Updated: November 26, 2008, 1:16 PM ET
Irish program used to be special now it just isn't
Pat Forde's Big Men on Campus
Charlie Weis and his football program are under siege, which is as much Notre Dame's fault as it is his. They are the victims of self-inflicted wounds that have sucked much of the specialness, if not the football relevance, out of the place.
If Notre Dame football were a blood-pressure reading, the nurse would jot down 40 over 20 -- barely a pulse. The recent defeat to eight-loss Syracuse (a Notre Dame first) only intensifies the scrutiny of Weis, whose record during the past two seasons is the worst in Notre Dame history. It won't get any better this Saturday, when the Fighting Irish lose their seventh consecutive game against longtime rival USC and finish the regular season at a forgettable 6-6. That's another thing. Notre Dame followers are now conditioned to lose to USC. They expect the annual beatdown, which makes sense, I guess. Since Weis' arrival in 2005, the USC margin of victory has grown from three points to 20 to 38 to who knows how much this time as the Trojans try to earn style points for the ridiculous BCS beauty pageant. The sense of doom reveals much about the state of Weis' program. But mostly it reveals why Notre Dame is no different than other football factories. The very fact that Weis' coaching future is in question is Exhibit A of Notre Dame's spectacular series of miscalculations. In a bizarre bit of symmetry, the very reason for Weis' hiring -- Tyrone Willingham's firing after just three seasons -- is why Fighting Irish fans, boosters, power brokers and maybe even school officials now feel empowered to call for Weis' dismissal. It's why Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick had to recently issue a vote of confidence for a head coach he didn't hire. The Rev. John Jenkins, Notre Dame's incoming president at the time, helped create this sloppy scenario the moment he supported Willingham's firing after the 2004 regular season. By ridding themselves of Willingham, who just happened to be the school's first African-American head coach, Jenkins & Co. ended the very thing that differentiated Notre Dame from everyone else: a five-year commitment to its coach. That commitment represented the very best of Notre Dame. Now it's like everyone else, but with snowball throwers.Forde-Yard Dash
From snowball bombardment at Notre Dame to rapid-firing snowballs at some offending parties to snow cones for the winners, the Dash runs through it all. Forde


