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WLAX: Michigan stuns Notre Dame at the buzzer in NCAA Tournament

Notre Dame women's lacrosse will attempt to keep its successful season alive today in the second round of the NCAA Tournament.

The No. 7 seed Irish (16-3) will host Michigan (15-3) at 12 p.m. EDT in Notre Dame's Arlotta Stadium.

Notre Dame advanced through the first round with a 24-6 victory over Coastal Carolina on Friday. The Wolverines made easy work of Mercer, 17-6, on Friday as well. Notre Dame beat Mercer 20-6 earlier this season on the road.

Michigan entered the tournament coming off back-to-back losses to Northwestern, the No. 1 overall tournament seed, and Johns Hopkins. Notre Dame lost to Boston College, 9-7, in the ACC semifinals after a 10-game winning streak.

You can watch the game on ESPN+ or click here for live stats. I'll provide periodic updates throughout the game. Chime in if you're watching as well.

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GAME RECAP

Notre Dame's defense never allowed the Irish to build a sizable lead over Michigan in Sunday's second round of the NCAA Tournament.

That defense failed the Irish once again in the final second as Michigan's Jill Smith scored a game-winning goal as time expired in a 15-14 victory for the Wolverines.

No. 7 seed Notre Dame (16-4) led by three goals on three occasions in the first half, but Michigan continued to fight from behind. After the Wolverines (16-3) scored in the final second of the third quarter, which cut Notre Dame's lead to 11-10, neither team led by more than one goal the rest of the way.

In a game that was tied eight different times after the first goal, including four times in the fourth quarter, Michigan held some important advantages. The Wolverines had better play in net with Erin O'Grady saving 10 shots on 24 attempts on goal. Notre Dame's Lilly Callahan managed just six saves on 21 shots on goal. Michigan scored on all three of its free position shots, while the Irish made three on six attempts. Michigan also won draw control on 18 of the 31 opportunities.

Smith, who made the game-winner for Michigan, scored all three of her goals in the second half and two in the final quarter. Katharine Merrifield led the Wolverines with four goals.

Notre Dame's Jackie Wolak, who set a program record with 341 career points, tied the game at 14 with 31 seconds left in regulation on a free position shot. She scored twice and assisted on five Notre Dame goals.

Four Notre Dame players registered hat tracks: Madison Ahern, Kasey Choma, Kathryn Morrissey and Abby Maichin.

Michigan moves on to play against No. 2 seed Boston College (17-3) in the quarterfinal round.

BAS: Notre Dame drops series finale to Toledo

Notre Dame baseball couldn't complete a three-game sweep at home against Toledo.

After victories over the Rockets on Friday and Saturday, the Irish dropped the series finale, 5-2, on Sunday.

Toledo (25-27) took the lead for good in the third inning with a pair of home runs. A two-run shot by JP Wagner gave the Rockets a 2-1 lead. Caden Konczak added another run with a solo homer two batters later.

Toledo added some cushion with a two-run blast by Garret Pike in the fifth inning. Notre Dame starting pitcher Rory Fox (2-2) allowed all five runs in his five innings of work. Three of the five hits he allowed were homers. Fox struck out five hitters and walked two.

Notre Dame's bullpen — Tobey McDonough, Caden Spivey, Ryan Lynch and David Lally Jr. — provided four innings of scoreless relief to give the Irish a chance to rally. McDonough did most of the work by striking out six and surrendering one hit in three innings.

Notre Dame, which scored its first run of the game on a solo dinger by right fielder Brady Gumpf in the second inning, only managed one more: a solo shot by shorstop Jack Penney in the bottom of the ninth. The Irish were limited to four hits throughout the game.

Toledo starter Jackson Bergman (3-5) kept the Irish in check through six innings by allowing three hits, one run and only one free pass: a hit batter. Jacob Tabor recorded a three-inning save for his sixth save of the season.

Notre Dame's final non-conference game of the regular season is scheduled for Tuesday against Butler (19-32) in Indianapolis at 4 p.m. EDT. The Irish (27-22, 9-18 ACC) will then spend the weekend in Louisville for a three-game series against the Cardinals (29-21, 13-13) to finish the regular season.

BOX SCORE: Toledo 5, Notre Dame 2
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BAS: Jack Penney's power surge leads Irish to Saturday win over Toledo

Jack Penney homered twice, doubled and drove in five runs as the Notre Dame baseball team won for the seventh time in the past eight games Saturday with an 8-2 non-conference home victory over Toledo.

The Irish (27-21) go for the three-game sweep of the series with the Rockets (24-27) at Eck Stadium in the final home game of the season, Sunday at 1 p.m. (EDT).

Penney also walked and scored two runs. Brady Gumpf drove in two with a solo home run and a sacrifice fly. Simon Baumgardt, the big bat in Friday’s 6-5 win, had an RBI single on Saturday. David Glancy had two hits and scored two runs.

With the Irish’s three homers Saturday, they set the program record for single-season home runs, currently at 81 on the year (The 2022 College World Series team single-season record was set at 79).

Matt Bedford (3-6) pitched five strong innings for the win. Bennett Flynn stuck out seven in his four innings of relief and picked up his third save.

After Sunday’s game, the Irish hit the road for a non-conference Tuesday night matchup at Butler before trying to clinch a spot in the 12-team ACC Tournament (May 21-26) in their final ACC series of the season, at Louisville, Friday through Sunday.

NOTRE DAME 8, TOLEDO 2: Box Score
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WLAX: Irish overwhelm Coastal Carolina, 24-6, in NCAA Tourney opener

Tewaaraton Award finalist Jackie Wolak accounted for 11 points and seventh-seeded Notre Dame overwhelmed visiting Coastal Carolina, 24-6, Friday in an NCAA Women’s Lacrosse Tournament first-round matchup at Arlotta Stadium.

The Irish (16-3) set program records for most goals and largest margin of victory in an NCAA Tourney game, and advance to a Sweet 16 matchup Sunday at home (noon EDT) against the winner of Friday’s second Arlotta Stadium matchup — Michigan (15-3), which beat Mercer 17-6.

Wolak amassed a school-record nine assists and scored two goals as the Irish took a 9-0 lead after one period and never let up against the Chanticleers (14-6) in the 300th all-time victory in the history of the Irish program.

Kasey Choma and Arden Tierney scored five goals apiece. Madison Ahern had four goals and Kathryn Morrisey three. Ten different Irish played scored in all.

Lilly Callahan recorded six saves and gave up four goals before being replaced by Isabel Pithie with less than eight minutes remaining in the game.

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BAS: Irish continue hot streak, edge Toledo in series opener, 6-5

Simon Baumgardt drove in three runs with a single and a sacrifice fly to help Notre Dame continue its late-season surge as the host Irish edged Toledo, 6-5, Friday night at Eck Stadium in the first game of a three-game non-conference baseball series.

Notre Dame (26-21), coming off final exams week, has won six of its last seven games and 11 of 14.

Lefty Ricky Reeth (2-4) got the win with three innings of shutout relief after the Irish fell behind early, 3-1. He allowed two hits and walked two while striking out five. Nate Hardman pitched a hitless ninth for his sixth save.

Toledo (24-26) hit three home runs in the game, two from Garret Pike.

The Irish, meanwhile, made the most of their six hits, only one of which went for extra bases — Conor Hincks’ first-inning double that plated David Glancy. Hincks reached base all four times he came to the plate, also collecting a single and reaching twice as a hit batsman.

Brady Gumpf drove in a pair of runs with a single. The two teams meet in game two Saturday at 2 p.m. EDT.

NOTRE DAME 6, TOLEDO 5: Box Score
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Bon Jovi and Notre Dame team up for special vinyl album release

From Fighting Irish Media​


The University of Notre Dame has partnered with rock legends, Bon Jovi, to produce a special edition vinyl of the band’s new album Forever (out on June 7th on Island Records). Notre Dame is the only collegiate property partnering with Bon Jovi for their album release which will feature Fighting Irish-inspired design elements. A limited number of albums will be available on release date, June 7th, exclusively at the Hammes Notre Dame Bookstore. See store for details.

Forever is a celebratory album that takes stock of the past and likes what it sees, while keeping one eye on the future. But it’s also a defiant record, the most compelling evidence yet that Bon Jovi — inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2018, with more than 130 million records sold and dozens of unassailable radio hits to his credit — has nothing left to prove. Forever features twelve new songs, including the hit lead single, "Legendary."

This special edition 2 LP vinyl release features twelve of those tracks on double disc colored vinyl and is limited to 2500 copies worldwide. This special edition is priced at $37.99.

The Notre Dame special edition album package will include:
· Notre Dame gold and blue splattered vinyl records.
· Exclusive poster of the band members with a Notre Dame color presentation.
· The Notre Dame Monogram featured on the included poster.
· The Notre Dame Monogram on all four record labels.
· A co-branded Notre Dame sticker on the front cover of the album wrapper.

“I have been a longtime fan of Notre Dame and have many incredible memories on campus supporting
the Fighting Irish with our family,” Jon Bon Jovi said.

“This was a great opportunity to create an exclusive limited edition Notre Dame themed version of our new album and I am excited to share it with you.”

Bon Jovi, Forever​


Jon Bon Jovi’s story is one of longevity. Forty years since the release of his namesake band’s debut album, Bon Jovi is not only still standing, but thriving. He’s stared down the toughest decade of his career — one beset by a global pandemic and his own harrowing vocal injury — to emerge with a timeless new album, Forever, and a life-affirming discovery: Jon Bon Jovi is happy again.

“For the first time in 10 years, I have joy,” Jon says. “I had lost touch with it for a number of reasons, and I’d set out to find it while writing and making this record. At the completion of the project, I realized I was at peace. I really found joy.”

Produced by Jon with John Shanks, Forever is a celebratory album that takes stock of the past and likes what it sees, while keeping one eye on the future. But it’s also a defiant record, the most compelling evidence yet that Bon Jovi — inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2018, with more than 130 million records sold and dozens of unassailable radio hits to his credit — has nothing left to prove.

“Forever is an opportunity to show that you can look back with one foot firmly entrenched in the future. And that only comes with age, wisdom, and experience,” Jon says.

It also helps to have people you can count on by your side. While Bon Jovi’s last album, the socially conscious 2020, was written almost entirely by Jon alone — “I was the narrator. It was what I saw happening when I turned on my television,” he says — Forever is a fully collaborative effort, underscoring the bond between Jon and his band of brothers: drummer Tico Torres, keyboardist David Bryan, bassist Hugh McDonald, guitarist Phil X, percussionist Everett Bradley, and guitarist John Shanks.

“It is absolutely an inclusive record,” he says. “If 2020 was ‘me,’ this album is ‘we.’”

Lead single “Legendary,” which Jon debuted live at the gala honoring him as the 2024 MusiCares Person of the Year, speaks to that union. The song is a rousing testament to the enduring relationships with his family, both those at home and in the band. “Got what I want/cause I got what I need,” he sings over Torres’ thumping beat, “Got a fistful of friends that’ll stand up for me.”

“I’ve come to realize in this chapter of my life that what matters is that handful of people that truly stood by your side. It’s not just my band, but my wife, my kids, my longtime engineer and friend…,” Jon says. “Out of all this pain and suffering that I've been through in the last decade, I've wrapped my arms around all of these moments and learned that what matters is what you’ve got. And what I've got has been pretty good.”

Jon doesn’t mince words when talking about the vocal problems that plagued him beginning in 2015. He says matter-of-factly that he was singing out of tune but, for the life of him, couldn’t figure out what was wrong. Finally, a doctor diagnosed an atrophying of one of his vocal cords and the singer underwent major surgery to have a permanent implant affixed to the damaged cord.

But the outcome wasn’t a sure bet. To get back to singing at the level he demands, Jon committed to a rigorous daily schedule of vocal exercises. “It’s been 21 months of recovery so far. There's no miracle, but there's steady progress,” he says. “Recording Forever in the studio in Nashville, I could take my time. And when we rehearse as a band, we make great strides. But I don't know the end game.”

To listen to Forever, though, is to hear an artist confidently in the zone. He throws himself headlong into the daring opus “Seeds,” a mesmerizing composition about perseverance brought to life with rich strings and sharp metaphor. In “I Wrote You a Song” — one of those lyrical lightning bolts that came to Jon while he slept — he delivers one of the album’s vocal highlights over Bryan’s stark piano. And with “Walls of Jericho,” he adds the most epic arena anthem to the Bon Jovi catalog since “Bad Medicine.”

A pair of tracks on the album directly chronicle the band’s history, which is also honestly retold in the four-part Hulu documentary Thank You, Goodnight: The Bon Jovi Story. “We Made It Look Easy” charts Bon Jovi’s hard-won evolution from New Jersey bar band to stadium headliners, while “Living Proof” evokes the group’s storied past through a signature sound: a TalkBox guitar intro reminiscent of “Livin’ on a Prayer.”

The chorus of “Living Proof” drives home one of Forever’s overarching themes: “This family tree got nothing left to prove now,” Jon sings. “Me and you/We’re the living proof.”

When Jon, a 2009 inductee into the Songwriters Hall of Fame, wrote those lines, he says they encapsulated everything he was feeling more than 40 years into a rock legacy: “I thought, ‘that pretty much sums it up for me.’”

But having nothing left to prove doesn’t mean not challenging oneself. Forever contains some of the most soul-baring songs Jon’s ever written. “Kiss the Bride” he wrote especially for his daughter and is destined to be heard at every wedding from here to eternity. “My First Guitar” is the tale of the cheap but cherished Univox he played as a teenager, sold to a neighbor, and was recently reunited with. And “Hollow Man,” which caps the album, is about submitting himself freely and openly to the muse.

“That’s me with my hands and eyes towards the sky, saying, ‘I'm an empty vessel. Fill me up,’” Jon says. “I am the hollow man.”

In a telling moment, he punctuates one line of the song — “Anyway, I got you to smile…” — with a warm chuckle.

It’s the sound of a man, no longer hollow, having fun again. He’s successfully navigated obstacles, both universal and personal, and is able to smile about it all.

“Over the course of my life, I've had love and loss all happen more than once,” Jon says. “With this album, I’m telling you the truth.”

The joy is back, and Bon Jovi is here. Forever.

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Football New PWO transfer portal CB offer

West Virginia cornerback Montre Miller officially entered the transfer portal Tuesday as a graduate transfer. Notre Dame is among the programs to immediately offer him in the hours following his entry. Miller has also reported offers from Jacksonville State, UAB, Mississippi State and UConn.

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The 2024 season will be Miller's seventh in college football. He spent the first five at Kent State. He still has one season of eligibility left because he received a waiver after playing in just one game for West Virginia last season before being sidelined with an undisclosed season-ending injury.

West Virginia recruited the 5-foot-10, 193-pound Miller out of the portal when Matt Jansen, Notre Dame's current director of scouting, was working was WVU's director of player personnel and scouting.

Notre Dame's been in the market for an experienced cornerback since Clarence Lewis entered the transfer portal earlier this spring. Then sophomore Micah Bell entered the portal this month too. The Irish previously hosted Rice cornerback Tre'Shon Devones.

Miller didn't start in the 2023 season opener for West Virginia, but he rotated into the game to record three tackles against Penn State. He was expected to be a contributor for the Mountaineers.

Miller started 25 games in his final two seasons at Kent State. In 2021, Miller totaled 47 tackles, four interceptions, nine pass breakups, 2.5 tackles for loss, one forced fumble and one recovered fumble. He recorded 52 tackles, two interceptions, eight pass breakups, one forced fumble and one recovered fumble.

The 2022 season was Miller's best, according to Pro Football Focus. He was given a defensive rating of 78.6 and a coverage rating of 81.1. He allowed 45 catches on 69 targets for 579 yards and five touchdowns.

Miller originally signed with Kent State as a two-star recruit in the 2018 class out of Blythewood (S.C.) Westwood.

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Recruiting The Heat Index update (5/10): Available spots narrow focus on remaining 2025 targets

The Heat Index has been updated with the following changes:

WR Derek Meadows’ heat rating has been downgraded from Extremely Hot to Hot.
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WR Dylan Robinson’s heat rating has been upgraded from Plain to Medium following him scheduling an official visit to Notre Dame.
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WR Jayvan Boggs’ heat rating has been downgraded from Medium to Mild.
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DT Jalen Wiggins’ heat check reflects the latest intel, and he’s been moved from a DE target to DT.
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DT Javeon Campbell’s removal as the Irish aren’t pursuing him anymore.
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LB Noah Mikhail's removal as the Irish aren’t pursuing him anymore.
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CB Mark Zackery's heat check reflects the latest intel.
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CB Trystan Haynes’ removal following his Oklahoma commitment.
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S Jahmir Joseph’s heat check reflects the latest intel, and he’s moved from a CB target to S.
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MLAX: Liam Entenmann and Pat Kavanagh named Tewaaraton finalists

Notre Dame goaltender Liam Entenmann and attacker Pat Kavanagh were named as two of the five finalists for the Tewaaraton Award given to the top male college lacrosse player in the United States.

Kavanagh, the 2024 ACC Offensive Player of the Year, is a three-time finalist. Entenmann, the ACC Defensive Player and Goalie of the Year, is a first-time finalist. They joined Duke's Brennan O'Neill, Virginia's Connor Shellenbergr and Yale's Matt Brandau as finalists. O'Neill won the Tewaaraton Trophy last year.

Entenmann logged a 9.34 goals against average, which ranks sixth in Division I. He allowed 117 goals in 13 games.

Kavanagh scored 60 points with 22 goals and 38 assists in 13 games for the Irish. He ranks No. 9 in Division I with 2.92 assists per game and No. 13 in points per game with 4.62.

No. 1 seed Notre Dame will host Alabany on Sunday at 5 p.m. EDT in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.

Basketball MBB: Notre Dame to host Lehigh F Burke Chebuhar on transfer portal visit

Former Lehigh forward Burke Chebuhar, a graduate transfer who entered the portal in March, will make a visit to Notre Dame on Friday, he tells Inside ND Sports. His visit was first reported by Irish Sports Daily.

The 6-foot-8, 230-pound Chebuhar scored 7.5 points and grabbed 5.0 rebounds per game last season at Lehigh in his first meaningul season as a contributor. He finished second on the team in rebounding and fourth in scoring as a senior after playing just 41 total minutes in his previous two seasons with the program.

Chebuhar, a product of The Walker School in Marietta, Ga., originally enrolled at Division III Bowdoin in 2020 to play basketball. But Bowdoin's 2020-21 season was canceled during the COVID-19 pandemic. Chebuhar then transferred to Lehigh ahead of the 2021-22 season as a walk-on player.

Chebuhar shot 46.2% from the field last season for Lehigh (14-18), which finished the regular season in sixth place on the Patriot League. He hit 27 of his 84 3-point attempts (32.1%) and shot 76.7% from the free-throw line.

Chebuhar is scheduled to arrive in South Bend late tonight and leave Saturday morning.

SOFT: Florida State ends Notre Dame's ACC Tourney run, 2-0 in quarterfinals

Kennedy Harp and Kalei Harding hit solo home runs as 2 seed Florida State advanced to the ACC Tournament semis with a 2-0 victory over 10 seed Notre Dame, Thursday in Durham, N.C.

The Irish finish the season at 27-23.

Allison Royalty (7-5) and Ashtyn Danley combined to shut out Notre Dame on four hits. Alexis Laudenslager (9-8) had a strong performance on the mound for the Irish against the nation's No. 6 scoring offense (7.7 runs per game) but didn't get the run support.

The Seminoles (42-13) advance to face 8 seed Georgia Tech (31-22) in a 3:30 p.m. EDT semifinal on Friday. Top-seeded Duke (45-6) and 5 seed Clemson (34-16) meet in a 1 p.m. semifinal.

FLORIDA STATE 2, NOTRE DAME 0: Box Score




WEDNESDAY'S GAME: Notre Dame beats North Carolina to advance to ACC quarterfinals

Notre Dame softball rallied after an early deficit to beat North Carolina, 7-4, in the first round of the ACC Tournament in Durham, N.C.

The 10th-seeded Irish (27-22) beat the 7th-seeded Tar Heels (30-20) for the second time in four chances this season.

North Carolina jumped out to a 3-0 lead on ND starter Alexis Laudenslager. She issued a bases-loaded walk to allow the first run in the bottom of the second inning. Then a fielding error by second baseman Addison Amaral allowed two more runs to score in the inning.

Notre Dame cut the lead to one with back-to-back home runs by right fielder Jane Kronenberger and shortstop Anna Holloway in the fourth inning. North Carolina earned one of those runs back with a sacrifice fly by Skyler Brooks to score Aneshia Jordan.

Notre Dame pushed ahead with a five-run sixth inning. RBI singles by left fielder Mac Vasquez and catcher Carlli Kloss tied the game against starter Kenna Raye Dark. North Carolina replaced Dark with Talia Hannapel, but the Irish kept scoring.

Notre Dame took the lead on a throwing error by second baseman Brooks on a grounder by center fielder Mickey Winchell, the first batter Hannapel faced. Amaral immediately followed with an RBI double to score Winchell.

Micaela Kastor, who replaced Laudenslager in the fourth inning, allowed a single in the sixth inning. But after a fielder's choice and a strike out, Kloss threw out Alex Coleman at second base on a steal attempt. Kastor pitched a perfect seventh to close out her 10th win of the season.

Notre Dame will play No. 2 seed Florida State (41-13) on Thursday at 5 p.m. EDT (ACC Network) in the ACC quarterfinals.

BOX SCORE: Notre Dame 7, North Carolina 4

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Basketball WBB: Podcast | Maddy Westbeld on raised expectations for Notre Dame

Forward Maddy Westbeld discusses how it feels to become a Notre Dame graduate, the new transfer portal additions of forwards Liatu King and Liza Karlen for Notre Dame women's basketball, how she can help them get acclimated, the culture of ND's program, playing during an era of growth in the sport, how the team evolved last season, finding a new identity for next season, where she's improved the most, her upcoming basketball clinic and more.

Then @Eric Hansen and I answer questions from Twitter and The Insider Lounge (22:53).

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RIP Notre Dame football All-American Kevin Hardy, a three-sport star

Release from Notre Dame:

South Bend, Indiana — Kevin Hardy, a two-time football All-American and three-sport monogram winner at the University of Notre Dame, passed away on Monday, May 6, 2024, in Northern California.

A defensive tackle with the Fighting Irish football team, Hardy was a key member of the 1966 National Championship team while also becoming the first student-athlete in 19 years to earn a monogram in three different sports. In 1964-65, Hardy was the first-team defensive tackle, played a key role as a reserve for the basketball team that advanced to the NCAA tournament and was the regular right fielder for the baseball team. Hardy led the 1967 Notre Dame baseball team with a .398 batting average.

Hardy did not play football varsity football in his first year at Notre Dame, as freshmen were ineligible to play until 1972. As a sophomore in 1964, Hardy posted 38 tackles and blocked two kicks. A back injury limited him in his junior season, but he was awarded an extra year of eligibility and piled up 79 tackles and broke up four passes for the 1966 national championship team to earn first-team All-America honors. He finished up in 1967 with 33 more tackles in a move to defensive end and was a first-round draft choice (seventh overall) by the New Orleans Saints in the 1968 NFL Draft.

Hardy did not play for the Saints, however, as he was moved to the San Francisco 49ers for compensation for a free agent signing. Hardy appeared for the 49ers, Green Bay Packers and San Diego Chargers during his professional career.

Hardy is survived by his son, Danny (daughter-in-law Julie Hardy), daughter Shannon Kuhl (son-in-law Chris Kuhl and grandson Kevin) and sisters Mary and Barbara.
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