Notre Dame Fighting Irish football
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Notre Dame Fighting Irish
First season 1887
Staff
Athletic director Jack Swarbrick
Head coach Charlie Weis
4th year, 27–18
Stadium
Home stadium Notre Dame Stadium
Stadium capacity 80,795
Stadium surface Grass
Location Notre Dame, Indiana
League/Conference
Conference Independent
Team records
All-time record 826–278–42 (.739)
Postseason bowl record 13–15
Awards
National titles 11
Heisman winners 7
All-Americans 178
Pageantry
Colors Gold and Blue            
Fight song Notre Dame Victory March
Mascot Leprechaun
Marching band The Band of the Fighting Irish
Major Rivals USC Trojans
Michigan Wolverines
Michigan State Spartans
Navy Midshipmen
Purdue Boilermakers
Website UND.com

Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team is the football team of the University of Notre Dame, Indiana, United States. The team competes as an Independent at the NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision level. The current head coach is Charlie Weis.

Notre Dame has the most consensus national championships and has produced more All-Americans than any other Football Bowl Subdivision school. Additionally, seven Fighting Irish football players have won the Heisman Trophy.

Notre Dame is one of only two Catholic universities that field a team in the Football Bowl Subdivision, the other being Boston College. The team plays its home games on Notre Dame's campus at Notre Dame Stadium, also known as the "House that Rockne Built," which has a capacity of 80,795.

Contents

Championships and distinctions

National championships

  • Notre Dame has won eight wire (AP or Coaches) national championships.
  • Notre Dame claims national championships in an additional three seasons, for a total of 11 consensus national championships. Notre Dame, however, is often credited with 13 national championships in total. The 1938 and 1953 seasons are the reason for the discrepancy. In 1938, 8-1 Notre Dame was awarded the national championship by the Dickinson System, while Texas Christian (which finished 11-0) was awarded the championship by the Associated Press. In the 1953 season, an undefeated Notre Dame team (9-0-1) was named national champion by every major selector except the AP and UPI (Coaches) polls, where the Irish finished second in both to 10-1 Maryland. As Notre Dame has a policy of only recognizing AP and Coaches Poll national championships post-1936, the school does not officially recognize the 1953 national championship.12
  • Notre Dame has been voted "national champion" by at least one selector in an additional eight seasons (1919, 1920, 1927, 1964, 1967, 1970, 1989, 1993).3

The following is a list of Notre Dame's 11 consensus national championships:

Year Coach Selector Record Bowl
1924 Knute Rockne Helms, CFRA, NCF 10-0 Won Rose
1929 Knute Rockne Helms, CFRA, NCF 9-0 -
1930 Knute Rockne Helms, CFRA, NCF 10-0 -
1943 Frank Leahy AP 9-1 -
1946 Frank Leahy AP 8-0-1 -
1947 Frank Leahy AP 9-0 -
1949 Frank Leahy AP 10-0 -
1966 Ara Parseghian AP, Coaches 9-0-1 -
1973 Ara Parseghian AP 11-0 Won Sugar
1977 Dan Devine AP, Coaches 11-1 Won Cotton
1988 Lou Holtz AP, Coaches 12-0 Won Fiesta
Consensus national championships 11

Distinctions*

The Leprechaun
  • Notre Dame has the 2nd highest winning percentage in NCAA history (.738), second only to Michigan (.743).1
  • The football program is tied with USC for most Heisman trophy winners at seven (Ohio State has seven Heisman trophies that were won by six players).
  • Notre Dame has produced the most All-Americans of any college program, including consensus All-Americans(79 with 96 selections).4
  • Notre Dame is represented by 48 players and coaches in the College Football Hall of Fame, the most of any university.56
  • Ten former players are in the Pro Football Hall of Fame, second only to USC(11). Notre Dame has produced the largest number of players to go on to play in the National Football League of any program in the country. As of the 2008 NFL draft, 463 players have been drafted.7
  • Helped by its status as a highly regarded academic institution (ranked 18th by U.S. News & World Report),8 Notre Dame is second only to Nebraska in Academic All-Americans (43).
  • Since 1962, Notre Dame has graduated 98.74% of its football players in four years. As of 2006, only 13 football players in this time have left Notre Dame without finishing their degree requirements. Also of note is the 90% graduation rate of ND's African-American players (only Navy and Boston College have higher African American graduation rates).9
  • Notre Dame holds the NCAA record for Most consecutive wins over one opponent, beating the US Naval Academy (USNA) 43 times in a row before falling to them in 2007.10
  • The football program is also known for ending the Oklahoma NCAA record winning streak of 47 games in 1957. Incidentally, Oklahoma's 28-21 loss to Notre Dame to open the 1953 season was the last loss before the beginning of the streak.11
  • Notre Dame has had 12 undefeated seasons and 10 others with at most one loss or tie. Notre Dame has only had 12 losing seasons in 118 seasons of playing football.12
  • Notre Dame is 3-3-1 in games where the national title winners from the previous two years have met in a regular season game. There have only been 10 of these games played in college football history, the most recent being LSU(2007 winner) vs. Florida(2006 winner) in 2008. Notre Dame has played in 7 of the 10 games:
  • 1945 - Army def. Notre Dame 48-0
  • 1947 - Notre Dame def. Army 27-7
  • 1968 - Notre Dame tie USC 21-21
  • 1974 - USC def. Notre Dame 55-24
  • 1978 - Notre Dame def. Pitt 26-17
  • 1989 - Miami def. Notre Dame 27-10
  • 1990 - Notre Dame def. Miami 29-20
  • The Bowl Championship Series' "Notre Dame rule" gives the university unique privileges in the postseason, due to its independent status. If Notre Dame finishes in the top 8 of BCS teams, they are automatically selected. If they finish in the top 12, they are considered for a BCS spot. Notre Dame now receives $4.5 million for playing in a BCS game and $1 million when they do not. In essence, they are treated like a conference team in either case. This is a change from the previous arrangement in which the Irish received $14 million for a BCS appearance and no cash otherwise.
  • Notre Dame is one of only five of the 119 Football Bowl Subdivision (formerly Division I-A) teams to have never played a Football Championship Subdivision (formerly Division I-AA) team since the division was made in 1978.13

*As of 2007

Number 1 vs. number 2

Notre Dame has participated in nine "#1 vs #2" matchups since the AP poll began in 1936.14 They have a record of 5-2-2 in such games, with a 4-0-1 record as the #1 team in such matchups. Here's a list of such games:

Date #1 Team #2 Team Outcome
9 October 1943 Notre Dame Michigan W 35-14
20 November 1943 Notre Dame Iowa Pre-Flight W 14-13
10 November 1945 Army Notre Dame L 48-0
9 November 1946 Army Notre Dame T 0-0
19 November 1966 Notre Dame Michigan State T 10-10
28 September 1968 Purdue Notre Dame L 37-22
26 November 1988 Notre Dame Southern Cal W 27-10
16 September 1989 Notre Dame Michigan W 24-19
13 November 1993 Florida State Notre Dame W 31-24

Historic games

Notre Dame has played in many regular season games that have been widely regarded by both the media15 and sports historians16 as historic or famous games. Notre Dame has played in many games labeled as "game of the century" games as well as several #1 vs #2 matchups,17 It has also participated in several games that ended record streaks in college football. The games listed are widely regarded as of historical importance to the game of college football and are written about by sports historians and make many sports writer’s lists.

Notre Dame has also played in several bowl games considered by many sportswriters to be among the best bowl games played:2829

History

The beginning (1887–1917)

American football did not have an auspicious beginning at the University of Notre Dame. In their inaugural game on November 23, 1887 the Irish lost to Michigan by a score of 8–0. Their first win came in the final game of the 1888 season when the Irish defeated Harvard Prep by a score of 20–0. At the end of the 1888 season they had a record of 1–3 with all three losses being at the hands of Michigan by a combined score of 43–9. Between 1887 and 1899 Notre Dame compiled a record of 31 wins, 15 losses, and four ties against a diverse variety of opponents ranging from local high school teams to other universities. At the beginning of the 20th century college football began to increase in popularity and became more standardized with the introduction of the Intercollegiate Athletic Association of the United States (IAAUS) in 1906. That organization would become the NCAA in 1910. Notre Dame continued its success during this time and achieved their first victory over Michigan in 1909 by the score of 11–3 after which Michigan refused to play Notre Dame again for 33 years. By the end of the 1912 season they had amassed a record of 108 wins, 31 losses, and 13 ties.

Jesse Harper became head coach in 1913 and remained so until he retired in 1917. During his tenure the Irish began playing only intercollegiate games and posted a record of 34 wins, 5 losses, and one tie. This period would also mark the beginning of the rivalry with Army and the continuation of rivalries with Michigan State.

In 1913, Notre Dame burst into the national consciousness and helped to transform the collegiate game in a single contest. In an effort to gain respect for a regionally successful but small-time Midwestern football program, Harper scheduled games in his first season with national powerhouses Texas, Penn State, and Army. On November 1, 1913, the Notre Dame squad stunned the Black Knights of the Hudson 35-13 in a game played at West Point. Led by quarterback Charlie "Gus" Dorais and end (soon to be legendary coach) Knute Rockne, the Notre Dame team attacked the Cadets with an offense that featured both the expected powerful running game but also long and accurate downfield forward passes from Dorais to Rockne.

This game has been miscredited as the "invention" of the forward pass but is considered the first major contest in which a team used the forward pass regularly throughout the game. (For example, Homer Woodson Hargiss regularly called the play for quarterback Arthur Schabinger at the College of Emporia as early as 1910.30)

Rockne era (1918–1930)

See also: Knute Rockne

Knute Rockne became head coach in 1918. Under Rockne the Irish would post a record of 105 wins, 12 losses, and 5 ties. During his 13 years the Irish won six national championships, had five undefeated seasons, won the Rose Bowl in 1925, and produced players such as the "Four Horsemen,". Knute Rockne has the highest win percentage (.881) in college football history.

Among the events that occurred during Rockne’s tenure none may be more famous than the Rockne’s Win one for the Gipper speech. George "the Gipper" Gipp was a player on Rockne’s earlier teams who died of strep throat in 1920. Army came into the 1928 matchup undefeated and was the clear favorite. Notre Dame, on the other hand, was having their worst season under Rockne’s leadership and entered the game with a 4–2 record. At the end of the half Army was leading and looked to be in command of the game. Rockne entered the locker room and gave his account of Gipp’s final words: "I've got to go, Rock. It's all right. I'm not afraid. Some time, Rock, when the team is up against it, when things are going wrong and the breaks are beating the boys, tell them to go in there with all they've got and win just one for the Gipper. I don't know where I'll be then, Rock. But I'll know about it, and I'll be happy." The speech, although possibly fictional, inspired the team and they went on to upset Army and win the game 12–6.

The last game Rockne coached was on December 14, 1930 when he led a group of Notre Dame All Stars against the New York Giants in New York City. The game31 raised funds for the Mayor's Relief Committee for the Unemployed and Needy of the city. Fifty-thousand fans turned out to see the reunited "Four Horsemen" along with players from Rockne's other championship teams take the field against the pros.32

Rockne died in the plane crash of TWA Flight 599 in Kansas on March 31, 1931, while on his way to help in the production of the film The Spirit of Notre Dame. The crash site, located in a remote expanse of Kansas known as the Flint Hills, now features a Rockne Memorial.33

Rockne was the subject of the 1940 film Knute Rockne, All American.

After Rockne (1931–1940)

Upon Rockne’s death Heartley "Hunk" Anderson took the helm of the Irish leading them to a record of 16 wins, 9 losses, and two ties. Anderson was a former Irish player under Rockne and was serving as an assistant coach at the time of Rockne's death. Anderson resigned as Irish head coach in 1934 and was replaced by Elmer Layden, who was one of Rockne’s "Four Horsemen" in the 1920s. After graduating, Layden played professional football for one year and then began a coaching career. The Irish posted a record of 47 wins, 13 losses, and 3 ties in 7 years under Layden, the most successful record of an ND coach not to win a national championship. He left Notre Dame after the 1940 season to become Commissioner of the National Football League (NFL).

Leahy era (1941–1953)

See also: Frank Leahy

Frank Leahy was hired by Notre Dame to take over for Layden in 1941, and was another former Irish player who played during the Rockne Era. After graduating from Notre Dame, Leahy held several coaching positions, including line coach of the "Seven Blocks of Granite" of Fordham University that helped that team win all but two of their games between 1935 and 1937. He then coached the Boston College Eagles to a win in the 1941 Sugar Bowl and a share of the national championship. His move to Notre Dame began a new period of gridiron success for the Irish, and ensured Leahy's place among the winningest coaches in the history of college football.34

Leahy coached the team for 11 seasons, from 1941 to 1943 and 1946 to 1953. He has the second highest winning percentage (.864) of any college coach in history.34 He led the Irish to a record of 87 wins, 11 losses, and 9 ties including 39 games without a loss (37–0–2),34 four national championships,34 and six undefeated seasons. A fifth national championship was lost because of a tie in 1953 against Iowa, in a game that caused a minor scandal at the time, when it appeared that some Irish players had faked injuries to stop the clock. Leahy retired in 1954 reportedly due to health reasons, although he later maintained that he left because he felt he wasn't wanted anymore.citation needed

From 1944 to 1945, Leahy served in the U.S. Navy and was honorably discharged as a Lieutenant. Ed McKeever, Leahy’s assistant coach, became interim head coach while Leahy was in the Navy. During his one year at the helm the Irish managed 8 wins and 2 losses. McKeever left Notre Dame in 1945 to take over as head coach of Cornell University. McKeever was replaced by Hugh Devore for the 1945 season and led the Irish to a 7-2-1 record.

After Leahy (1954–1963)

The departure of Leahy ushered in a downward slope in Notre Dame’s performance, referred to in various circles as a period of deemphasis. Terry Brennan was hired as the Notre Dame head coach in 1954 and would stay until 1958. He departed with a total of 32 wins and 18 losses. But note: the 32 wins included 17 in 1954 and 1955. From 1956 to 1958 his record was 15–15. Brennan was a former player under Leahy and before joining the Irish had coached the Mount Carmel High School team in Chicago, Illinois and later the freshman squad at Notre Dame. His first two seasons the Irish were ranked 4th and 9th respectively. However, in the light of what would follow those first seasons, some observers began to wonder if Brennan's early success owed more to the residual effects of Leahy's coaching on Brennan's first two cadres than it did to any notable brilliance of his own.who? It was the 1956 season that began to darken his reputation, for it became one of the most dismal in the team’s history and saw them finish the season with a mere 2 wins, including losses to Michigan State, Oklahoma, and Iowa. The Irish would recover the following season, posting a record of 7-3 and including in their wins a stunning upset of Oklahoma, in Norman, that ended the Sooners' still-standing record of 47 consecutive wins. In Brennan’s final season, though, the Irish finished 6-4. Brennan was fired in Mid-December and served as the conditioning coach for the Cincinnati Reds during spring training in 1959.

Fifty years after Brennan's appointment, one could look back at Notre Dame's hiring policies and notice a curious pattern: the recurrent hiring of inexperienced coaches in the wake of legends. Brennan following Leahy; Gerry Faust following the hall-of-fame tandem of Parseghian and Devine; and, finally, Davie following Lou Holtz. In each case the Irish had hired a youthful coach with no experience as a head coach, and in each case the choices led to bitter disappointment on the field.citation needed

Joe Kuharich took over for Brennan in 1959 and to date remains the only Irish head coach to leave the team with a losing record. During his 4 year tenure as coach, the Irish finished 17-23 and they never finished better than .500 in a season. Hugh Devore once again filled in the gap between coaches and led the Irish to a 2-7 record.

Parseghian era (Era of Ara)(1964–1974)

See also: Ara Parseghian
Ara Parseghian Statue, dedicated September 22, 2007

Ara Parseghian was a former college football player for the Miami University Redskins until 1947 and became their assistant coach in 1950 and head coach in 1951, after a two year stint playing for the Cleveland Browns. In 1956 he moved to Northwestern University, where he stayed for eight years. In 1964 he was hired to replace Devore as head football coach and immediately brought the team back to their former levels of success. In his first year the Irish improved their record to 9-1, earning Parseghian coach of the year honors.

It was under Parseghian, that Notre Dame had lifted its 40-plus year-old "no bowl games" policy, beginning with the season of 1969.

During his eleven year career, the Irish amassed a record of 95-17-4 and captured two uncontested national championships as well as the MacArthur Bowl in 1964. The Irish also had two undefeated seasons in 1966 and 1973, had three major bowl wins in five appearances, and produced one Heisman Trophy winner. In 1971, Cliff Brown became the first African-American quarterback to start a game for the program. Parseghian was forced to retire after the 1974 season for medical reasons.

Devine era (1975–1980)

See also: Dan Devine

Dan Devine was hired to take over as head coach upon Parseghian's retirement in 1975. Devine was already a highly successful coach and had led Arizona State, Missouri, and the Green Bay Packers. When he arrived at Notre Dame he already had a college coaching record of 120 wins, 40 losses, and 8 ties and had led his teams to victory in 4 bowl games. At Notre Dame he would lead the Irish to 53 wins, 16 losses, and 1 tie. The Irish were winners of 3 major bowl games and captured one national championship in 1977. Devine resigned as head football coach in 1980.

Faust era (1981-1985)

Gerry Faust was hired to replace Devine for the 1981 season. Prior to Notre Dame, Faust had been one of the more successful high school football coaches in the country. As coach of Moeller High School in Cincinnati, Ohio he amassed a 174-17-2 record. Despite his success in the high school ranks, his success at Notre Dame was mixed and his record mediocre at best. In his first season the Irish finished 5-6. The most successful years under Faust were the 1983 and 1984 campaigns where the Irish finished 7-5 and made trips to the Liberty Bowl and Aloha Bowl respectively. Faust resigned at the end of the 1985 season to take over as head coach for the University of Akron. Faust was recently invited by head coach Charlie Weis to speak to the 2006 team at the annual football awards banquet.

Holtz era (1986–1996)

See also: Lou Holtz

Lou Holtz had 17 years of coaching experience by the time he was hired to lead the Irish. He had previously been head coach of William and Mary, North Carolina State, Arkansas, and Minnesota. Holtz began in 1986 where his predecessor left off in 1985, finishing with an identical record of 5 wins and 6 losses. However, unlike the 1985 squad, which was generally outcoached and outplayed, Holtz's 1986 edition was competitive in nearly every game, losing five out of those six games by a combined total of 14 points. That would be his only losing season as he posted a record of 95-24-2 over the next ten seasons adding up to a 100-30-2 docket overall.1

In contrast to Faust, Holtz was well-known as a master motivator and a strict disciplinarian. He displayed the latter trait in spades when two of his top contributing players showed up late for dinner right before the then top-ranked Irish played second-ranked Southern California in the final regular season game of 1988. In a controversial move, coach Lou Holtz took his 10-0 Irish squad to L.A. without stars Ricky Watters and Tony Brooks, who he suspended for disciplinary reasons.35 This was not the first time these players had gotten into trouble and the players had been warned there would be serious consequences if it happened again. His move was vindicated when the Irish defeated USC anyway.35

Holtz was named national coach of the year (Paul "Bear" Bryant Award) in 1988, the same season he took Notre Dame to an upset of #1 Miami in the Catholics vs. Convicts series and a win over West Virginia University in the Fiesta Bowl, thus capturing the National Championship. His 1989 and 1993 squads narrowly missed repeating the feat. Overall, he took Notre Dame to one undefeated season, 9 consecutive New Year’s Day bowl games, and top 10 finishes in the AP poll in five seasons.1 Holtz resigned from Notre Dame in 1996.

Davie era (1997–2001)

Bob Davie, who had been Holtz's defensive coordinator from 1994 to 1996, was promoted to head coach when Holtz departed. One of his first major decisions was to fire long-time offensive line coach Joe Moore, who then successfully sued the university for age discrimination.36 On Davie's watch, the team suffered three bowl game losses (1997's Independence Bowl, 1998's Gator Bowl, and 2000's Fiesta Bowl), it failed to qualify for a bowl game in two others (1999 and 2001). The highlight of Davie's tenure was a 36-20 upset win in 1998 over fifth ranked Michigan, the defending national champion. Davie also helmed the thrilling 25–24 home game victory over USC in 1999. Davie nearly defeated top ranked Nebraska in 2000, with the Irish comeback bid falling short in overtime 24-27. The aforementioned 2000 Fiesta Bowl was Notre Dame's first invitation to the Bowl Championship Series. The Irish were humbled by 32 points to Oregon State, but would finish #15 in the AP Poll, Davie's highest ranking as head coach. The 2001 squad was awarded the American Football Coaches Association Achievement Award for its 100% graduation rate.

Following the 1998 season, the team fell into a pattern of frustrating inconsistency, alternating between successful and mediocre seasons. Scandal rocked the program when the NCAA placed the university on probation at the end of the 1999 season, citing gifts given to football players by a Notre Dame booster, Kim Dunbar.37 Despite Davie's rocky tenure, new athletic director Kevin White gave the coach a contract extension following the Fiesta Bowl-capped 2000 season, then saw the team start 0-3 in 2001 – the first such start in school history. Disappointed by the on-field results, coupled with the Joe Moore and Kim Dunbar scandals, the administration decided to dismiss Davie. On December 9, 2001, Notre Dame hired George O'Leary to replace Davie. However, New Hampshire Union Leader reporter Jim Fennell — while researching a "local boy done good" story on O'Leary — uncovered misrepresentations in O'Leary's résumé that had influenced the administration's decision to hire him.38 The resulting media scandal embarrassed Notre Dame officials, and tainted O'Leary; he resigned five days later, before coaching a single practice.

Willingham era (2002–2004)

Once again in need of a new head coach, the school turned to Tyrone Willingham, the head coach at Stanford. Bringing a feeling of change and excitement to campus, Willingham led the 2002 squad to a 10-2 regular season record, including an 8-0 start with wins over #7 Michigan and #11 Florida State, and a #4 ranking. This great early start, however, would be the lone highlight of Willingham's tenure, as Notre Dame finished the year with a heart-breaking loss to Boston College, then lopsided losses to USC and North Carolina State (in the Gator Bowl). The program faltered over the next two seasons under Willingham, compiling an 11–12 record. During this time, Notre Dame lost a game by at least 30 points on 5 occasions. (For perspective, in the previous 40 seasons (1961-2000), Notre Dame had lost by at least 30 points only four times. Bob Davie lost by 30 points only once.) They also suffered a home loss to Purdue by 25 points. Furthermore, Willingham's 2004 recruiting class was judged by analysts to be the worst at Notre Dame in more than two decades.39 Citing Notre Dame's third consecutive 4-touchdown loss to arch-rival USC compounded by another year of sub-par recruiting efforts, the university chose to pay out the remainder of Willingham's five-year contract at the conclusion of the 2004 season.

Reports circulated that Urban Meyer might be hired as Willingham's successor. Meyer was a highly sought after coach and a former wide receivers coach at Notre Dame.40 Following a well-publicized courtship by the Irish, Meyer chose instead to accept the head coaching position at the University of Florida. Notre Dame subsequently hired Charlie Weis, the offensive coordinator of the New England Patriots (who at the time were en route to their third Super Bowl victory in four years). Weis had graduated from Notre Dame, but had never played for its football team.

Weis era (2005–present)

See also: Charlie Weis
Charlie Weis

Charlie Weis became head football coach for the Irish beginning with the 2005 season. In his inaugural season he led Notre Dame to a record of 9-3, including an appearance in the Fiesta Bowl, where they were defeated by the Ohio State Buckeyes 34-20. Weis's impact was apparent when, in the first half of the first game (against Pittsburgh), Notre Dame had gained more offensive yards than it had in 5 games combined, during the previous season. Quarterback Brady Quinn would go on to break numerous team passing records that season and rise to the national spotlight, by holding 35 Notre Dame records as well as becoming a top Heisman contender. The school administration was so impressed with the turnaround, it made the surprise move of offering Weis a (ten-year) contract extension midway through his inaugural season.41

Weis and the Irish went into the 2006 season with a #2 preseason ranking in the ESPN/Coaches Poll. They finished the regular season with a 10-2 record, losing only to Michigan and USC. Notre Dame accepted a bid to the 2007 Sugar Bowl, losing to LSU 41-14. This marked their ninth consecutive post-season/bowl game loss, the longest drought in NCAA history. As a result, Notre Dame dropped to #17 in the final rankings. This also gave the program the Division 1-A record for the most consecutive bowl game defeats. The football program's overall bowl game record now stands at 13-15.

In the wake of a graduating class that sent eleven players to the NFL,42 plus All-American wide receiver Jeff Samardzija to the Chicago Cubs,43 the 2007 season (3-9) included various negative milestones: the most losses in a single year (9);44 two of the ten worst losses ever (38-0 losses to both Michigan and USC); and the first 6-game losing streak for home games. Its losses to Navy and Air Force marked the first time Notre Dame has lost to two military academies in the same season since 1944, and the first time in the BCS era that Notre Dame went winless against mid-majors. The Naval Academy recorded their first win over the Irish since 1963, breaking the NCAA-record 43-game streak. Notre Dame did manage to close out a season with two straight wins for the first time since 1992.45

All-time records

For more details on this topic, see Notre Dame football yearly totals.

Notre Dame's all time record stands at 824 wins, 278 losses, and 42 ties (as of before the 2008 season). Its 824 wins are second only to Michigan and its 278 losses are the lowest of any college programs that have been playing football for 100 years or more.citation needed

All-time coaching records

Tenure Coach Years Record Pct.
1887–89, 92–93 None 5 7–4-1 .625
1894 J.L. Morison 1 3–1–1 .700
1895 H.G. Hadden 1 3–1–0 .750
1896–98 Frank E. Hering 3 12–6–1 .658
1899 James McWeeney 1 6–3–1 .650
1900–01 Pat O'Dea 2 14–4–2 .750
1902–03 James F. Faragher 2 14–2–2 .843
1904 Red Salmon 1 5–3–0 .625
1905 Henry J. McGlew 1 5–4–0 .556
1906–07 Thomas A. Barry 2 12–1–1 .893
1908 Victor M. Place 1 8–1–0 .889
1909–10 Shorty Longman 2 11–1–2 .857
1911–12 Jack Marks 2 13–0–2 .933
1913–17 Jesse Harper 5 34–5–1 .863
1918–30 Knute Rockne 13 105–12–5 .881
1931–33 Hunk Anderson 3 16–9–2 .630
1934–40 Elmer Layden 7 47–13–3 .770
1941–43, 46–53 Frank Leahy 11 87–11–9 .855
1944 Ed McKeever 1 8–2–0 .800
1945, 63 Hugh Devore 2 9–9–1 .500
1954–58 Terry Brennan 5 32–18-0 .640
1959–62 Joe Kuharich 4 17–23–0 .425
1964–74 Ara Parseghian 11 95–17–4 .836
1975–80 Dan Devine 6 53–16–1 .764
1981–85 Gerry Faust 5 30–26–1 .535
1986–96 Lou Holtz 11 100–30–2 .765
1997–2001 Bob Davie 5 35–25 .583
2001* George O'Leary 0 0–0 .000
2002–2004 Tyrone Willingham 3 21-15 .583
2004† Kent Baer 1 0–1 .000
2005–present Charlie Weis 3 24–15 .615
Totals 30 coaches 119 seasons 826–278–42 .739
* George O'Leary did not coach a single practice or game, being fired five days after being hired; O'Leary misrepresented his academic credentials.
† Kent Baer served as interim head coach for one game at the 2004 Insight Bowl after Tyrone Willingham was fired.

Bowl games

Notre Dame has made 28 Bowl appearances, winning 13 and losing 15.46 It has played in the Rose Bowl (1 win), the Cotton Bowl (5 wins, 2 losses), the Orange Bowl (2 wins, 3 losses), the Sugar Bowl (2 wins, 2 losses), the Gator Bowl (1 win, 2 losses), the Liberty Bowl (1 win), the Aloha Bowl (1 loss), the Fiesta Bowl (1 win, 3 losses), the Independence Bowl (1 loss), and the Insight Bowl (1 loss). As of the 2007 season, Notre Dame has lost 9 consecutive bowl games dating back to 1995, setting the NCAA record for consecutive bowl losses. The streak is currently active.47 Notre Dame has lost by an average of 17 points over the 12-year span.

Date Bowl W/L Opponent PF PA
January 1, 1925 Rose Bowl W Stanford 27 10
January 1, 1970 Cotton Bowl L Texas 17 21
January 1, 1971 Cotton Bowl W Texas 24 11
January 1, 1973 Orange Bowl L Nebraska 6 40
December 31, 1973 Sugar Bowl W Alabama 24 23
January 1, 1975 Orange Bowl W Alabama 13 11
December 27, 1976 Gator Bowl W Penn State 20 9
January 2, 1978 Cotton Bowl W Texas 38 10
January 1, 1979 Cotton Bowl W Houston 35 34
January 1, 1981 Sugar Bowl L Georgia 10 17
December 29, 1983 Liberty Bowl W Boston College 19 18
December 29, 1984 Aloha Bowl L SMU 20 27
January 1, 1988 Cotton Bowl L Texas A&M 10 35
January 2, 1989 Fiesta Bowl W West Virginia 34 21
January 1, 1990 Orange Bowl W Colorado 21 6
January 1, 1991 Orange Bowl L Colorado 9 10
January 1, 1992 Sugar Bowl W Florida 39 28
January 1, 1993 Cotton Bowl W Texas A&M 28 3
January 1, 1994 Cotton Bowl W Texas A&M 24 21
January 2, 1995 Fiesta Bowl L Colorado 24 41
January 1, 1996 Orange Bowl L Florida State 26 31
December 28, 1997 Independence Bowl L LSU 9 27
January 1, 1999 Gator Bowl L Georgia Tech 28 35
January 1, 2001 Fiesta Bowl L Oregon State 9 41
January 1, 2003 Gator Bowl L North Carolina State 6 28
December 28, 2004 Insight Bowl L Oregon State 21 38
January 2, 2006 Fiesta Bowl L Ohio State 20 34
January 3, 2007 Sugar Bowl L LSU 14 41
Total 28 bowl games 13-15 575 671

Players and coaches

See also: Notre Dame starting quarterbacks and Fighting Irish football players

Heisman Trophy

See also: Heisman Trophy

Seven Notre Dame football players have won the prestigious Heisman Trophy. As of 2006, Notre Dame, Ohio State, and USC are tied for the most Heisman Trophy winners, with 7. 48

Heisman Voting:

49

Other national award winners

Leon Hart - 194950
Johnny Lattner - 1952, 195350
Jim Lynch - 196650
Ross Browner - 197750
Brady Quinn - 200651
Ken MacAfee - 197752
Tim Brown - 198753
Raghib Ismail - 199053
Tony Rice - 198954
Brady Quinn - 200654
Brady Quinn - 200655
George Connor - 194656
Bill Fischer - 194856
Ross Browner - 197656
Walt Patulski - 197157
Ross Browner - 197757
Chris Zorich - 199057
Aaron Taylor - 199357
Terry Hanratty - 196758
Brady Quinn - 200558

Coaching awards

Ara Parseghian - 196459
Lou Holtz - 198859
Ara Parseghian - 196460
Lou Holtz - 198860
Charlie Weis - 200560
Tyrone Willingham - 200261

College Football Hall of Fame

See also: College Football Hall of Fame

48 former Notre Dame players and coaches have been inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame, located in South Bend, Indiana.62 Notre Dame leads all universities in players inducted.

Name Position Year Inducted
Hunk Anderson Guard 1974
Angelo Bertelli Quarterback 1972
Ross Browner Defensive End 1999
Jack Cannon Guard 1965
Frank Carideo Quarterback 1954
George Connor Tackle 1963
Jim Crowley Halfback 1966
Zygmont Czarobski Tackle 1977
Dan Devine Coach 1985
Bob Dove End 2000
Ray Eichenlaub Fullback 1972
Bill Fischer Tackle/Guard 1983
George Gipp Halfback 1951
Jerry Groom Center 1994
Ralph Guglielmi Quarterback 2001
Jesse Harper Coach 1994
Leon Hart End 1973
Frank Hoffman Guard 1978
Lou Holtz Coach 2008
Paul Hornung Quarterback 1985
John Huarte Quarterback 2005
Johnny Lattner Halfback 1979
Elmer Layden Fullback 1951
Frank Leahy Coach 1970
Johnny Lujack Quarterback 1960
Jim Lynch Linebacker 1992
Ken MacAfee Tight End 1997
Jim Martin End/Tackle 1995
Bert Metzger Guard 1982
Creighton Miller Halfback 1976
Don Miller Halfback 1970
Edgar Miller Tackle 1966
Fred Miller Tackle 1985
Wayne Millner End 1990
Alan Page Defensive End 1993
Ara Parseghian Coach 1980
Knute Rockne Coach 1951
Louis Salmon Fullback 1971
Marchy Schwartz Halfback 1974
Bill Shakespeare Halfback 1983
Red Sitko Halfback/Fullback 1984
John "Clipper" Smith Guard 1975
Harry Stuhldreher Quarterback 1958
Joe Theismann Quarterback 2003
Adam Walsh Center 1968
Bob Williams Quarterback 1988
Tommy Yarr Center 1987
Chris Zorich Defensive Tackle 2007

Current roster and staff

  • Team Roster:63

Uniforms

The team in their current home uniforms
Former quarterback Brady Quinn in the current away uniform

Notre Dame's home jersey is dark blue with white numerals, gold outlining, and a small interlocking "ND" logo at the base of the collar. The away jersey is white with blue numerals, gold outlining, and the interlocking "ND" at the collar. Neither jersey includes the player's name on the back at the present time, but names were included during the Dan Devine and Gerry Faust eras. Gold pants, with a small ND logo just below the left waist, are worn with both home and away jerseys.

Notre Dame's helmets are solid gold with gray facemasks, the gold being emblematic of the University's famed "Golden Dome." It is a Notre Dame tradition for the team's student managers to spray-paint the team's helmets prior to each game, ensuring that they keep their gold shine each week. The paint contains actual gold.


Helmet
Left arm Body Right arm
Trousers
Socks
Home
Helmet
Left arm Body Right arm
Trousers
Socks
Away
Helmet
Left arm Body