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No team has yet played a game, and yet all suspects are already ranked in polls based on the opinions of the rankers and not anything that’s happened on the field. We also already know who is going to win the mythical national championship and the Heisman Trophy.
According to the pundits, it’s Notre Dame in the first instance and the Fighting Irish quarterback, who in an odd quirk is actually of Irish descent, Brady Quinn, in the second.
The national champion-designate tag is a moot point, set out for discussion purposes only. All it means is that if the Irish win all their games, they should go to the BCS championship game, and if they don’t, whoever else is undefeated will take their place.
But the Heisman-in-waiting tag that’s been stapled to the back of Quinn’s jersey actually means something. In effect, he’s already been given the trophy, and if he plays as he did last year, it will be his to keep come December.
That’s something of a tall order, as he completed 65 percent of his passes for 3,919 yards and 32 touchdowns against just seven interceptions. But if he gets roughly the same numbers, he knows he wins. It’s that simple.
Unlike the national championship, which can be lost on an unlucky bounce or one spectacular play by the opposition, the Heisman can’t be lost to bad luck. Rather, it takes bad play or the great monkey wrench of sports, injury. Adrian Peterson, who at 7-2 is second on the betting charts this year, knows all about being stopped that way.
A lot of people will write about how much pressure that puts on the kid’s shoulders, and they’d be right. But which would you prefer, the pressure of being favored to win or the pressure of having to play catch-up? In other words, would you rather have a two-stroke lead on Tiger Woods going into the final round of a major or a two-stroke deficit? Either way there’s pressure, and only a fool would choose to be trailing instead of leading.
Anyway, whatever pressure there is nationally on him pales in comparison to the pressure being applied on the Notre Dame campus, where he and Weis together are expected to end a run of 20 seasons without a national championship.
After Notre Dame's Blue and Gold game, it appears to be a three-way race for the starting QB position. Keith Arnold breaks down this race and each area of the offense as he projects the opening day starting lineup.
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Notre Dame 2011 schedule See when all the big matchups will take place with Notre Dame's 2011 schedule. NBCSports.com |
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