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Recruiting A 2027 QB name on Notre Dame's radar

In Sam Spiegelman's Recruiting Rumor Mill on quarterbacks at the Rivals Camp Series in Dallas, he highlighted 2027 quarterback Peyton Houston.

He expects Notre Dame to stop by his school, Shreveport (La.) Evangel Christian, this contact period. That's the same school that produced former ND DT Jerry Tillery nearly a decade ago.


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Football Washington Commanders pick DE Javontae Jean-Baptiste in seventh round of NFL Draft

Javontae Jean-Baptiste becomes the sixth Notre Dame defensive end selected in the last five drafts.

Football Denver Broncos pick RB Audric Estimé in NFL Draft's fifth round

A fifth-round Notre Dame running back selection worked out pretty well for Kyren Williams and the LA Rams in 2022. Now Audric Estimé is a fifth-round pick for the Denver Broncos.

BAS: TJ Williams, Irish walk off No. 8 Wake Forest to win series

TJ Williams launched the first pitch he saw from Wake Forest reliever Joshua Gunther over the left-field fence leading off the bottom of the ninth inning as host Notre Dame rallied past eighth-ranked Wake Forest, 8-7, Sunday in ACC baseball.

It was the eighth home run of the year for the Irish senior center fielder, and it gave the Irish (22-20, 7-17 ACC) the series win at Eck Stadium — two games to one — over the Demon Deacons (27-16, 12-12).

Simon Baumgardt had tied the game at 7-7 in the bottom of the eighth for Notre Dame on his 10th home run of the year, a solo homer. Nick Kurtz, the ACC’s leading home run hitter and seventh nationally, hit his 18th of the season — a solo shot — and doubled in two runs to lead Wake Forest.

Nate Hardman (2-1), the fifth Irish pitcher of the day, got the win with 1 ⅔ innings of shutout relief. Joe Spence also homered for ND, while shortstop Jack Penney went 2-for-3 with two runs scored.

The Irish next play Michigan State (19-21) Tuesday at East Lansing, Mich., before returning home for a three-game ACC series against Pittsburgh (17-21, 5-16), beginning Friday.

NOTRE DAME 8, WAKE FOREST 7: Box Score

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BAS: Notre Dame bats wallop Wake Forest in game two

Notre Dame baseball hit Wake Forest starting pitcher Josh Hartle early and often Saturday in game two of a three-game ACC series.

The Irish took a seven-run lead after two innings and never relinquished it in an 11-3 victory at home.

In beating No. 10 Wake Forest (27-15, 12-11 ACC), Notre Dame (21-20, 6-17) picked up its first win over a ranked team since April 23 of last year.

Notre Dame's offense found a jolt in the first innings with three solo home runs by center fielder TJ Williams, second baseman Estevan Moreno and first baseman Connor Hincks.

The Irish scored four more runs in the second inning with an RBI double by shortstop Jack Penney, a passed ball that allowed Penney to score, an RBI double by Hincks and another passed ball that allowed HIncks to score.

Hartle (4-2) lasted 1 2/3 innings after surrendering seven hits and three walks. Only four of his seven runs allowed were earned. Notre Dame starter Jack Radel (4-2) picked up a win for his 5 1/3 innings of work. He gave up three runs on three hits and four walks with five strikeouts.

Wake Forest's run all came in the sicth inning. Radel loaded the bases with a walk, single and walk. Then a sacrifice fly by Jake Reinisch plated the first run. Reliever Caden Spivey replaced Radel with two runners in scoring position, and those runners scored right away on a single by Seaver King.

Notre Dame tacked on runs in the sixth and eight innings, respectively, on a two-run homer by Moreno and a two-RBI triple by third baseman Simon Baumgardt. Moreno finished 2-for-4 at the plate with two homers, three RBIs and four runs scored.

Notre Dame will try to pick up its second consecutive ACC home series victory Sunday with a win in the rubber match at 12 p.m. EDT on ACCNX.

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BOX SCORE: Notre Dame 11, Wake Forest 3
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Football Atlanta Falcons draft 'Captain America' JD Bertrand from Notre Dame

Notre Dame's JD Bertrand joins Marist Liufau as 2024 NFL Draft picks. This is the first time two Notre Dame LBs have been drafted in the same draft since 2002.

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Football NFL Draft Thread: Day 3

Rounds 4-7 are about to get underway in the NFL Draft.

Notre Dame has already had three player drafted, which matches last year's total: OT Joe Alt, OT Blake Fisher and LB Marist Liufau.

A handful of former Irish players could get picked today: RB Audric Estimé, CB Cam Hart, LB JD Bertrand, DE Javontae Jean-Baptiste and QB Sam Hartman being the most likely. I think I'd take a flyer on DB Thomas Harper personally, but I haven't seen many analyst predict that.

On ESPN's best available list ...
No. 9: Hart
No. 61: Estimé
No. 114: Jean-Baptiste
No. 170: Bertrand
No. 215: Hartman

Recruiting LB Antoine Deslauriers commits to Syracuse

Notre Dame moved on from recruiting 2025 linebacker Antoine Deslauriers after landed a commitment from Anthony Sacca, but I think it's always interest to track where former targets end up.

Deslauriers committed to Syracuse today. At one point he planned to take an official visit to Notre Dame.

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Check The Heat Index for info on ND's remaining linebacker targets.

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Recruiting Adam Gorney predicts a Notre Dame commitment for recruit in the west

@Adam Gorney is getting ready to place four new FutureCast predictions for recruits in the West region.

Four-star WR Derek Meadows to Notre Dame is one of them. 👀

Welcome to the club, Adam.


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Football NFL Draft Thread: Day 2

The second and third rounds of the NFL Draft get underway tonight at 7 p.m. EDT.

According to the big boards and mock drafts we surveyed, three former Notre Dame players seemingly have a chance to be selected tonight: OT Blake Fisher, RB Audric Estimé and CB Cam Hart.

ICYMI: Here's the coverage that @Eric Hansen had of Joe Alt being picked No. 5 overall by the LA Chargers.



Feel free to discuss other non-Notre Dame draft topics in this thread too.

BAS: ND lets late lead slip away in 4-3 loss to No. 10 Wake Forest

Notre Dame baseball failed to hold onto a 3-1 lead after seven innings in Frank Eck Stadium on Friday.

No. 10 Wake Forest scored three runs in the top of the eighth inning to win, 4-3, in the first game of a three-game ACC series.

Notre Dame's 3-1 lead came via home runs by first baseman Connor Hincks (solo) in the second inning and third baseman Simon Baumgardt (two runs) in the seventh inning. The Irish had only allowed one run at that point, and it came on a wild pitch by Bennett Flynn that plated Nick Kurtz in the top of the sixth.

Wake Forest (27-14, 12-10 ACC) tied the game at 3 with a two-run home run by Jake Reinisch in the eighth off Flynn. Then ND's Tobey McDonough, who replaced Flynn after a walk to Seaver King, allowed a double by Antonio Morales for the go-ahead RBI.

Notre Dame (20-20, 5-17) wasted starter Bedford's 5 2/3 innings, in which he allowed two hits and one unearned run. Kurtz, who scored the first run on a Flynn wild pitch, reached on an error by left fielder David Glancy.

Flynn (1-2) allowed three earned runs in two innings with three walks, one hit and four strikeouts.

Wake Forest starter Chase Burns (8-1) struck out 14 hitters in seven innings while allowing four hits, two walks and three runs. Notre Dame didn't manage a base runner in the final two innings after falling behind. Joshua Gunther pitched a perfect eighth. Cole Roland struck out the side for his second save of the season.

BOX SCORE: Wake Forest 4, Notre Dame 3

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Recruiting 2026 TE target Kaiden Prothro

Kaiden Prothro, one of Notre Dame's tight end targets in the 2026 class, took hom the WR/TE MVP honors at Sunday's Rivals Camp Series in Atlanta.

In today's Recruiting Rumor Mill from @RivalsFriedman and @John Garcia Jr., word is that Prothro would like to visit Notre Dame this summer.


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Football Transcript: Joe Alt's introductory press conference with Los Angeles Chargers

Opening statement:
"Before we begin, I'd just like to start off by thanking the Spanos Family, [General Manager] Joe Hortiz and [Head] Coach [Jim] Harbaugh for believing in me and giving me this opportunity. I'd also like to thank my two parents that are here today. I couldn't be here without them. They've blessed me with a lot of opportunities. I want to thank God for the opportunity, the body and the ability that he has blessed me with to be here today."

On his 'first thoughts' upon being selected by the Chargers:
"I think that there were two thoughts that popped in my head immediately. The first one being gratitude. Like I said, just grateful for the people around me, grateful for this organization in believing in me and this opportunity. The second one, just straight excitement. I can't wait to get out here, get to work and go back to what I love doing, and that's playing football."

On his timeline since being drafted by the Chargers:
"Obviously, got the call. Super excited. I spent the time with my family briefly there, got to hug everybody. I appreciate everyone that was there. Then, hopped onto a couple of interviews, got my flight set up, hung out with my family and my girlfriend. Went back to my house, went to bed about midnight, woke up this morning, hopped on a plane at 7:30 [a.m.], flew out here, got to come to the facility, and have just been meeting everybody and going from there."

On playing quarterback growing up:
"I grew up playing quarterback, all the way until my sophomore year of high school. For me, the biggest thing there was just learning an entire defense and how it works — understanding safeties, their rotation, and how it affects a defense, how you can read a safety and see how that can give you a pressure look. I started playing tight end when I grew, my junior year of high school. Then, transitioned to offensive line when I got to Notre Dame as a freshman."

On if being a quarterback 'helped with his footwork':
"Yeah. Playing quarterback, playing basketball, all of that stuff did. I think that's a testament to my athleticism, now, from those things, because I was able to kind of stay light on my feet as I grew."

On the 'type' of quarterback that he was:
"I was a bigger quarterback [laughter]. Let's be real, I ran the ball most of the time [laughter]. I had a decent arm, but it was mostly just running the ball, sweeps out there. [John Alt] was the one getting me out there on the ball."

On if he 'could be the emergency quarterback':
"I don't know about that, I haven't thrown a football in a long time [laughter]. Been putting my hand in the dirt instead. I don't know, we'll have to see."

On his training during the pre-draft process:
"I've been working with [former NFL offensive lineman] Alex Boone up at Training HAUS in Minnesota, that's where I did all of my Combine prep. The biggest thing for me is just getting comfortable, being able to set both in my left and righthand stance, being just as comfortable as I was at the left at the right-hand side. Did a lot of drills — pass pro, run blocking — just to make sure that I was comfortable there. I thought we put a lot of good work in from that."

On if 'playing in unbalanced fronts helps with a potential transition to the right side':
"Yeah, of course. I think just having that in-game experience, those live reps, is always a huge help — just being comfortable getting over there and putting your hand down in that stance in-game is huge for my confidence going forward."

On football being 'in his family':
"Yeah, my dad played 13 years for the Chiefs. Football is all I can remember growing up. Walking into the basement, my dad's jersey was hung up at the bottom of the steps, and it was a dream for me my entire life. My dad coached me from youth through high school. He was there, he allowed me to really learn what football was and the appreciation for the game and what it did for me and my family. Football has always been kind of top of the totem pole in the family in what we wanted to do. That's why I fell in love with it and have been going with it ever since."

On if he played hockey growing up, like his brother, Mark:
"I did, until second grade. I did not have the body for hockey [laughter]. I got a little heavy for it, so we just decided to hang up the skates and start playing basketball."

On watching his father's games on tape growing up:
"We didn't watch a ton of tape of his VCRs [laughter]. In high school, we kind of stayed away from that. But most recently, a lot of his games have come back out on YouTube in better quality, and we re-watched them when I was home this training process. I got to give him a little bit of crap and watch his film and assess the differences in our games [laughter]."

On the differences between him and his father:
"My dad had — still does — very, very broad shoulders. He has the biggest shoulders that I've ever seen on a man. His ability to clamp guys, like defensive ends, is one of the most humbling things, I think, for defensive end, they were just out-muscled up top. I think that's the biggest difference. I like to punch inside because I don't have as big of shoulders as he did. I think that's the biggest difference between me and him."

On players in the NFL that he 'tries to learn from':
"I watch a lot of Joe Thomas. I watch a lot of how he sets. He has a lot of changeups in his set, between jump setting and vertical setting, and how he throws the differences in there. Then, I listen to a lot of Lane Johnson and stuff with the snap count, and how crucial that is to win the first second and being ahead of the punch, ahead of the defense, being able to get off the ball early."

On 'setting the tone up front':
"I think the thing I love about the offensive line is being able to hit someone every single play. You don't have a play off, you're going to be throwing your head in there. Whether it's pass or run, you have a job to do and you have to hold up your end of the bargain — one of the five [offensive linemen], one of the 11 [offensive players]. If you don't do your job, it's going to hurt the offensive line, hurt the entire offense. I think that's why I love it. That's kind of why I fell in love with the position, and just really the camaraderie of the group. The offensive line group, I think, is a special group."

On 'dominate' being one of his 'favorite words':
"It's not a word that I use in my vocabulary, but it's a mindset that I have, I would say more so. Just refusing to lose and taking it one play at a time and trying to do your best each and every play is kind of my mindset."

(more)
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Basketball WBB: Stanford hires Notre Dame's Heather Oesterle

Heather Oesterle, who joined the Notre Dame women's basketball staff in September as the strategic program director, has been hired by Stanford as an assistant coach. Oesterle was previously the head coach at Central Michigan.

Her role at Notre Dame included NIL education and helping player work on their brands.


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BAS: Irish blanked at home by Central Michigan

So much for momentum.

After a three-game sweep of Boston College this past weekend, Notre Dame laid a dud in a 2-0 home loss to Central Michigan on Wednesday night.

The Chippewas (14-27) limited Notre Dame to just one hit in the nine-inning shutout. Third baseman Simon Baumgardt singled in the second inning after first baseman Connor Hincks walked, but the Irish never threatened to score again after Hincks reached third base.

Notre Dame never managed to get another base runner in scoring position despite three free passes in the last seven innings.

Central Michigan used seven pitchers to keep the Irish scoreless. Starter Jack Bach pitched two innings, allowed one hit and one walk and struck out three. Jack Bell (1-0) picked up the win with a spotless third inning.

The Chippewas were never able to gain much breathing room despite the lights out pitching. Central Michigan only managed three hits of its own. Designed hitter Robby Morgan IV recorded both runs batted in for CMU. He plated the first run in the fourth inning with a bases loaded walk. He knocked in Ely Stuart in the sixth with a fielder's choice as two runners were in scoring position.

Notre Dame freshman DJ Helwig pitched three scoreless innings in his second career start and sixth game appearance. Fellow freshman Keenan Mork struggled in relief. After allowing a leadoff walk in the fourth inning, the Irish recorded two outs in the infield that advance Danny Wuestenfeld to third base. Then Mork issued a walk, hit a batter and walked another to force home one run. Ricky Reeth came on to record the final out of the inning.

Notre Dame will host No. 10 Wake Forest (26-14, 11-10 ACC) for a three-game series starting Friday.
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OT: NFL teams desperate for quality QB's

This was a very good year for QB's, but six that early in the draft? Every year, you look at the QB's starting in the NFL and it's a "who's who" of just mediocre players. Not sure if it is just how many QB's get injured year after year in the NFL or poor evaluations? I like the QB's this year much better than the last couple, but I bet half these guys flame out or just have average careers in the NFL.
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