries himself, his body type. He reminds me a lot of Mo. We really like this kid. He’s athletic, big, fast. We see him coming in here and challenging walking in the door.

Emeka Nwankwo - Offensive Lineman - (6′4″, 280 - Miramar, Florida)
Nwankwo is a bit of a “tweener” between the offensive and defensive line and could end up along either line before all is said and done. He’s got some pretty good agility from playing high school basketball so I could easily see him making the move to the defensive line in a 3-4 system next to the NT. He will need to increase his strength no matter where he goes and will need to spend a lot of time with Reuben Mendoza before really making an impact, but he has a lot of upside.

Weis on Nwankwo: “There’s a 6′4″, 280 pound guy getting bigger every time I see him. He gives us the versatility both as an offensive and defensive lineman. 60 pancake blocks, 70 knock downs as a senior, and also played some hoops.”

Mike Ragone - Tight End - (6′5″, 230 - Cherry Hill, New Jersey)
Simply put Ragone is a defense stretching tight end. He’s got great speed for the position and was one of the two best tight ends in the country on almost everyone’s list. Like Allen, he missed his senior year because of an injury and had to skip the Army All American game. He hauled in 35 passes for 720 yards and 9 touchdowns as a junior including 6 touchdowns of 60 yards or more. USC was trying to visit with Ragone right up until this past week. Once he adds a little bit more weight to handle the blocking duties of a college tight end, he is going to be one heck of a weapon in this offense. Like Konrad Reuland last year, he comes to Notre Dame more highly touted and with more pure athleticism than either John Carlson and Anthony Fasnao - and we’ve all seen how well each of them has done in this offense.

Weis on Ragone: “We love this kid. As a junior he got hurt. He got to the right guys. He got it repaired right away. Coach Brown did a nice job of working with him, helping him rehab, develop. Kid looks great, put on some weight. He’s really, really fast. As a tight end, you don’t find very many tight ends that run fast. The MO on this guy is how fast he runs….They’re trying to cover a tight end. He’s just running right by everybody.”

Matt Romine - Offensive Lineman - (6′5″, 275 - Tulsa, Oklahoma)
Romine is the highest rated offensive lineman in this class and is a consensus top 100 prospect. He was an Army All American and showed enough leadership to be named captain of the West team. On top of being the most highly rated lineman in this class, he is also the most ready to play which is a good thing considering the lack of experience and depth the Irish have along the offensive line. He might not be as physically dominating as Sam Young was coming out of high school, but he’s got excellent leadership abilities and very good technique for a high school offensive lineman.

Weis on Romine: He got picked as one of the captains for the west team in the All American Bowl. That’s how much the players thought of him that All Star Game down there in San Antonio. He was one of the four cocaptains for the west team. We really like him. We think here is a guy that can come in and compete early in his career. Neither of these guys are projects. These guys are both guys that are solid guys, ready to play.

Golden Tate - Wide Receiver - (6′0″, 190 - Hendersonville, Tennessee)
Tate is a vertical threat from the wide receiver position. He’s got a lot of speed and could be the “stretch the field” receiver Notre Dame has been lacking. Reviews are mixed on him with ESPN ranking Tate as the 2nd best receiver in the country and Scout.com listing him as the 37th best. Regardless, Notre Dame got a very fast wide receiver who can help the Irish in special teams right away. He spent his senior season at running back where he totaled 1,413 yards on 140 carries (10.1 yards/carry) with 22 touchdowns. The 10+ yards per carry average gives us a little idea for about his speed.

Weis on Tate: This kid is as good an athlete as I saw this year. Doesn’t make any difference what we have him do, he’s rushing the ball for 1400 yards, 23 touchdowns, he’s catching the ball for another 510 yards and six touchdowns. The only thing I’m concerned about is that Coach Shrag is going to want him because he might be as good a centerfielder as there is on the country on top of everything else.

Quotes from Wednesday’s Signing Day Press Conference.

[tags]Notre Dame Recruiting, Jimmy Clausen, Charlie Weis, Robert Hughes, Armando Allen, Duval Kamara, Golden Tate, Matt Romine, Taylor Dever, Mike Ragone, Emeka Nwankwo[/tags]

February 7, 2007

Best Quote from Weis’s Signing Day Presser

Author: Frankie V | Filed Under Charlie Weis, Notre Dame Recruiting

Comments (5) Email This Post Email This Post Printer Friendly Printer Friendly
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

Weis’s last quote of today’s press conference was his best. After talking about soft verbal, silent verbals, decommitments, etc; Weis ended with.

“If they’re looking, we’re looking. That’s it.”

I hope Weis holds true to that and pulls a Ferentz and tells kids who want to keep visiting after they “commit” that if they are moving on, so is Notre Dame.

I’ll have plenty more on the blog and on the main site tonight on the 18 kids who did sign their LOI’s for Notre Dame this year.

January 16, 2007

Weis Wanted Jim Mora for DC?

Author: Frankie V | Filed Under Charlie Weis, Notre Dame Football

Comments (7) Email This Post Email This Post Printer Friendly Printer Friendly
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

Peter’s Kings MMQB was just full of Notre Dame related news this week including this little nugget about Notre Dame’s search for a defensive coordinator…

“Corwin Brown got the Notre Dame defensive coordinator’s job, but the guy Charlie Weis really wanted was Jim Mora.”

Jim Mora? Wow. That little bit of news shows that Weis really was looking to hit a home run with this hire. Mora’s defenses in Atlanta were pretty good and prior to trying to win with a punt returner with a rocket arm at QB in Atlanta, he was the defensive coordinator with the 49ers.

Part of me likes that fact that Weis though about going after someone like Mora, but another part of me likes that we’ll be getting someone who will probably be sticking around for a while like Corwin Brown.

Mora is going to want to be a head coach again after having some great success in his first year in Atlanta when he took the Falcons into Philadelphia for the NFC Title game. A game he lost to my beloved Eagles :-). Mora would probably have been able to turn the defense around pretty quickly, but he also would have probably been here for a year or two before bolting for a head coaching gig somewhere.

Side note on Mora, personally, I haven’t liked him since his Falcons lost to the Eagles in 2004 for his rather snide “I hope it doesn’t take us four tries to get to the Super Bowl” post game comments, but I digress…

Back to Corwin Brown… Brown is a young coach who is will be looking to make a name for himself and will have to prove himself with the Irish before he is considered for a head coaching gig. Brown has also risen through the ranks of the coaching world very fast and who knows, maybe he grows into a great defensive coordinator and Weis grooms him to be his eventual replacement. Some people might be leery of that since the last time a successful coach left Notre Dame and recommended his defensive coordinator for the head coaching position, it didn’t exactly work out too well.

Anyway, I’m getting ahead of myself here, Brown should probably be officially named DC before any speculation about his future with Notre Dame is really considered. Details. Details.

[tags]Charlie Weis, Notre Dame Football, Corwin Brown, Jim Mora[/tags]

January 15, 2007

Weis’s Buyout $21 Million

Author: Frankie V | Filed Under Charlie Weis, NFL Irish, Notre Dame Football

Comments (0) Email This Post Email This Post Printer Friendly Printer Friendly
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

SI.com’s Peter King reported Monday in his weekly MMQB (Monday Morning Quarterback) column that Weis’s buyout is worth $21 million.

“Let’s put all of the Charlie Weis-to-the-NFL possibilities to bed, shall we? I’ve got the real number it would take to buy him out of his contract, which has nine years left to run at Notre Dame. That figure plus the fact that he doesn’t want to leave should take him out of the NFL pool for the foreseeable future.

The rock-solid, no-exceptions buyout number for Weis from Notre Dame: $21 million.”

This is the first time we’ve seen a concrete dollar amount associated with Weis’s buyout. The highest amounts I had seen previously reported speculated that the buyout was in the $10-15 million range.

Hopefully this helps put an end to the Weis to the NFL rumors for a while. With a $21 million buyout, it would take an NFL team around $40-45 million to get Weis out of South Bend if you consider that Weis would probably command a contract in the $4-5 million range over five or so years by NFL standards.

Some non-Notre Dame fans will see this number and think its absurd, but tell that to Louisville fans who just saw Bobby Petrino turn them into a top 10 team and then bolt for the NFL because his buyout was a mere $1 million.

In this day of coaches hoping from big payout to big payout, it’s nice to know that Weis’s buyout should be enough to keep NFL owners from inquiring about Weis.

Archive Navigation«1234»


Latest Posts

Our Sponsors

Notre Dame Blogs

Media Links