Notre Dame offensive coordinator Gerad Parker spoke to local beat writers Tuesday evening. Here’s a transcript of that conversation. Questions may be paraphrased. Quotes aren’t.
GERAD PARKER
What was supposed to happen on fourth-and-16? And what actually happened?
“Well, there's not many calls for fourth-and-16. But we have calls ready. We got one we liked out of our three-by-one set. Drop eight as the story has it, right? Everybody, to be fair, was probably thinking exactly how Sam [Hartman] did, which was stay back, find a throw, find a throw. Which then he hesitates like, do I try to rip it across my body to Mitch [Evans] or do I see? And he said, 'Go.' The thing is, what do you do? You have to keep the ball alive. Gotta keep it in bounds. And if you run you got to make it. It worked out for us. Certainly helped TV ratings, I'm sure.”
Were you anticipating drop eight?
“I didn't. I think they did it one other time in that when we got another throw, I think, to Rico [Flores Jr.] on the dig. So, we knew that was part of who they were. They've shown in two-minute studies from last year and before. You do your research. They have that in their calls, so we had calls for it. So, it was kind of one of those 50-50s on a fourth-down call. It was in there. It was in for us and planned for us to be a possibility.”
You mentioned not a lot of calls for fourth-and-16. How many fewer calls were there when you can only play three wide receivers?
“Yeah, well. Yeah, you're right. Anytime you — I want to answer it honestly — it reduced us a little bit. That's fair. But as you all know, you all write it and report it, you guys don't care whether we're short or not, nor does the fan base. So, we've got to play better and be more productive, regardless of who it is. And that's what we talked to the guys about. And it starts with me. Did it reduce us some in what we could call and do and how we had to do it through personnels? Yes. But, we got to be more efficient and be better, and we know that.”
Do you remember when you first saw Jeremiyah Love out on the field once he got here? Was there a moment where you knew he would play right away?
“Yes. It happens with guys like that that have that much of a skill set and are that fast. When you saw him in summer running, when we first got a chance to do it, it was kind of one of those moments where we're like, 'Wow. He can go.’ And then to go on with it, which is a testament to Deland [McCullough] and him, he picked up on it pretty fast. He's at a point now where he understands most of it. He's done a really good job learning, and he's gifted. So, we've got to keep finding ways.”
How important is Audric Estimé's feel for pass pro versus when you slip out? When you get behind the chains it seems like he's the guy who's made it third-and-manageable?
“Yeah. You saw it in the first series of the game, we got ourselves in a situation that's not friendly. He's able to check out, we get something, pick most of it up, get ourselves into an efficient fourth-down call, which led to the fake punt and got it. If you don't pick that up, you don't get to do it. He's crafty. He's a veteran, he knows how to find ways out when he needs to pick up or not, and he has really good ball skills. It's just added to what he is.”
We saw on the Twitter video that it was discussed that Rico Flores Jr. was your best zone beater while shorthanded. What does it say about a true freshman that you go to him in that situation?
“I've said it from the start of it. Not only him but others, but for sure for Reek, he has no performance anxieties, he believes and has confidence in himself and he's so eager to learn. He's so fun to coach. And in that situation, you're trying to find different answers, because things change throughout the game. He found a way. One of our pillars is details. It’s to make plays work. He made the play work against a bad look. It's a testament to him and Sam.”
How was it a bad look?
“We would rather have had head up to inside leverage. And at the last second you saw the defender bumped outside, which was what we said of him, to hit it and get out. So we kind of hit it, poked out and got back out of it and made it go. Pretty slick.”
You had to lean on both Rico and Jaden Greathouse this season. How much does that underscore what Chansi Stuckey was able to do last year on the recruiting trail, and then what those guys have done from January forward to be in a position where you can trust them?
“Well, first to Stuck, like Stuck has done an unbelievable job changing the culture of that room. He just has. And how we caught balls over the summer, how we pushed our details to show up on time and be where we got to be in our route details. Do we have plenty of work to do? Absolutely. But Stuck, it starts there. And then with those young guys, I think they operate with such confidence and poise as if they're not freshmen. So, for them to have already been here in January helped them get there quicker. Because they were swimming early, but now they've really kind of grown into themselves and started operating with confidence. And now you see that they're a big part of what we do.”
Did you get to a root cause of the presnap penalties and a plan to solve it?
“The deal is like, have we had an issue? No. So then you try to make sure everything is good. But we had an issue, and you can't ignore it. So, the root cause is being in that type of environment certainly had a factor on us, right? Not to give away what we have to change to obviously develop what we're going to do with our cadence and how we're going to snap the football. But, we have to adjust some things to make sure we can operate in a hostile environment, which is happening Saturday night. We will change and how we'll change, to be fair, will be off record.”
It was fairly clean at NC State, though, right? Was the environment different? Different approach?
“No, we didn't have a different approach. One piece of it was different. Again, I wouldn't want to discuss on record. But there was a difference. So, it taught us a lesson. And, after the storm, it wasn't near as rowdy, you know what I mean? And then we got the noise turned down by how we played and finished the game. You hope you can operate that way to turn the noise down as you play. But it's going to be loud early, and we know that. We've got to adjust some things to make sure this doesn't happen again.”
What did Duke do to make it tough to run the ball at times?
“With anything, they were downhill on us and fit us well. That involves their scheme, which they did a great job, and we knew they would. They're a great operation, too. They've got good personnel, and they're really good. And then to go along with us, there's some stuff we got to execute better too, right? And that goes with me, too. I've got to be better in the game, in-game adjustments to help us get through to find ways to maybe get the ball off the spot a little bit more to give us some air. And then, no excuses at all, but to be fair to it, when you're inefficient, and you have the amount of penalties we had, and you get — why were we bad on third down? Because we were in third-and-long eight times or more. We're not going to be good on third down. So, those are the things that we've got to make sure and be better at. But I think that leads to that. It was a mixture of about three or four real things. How they fit us, how they put us down, and us not maybe missing on a couple throws that didn't give some air to it that we normally have hit or not caught, and all those things lead to kind of feeling like that by the end of the third quarter, if that makes sense.”
When we talked to Mitchell Evans after the Ohio State game, he seemed to think a lot of those plays he made catches on were ones he wasn't very high in the progression, but Sam found him. With the last two performances he's put out there, do you have to maybe rethink getting him higher along in the progression?
“Yeah, it's like anything. As a guy develops, and you see things happen, you better, right? So, it's our job, my job, to make sure the guys that can make plays for us, and we believe in, you better do that, especially as the year progresses. We've got to make sure we find ways now to where there’s a target number that we have to get him to because he's been too valuable and he's too good at making plays vertically down the field for us not to.”
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