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2005 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team

The 2005 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team represented the University of Notre Dame in the 2005 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team was coached by Charlie Weis and played its home games at Notre Dame Stadium in South Bend, Indiana. The Irish completed the season with a record of 9–3, culminating in an appearance in the Fiesta Bowl and a number 9 ranking in the nation.

2005 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football
Fiesta Bowl, L 20–34 vs. Ohio State
ConferenceIndependent
Ranking
CoachesNo. 11
APNo. 9
Record9–3
Head coach
Offensive coordinatorMichael Haywood (1st season)
Offensive schemePro-style
Defensive coordinatorRick Minter (1st year of 2nd stint, 3rd overall season)
Base defense4–3 Multiple
Captains
Home stadiumNotre Dame Stadium (c. 80,795, grass)
Seasons
← 2004
2006 →
2005 NCAA Division I-A independents football records
Conf Overall
Team   W   L     W   L  
No. 9 Notre Dame  %       9 3  
Navy       8 4  
Army       4 7  
Temple       0 11  
  • % – BCS at-large representative
Rankings from AP Poll

Preseason edit

Coaching changes edit

After finishing the 2004 season at 6–6, Notre Dame officials, in a controversial move,[1][2] fired third-year head coach Tyrone Willingham. The Irish initially hoped to hire University of Utah head coach Urban Meyer, who had led the Utes to an undefeated season, as Meyer had been an assistant coach for the Irish for five years and had a clause in his contract stating he could leave Utah without penalty if Notre Dame offered him a job.[3] When Meyer accepted the head coaching job at the University of Florida, Notre Dame hired Charlie Weis, the New England Patriots' offensive coordinator, making him the first Notre Dame alumnus to lead the team since 1963.[4]

Roster changes edit

The Irish lost a number of players on defense including four former starting defensive backs, three players on the defensive line, including defensive end Justin Tuck, and two former starting linebackers, including honorable mention All-American Derek Curry, to graduation. On the offensive side of the ball the only key losses for the Irish were running back Ryan Grant and former quarterback and wide receiver Carlyle Holiday. The Irish returned ten starters on offense and four on defense.[5]

Recruits edit

With poor recruiting being one of the issues that led to the firing of Willingham,[6] Weis was challenged to coach the Patriots' offense during the day and work on recruiting players for the Irish at night.[7] He took a proactive role in recruiting, including sending seven of his assistant coaches to a recruit who had de-committed after Willingham was fired[8] (the recruit, however, signed with the Ohio State Buckeyes). Weis, with some of Willingham's recruits signing also, built a class of 15 recruits, including five four star recruits.

US college sports recruiting information for 2005 recruits
Name Hometown High school / college Height Weight 40 Commit date
David Bruton
DB
Miamisburg, OH Miamisburg HS 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) 180 lb (82 kg) 4.5 Jun 29, 2004 
Recruiting star ratings: Scout:    Rivals:    247SportsN/A
Paul Duncan
OL
Dallas, GA Eas Paulding HS 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) 282 lb (128 kg) 5.43 Jan 11, 2005 
Recruiting star ratings: Scout:    Rivals:    247SportsN/A
David Grimes
WR
Detroit, MI Detroit City HS 5 ft 9 in (1.75 m) 157 lb (71 kg) 4.5 Jul 18, 2004 
Recruiting star ratings: Scout:    Rivals:    247SportsN/A
Derrell Hand
DT
Philadelphia, PA West Philadelphia Catholic HS 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) 298 lb (135 kg) 5.62 Jan 19, 2005 
Recruiting star ratings: Scout:    Rivals:    247SportsN/A
Ray Herring
S
Melbourne, FL Holy Trinity Episcopal School 5 ft 10 in (1.78 m) 187 lb (85 kg) 4.5 Jan 19, 2005 
Recruiting star ratings: Scout:    Rivals:    247SportsN/A
Joey Hiben
TE
Waconia, MN Waconia Sr. 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 235 lb (107 kg) 4.7 Nov 8, 2004 
Recruiting star ratings: Scout:    Rivals:    247SportsN/A
D.J. Hord
WR
Kansas City, MO Rockhurst HS 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) 195 lb (88 kg) 4.4 Jan 15, 2005 
Recruiting star ratings: Scout:    Rivals:    247SportsN/A
Patrick Kuntz
DE
Indianapolis, IN Roncalli HS 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) 255 lb (116 kg) 4.8 Jan 15, 2005 
Recruiting star ratings: Scout:    Rivals:    247SportsN/A
Kyle McCarthy
CB
Youngstown, OH Cardinal Mooney HS 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) 172 lb (78 kg) 4.47 Jan 23, 2005 
Recruiting star ratings: Scout:    Rivals:    247SportsN/A
Steve Quinn
LB
Philadelphia, PA St. Joseph's Prep School 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) 208 lb (94 kg) 4.62 Feb 2, 2005 
Recruiting star ratings: Scout:    Rivals:    247SportsN/A
Asaph Schwapp
RB
Hartford, CT Weaver HS 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) 247 lb (112 kg) 4.64 Jul 15, 2004 
Recruiting star ratings: Scout:    Rivals:    247SportsN/A
Evan Sharpley
QB
Marshall, MI Marshall HS 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) 200 lb (91 kg) 4.7 Jul 18, 2004 
Recruiting star ratings: Scout:    Rivals:    247SportsN/A
Scott Smith
LB
Highland Park, IL Highland Park, HS 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) 222 lb (101 kg) 4.75 Jul 16, 2004 
Recruiting star ratings: Scout:    Rivals:    247SportsN/A
Michael Turkovich
OL
Wayne, PA Valley Forge Military Academy 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) 280 lb (130 kg) 5 Jan 8, 2005 
Recruiting star ratings: Scout:    Rivals:    247SportsN/A
Kevin Washington
LB
Sugar Land, TX Steven F. Austin HS 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) 213 lb (97 kg) 4.59 Jul 18, 2004 
Recruiting star ratings: Scout:    Rivals:    247SportsN/A
Overall recruiting rankings: Scout: #27   Rivals: #40
  • ‡ Refers to 40 yard dash
  • Note: In many cases, Scout, Rivals, 247Sports, and ESPN may conflict in their listings of height, weight and 40 time.
  • In these cases, the average was taken. ESPN grades are on a 100-point scale.

Sources:

  • "Notre Dame Commit List 2005". Rivals.com. Retrieved June 22, 2007.
  • "Scout.com Football Recruiting: Notre Dame". Scout.com. Retrieved June 22, 2007.
  • "Scout.com Team Recruiting Rankings". Scout.com. Retrieved June 22, 2007.
  • "2005 Team Ranking". Rivals.com. Retrieved June 22, 2007.

Award candidates edit

Four players were named to the national awards watch lists in the pre-season:

Schedule edit

DateTimeOpponentRankSiteTVResultAttendance
September 38:00 p.m.at No. 23 PittsburghABCW 42–2166,451
September 1012:00 p.m.at No. 3 MichiganNo. 20ABCW 17–10111,386
September 173:30 p.m.Michigan StateNo. 10NBCL 41–44 OT80,795
September 243:30 p.m.at WashingtonNo. 16ABCW 36–1771,473
October 17:45 p.m.at No. 22 PurdueNo. 13ESPNW 49–2865,491
October 153:30 p.m.No. 1 USCNo. 9
NBCL 31–3480,795
October 222:30 p.m.BYUNo. 9
  • Notre Dame Stadium
  • Notre Dame, IN
NBCW 49–2380,795
November 52:30 p.m.TennesseeNo. 8
  • Notre Dame Stadium
  • Notre Dame, IN
NBCW 41–2180,795
November 121:00 p.m.NavyNo. 7
  • Notre Dame Stadium
  • Notre Dame, IN (rivalry)
NBCW 42–2180,795
November 192:30 p.m.SyracuseNo. 6
  • Notre Dame Stadium
  • Notre Dame, IN
NBCW 34–1080,795
November 268:00 p.m.at StanfordNo. 8ABCW 38–3156,057
January 2, 20064:30 p.m.vs. No. 4 Ohio StateNo. 6ABCL 20–3476,196

Roster edit

Coaching staff edit

When Willingham was fired all of his assistant coaches left, leaving Weis to rebuild a coaching staff. He sought to find experienced coaches that would be able to make the team competitive. When the new assistants were announced in January they were billed as having 25 seasons of collegiate head coaching, 50 seasons as coordinators, 12 seasons as NFL assistant coaches, and 42 bowl victories.[13] Before the season, however, assistant offensive head and quarterbacks coach David Cutcliffe after undergoing heart surgery and being on medical leave, decided to resign, saying he felt his absence unfair to the players and coaches.[14] In early June, Peter Vaas was named as Cutcliffe's replacement. Vaas was a former six-year NFL Europa head coach, an eight-year collegiate head coach, and had 17 years of assistant coaching experience, including two years at Notre Dame under Lou Holtz.[15]

On October 29, only half-way through the season, Weis, who originally signed a six-year contract with the Irish, was offered an extension on his contract. The new 10-year deal was worth $30 to $40 million, and made him the highest paid coach in college football.[16] The extension was seen as controversial,[17][18] as Weis' record was 5–2 at the time while Willingham started his first season with an 8–0 record.

 
Charlie Weis, Head Coach
Name Position Alma Mater (Year)
Charlie Weis Head coach Notre Dame (1978)
Michael Haywood Offensive coordinator, running backs Notre Dame (1986)
Rob Ianello Recruiting coordinator, receivers Catholic (1987)
John Latina Assistant head coach (offense), offensive line Virginia Tech (1981)
Bill Lewis Assistant head coach (defense), defensive backs East Stroudsburg (1963)
Rick Minter* Defensive coordinator Henderson State (1977)
Jerome "Jappy" Oliver Defensive line Purdue (1978)
Bernie Parmalee Tight ends, special teams Ball State (1990)
Brian Polian Assistant defensive backs, special teams John Carroll (1997)
Peter Vaas Quarterbacks Holy Cross (1974)

*Minter had been on the Notre Dame coaching staff under coach Lou Holtz, but this is his first under Weis.

Game summaries edit

Pittsburgh edit

Notre Dame at #23 Pittsburgh
1 234Total
• Notre Dame 7 2870 42
Pittsburgh 10 308 21
  • Date: September 3
  • Location: Heinz Field, Pittsburgh, PA
  • Game start: 8:00 p.m. EST
  • Elapsed time: 3:25
  • Game attendance: 66,451
  • Game weather: Clear; 73 °F (23 °C); wind 7 mph (11 km/h) NW
  • Referee: Dennis Lipski
  • Television network: ABC
Scoring summary
Q110:58PITTLee 39 yard pass from Palko (Cummings kick)PITT 7–0
Q18:19NDWalker 51 yard pass from Quinn (Fitzpatrick kick)Tie 7–7
Q11:40PITTCummings 49 yard field goalPITT 10–7
Q213:07NDWalker 2 yard run (Fitzpatrick kick)ND 14–10
Q26:59NDPowers-Neal 2 yard run (Fitzpatrick kick)ND 21–10
Q26:03NDSamardzija 19 yard pass from Quinn (Fitzpatrick kick)ND 28–10
Q24:20PITTCummings 23 yard field goalND 28–13
Q21:39NDPowers-Neal 9 yard run (Fitzpatrick kick)ND 35–13
Q37:59NDPowers-Neal 4 yard run (Fitzpatrick kick)ND 42–13
Q412:55PITTPalko 4 yard run (Murphy run)ND 42–21

The Irish's first game of the season came on the road against the No. 23 ranked Pittsburgh Panthers. The Panthers were led by their first-year head coach Dave Wannstedt and junior quarterback and two-year starter, Tyler Palko. At Notre Dame, the previous season, Palko became the first quarterback to throw five touchdown passes against the Irish in the Panthers 41–38 win.[19] Palko started the scoring this year with a 39-yard touchdown pass to Greg Lee, however Brady Quinn and the Irish answered with a 51-yard touchdown pass to Darius Walker. The Panthers completed the first quarter scoring with a 49-yard field goal by Josh Cummings to take a 10–7 lead into the second quarter. In the second quarter, the Irish took control. The quarter began with a 2-yard touchdown run by Walker. Later, Rashon Powers-Neal scored on his own 2-yard run, and, after a fumble on the kickoff return, less than a minute later Quinn threw a 19-yard touchdown pass to Jeff Samardzija, the first touchdown catch of his career, to give the Irish a 28–10 lead. Cummings hit a 23-yard field goal to cut the Irish lead to 15, but late in the half Powers-Neal ran for a 9-yard touchdown, giving the Irish a 35–13 lead at halftime.

The second half saw much less scoring. In the third quarter, Powers-Neal ran for a 4-yard touchdown, the only score in the quarter, to give the Irish their final score. In the fourth quarter, Palko ran for his own 4-yard touchdown, and the two-point conversion was the final score of the game. The Irish won the game 42–21,[20] and jumped to 23rd in the national rankings.

Michigan edit

#23 Notre Dame at #3 Michigan
1 234Total
• Notre Dame 7 703 17
Michigan 0 307 10
  • Date: September 10
  • Location: Michigan Stadium, Ann Arbor, MI
  • Game start: 12:00 p.m. EST
  • Elapsed time: 3:30
  • Game attendance: 111,386
  • Game weather: Sunny; 85 °F (29 °C); wind 10–15 mph (16–24 km/h) SE
  • Referee: B. LeMonnier
Scoring summary
Q112:02NDMcKnight 5 yard pass from Quinn (Fitzpatrick kick)ND 7–0
Q214:04MICHRivas 38 yard field goalND 7–3
Q24:24NDSamardzija 5 yard pass from Quinn (Fitzpatrick kick)ND 14–3
Q414:11NDFitzpatrick 43 yard field goalND 17–3
Q43:47MICHManningham 25 yard pass from Henne (Rivas kick)ND 17–10

The second game of the season came on the road against long-time rivals the Michigan Wolverines, led by coach Lloyd Carr and second year starting quarterback, Chad Henne. Michigan had moved up to 3rd in the nation from a pre-season ranking of 4th after a 16-point win against Northern Illinois. Coming into the season, Michigan had not lost a home game since 2002 with a streak of 16 games and hadn't lost a non-conference home game since 1998.[21] Also, despite beating the Wolverines twice in the last three years including a 28–20 win over the then 7th ranked Wolverines in 2004,[22] the Irish hadn't won at Michigan since 1993.

The Irish began the game with the ball, and marched down the field with a 76-yard drive that culminated in a 5-yard Brady Quinn touchdown pass to Rhema McKnight. Late in the quarter, key Wolverine running back Mike Hart was injured during a run, keeping him out for the rest of the game. In the second quarter, on Michigan's first drive past the 50-yard line, Garrett Rivas was able to hit a 38-yard field goal to make the score 7–3 in favor of the Irish. Later in the quarter, the Irish lost McKnight to what would later be revealed as a season-ending knee injury. Quinn and Walker, however, led the Irish on another long drive, culminating in a 5-yard touchdown pass to Jeff Samardzija to give the Irish a 14–3 lead at halftime.

The second half was filled with missed opportunities for the Wolverines. At the start of the third quarter, Henne and running back Kevin Grady led the Wolverines on a 69-yard drive, that was finally stopped on a Henne interception by safety Tom Zbikowski on the Irish 1-yard line. Most of the rest of the quarter consisted of short drives that were stopped early forcing each team to punt. In the Wolverines' final drive of the quarter, the Irish defense held them to their own 9-yard line, and forced a punt that was returned by Zbikowski to the Michigan 33-yard line. Although the Irish only advanced the ball 7-yards, at the beginning of the fourth quarter D. J. Fitzpatrick kicked a 43-yard field goal to give the Irish a 17–3 lead. On their next possession, a Walker fumble was recovered by the Wolverines on the Irish 18-yard line. After driving to the 5-yard line, the Wolverines couldn't convert a fourth down and turned the ball over to the Irish. On the Wolverines next possession, on another fourth down attempt near midfield, Henne completed a 54-yard pass to Jason Avant who was tackled at the Irish 1-yard line. On the next play, however, Henne fumbled the ball into the endzone and it was recovered by Chinedum Ndukwe for the Irish. On the Wolverines next possession, Henne threw a 26-yard touchdown pass to Mario Manningham to bring the score to 17–10. Michigan had one final possession with two minutes remaining, but failed, once again, to convert a fourth down, sealing the win for the Irish. With the win, Weis became the first Notre Dame coach since Knute Rockne to win his first two games on the road,[23] and the Irish moved up to 12th in the nation.

Michigan State edit

1 2 3 4OT Total
Spartans 14 10 14 06 44
#10 Irish 7 10 7 143 41

The Irish next had their home opener against the Michigan State Spartans, a rivalry game with the Megaphone Trophy given to the winner. The Spartans, this year's team led by coach John L. Smith and second year starting quarterback Drew Stanton, hoped to become only the second team to beat the Irish at Notre Dame for five consecutive games. Despite a win in 2004, the Irish had lost six of their last eight games against the Spartans.[24]

The Spartans led for much of the game, at one point, late in the third quarter after Stanton threw a 65-yard pass for his third touchdown of the game, they had a 38–17 lead. The Irish, however, came back later in the quarter and tied the game at 38 during the fourth quarter, with three touchdown passes by Brady Quinn to give him a total of five for the game. During the overtime period, the Irish, with the ball first, missed three attempted passes by Quinn into the endzone, and settled for a field goal to give them a 41–38 lead. On the Spartans second play in overtime, Stanton, while running the option, pitched the ball to Jason Teague for a 19-yard touchdown to win the game.[25] The Irish dropped to 18th and the Spartans entered the national rankings at 23rd after the week. After the game, apparently upset at not having the Megaphone Trophy to raise after the win,[26] a small group of Spartans planted the Michigan State flag on the field. After the incident, a number of other occurrences of flag planting happened, leading to a banning of the practice by the Big Ten.[27]

Washington edit

1 2 3 4 Total
#16 Irish 3 9 7 17 36
Huskies 0 3 0 14 17

The Irish next went on the road to face the Washington Huskies, in a game dubbed the "Ty Bowl,"[28][29] because the Huskies were led by former Irish coach Ty Willingham. The Huskies came into the game never having beaten the Irish in five meetings including a 38–3 loss at Notre Dame in 2004.[30]

On the first drive of the game, the Huskies easily moved forward on the Irish defense, however, were held without scoring when quarterback, Isaiah Stanback's pass to Craig Chambers was fumbled on the goal line and recovered by the Irish. The Irish didn't score on their first drive when the hold for a field goal attempt was botched. However, on their next drive the D. J. Fitzpatrick kicked a 25-yard field goal for the only score of the first quarter. In the second quarter, Evan Knudson tied the game on a 27-yard field goal. On the next drive, Darius Walker ran for a 17-yard touchdown, giving the Irish a 9–3 lead after a missed extra point. Fitzpatrick kicked another field goal of 39-yards to end scoring in the first half with the Irish leading 12–3.

After two Irish failed fourth down attempts, and a Huskies fumble, Rashon Powers-Neal ran for a 2-yard touchdown to give the Irish a 19–3 lead at the end of the third quarter. In the fourth quarter, Fitzpatrick kicked another field goal of 23-yards to extend the Irish lead to 19. Later in the quarter, Brady Quinn threw his only touchdown of the game with a 52-yard pass to Jeff Samardzija. Stanback led the Huskies for their first touchdown, culminating in a 1-yard run by Mark Palaita, however the Irish answered with an 11-yard touchdown by Travis Thomas for their final score of the game. With three minutes left in the game, Stanback was replaced with backup quarterback Johnny Durocher, who threw a 41-yard touchdown to Chambers, to give the final score of 36–17.[31] With the win, the Irish moved up in the rankings to 14th in the nation.

Purdue edit

1 2 3 4 Total
#13 Irish 7 21 7 14 49
#20 Boilermakers 0 0 14 14 28

The Irish next went on the road, for the fourth time in the season, to face the 20th ranked Purdue Boilermakers, led by 9th year head coach Joe Tiller, for the Shillelagh Trophy. Although the Irish led the all-time series against Purdue 49–25–2, the Boilermakers had won the two previous meetings and were hoping to come back after a double-overtime loss the previous week.[32]

Although neither team was able to score on their opening drives, the Irish quickly got going on their second, and were led by Brady Quinn's passing and Darius Walker's rushes on a 90-yard drive that ended with a Rashon Powers-Neal 1-yard touchdown to give the Irish the lead. The Boilermakers, led by Brandon Kirsch to the Irish 2-yard line, failed to answer after a goal line fumble was recovered by the Irish. Quinn then led the Irish on a 98-yard drive, that lasted into the second quarter, and ended with another 1-yard touchdown run by Powers-Neal. The ensuing kickoff was returned by Dorien Bryant 66 yards to give the Boilermakers the ball on the Notre Dame 30-yard line, however, they were unable to advance it and didn't score due to a missed 43-yard field goal. Quinn took advantage and led the Irish on a 73-yard drive ending with his touchdown pass to Jeff Samardzija. With another 10-yard touchdown run by Walker later in the quarter, the Irish took a 28–0 lead at halftime.

In the second half, the Boilermakers finally scored after Kirsch passed for a total of 73 yards on an 85-yard drive that ended with his touchdown 18-yard touchdown pass to Bryant. The Irish answered on Quinn's second touchdown pass to Samardzija of 55 yards, however Kirsch cut the Irish lead once again to 21 after a 3-yard touchdown pass to Bryant. Although Quinn and Kirsch threw back-to-back interceptions, neither team scored again in the third, leaving the score 35–14. The Irish started the fourth quarter scoring with a 22-yard touchdown pass from Quinn to John Carlson, for Quinn's final series in the game, he would be replaced by back-ups David Wolke and Marty Mooney for the final three drives. Kirsch led the Boilermakers to a 5-yard touchdown rush by Kory Sheets for his final drive of the game, he would be replaced by Curtis Painter for their final two drives. The Irish, helped by Wolke's only completion of the game for 29 yards, scored again with a 10-yard rushing touchdown by Travis Thomas, for the final Irish score of the game. After both teams had turnovers, Painter and the Boilermakers capitalized with Sheets second rushing touchdown of 8 yards, giving the final score with the Irish winning 49–28. With Quinn's touchdown passes, he tied a Notre Dame record held by John Huarte of 10 straight games with touchdown passes, and also became the only Irish quarterback to pass for 300 yards in 3 straight games.[33] After the game, the Irish moved up to 12th in the nation and would move up again to 9th before their next game, while the Boilermakers dropped from the rankings.

USC edit

1 2 3 4 Total
#1 Trojans 14 0 7 13 34
#9 Irish 7 14 0 10 31
 
Notre Dame defense during the first half of game action

In a game that looked to be overshadowed by pre-game hype and assertions of being the newest "Game of the Century"[34] the meeting between perennial rivals, Notre Dame and USC, called by some the greatest intersectional rivalry in college football,[35] would be the 77th meeting between the schools, who play for the Jeweled Shillelagh. The Trojans, led by coach Pete Carroll and Heisman-winning senior quarterback Matt Leinart, were ranked first in the country, were on a 27-game winning streak, and had won three straight meetings with the Irish, each by 31 points. Expectations, however, were high that this game would be closer.[36]

 
Brady Quinn and the offense, donning the green jerseys, line up for a play

In a surprise move, after Weis insisted it wouldn't happen,[37] the Irish wore green jerseys for the game. The score was back and forth for much of the game, with the Irish leading 21–14 at halftime after a pair of touchdowns by running backs Reggie Bush and LenDale White for the Trojans, and a rushing touchdown by Travis Thomas, a passing touchdown by Brady Quinn, and a punt return for a touchdown by Tom Zbikowski for the Irish. The Trojans took a 28–24 lead with five minutes left in the game when Reggie Bush ran for his third touchdown of the game, however, Quinn answered with four complete passes and his own 5-yard touchdown run to give the Irish a 31–28 lead with less than two minutes remaining. On the Trojans last series, however, Leinart, after being sacked and facing a fourth down on his own 26-yard line, completed a 61-yard fade to Dwayne Jarrett to give the Trojans a last chance near the Irish goal line. After a series of plays including Leinart fumbling the ball out of bounds, the stadium clock incorrectly running out of time, and part of the Notre Dame student section rushing the field, the Trojans had the ball on the Irish 1-yard line with seven seconds remaining. Instead of opting for the field goal and going to overtime, Leinart tried to sneak into the end zone. When he was stopped, in a play that would be called the "Bush Push,” Bush pushed him over the goal line for the winning score of 34–31.[38]

On June 10, 2010, the NCAA found that Bush was ineligible for college athletics during the 2005 season and USC was forced to vacate all wins from that year. However, the loss still counts for Notre Dame.

BYU edit

BYU at #12 Notre Dame
1 234Total
BYU 10 0130 23
Notre Dame 7 14217 49
Scoring summary
19:51BYUJared McLaughlin 44-yard field goalBYU 3–0
17:12NDMaurice Stovall 10-yard pass from Brady Quinn (D. J. Fitzpatrick kick)ND 7–3
12:48BYUJonny Harline 12-yard pass from John Beck (Jared McLaughlin kick)BYU 10–7
210:33NDJeff Samardzija 14-yard pass from Brady Quinn (D. J. Fitzpatrick kick)ND 14–10
24:18NDMaurice Stovall 15-yard pass from Brady Quinn (D. J. Fitzpatrick kick)ND 21–10
312:50NDJeff Ssmardzija 21-yard pass from Brady Quinn (D. J. Fitzpatrick kick)ND 28–10
39:11BYUJohn Beck 10-yard run (Jared McLaughlin kick)ND 28–17
35:38BYUTodd Watkins 10-yard pass from John Beck (pass failed)ND 28–23
34:47NDMaurice Stovall 36-yard pass from Brady Quinn (D. J. Fitzpatrick kick)ND 35–23
32:16NDMaurice Stovall 24-yard pass from Brady Quinn (D. J. Fitzpatrick kick)ND 42–23
49:24NDTom Zbikowski 83-yard interception return (D. J. Fitzpatrick kick)ND 49–23

After the disappointment from the loss to USC, the Irish looked to rebound against the BYU Cougars, a team that gave the Irish a season opening loss in 2004.[39] The Cougars were led by junior quarterback John Beck and first-year head coach Bronco Mendenhall. The Cougars had a 3–3 record, but had won their previous two games.

The Cougars started the scoring with a 45-yard field goal, but Brady Quinn, completing six of seven passes on his first drive, threw a 10-yard touchdown to Maurice Stovall to take the lead. Beck led the Cougars on a drive that included an interception by Mike Richardson, that was fumbled and recovered by the Cougars and finished with a 12-yard touchdown pass to Jonny Harline. The Cougars led 10–7 at the end of the first quarter, but a pair of 15-yard Quinn touchdown passes to Jeff Samardzija and Stovall gave the Irish a 21–10 lead at halftime. In the third, Quinn completed three long touchdown passes, two to Stovall and one to Samardzija, while Beck ran for a touchdown and threw another to Todd Watkins to end the third quarter with the Irish leading 42–23. The final score of the game came in the fourth when a Beck pass was intercepted by Tom Zbikowski and returned 83 yards, giving the final score of the game with the Irish winning 49–23.[40] The Irish won their first home game of the season and moved to 9th nationally.

Tennessee edit

1 2 3 4 Total
Volunteers 3 7 11 0 21
#9 Irish 14 7 0 20 41
 
Quinn directs the offense against Tennessee

The Irish next played the struggling Tennessee Volunteers. The teams last met at Tennessee in 2004, when the Irish surprised the top-15 ranked Volunteers with a 17–13 win.[41] The Volunteers were led by coach Phillip Fulmer and quarterback Erik Ainge.

When the Volunteers didn't score on the first drive of the game, the Irish took advantage, with Brady Quinn leading an Irish drive that ended with his 43-yard touchdown pass to Anthony Fasano. The ensuing kickoff was fumbled by the Volunteers, and Quinn threw his second touchdown to Maurice Stovall three plays later. Volunteers' kicker, James Wilhout kicked a 26-yard field goal for their only score of the quarter. In the second quarter, on a Volunteer punt, Tom Zbikowski returned the ball 43-yards to give the Irish a 21–3 lead. After a Quinn fumble that was recovered by the Volunteers, Ainge led a 40-yard drive and threw a 7-yard touchdown pass to Bret Smith to give the halftime score of 21–10. In the second half, after a failed fourth down conversion by the Irish, Wilhout kicked a 30-yard field goal to put the Volunteers down by 8. When the Irish didn't answer, Ainge and running back Arian Foster led the Volunteers to Foster's 3-yard touchdown. With Ainge's pass to Smith completed for a two-point conversion, the game was tied at 21 at the end of the third. In the fourth quarter, however, the Irish scored 20, including two D.J. Fitzpatrick field goals, a Quinn touchdown pass to Jeff Samardzija, and a Zbikowski interception return for a touchdown. With no answers by the Volunteers, the Irish won the game 41–21.[42] With the win, Quinn continued his Irish record touchdown passing streak to 13 games, Samardzija's touchdown catch, his 12th broke an Irish record of touchdown catches in a season, and the Irish moved up in ranking to 7th nationally.

Navy edit

1 2 3 4 Total
Navy 7 0 7 7 21
#7 Irish 7 21 7 7 42

The Irish next played the Navy Midshipmen, a team the Irish had played annually since 1927, and had beaten in 41 straight games, a record NCAA winning streak. Navy was led by option quarterback Lamar Owens and coach Paul Johnson. The game began with a 73-yard Irish drive that ended with a 31-yard touchdown pass from Brady Quinn to Maurice Stovall. Navy answered, after a 69-yard drive that took half of the quarter, when Adam Ballard ran for an 8-yard touchdown. After both teams failed to convert on fourth downs in the second quarter, Quinn led the Irish to a Travis Thomas 12-yard touchdown run. On the next Navy possession, a fumble by Owens was recovered by the Irish. Quinn completed two passes on the drive and Darius Walker ran for a 12-yard touchdown. After a Navy punt, a Quinn pass to Anthony Fasano for an 8-yard touchdown, gave the Irish a 28–7 lead at halftime. A six-minute drive by Navy to start the second half ended in a 1-yard touchdown run by Owens to bring Navy to within two touchdowns, but Quinn answered on the next drive with a 17-yard touchdown pass to Stovall. After both teams threw interceptions, Quinn threw his fourth touchdown of the game, a 10-yard pass to Stovall. With a Brian Hampton 17-yard touchdown to Tyree Barnes, Navy finished the scoring in the game. The Irish won 42–21,[43] with Quinn increasing his Notre Dame record touchdown passing streak to 14 games and the team extending its record winning streak over Navy to 42 games.

Syracuse edit

1 2 3 4 Total
Orange 3 0 0 7 10
#7 Irish 0 14 10 10 34

Notre Dame's next game, and final home game of the season, came against the 1–8 Syracuse Orange. Syracuse, led by first-year coach Greg Robinson and quarterback Perry Patterson, had spoiled the Irish chance of not having a losing season in 2003 when they routed the Irish in the Carrier Dome by 26.[44] This year, however, it seemed like the Orange, ranked last in total yards, were over-matched. The Orange, however, kept up with the Irish in the first quarter, and after a failed field goal attempt by D. J. Fitzpatrick, and a 51-yard run by Damien Rhodes on the ensuing drive, the Orange scored the first points of the game with a 31-yard field goal by John Barker. On the next Irish drive, Fitzpatrick's field goal attempt was blocked, and the Orange kept the lead. However, four minutes later, a 25-yard Brady Quinn pass to Maurice Stovall ended with a touchdown, giving the Irish the lead. A 30-yard pass to Jeff Samardzija, on the second play of the next Irish drive, gave the Irish a 14–3 lead that they would have at halftime. On the first play of the third quarter, Patterson was intercepted by Leo Ferrine, who returned it 17-yards for a touchdown to give the Irish a 21–3 lead. After a failed fourth down attempt at the Orange goal line, and a pair of punts by the Orange, Fitzpatrick gave the Irish a 24–3 lead with his 44-yard field goal. In the fourth quarter, Fitzpatrick kicked a 29-yard field goal, Darius Walker ran for a 3-yard touchdown, and Patterson threw an 18-yard touchdown to Joseph Kowaleski for the only Orange touchdown of the day, to give the final score of 34–10 in favor of the Irish.[45] With the game, Quinn continued his Notre Dame record touchdown streak and the Irish moved to 6th nationally. They were also one win away from being eligible for a BCS bowl.

Stanford edit

1 2 3 4 Total
#6 Irish 14 0 6 18 38
Cardinal 7 7 0 17 31

The final Irish test of the regular season came on the road against the 5–5 Stanford Cardinal, in the last game in Stanford Stadium before it would be renovated. Stanford, coached by first-year coach Walt Harris and quarterback Trent Edwards, and Notre Dame played annually since 1997 and have a minor rivalry for the Legends Trophy. The Irish had won the three previous seasons when coached by former Cardinal head coach Ty Willingham, and the Cardinal didn't look to have much chance in this game after losing in the Big Game to rival California, with the Bears outrushing the Cardinal by 210 yards.[46]

The Irish took an early lead on the second play of the game when Brady Quinn threw an 80-yard touchdown to Jeff Samardzija, however, after a Quinn interception, Edwards tied the game with a 27-yard touchdown to Mark Bradford. The Irish scored the last points of the quarter with another Quinn touchdown to Samardzija, this time for 7 yards to bring the game to 14–7 in favor of the Irish. In the second quarter, after both teams failed to convert fourth downs, a 38-yard Edwards pass to Justin McCullum, tied the game once again. Although Quinn threw his second interception of the game later in the quarter, neither team scored again in the half. In the third quarter, Quinn threw his third touchdown to Maurice Stovall for 10-yards, however, D. J. Fitzpatrick missed the extra point, and left the Irish only winning by 6. With a missed 42-yard field goal by Fitzpatrick, and the Cardinal not scoring in the quarter, the Irish took a 20–14 lead to the fourth quarter. Early in the fourth quarter, Carl Gioia replaced Fitzpatrick and kicked a 29-yard field goal to put the Irish up two scores, however, on his kickoff, T.J. Rushing returned the ball 87-yards to bring the Cardinal to within two points. Quinn then brought the Irish on an 80-yard drive that ended with a Travis Thomas 8-yard touchdown run. The Cardinal were only able to answer with a 31-yard field goal that made the score 30–24 in favor of the Irish. Fitzpatrick was brought in during the next Irish drive, but missed a 29-yard field goal that would have put the Irish up by two scores. The Cardinal, who had brought in backup quarterback T.C. Ostrander when Edwards didn't move the ball in the third quarter, capitalized on the miss and took the lead on a 4-yard pass to Matt Traverso, with less than two minutes left in the game. Quinn then completed three long passes and Darius Walker ran the last 6-yards for the go-ahead touchdown. A direct snap to Walker on the two-point conversion put the Irish up by a touchdown with less than a minute remaining. Ostrander was able to bring the Cardinal to their 38-yard line on a 14-yard pass, but was sacked on a fourth down to seal the win for the Irish, 38–31.[47] With the win the Irish were eligible for a BCS bowl, and although falling to 7th in the rankings, were ranked 6th by the BCS and invited to the Fiesta Bowl.

Fiesta Bowl edit

1 2 3 4 Total
#6 Irish 7 0 6 7 20
#4 Buckeyes 7 14 3 10 34

With 9 wins and a ranking of 6th in the BCS polls, the Irish were invited to the Fiesta Bowl, held in Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe Arizona, to face the number 4 ranked Ohio State Buckeyes. The BCS appearance was only the second for the Irish and the first since a 2000 loss to the Oregon State Beavers in the Fiesta Bowl. The Buckeyes, led by coach Jim Tressel and junior quarterback Troy Smith, had a 9–2 record, with losses to BCS contender Penn State and eventual national champion Texas. Although both teams had long football histories, they had only met four times previous to this game, the latest in 1996.[48]

The Irish took an early lead on a 20-yard run by Darius Walker, but Smith answered for the Buckeyes three minutes later with a 56-yard pass to Ted Ginn Jr. to tie the game. After Smith fumbled the ball on the Buckeye 15-yard line, the Irish had another chance to take the lead. However, after not gaining a first down after three plays, they attempted a fourth down conversion, during which Quinn was sacked. Without scoring, the quarter ended with the game tied at 7. On the third play of the second quarter, Smith once again scored a touchdown on a 68-yard pass to Ginn to give the Buckeyes a lead they would never relinquish. On the Buckeyes next drive, Smith brought them to the Irish 15-yard line, before his fumble was recovered by the Irish. The Irish, however, couldn't take advantage, and on the Buckeyes next drive Smith threw an 85-yard touchdown pass to Santonio Holmes to give the Buckeyes a 21–7 lead. With a blocked field goal attempt by the Buckeyes, the score stayed the same at the half. In the third quarter, the Irish blocked a second field goal attempt, and finally took advantage with a 10-yard rushing touchdown by Walker. With a missed extra point, and a 40-yard field goal by Josh Huston on the Buckeyes next possession, the Buckeyes took a 24–13 lead into the fourth quarter. In the fourth, Huston added another field goal, and Walker ran for a third touchdown, before Antonio Pittman ran for his own 60-yard touchdown for the final score of the game. The Buckeyes won 34–20,[49] giving the Irish their NCAA record-tying 8th straight bowl game loss.[50]

Notre Dame also finished 2–2 against schools from the Big Ten in 2005.

Post-season edit

Notre Dame records edit

By the end of the season, the 2005 team set 47 Notre Dame team and individual records.[51] The team set 11 season records, including most points (440) and most offensive yards (5728). Four players set individual season records, including Jeff Samardzija's touchdown receptions (15), Brady Quinn's touchdown passes (32), Darius Walker's receptions by a running back (43), and D. J. Fitzpatrick's PATs (52). Seven individual game records were set, including Quinn's touchdown passes (6) and Maurice Stovall's receptions (14). Samardzija set a record with 8 consecutive touchdown catches, Walker another record with four consecutive 100-yard rushing games, and Quinn's record of 16 consecutive games with a touchdown pass that began in 2004 and ended in the Fiesta Bowl. With his records this season, Quinn holds 30 Notre Dame individual records, including games with 300-yards passing (5) becoming the only Irish player to throw for 400-yards in a game more than once.

Awards edit

A number of Irish players and coaches were named post-season award finalists and winners. Head coach Charlie Weis was named by the Football Writers Association of America as the Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year.[52] Offensive coordinator, Michael Haywood, was named by the American Football Coaches Association as the Assistant Coach of the Year.[53] Offensive lineman John Sullivan was named by the Walter Camp Football Foundation as the Connecticut Player of the Year,[54] wide receiver Jeff Samardzija was named as a finalist for the Fred Biletnikoff Award,[55] and tight end Anthony Fasano, named to the preseason Mckey Award watchlist, was also named a finalist for the award.[56] Quarterback Brady Quinn, after finishing fourth in Heisman Trophy balloting,[57] was nominated for two Player of the Year awards,[58][59] two quarterback trophies,[60][61] and won the Sammy Baugh Trophy.[62]

In addition to the awards, three Irish players were named on All American teams. Quinn, Samardzija, and safety Tom Zbikowski were all named the AP All-America team, Samardzija to the second team and Quinn and Zbiokowski to the third.[63] In addition to the AP team, Samardzija was named to seven other All-America teams, six on the first teams.[64] Samardzija was also named as Notre Dame's NCAA record 79th Consensus All American.[65]

NFL draft edit

In the 2006 NFL Draft, three Irish players were drafted by NFL teams. Fasano was taken by the Dallas Cowboys in the second round of the draft, Maurice Stovall was taken by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the third round,[66] and Dan Stevenson was taken in the sixth round by the New England Patriots.[67] In addition to the three players taken in the draft, six signed free agent contracts with NFL teams.[68]

References edit

  1. ^ "Fall From Grace". November 30, 2004. Retrieved June 22, 2007.
  2. ^ Wilbon, Michael (December 1, 2004). "Notre Dame's True Colors". The Washington Post. Retrieved June 22, 2007.
  3. ^ "Notre Dame officials meet with Meyer in Utah". December 2, 2004. Retrieved June 22, 2007.
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  5. ^ "#41 Notre Dame". from the original on June 8, 2007. Retrieved June 22, 2007.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on December 24, 2006. Retrieved June 22, 2007.
  7. ^ Forbes, Gordon (December 16, 2004). "Challenge for Weis: Guide Pats, build Irish". USA Today. Retrieved June 22, 2007.
  8. ^ "Seven Notre Dame coaches visit Ohio recruit". USA Today. January 19, 2005. Retrieved June 22, 2007.
  9. ^ "Anthony Fasano Named To Mackey Award Watch List". Retrieved June 22, 2007.
  10. ^ "Fitzpatrick Among 30 Named To Groza Award Watch List". Archived from the original on July 28, 2012. Retrieved June 22, 2007.
  11. ^ "Brandon Hoyte Named To Butkus Award Watch List". Retrieved June 22, 2007.
  12. ^ "Brady Quinn Named To Maxwell Award Watch List". Retrieved June 22, 2007.
  13. ^ "Football Coaching Staff Announced". Retrieved June 23, 2007.
  14. ^ "David Cutcliffe Resigns From The Football Staff". Retrieved June 23, 2007.
  15. ^ "Peter Vaas Named Football Quarterbacks Coach". Retrieved June 23, 2007.
  16. ^ "Notre Dame extends Weis through 2015". October 29, 2005. Retrieved June 23, 2007.
  17. ^ Whiteside, Kelly (November 4, 2005). "Irish extension". USA Today. Retrieved June 23, 2007.
  18. ^ "His Biggest Victory". CNN. November 2, 2005. from the original on June 15, 2007. Retrieved June 23, 2007.
  19. ^ "Pittsburgh's Palko takes home Player of Week honor". USA Today. November 16, 2004. Retrieved June 23, 2007.
  20. ^ "Weis outduels Wannstedt in matchup of new coaches". Retrieved June 23, 2007.
  21. ^ "Wolverines' defense to be tested against Irish". Retrieved June 24, 2007.
  22. ^ "Freshman rusher leads Irish to surprise upset". Retrieved June 24, 2007.
  23. ^ "Weis joins Rockne in record books with victory". Retrieved June 24, 2007.
  24. ^ "Notre Dame hopes to avoid letdown vs. Michigan State". Retrieved June 24, 2007.
  25. ^ "Spartans win fifth straight at Notre Dame". Retrieved June 24, 2007.
  26. ^ "Spartans regret South Bend flag-raising". September 21, 2005. Retrieved June 24, 2007.
  27. ^ O'Toole, Thomas (October 14, 2005). "Big Ten burying postgame flag plantings". USA Today. Retrieved June 24, 2007.
  28. ^ "Notre Dame pours it on late to win 'Ty Bowl'". Archived from the original on January 3, 2013. Retrieved June 24, 2007.
  29. ^ . Archived from the original on September 29, 2007. Retrieved June 24, 2007.
  30. ^ "Washington, Willingham aim for revenge vs. Notre Dame". Retrieved June 24, 2007.
  31. ^ "Willingham loses first game against former team". Retrieved June 24, 2007.
  32. ^ "Purdue looks to bounce back vs. Notre Dame". Retrieved June 25, 2007.
  33. ^ "Quinn throws for 440 yards, 3 TDs as Irish roll". Retrieved June 25, 2007.
  34. ^ Wilbon, Michael (October 16, 2005). "Southern Cal shows its true colors". The Washington Post. Retrieved June 25, 2007.
  35. ^ "Notre Dame vs. USC: Greatest Intersectional Rivalry in College Football". Bleacher Report. Retrieved October 17, 2014.
  36. ^ "Quinn, Notre Dame hope to end USC's 27-game winning streak". Retrieved June 25, 2007.
  37. ^ . Archived from the original on March 11, 2007. Retrieved June 25, 2007.
  38. ^ "USC win streak intact after wild fourth-quarter finish". Retrieved June 25, 2007.
  39. ^ "37-yard completion on third down seals win". Retrieved June 25, 2007.
  40. ^ "Irish snap home skid behind Quinn's six TDs". Retrieved June 25, 2007.
  41. ^ "Ainge separates shoulder, joins Schaeffer on sidelines". Retrieved June 25, 2007.
  42. ^ "Quinn tosses three TDs as Irish top reeling Vols". Retrieved June 25, 2007.
  43. ^ "Quinn-Stovall connection helps upend Midshipmen". Retrieved June 25, 2007.
  44. ^ "Notre Dame looks to keep rolling vs. Syracuse". Retrieved June 26, 2007.
  45. ^ "Fighting Irish struggle early, pull out win over Syracuse". Retrieved June 25, 2007.
  46. ^ "Notre Dame aims for BCS bowl berth at Stanford". Retrieved June 26, 2007.
  47. ^ "Irish hold off Stanford upset bid, become BCS eligible". Retrieved June 26, 2007.
  48. ^ "Irish To Face Buckeyes In Tostitos Fiesta Bowl". Retrieved June 26, 2007.
  49. ^ "Smith, Ginn lift speedy Ohio State to another Fiesta title". Retrieved June 26, 2007.
  50. ^ "(11) Notre Dame vs. (4) LSU". Retrieved June 26, 2007.
  51. ^ "Football's Record-Setting 2005 Season". Retrieved June 27, 2007.
  52. ^ "Charlie Weis Earns FWAA's Eddie Robinson Coach Of The Year Award". Retrieved June 27, 2007.
  53. ^ "Michael Haywood Earns AFCA Assistant Coach Of The Year Award". Retrieved June 27, 2007.
  54. ^ "John Sullivan Named 2005 Walter Camp". Retrieved June 27, 2007.
  55. ^ "Samardzjia In The Final Running For Biletnikoff Award". Retrieved June 27, 2007.
  56. ^ "Anthony Fasano Named Mackey Award Finalist". Retrieved June 27, 2007.
  57. ^ "Brady Quinn Finishes Fourth In Heisman Trophy Balloting". Retrieved June 27, 2007.
  58. ^ "Brady Quinn A Nominee For Cingular/ABC Sports All-America Player Of The Year". Retrieved June 27, 2007.
  59. ^ "Quinn One Of Five Finalists For Walter Camp Player Of The Year Award". Retrieved June 27, 2007.
  60. ^ "Quinn Named A Manning Award Finalist". Retrieved June 27, 2007.
  61. ^ "Brady Quinn Named One Of Three O'Brien Award Finalists". Retrieved June 27, 2007.
  62. ^ "Brady Quinn Wins Sammy Baugh Award". Retrieved June 27, 2007.
  63. ^ "Quinn, Samardzija and Zbikowski Earn Mention On AP All-America Teams". Retrieved June 27, 2007.
  64. ^ "Samardzija Earns Eighth All-America Honor". Retrieved June 27, 2007.
  65. ^ . Archived from the original on June 30, 2008. Retrieved June 27, 2007.
  66. ^ "Fasano and Stovall Taken On Day One Of 2006 NFL Draft". Retrieved June 27, 2007.
  67. ^ "Stevenson Becomes Third Notre Dame Football Player Taken In 2006 NFL Draft". Retrieved June 27, 2007.
  68. ^ "6 NOTRE DAME FOOTBALL STARS SIGN FREE AGENT PACTS WITH NFL TEAMS". from the original on June 8, 2007. Retrieved June 27, 2007.

2005, notre, dame, fighting, irish, football, team, represented, university, notre, dame, 2005, ncaa, division, football, season, team, coached, charlie, weis, played, home, games, notre, dame, stadium, south, bend, indiana, irish, completed, season, with, rec. The 2005 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team represented the University of Notre Dame in the 2005 NCAA Division I A football season The team was coached by Charlie Weis and played its home games at Notre Dame Stadium in South Bend Indiana The Irish completed the season with a record of 9 3 culminating in an appearance in the Fiesta Bowl and a number 9 ranking in the nation 2005 Notre Dame Fighting Irish footballFiesta Bowl L 20 34 vs Ohio StateConferenceIndependentRankingCoachesNo 11APNo 9Record9 3Head coachCharlie Weis 1st season Offensive coordinatorMichael Haywood 1st season Offensive schemePro styleDefensive coordinatorRick Minter 1st year of 2nd stint 3rd overall season Base defense4 3 MultipleCaptainsBrady Quinn Brandon HoyteHome stadiumNotre Dame Stadium c 80 795 grass Seasons 20042006 2005 NCAA Division I A independents football records vte Conf Overall Team W L W L No 9 Notre Dame 9 3 Navy 8 4 Army 4 7 Temple 0 11 BCS at large representativeRankings from AP Poll Contents 1 Preseason 1 1 Coaching changes 1 2 Roster changes 1 2 1 Recruits 1 3 Award candidates 2 Schedule 3 Roster 4 Coaching staff 5 Game summaries 5 1 Pittsburgh 5 2 Michigan 5 3 Michigan State 5 4 Washington 5 5 Purdue 5 6 USC 5 7 BYU 5 8 Tennessee 5 9 Navy 5 10 Syracuse 5 11 Stanford 5 12 Fiesta Bowl 6 Post season 6 1 Notre Dame records 6 2 Awards 6 3 NFL draft 7 ReferencesPreseason editCoaching changes edit After finishing the 2004 season at 6 6 Notre Dame officials in a controversial move 1 2 fired third year head coach Tyrone Willingham The Irish initially hoped to hire University of Utah head coach Urban Meyer who had led the Utes to an undefeated season as Meyer had been an assistant coach for the Irish for five years and had a clause in his contract stating he could leave Utah without penalty if Notre Dame offered him a job 3 When Meyer accepted the head coaching job at the University of Florida Notre Dame hired Charlie Weis the New England Patriots offensive coordinator making him the first Notre Dame alumnus to lead the team since 1963 4 Roster changes edit The Irish lost a number of players on defense including four former starting defensive backs three players on the defensive line including defensive end Justin Tuck and two former starting linebackers including honorable mention All American Derek Curry to graduation On the offensive side of the ball the only key losses for the Irish were running back Ryan Grant and former quarterback and wide receiver Carlyle Holiday The Irish returned ten starters on offense and four on defense 5 Recruits edit With poor recruiting being one of the issues that led to the firing of Willingham 6 Weis was challenged to coach the Patriots offense during the day and work on recruiting players for the Irish at night 7 He took a proactive role in recruiting including sending seven of his assistant coaches to a recruit who had de committed after Willingham was fired 8 the recruit however signed with the Ohio State Buckeyes Weis with some of Willingham s recruits signing also built a class of 15 recruits including five four star recruits US college sports recruiting information for 2005 recruits Name Hometown High school college Height Weight 40 Commit date David BrutonDB Miamisburg OH Miamisburg HS 6 ft 2 in 1 88 m 180 lb 82 kg 4 5 Jun 29 2004 Recruiting star ratings Scout nbsp Rivals nbsp 247Sports N A Paul DuncanOL Dallas GA Eas Paulding HS 6 ft 6 in 1 98 m 282 lb 128 kg 5 43 Jan 11 2005 Recruiting star ratings Scout nbsp Rivals nbsp 247Sports N A David GrimesWR Detroit MI Detroit City HS 5 ft 9 in 1 75 m 157 lb 71 kg 4 5 Jul 18 2004 Recruiting star ratings Scout nbsp Rivals nbsp 247Sports N A Derrell HandDT Philadelphia PA West Philadelphia Catholic HS 6 ft 2 in 1 88 m 298 lb 135 kg 5 62 Jan 19 2005 Recruiting star ratings Scout nbsp Rivals nbsp 247Sports N A Ray HerringS Melbourne FL Holy Trinity Episcopal School 5 ft 10 in 1 78 m 187 lb 85 kg 4 5 Jan 19 2005 Recruiting star ratings Scout nbsp Rivals nbsp 247Sports N A Joey HibenTE Waconia MN Waconia Sr 6 ft 5 in 1 96 m 235 lb 107 kg 4 7 Nov 8 2004 Recruiting star ratings Scout nbsp Rivals nbsp 247Sports N A D J HordWR Kansas City MO Rockhurst HS 6 ft 1 in 1 85 m 195 lb 88 kg 4 4 Jan 15 2005 Recruiting star ratings Scout nbsp Rivals nbsp 247Sports N A Patrick KuntzDE Indianapolis IN Roncalli HS 6 ft 4 in 1 93 m 255 lb 116 kg 4 8 Jan 15 2005 Recruiting star ratings Scout nbsp Rivals nbsp 247Sports N A Kyle McCarthyCB Youngstown OH Cardinal Mooney HS 6 ft 0 in 1 83 m 172 lb 78 kg 4 47 Jan 23 2005 Recruiting star ratings Scout nbsp Rivals nbsp 247Sports N A Steve QuinnLB Philadelphia PA St Joseph s Prep School 6 ft 2 in 1 88 m 208 lb 94 kg 4 62 Feb 2 2005 Recruiting star ratings Scout nbsp Rivals nbsp 247Sports N A Asaph SchwappRB Hartford CT Weaver HS 6 ft 0 in 1 83 m 247 lb 112 kg 4 64 Jul 15 2004 Recruiting star ratings Scout nbsp Rivals nbsp 247Sports N A Evan SharpleyQB Marshall MI Marshall HS 6 ft 2 in 1 88 m 200 lb 91 kg 4 7 Jul 18 2004 Recruiting star ratings Scout nbsp Rivals nbsp 247Sports N A Scott SmithLB Highland Park IL Highland Park HS 6 ft 3 in 1 91 m 222 lb 101 kg 4 75 Jul 16 2004 Recruiting star ratings Scout nbsp Rivals nbsp 247Sports N A Michael TurkovichOL Wayne PA Valley Forge Military Academy 6 ft 7 in 2 01 m 280 lb 130 kg 5 Jan 8 2005 Recruiting star ratings Scout nbsp Rivals nbsp 247Sports N A Kevin WashingtonLB Sugar Land TX Steven F Austin HS 6 ft 0 in 1 83 m 213 lb 97 kg 4 59 Jul 18 2004 Recruiting star ratings Scout nbsp Rivals nbsp 247Sports N A Overall recruiting rankings Scout 27 Rivals 40 Refers to 40 yard dash Note In many cases Scout Rivals 247Sports and ESPN may conflict in their listings of height weight and 40 time In these cases the average was taken ESPN grades are on a 100 point scale Sources Notre Dame Commit List 2005 Rivals com Retrieved June 22 2007 Scout com Football Recruiting Notre Dame Scout com Retrieved June 22 2007 Scout com Team Recruiting Rankings Scout com Retrieved June 22 2007 2005 Team Ranking Rivals com Retrieved June 22 2007 Award candidates edit Four players were named to the national awards watch lists in the pre season Anthony Fasano John Mackey Award 9 D J Fitzpatrick Lou Groza Award 10 Brandon Hoyte Dick Butkus Award 11 Brady Quinn Maxwell Award 12 Schedule editDateTimeOpponentRankSiteTVResultAttendanceSeptember 38 00 p m at No 23 PittsburghHeinz FieldPittsburgh PA rivalry ABCW 42 2166 451 September 1012 00 p m at No 3 MichiganNo 20Michigan StadiumAnn Arbor MI rivalry ABCW 17 10111 386 September 173 30 p m Michigan StateNo 10Notre Dame StadiumNotre Dame IN rivalry NBCL 41 44 OT80 795 September 243 30 p m at WashingtonNo 16Husky StadiumSeattle WAABCW 36 1771 473 October 17 45 p m at No 22 PurdueNo 13Ross Ade StadiumWest Lafayette IN rivalry ESPNW 49 2865 491 October 153 30 p m No 1 USCNo 9Notre Dame StadiumNotre Dame IN rivalry College GameDay NBCL 31 3480 795 October 222 30 p m BYUNo 9Notre Dame StadiumNotre Dame INNBCW 49 2380 795 November 52 30 p m TennesseeNo 8Notre Dame StadiumNotre Dame INNBCW 41 2180 795 November 121 00 p m NavyNo 7Notre Dame StadiumNotre Dame IN rivalry NBCW 42 2180 795 November 192 30 p m SyracuseNo 6Notre Dame StadiumNotre Dame INNBCW 34 1080 795 November 268 00 p m at StanfordNo 8Stanford StadiumStanford CA rivalry ABCW 38 3156 057 January 2 20064 30 p m vs No 4 Ohio StateNo 6Sun Devil StadiumTempe AZ Fiesta Bowl ABCL 20 3476 196 Rankings from AP Poll released prior to the gameAll times are in Eastern timeRoster editRoster Wide receiver 1 D J Hord Freshman 5 Rhema McKnight Senior 7 Darrin Bragg Sophomore 11 David Grimes Freshman 21 Maurice Stovall Senior 23 Chase Anastasio Junior 24 Brandon Erickson Sophomore 36 Brandon Harris Senior 38 Nick Possley Sophomore 80 Chris Vaughn Sophomore 81 Rob Woods Senior 82 Matt Shelton Senior 83 Jeff Samardzija Junior 84 Mike O Hara Senior Center 59 James Bent Senior 78 John Sullivan Junior Offensive tackle 67 John Kadous Sophomore 68 Ryan Harris Junior 72 Paul Duncan Freshman 73 Mark LeVoir Senior 77 Mike Turkovich Freshman 79 Brian Mattes Junior Offensive guard 50 Dan Santucci Senior 54 David Fitzgerald Senior 71 James Bonelli Senior 74 Dan Stevenson Senior 76 Bob Morton Senior Tight end 40 Mike Talerico Junior 85 Joey Hiben Freshman 86 Tim Gritzman Sophomore 87 Marcus Freeman Senior 88 Anthony Fasano Senior 89 John Carlson Junior Quarterback 8 Marty Mooney Senior 10 Brady Quinn Junior 13 Evan Sharpley Freshman 14 David Wolke Sophomore 17 Dan Gorski Sophomore 18 Justin Gillett Sophomore Running back 3 Darius Walker Sophomore 16 Rashon Powers Neal Senior 27 John Lyons Junior 32 Jeff Jenkins Senior 33 Justin Hoskins Sophomore 35 Ashley McConnell Junior 44 Asaph Schwapp Freshman 49 Matt Augustyn Junior Nose Tackle 66 Derek Landri Junior Defensive end 25 Nate Schiccatano Senior 60 Casey Cullen Junior 75 Chris Frome Senior 94 Justin Brown Sophomore 95 Victor Abiamiri Junior 96 Pat Kuntz Freshman 99 Ronald Talley Sophomore Defensive tackle 57 Dwight Stephenson Jr Sophomore 59 Dan Chervanick Senior 65 Patrick McInerney Sophomore 69 Neil Kennedy Sophomore 90 Brian Beidatsch Senior 92 Derrell Hand Freshman 98 Trevor Laws Junior Cornerback 8 Junior Jabbie Sophomore 15 Leo Ferrine Sophomore 20 Terrail Lambert Sophomore 22 Ambrose Wooden Junior 23 William David Williams Junior 24 Tregg Duerson Sophomore 26 Wade Iams Junior 30 Mike Richardson Junior 31 A J Cedeno Junior 32 Alvin Reynolds Jr Sophomore 33 Bret Shapot Sophomore 35 Tim Kenney Junior 37 Matt Mitchell Senior Linebacker 4 Anthony Vernaglia Sophomore 26 Travis Thomas Junior 39 Brandon Hoyte Senior 40 Maurice Crum Jr Sophomore 41 Scott Smith Freshman 42 Kevin Washington Junior 43 Anthony Salvador Senior 46 Corey Mays Senior 47 Mitchell Thomas Junior 48 Steve Quinn Freshman 52 Joe Brockington Junior 53 Joe Boland Senior 56 Nick Borseti Junior 58 Abdel Banda Sophomore Field Safety 18 Chinedum Ndukwe Junior 27 David Bruton Freshman 28 Kyle McCarthy Freshman 45 Rich Whitney III Junior Safety 6 Ray Herring Freshman 9 Tom Zbikowski Junior 31 Jake Carney Senior Long Snapper 53 Dan Hickey Senior 61 J J Jansen Junior 62 Scott Raridon Junior Punter 17 Geoff Price Junior Place Kicker 19 D J Fitzpatrick Senior 45 Carl Gioia Junior 91 Craig Cardillo Senior 96 Bobby Renkes Junior Sources http sportsillustrated cnn com football ncaa rosters 2005 notred http und cstv com sports m footbl archive 072506aaa htmCoaching staff editWhen Willingham was fired all of his assistant coaches left leaving Weis to rebuild a coaching staff He sought to find experienced coaches that would be able to make the team competitive When the new assistants were announced in January they were billed as having 25 seasons of collegiate head coaching 50 seasons as coordinators 12 seasons as NFL assistant coaches and 42 bowl victories 13 Before the season however assistant offensive head and quarterbacks coach David Cutcliffe after undergoing heart surgery and being on medical leave decided to resign saying he felt his absence unfair to the players and coaches 14 In early June Peter Vaas was named as Cutcliffe s replacement Vaas was a former six year NFL Europa head coach an eight year collegiate head coach and had 17 years of assistant coaching experience including two years at Notre Dame under Lou Holtz 15 On October 29 only half way through the season Weis who originally signed a six year contract with the Irish was offered an extension on his contract The new 10 year deal was worth 30 to 40 million and made him the highest paid coach in college football 16 The extension was seen as controversial 17 18 as Weis record was 5 2 at the time while Willingham started his first season with an 8 0 record nbsp Charlie Weis Head Coach Name Position Alma Mater Year Charlie Weis Head coach Notre Dame 1978 Michael Haywood Offensive coordinator running backs Notre Dame 1986 Rob Ianello Recruiting coordinator receivers Catholic 1987 John Latina Assistant head coach offense offensive line Virginia Tech 1981 Bill Lewis Assistant head coach defense defensive backs East Stroudsburg 1963 Rick Minter Defensive coordinator Henderson State 1977 Jerome Jappy Oliver Defensive line Purdue 1978 Bernie Parmalee Tight ends special teams Ball State 1990 Brian Polian Assistant defensive backs special teams John Carroll 1997 Peter Vaas Quarterbacks Holy Cross 1974 Minter had been on the Notre Dame coaching staff under coach Lou Holtz but this is his first under Weis Game summaries editPittsburgh edit Notre Dame at 23 Pittsburgh 1 234Total Notre Dame 7 2870 42Pittsburgh 10 308 21 Date September 3Location Heinz Field Pittsburgh PAGame start 8 00 p m ESTElapsed time 3 25Game attendance 66 451Game weather Clear 73 F 23 C wind 7 mph 11 km h NWReferee Dennis LipskiTelevision network ABCScoring summaryQ110 58PITTLee 39 yard pass from Palko Cummings kick PITT 7 0 Q18 19NDWalker 51 yard pass from Quinn Fitzpatrick kick Tie 7 7 Q11 40PITTCummings 49 yard field goalPITT 10 7 Q213 07NDWalker 2 yard run Fitzpatrick kick ND 14 10 Q26 59NDPowers Neal 2 yard run Fitzpatrick kick ND 21 10 Q26 03NDSamardzija 19 yard pass from Quinn Fitzpatrick kick ND 28 10 Q24 20PITTCummings 23 yard field goalND 28 13 Q21 39NDPowers Neal 9 yard run Fitzpatrick kick ND 35 13 Q37 59NDPowers Neal 4 yard run Fitzpatrick kick ND 42 13 Q412 55PITTPalko 4 yard run Murphy run ND 42 21 The Irish s first game of the season came on the road against the No 23 ranked Pittsburgh Panthers The Panthers were led by their first year head coach Dave Wannstedt and junior quarterback and two year starter Tyler Palko At Notre Dame the previous season Palko became the first quarterback to throw five touchdown passes against the Irish in the Panthers 41 38 win 19 Palko started the scoring this year with a 39 yard touchdown pass to Greg Lee however Brady Quinn and the Irish answered with a 51 yard touchdown pass to Darius Walker The Panthers completed the first quarter scoring with a 49 yard field goal by Josh Cummings to take a 10 7 lead into the second quarter In the second quarter the Irish took control The quarter began with a 2 yard touchdown run by Walker Later Rashon Powers Neal scored on his own 2 yard run and after a fumble on the kickoff return less than a minute later Quinn threw a 19 yard touchdown pass to Jeff Samardzija the first touchdown catch of his career to give the Irish a 28 10 lead Cummings hit a 23 yard field goal to cut the Irish lead to 15 but late in the half Powers Neal ran for a 9 yard touchdown giving the Irish a 35 13 lead at halftime The second half saw much less scoring In the third quarter Powers Neal ran for a 4 yard touchdown the only score in the quarter to give the Irish their final score In the fourth quarter Palko ran for his own 4 yard touchdown and the two point conversion was the final score of the game The Irish won the game 42 21 20 and jumped to 23rd in the national rankings Michigan edit 23 Notre Dame at 3 Michigan 1 234Total Notre Dame 7 703 17Michigan 0 307 10 Date September 10Location Michigan Stadium Ann Arbor MIGame start 12 00 p m ESTElapsed time 3 30Game attendance 111 386Game weather Sunny 85 F 29 C wind 10 15 mph 16 24 km h SEReferee B LeMonnierScoring summaryQ112 02NDMcKnight 5 yard pass from Quinn Fitzpatrick kick ND 7 0 Q214 04MICHRivas 38 yard field goalND 7 3 Q24 24NDSamardzija 5 yard pass from Quinn Fitzpatrick kick ND 14 3 Q414 11NDFitzpatrick 43 yard field goalND 17 3 Q43 47MICHManningham 25 yard pass from Henne Rivas kick ND 17 10 The second game of the season came on the road against long time rivals the Michigan Wolverines led by coach Lloyd Carr and second year starting quarterback Chad Henne Michigan had moved up to 3rd in the nation from a pre season ranking of 4th after a 16 point win against Northern Illinois Coming into the season Michigan had not lost a home game since 2002 with a streak of 16 games and hadn t lost a non conference home game since 1998 21 Also despite beating the Wolverines twice in the last three years including a 28 20 win over the then 7th ranked Wolverines in 2004 22 the Irish hadn t won at Michigan since 1993 The Irish began the game with the ball and marched down the field with a 76 yard drive that culminated in a 5 yard Brady Quinn touchdown pass to Rhema McKnight Late in the quarter key Wolverine running back Mike Hart was injured during a run keeping him out for the rest of the game In the second quarter on Michigan s first drive past the 50 yard line Garrett Rivas was able to hit a 38 yard field goal to make the score 7 3 in favor of the Irish Later in the quarter the Irish lost McKnight to what would later be revealed as a season ending knee injury Quinn and Walker however led the Irish on another long drive culminating in a 5 yard touchdown pass to Jeff Samardzija to give the Irish a 14 3 lead at halftime The second half was filled with missed opportunities for the Wolverines At the start of the third quarter Henne and running back Kevin Grady led the Wolverines on a 69 yard drive that was finally stopped on a Henne interception by safety Tom Zbikowski on the Irish 1 yard line Most of the rest of the quarter consisted of short drives that were stopped early forcing each team to punt In the Wolverines final drive of the quarter the Irish defense held them to their own 9 yard line and forced a punt that was returned by Zbikowski to the Michigan 33 yard line Although the Irish only advanced the ball 7 yards at the beginning of the fourth quarter D J Fitzpatrick kicked a 43 yard field goal to give the Irish a 17 3 lead On their next possession a Walker fumble was recovered by the Wolverines on the Irish 18 yard line After driving to the 5 yard line the Wolverines couldn t convert a fourth down and turned the ball over to the Irish On the Wolverines next possession on another fourth down attempt near midfield Henne completed a 54 yard pass to Jason Avant who was tackled at the Irish 1 yard line On the next play however Henne fumbled the ball into the endzone and it was recovered by Chinedum Ndukwe for the Irish On the Wolverines next possession Henne threw a 26 yard touchdown pass to Mario Manningham to bring the score to 17 10 Michigan had one final possession with two minutes remaining but failed once again to convert a fourth down sealing the win for the Irish With the win Weis became the first Notre Dame coach since Knute Rockne to win his first two games on the road 23 and the Irish moved up to 12th in the nation Michigan State edit 1 2 3 4OT Total Spartans 14 10 14 06 44 10 Irish 7 10 7 143 41 The Irish next had their home opener against the Michigan State Spartans a rivalry game with the Megaphone Trophy given to the winner The Spartans this year s team led by coach John L Smith and second year starting quarterback Drew Stanton hoped to become only the second team to beat the Irish at Notre Dame for five consecutive games Despite a win in 2004 the Irish had lost six of their last eight games against the Spartans 24 The Spartans led for much of the game at one point late in the third quarter after Stanton threw a 65 yard pass for his third touchdown of the game they had a 38 17 lead The Irish however came back later in the quarter and tied the game at 38 during the fourth quarter with three touchdown passes by Brady Quinn to give him a total of five for the game During the overtime period the Irish with the ball first missed three attempted passes by Quinn into the endzone and settled for a field goal to give them a 41 38 lead On the Spartans second play in overtime Stanton while running the option pitched the ball to Jason Teague for a 19 yard touchdown to win the game 25 The Irish dropped to 18th and the Spartans entered the national rankings at 23rd after the week After the game apparently upset at not having the Megaphone Trophy to raise after the win 26 a small group of Spartans planted the Michigan State flag on the field After the incident a number of other occurrences of flag planting happened leading to a banning of the practice by the Big Ten 27 Washington edit 1 2 3 4 Total 16 Irish 3 9 7 17 36 Huskies 0 3 0 14 17 The Irish next went on the road to face the Washington Huskies in a game dubbed the Ty Bowl 28 29 because the Huskies were led by former Irish coach Ty Willingham The Huskies came into the game never having beaten the Irish in five meetings including a 38 3 loss at Notre Dame in 2004 30 On the first drive of the game the Huskies easily moved forward on the Irish defense however were held without scoring when quarterback Isaiah Stanback s pass to Craig Chambers was fumbled on the goal line and recovered by the Irish The Irish didn t score on their first drive when the hold for a field goal attempt was botched However on their next drive the D J Fitzpatrick kicked a 25 yard field goal for the only score of the first quarter In the second quarter Evan Knudson tied the game on a 27 yard field goal On the next drive Darius Walker ran for a 17 yard touchdown giving the Irish a 9 3 lead after a missed extra point Fitzpatrick kicked another field goal of 39 yards to end scoring in the first half with the Irish leading 12 3 After two Irish failed fourth down attempts and a Huskies fumble Rashon Powers Neal ran for a 2 yard touchdown to give the Irish a 19 3 lead at the end of the third quarter In the fourth quarter Fitzpatrick kicked another field goal of 23 yards to extend the Irish lead to 19 Later in the quarter Brady Quinn threw his only touchdown of the game with a 52 yard pass to Jeff Samardzija Stanback led the Huskies for their first touchdown culminating in a 1 yard run by Mark Palaita however the Irish answered with an 11 yard touchdown by Travis Thomas for their final score of the game With three minutes left in the game Stanback was replaced with backup quarterback Johnny Durocher who threw a 41 yard touchdown to Chambers to give the final score of 36 17 31 With the win the Irish moved up in the rankings to 14th in the nation Purdue edit 1 2 3 4 Total 13 Irish 7 21 7 14 49 20 Boilermakers 0 0 14 14 28 The Irish next went on the road for the fourth time in the season to face the 20th ranked Purdue Boilermakers led by 9th year head coach Joe Tiller for the Shillelagh Trophy Although the Irish led the all time series against Purdue 49 25 2 the Boilermakers had won the two previous meetings and were hoping to come back after a double overtime loss the previous week 32 Although neither team was able to score on their opening drives the Irish quickly got going on their second and were led by Brady Quinn s passing and Darius Walker s rushes on a 90 yard drive that ended with a Rashon Powers Neal 1 yard touchdown to give the Irish the lead The Boilermakers led by Brandon Kirsch to the Irish 2 yard line failed to answer after a goal line fumble was recovered by the Irish Quinn then led the Irish on a 98 yard drive that lasted into the second quarter and ended with another 1 yard touchdown run by Powers Neal The ensuing kickoff was returned by Dorien Bryant 66 yards to give the Boilermakers the ball on the Notre Dame 30 yard line however they were unable to advance it and didn t score due to a missed 43 yard field goal Quinn took advantage and led the Irish on a 73 yard drive ending with his touchdown pass to Jeff Samardzija With another 10 yard touchdown run by Walker later in the quarter the Irish took a 28 0 lead at halftime In the second half the Boilermakers finally scored after Kirsch passed for a total of 73 yards on an 85 yard drive that ended with his touchdown 18 yard touchdown pass to Bryant The Irish answered on Quinn s second touchdown pass to Samardzija of 55 yards however Kirsch cut the Irish lead once again to 21 after a 3 yard touchdown pass to Bryant Although Quinn and Kirsch threw back to back interceptions neither team scored again in the third leaving the score 35 14 The Irish started the fourth quarter scoring with a 22 yard touchdown pass from Quinn to John Carlson for Quinn s final series in the game he would be replaced by back ups David Wolke and Marty Mooney for the final three drives Kirsch led the Boilermakers to a 5 yard touchdown rush by Kory Sheets for his final drive of the game he would be replaced by Curtis Painter for their final two drives The Irish helped by Wolke s only completion of the game for 29 yards scored again with a 10 yard rushing touchdown by Travis Thomas for the final Irish score of the game After both teams had turnovers Painter and the Boilermakers capitalized with Sheets second rushing touchdown of 8 yards giving the final score with the Irish winning 49 28 With Quinn s touchdown passes he tied a Notre Dame record held by John Huarte of 10 straight games with touchdown passes and also became the only Irish quarterback to pass for 300 yards in 3 straight games 33 After the game the Irish moved up to 12th in the nation and would move up again to 9th before their next game while the Boilermakers dropped from the rankings USC edit 1 2 3 4 Total 1 Trojans 14 0 7 13 34 9 Irish 7 14 0 10 31 Main article 2005 USC vs Notre Dame football game nbsp Notre Dame defense during the first half of game action In a game that looked to be overshadowed by pre game hype and assertions of being the newest Game of the Century 34 the meeting between perennial rivals Notre Dame and USC called by some the greatest intersectional rivalry in college football 35 would be the 77th meeting between the schools who play for the Jeweled Shillelagh The Trojans led by coach Pete Carroll and Heisman winning senior quarterback Matt Leinart were ranked first in the country were on a 27 game winning streak and had won three straight meetings with the Irish each by 31 points Expectations however were high that this game would be closer 36 nbsp Brady Quinn and the offense donning the green jerseys line up for a play In a surprise move after Weis insisted it wouldn t happen 37 the Irish wore green jerseys for the game The score was back and forth for much of the game with the Irish leading 21 14 at halftime after a pair of touchdowns by running backs Reggie Bush and LenDale White for the Trojans and a rushing touchdown by Travis Thomas a passing touchdown by Brady Quinn and a punt return for a touchdown by Tom Zbikowski for the Irish The Trojans took a 28 24 lead with five minutes left in the game when Reggie Bush ran for his third touchdown of the game however Quinn answered with four complete passes and his own 5 yard touchdown run to give the Irish a 31 28 lead with less than two minutes remaining On the Trojans last series however Leinart after being sacked and facing a fourth down on his own 26 yard line completed a 61 yard fade to Dwayne Jarrett to give the Trojans a last chance near the Irish goal line After a series of plays including Leinart fumbling the ball out of bounds the stadium clock incorrectly running out of time and part of the Notre Dame student section rushing the field the Trojans had the ball on the Irish 1 yard line with seven seconds remaining Instead of opting for the field goal and going to overtime Leinart tried to sneak into the end zone When he was stopped in a play that would be called the Bush Push Bush pushed him over the goal line for the winning score of 34 31 38 On June 10 2010 the NCAA found that Bush was ineligible for college athletics during the 2005 season and USC was forced to vacate all wins from that year However the loss still counts for Notre Dame BYU edit BYU at 12 Notre Dame 1 234TotalBYU 10 0130 23 Notre Dame 7 14217 49 Date October 22Location Notre Dame Stadium South Bend INGame start 2 30 p m ESTTelevision network NBCScoring summary19 51BYUJared McLaughlin 44 yard field goalBYU 3 0 17 12NDMaurice Stovall 10 yard pass from Brady Quinn D J Fitzpatrick kick ND 7 3 12 48BYUJonny Harline 12 yard pass from John Beck Jared McLaughlin kick BYU 10 7 210 33NDJeff Samardzija 14 yard pass from Brady Quinn D J Fitzpatrick kick ND 14 10 24 18NDMaurice Stovall 15 yard pass from Brady Quinn D J Fitzpatrick kick ND 21 10 312 50NDJeff Ssmardzija 21 yard pass from Brady Quinn D J Fitzpatrick kick ND 28 10 39 11BYUJohn Beck 10 yard run Jared McLaughlin kick ND 28 17 35 38BYUTodd Watkins 10 yard pass from John Beck pass failed ND 28 23 34 47NDMaurice Stovall 36 yard pass from Brady Quinn D J Fitzpatrick kick ND 35 23 32 16NDMaurice Stovall 24 yard pass from Brady Quinn D J Fitzpatrick kick ND 42 23 49 24NDTom Zbikowski 83 yard interception return D J Fitzpatrick kick ND 49 23 After the disappointment from the loss to USC the Irish looked to rebound against the BYU Cougars a team that gave the Irish a season opening loss in 2004 39 The Cougars were led by junior quarterback John Beck and first year head coach Bronco Mendenhall The Cougars had a 3 3 record but had won their previous two games The Cougars started the scoring with a 45 yard field goal but Brady Quinn completing six of seven passes on his first drive threw a 10 yard touchdown to Maurice Stovall to take the lead Beck led the Cougars on a drive that included an interception by Mike Richardson that was fumbled and recovered by the Cougars and finished with a 12 yard touchdown pass to Jonny Harline The Cougars led 10 7 at the end of the first quarter but a pair of 15 yard Quinn touchdown passes to Jeff Samardzija and Stovall gave the Irish a 21 10 lead at halftime In the third Quinn completed three long touchdown passes two to Stovall and one to Samardzija while Beck ran for a touchdown and threw another to Todd Watkins to end the third quarter with the Irish leading 42 23 The final score of the game came in the fourth when a Beck pass was intercepted by Tom Zbikowski and returned 83 yards giving the final score of the game with the Irish winning 49 23 40 The Irish won their first home game of the season and moved to 9th nationally Tennessee edit 1 2 3 4 Total Volunteers 3 7 11 0 21 9 Irish 14 7 0 20 41 nbsp Quinn directs the offense against Tennessee The Irish next played the struggling Tennessee Volunteers The teams last met at Tennessee in 2004 when the Irish surprised the top 15 ranked Volunteers with a 17 13 win 41 The Volunteers were led by coach Phillip Fulmer and quarterback Erik Ainge When the Volunteers didn t score on the first drive of the game the Irish took advantage with Brady Quinn leading an Irish drive that ended with his 43 yard touchdown pass to Anthony Fasano The ensuing kickoff was fumbled by the Volunteers and Quinn threw his second touchdown to Maurice Stovall three plays later Volunteers kicker James Wilhout kicked a 26 yard field goal for their only score of the quarter In the second quarter on a Volunteer punt Tom Zbikowski returned the ball 43 yards to give the Irish a 21 3 lead After a Quinn fumble that was recovered by the Volunteers Ainge led a 40 yard drive and threw a 7 yard touchdown pass to Bret Smith to give the halftime score of 21 10 In the second half after a failed fourth down conversion by the Irish Wilhout kicked a 30 yard field goal to put the Volunteers down by 8 When the Irish didn t answer Ainge and running back Arian Foster led the Volunteers to Foster s 3 yard touchdown With Ainge s pass to Smith completed for a two point conversion the game was tied at 21 at the end of the third In the fourth quarter however the Irish scored 20 including two D J Fitzpatrick field goals a Quinn touchdown pass to Jeff Samardzija and a Zbikowski interception return for a touchdown With no answers by the Volunteers the Irish won the game 41 21 42 With the win Quinn continued his Irish record touchdown passing streak to 13 games Samardzija s touchdown catch his 12th broke an Irish record of touchdown catches in a season and the Irish moved up in ranking to 7th nationally Navy edit 1 2 3 4 Total Navy 7 0 7 7 21 7 Irish 7 21 7 7 42 The Irish next played the Navy Midshipmen a team the Irish had played annually since 1927 and had beaten in 41 straight games a record NCAA winning streak Navy was led by option quarterback Lamar Owens and coach Paul Johnson The game began with a 73 yard Irish drive that ended with a 31 yard touchdown pass from Brady Quinn to Maurice Stovall Navy answered after a 69 yard drive that took half of the quarter when Adam Ballard ran for an 8 yard touchdown After both teams failed to convert on fourth downs in the second quarter Quinn led the Irish to a Travis Thomas 12 yard touchdown run On the next Navy possession a fumble by Owens was recovered by the Irish Quinn completed two passes on the drive and Darius Walker ran for a 12 yard touchdown After a Navy punt a Quinn pass to Anthony Fasano for an 8 yard touchdown gave the Irish a 28 7 lead at halftime A six minute drive by Navy to start the second half ended in a 1 yard touchdown run by Owens to bring Navy to within two touchdowns but Quinn answered on the next drive with a 17 yard touchdown pass to Stovall After both teams threw interceptions Quinn threw his fourth touchdown of the game a 10 yard pass to Stovall With a Brian Hampton 17 yard touchdown to Tyree Barnes Navy finished the scoring in the game The Irish won 42 21 43 with Quinn increasing his Notre Dame record touchdown passing streak to 14 games and the team extending its record winning streak over Navy to 42 games Syracuse edit 1 2 3 4 Total Orange 3 0 0 7 10 7 Irish 0 14 10 10 34 Notre Dame s next game and final home game of the season came against the 1 8 Syracuse Orange Syracuse led by first year coach Greg Robinson and quarterback Perry Patterson had spoiled the Irish chance of not having a losing season in 2003 when they routed the Irish in the Carrier Dome by 26 44 This year however it seemed like the Orange ranked last in total yards were over matched The Orange however kept up with the Irish in the first quarter and after a failed field goal attempt by D J Fitzpatrick and a 51 yard run by Damien Rhodes on the ensuing drive the Orange scored the first points of the game with a 31 yard field goal by John Barker On the next Irish drive Fitzpatrick s field goal attempt was blocked and the Orange kept the lead However four minutes later a 25 yard Brady Quinn pass to Maurice Stovall ended with a touchdown giving the Irish the lead A 30 yard pass to Jeff Samardzija on the second play of the next Irish drive gave the Irish a 14 3 lead that they would have at halftime On the first play of the third quarter Patterson was intercepted by Leo Ferrine who returned it 17 yards for a touchdown to give the Irish a 21 3 lead After a failed fourth down attempt at the Orange goal line and a pair of punts by the Orange Fitzpatrick gave the Irish a 24 3 lead with his 44 yard field goal In the fourth quarter Fitzpatrick kicked a 29 yard field goal Darius Walker ran for a 3 yard touchdown and Patterson threw an 18 yard touchdown to Joseph Kowaleski for the only Orange touchdown of the day to give the final score of 34 10 in favor of the Irish 45 With the game Quinn continued his Notre Dame record touchdown streak and the Irish moved to 6th nationally They were also one win away from being eligible for a BCS bowl Stanford edit 1 2 3 4 Total 6 Irish 14 0 6 18 38 Cardinal 7 7 0 17 31 The final Irish test of the regular season came on the road against the 5 5 Stanford Cardinal in the last game in Stanford Stadium before it would be renovated Stanford coached by first year coach Walt Harris and quarterback Trent Edwards and Notre Dame played annually since 1997 and have a minor rivalry for the Legends Trophy The Irish had won the three previous seasons when coached by former Cardinal head coach Ty Willingham and the Cardinal didn t look to have much chance in this game after losing in the Big Game to rival California with the Bears outrushing the Cardinal by 210 yards 46 The Irish took an early lead on the second play of the game when Brady Quinn threw an 80 yard touchdown to Jeff Samardzija however after a Quinn interception Edwards tied the game with a 27 yard touchdown to Mark Bradford The Irish scored the last points of the quarter with another Quinn touchdown to Samardzija this time for 7 yards to bring the game to 14 7 in favor of the Irish In the second quarter after both teams failed to convert fourth downs a 38 yard Edwards pass to Justin McCullum tied the game once again Although Quinn threw his second interception of the game later in the quarter neither team scored again in the half In the third quarter Quinn threw his third touchdown to Maurice Stovall for 10 yards however D J Fitzpatrick missed the extra point and left the Irish only winning by 6 With a missed 42 yard field goal by Fitzpatrick and the Cardinal not scoring in the quarter the Irish took a 20 14 lead to the fourth quarter Early in the fourth quarter Carl Gioia replaced Fitzpatrick and kicked a 29 yard field goal to put the Irish up two scores however on his kickoff T J Rushing returned the ball 87 yards to bring the Cardinal to within two points Quinn then brought the Irish on an 80 yard drive that ended with a Travis Thomas 8 yard touchdown run The Cardinal were only able to answer with a 31 yard field goal that made the score 30 24 in favor of the Irish Fitzpatrick was brought in during the next Irish drive but missed a 29 yard field goal that would have put the Irish up by two scores The Cardinal who had brought in backup quarterback T C Ostrander when Edwards didn t move the ball in the third quarter capitalized on the miss and took the lead on a 4 yard pass to Matt Traverso with less than two minutes left in the game Quinn then completed three long passes and Darius Walker ran the last 6 yards for the go ahead touchdown A direct snap to Walker on the two point conversion put the Irish up by a touchdown with less than a minute remaining Ostrander was able to bring the Cardinal to their 38 yard line on a 14 yard pass but was sacked on a fourth down to seal the win for the Irish 38 31 47 With the win the Irish were eligible for a BCS bowl and although falling to 7th in the rankings were ranked 6th by the BCS and invited to the Fiesta Bowl Fiesta Bowl edit 1 2 3 4 Total 6 Irish 7 0 6 7 20 4 Buckeyes 7 14 3 10 34 Main article 2006 Fiesta Bowl With 9 wins and a ranking of 6th in the BCS polls the Irish were invited to the Fiesta Bowl held in Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe Arizona to face the number 4 ranked Ohio State Buckeyes The BCS appearance was only the second for the Irish and the first since a 2000 loss to the Oregon State Beavers in the Fiesta Bowl The Buckeyes led by coach Jim Tressel and junior quarterback Troy Smith had a 9 2 record with losses to BCS contender Penn State and eventual national champion Texas Although both teams had long football histories they had only met four times previous to this game the latest in 1996 48 The Irish took an early lead on a 20 yard run by Darius Walker but Smith answered for the Buckeyes three minutes later with a 56 yard pass to Ted Ginn Jr to tie the game After Smith fumbled the ball on the Buckeye 15 yard line the Irish had another chance to take the lead However after not gaining a first down after three plays they attempted a fourth down conversion during which Quinn was sacked Without scoring the quarter ended with the game tied at 7 On the third play of the second quarter Smith once again scored a touchdown on a 68 yard pass to Ginn to give the Buckeyes a lead they would never relinquish On the Buckeyes next drive Smith brought them to the Irish 15 yard line before his fumble was recovered by the Irish The Irish however couldn t take advantage and on the Buckeyes next drive Smith threw an 85 yard touchdown pass to Santonio Holmes to give the Buckeyes a 21 7 lead With a blocked field goal attempt by the Buckeyes the score stayed the same at the half In the third quarter the Irish blocked a second field goal attempt and finally took advantage with a 10 yard rushing touchdown by Walker With a missed extra point and a 40 yard field goal by Josh Huston on the Buckeyes next possession the Buckeyes took a 24 13 lead into the fourth quarter In the fourth Huston added another field goal and Walker ran for a third touchdown before Antonio Pittman ran for his own 60 yard touchdown for the final score of the game The Buckeyes won 34 20 49 giving the Irish their NCAA record tying 8th straight bowl game loss 50 Notre Dame also finished 2 2 against schools from the Big Ten in 2005 Post season editNotre Dame records edit By the end of the season the 2005 team set 47 Notre Dame team and individual records 51 The team set 11 season records including most points 440 and most offensive yards 5728 Four players set individual season records including Jeff Samardzija s touchdown receptions 15 Brady Quinn s touchdown passes 32 Darius Walker s receptions by a running back 43 and D J Fitzpatrick s PATs 52 Seven individual game records were set including Quinn s touchdown passes 6 and Maurice Stovall s receptions 14 Samardzija set a record with 8 consecutive touchdown catches Walker another record with four consecutive 100 yard rushing games and Quinn s record of 16 consecutive games with a touchdown pass that began in 2004 and ended in the Fiesta Bowl With his records this season Quinn holds 30 Notre Dame individual records including games with 300 yards passing 5 becoming the only Irish player to throw for 400 yards in a game more than once Awards edit A number of Irish players and coaches were named post season award finalists and winners Head coach Charlie Weis was named by the Football Writers Association of America as the Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year 52 Offensive coordinator Michael Haywood was named by the American Football Coaches Association as the Assistant Coach of the Year 53 Offensive lineman John Sullivan was named by the Walter Camp Football Foundation as the Connecticut Player of the Year 54 wide receiver Jeff Samardzija was named as a finalist for the Fred Biletnikoff Award 55 and tight end Anthony Fasano named to the preseason Mckey Award watchlist was also named a finalist for the award 56 Quarterback Brady Quinn after finishing fourth in Heisman Trophy balloting 57 was nominated for two Player of the Year awards 58 59 two quarterback trophies 60 61 and won the Sammy Baugh Trophy 62 In addition to the awards three Irish players were named on All American teams Quinn Samardzija and safety Tom Zbikowski were all named the AP All America team Samardzija to the second team and Quinn and Zbiokowski to the third 63 In addition to the AP team Samardzija was named to seven other All America teams six on the first teams 64 Samardzija was also named as Notre Dame s NCAA record 79th Consensus All American 65 NFL draft edit In the 2006 NFL Draft three Irish players were drafted by NFL teams Fasano was taken by the Dallas Cowboys in the second round of the draft Maurice Stovall was taken by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the third round 66 and Dan Stevenson was taken in the sixth round by the New England Patriots 67 In addition to the three players taken in the draft six signed free agent contracts with NFL teams 68 References edit Fall From Grace November 30 2004 Retrieved June 22 2007 Wilbon Michael December 1 2004 Notre Dame s True Colors The Washington Post Retrieved June 22 2007 Notre Dame officials meet with Meyer in Utah December 2 2004 Retrieved June 22 2007 Weis to be introduced as Irish coach Monday December 13 2004 Retrieved June 22 2007 41 Notre Dame Archived from the original on June 8 2007 Retrieved June 22 2007 Kevin White Teleconference Transcript Archived from the original on December 24 2006 Retrieved June 22 2007 Forbes Gordon December 16 2004 Challenge for Weis Guide Pats build Irish USA Today Retrieved June 22 2007 Seven Notre Dame coaches visit Ohio recruit USA Today January 19 2005 Retrieved June 22 2007 Anthony Fasano Named To Mackey Award Watch List Retrieved June 22 2007 Fitzpatrick Among 30 Named To Groza Award Watch List Archived from the original on July 28 2012 Retrieved June 22 2007 Brandon Hoyte Named To Butkus Award Watch List Retrieved June 22 2007 Brady Quinn Named To Maxwell Award Watch List Retrieved June 22 2007 Football Coaching Staff Announced Retrieved June 23 2007 David Cutcliffe Resigns From The Football Staff Retrieved June 23 2007 Peter Vaas Named Football Quarterbacks Coach Retrieved June 23 2007 Notre Dame extends Weis through 2015 October 29 2005 Retrieved June 23 2007 Whiteside Kelly November 4 2005 Irish extension USA Today Retrieved June 23 2007 His Biggest Victory CNN November 2 2005 Archived from the original on June 15 2007 Retrieved June 23 2007 Pittsburgh s Palko takes home Player of Week honor USA Today November 16 2004 Retrieved June 23 2007 Weis outduels Wannstedt in matchup of new coaches Retrieved June 23 2007 Wolverines defense to be tested against Irish Retrieved June 24 2007 Freshman rusher leads Irish to surprise upset Retrieved June 24 2007 Weis joins Rockne in record books with victory Retrieved June 24 2007 Notre Dame hopes to avoid letdown vs Michigan State Retrieved June 24 2007 Spartans win fifth straight at Notre Dame Retrieved June 24 2007 Spartans regret South Bend flag raising September 21 2005 Retrieved June 24 2007 O Toole Thomas October 14 2005 Big Ten burying postgame flag plantings USA Today Retrieved June 24 2007 Notre Dame pours it on late to win Ty Bowl Archived from the original on January 3 2013 Retrieved June 24 2007 Irish travel to Seattle for Ty Bowl Archived from the original on September 29 2007 Retrieved June 24 2007 Washington Willingham aim for revenge vs Notre Dame Retrieved June 24 2007 Willingham loses first game against former team Retrieved June 24 2007 Purdue looks to bounce back vs Notre Dame Retrieved June 25 2007 Quinn throws for 440 yards 3 TDs as Irish roll Retrieved June 25 2007 Wilbon Michael October 16 2005 Southern Cal shows its true colors The Washington Post Retrieved June 25 2007 Notre Dame vs USC Greatest Intersectional Rivalry in College Football Bleacher Report Retrieved October 17 2014 Quinn Notre Dame hope to end USC s 27 game winning streak Retrieved June 25 2007 Charlie Weis Press Conference Transcript Oct 6 Archived from the original on March 11 2007 Retrieved June 25 2007 USC win streak intact after wild fourth quarter finish Retrieved June 25 2007 37 yard completion on third down seals win Retrieved June 25 2007 Irish snap home skid behind Quinn s six TDs Retrieved June 25 2007 Ainge separates shoulder joins Schaeffer on sidelines Retrieved June 25 2007 Quinn tosses three TDs as Irish top reeling Vols Retrieved June 25 2007 Quinn Stovall connection helps upend Midshipmen Retrieved June 25 2007 Notre Dame looks to keep rolling vs Syracuse Retrieved June 26 2007 Fighting Irish struggle early pull out win over Syracuse Retrieved June 25 2007 Notre Dame aims for BCS bowl berth at Stanford Retrieved June 26 2007 Irish hold off Stanford upset bid become BCS eligible Retrieved June 26 2007 Irish To Face Buckeyes In Tostitos Fiesta Bowl Retrieved June 26 2007 Smith Ginn lift speedy Ohio State to another Fiesta title Retrieved June 26 2007 11 Notre Dame vs 4 LSU Retrieved June 26 2007 Football s Record Setting 2005 Season Retrieved June 27 2007 Charlie Weis Earns FWAA s Eddie Robinson Coach Of The Year Award Retrieved June 27 2007 Michael Haywood Earns AFCA Assistant Coach Of The Year Award Retrieved June 27 2007 John Sullivan Named 2005 Walter Camp Retrieved June 27 2007 Samardzjia In The Final Running For Biletnikoff Award Retrieved June 27 2007 Anthony Fasano Named Mackey Award Finalist Retrieved June 27 2007 Brady Quinn Finishes Fourth In Heisman Trophy Balloting Retrieved June 27 2007 Brady Quinn A Nominee For Cingular ABC Sports All America Player Of The Year Retrieved June 27 2007 Quinn One Of Five Finalists For Walter Camp Player Of The Year Award Retrieved June 27 2007 Quinn Named A Manning Award Finalist Retrieved June 27 2007 Brady Quinn Named One Of Three O Brien Award Finalists Retrieved June 27 2007 Brady Quinn Wins Sammy Baugh Award Retrieved June 27 2007 Quinn Samardzija and Zbikowski Earn Mention On AP All America Teams Retrieved June 27 2007 Samardzija Earns Eighth All America Honor Retrieved June 27 2007 Jeff Samardzija Named Consensus All American Archived from the original on June 30 2008 Retrieved June 27 2007 Fasano and Stovall Taken On Day One Of 2006 NFL Draft Retrieved June 27 2007 Stevenson Becomes Third Notre Dame Football Player Taken In 2006 NFL Draft Retrieved June 27 2007 6 NOTRE DAME FOOTBALL STARS SIGN FREE AGENT PACTS WITH NFL TEAMS Archived from the original on June 8 2007 Retrieved June 27 2007 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2005 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team amp oldid 1183086773, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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