Jimmy Clausen talks about taking control in the huddle (WNDU 16 South Bend) In the off-season, Clausen became stronger, quicker, and healthier. He now runs the Irish offense and realizes that being the quarterback is a lot more than sometimes meets the eye.
Young Notre Dame, Clausen feel bruises from growing pains (Arizona Daily Star) SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Jimmy Clausen figures he got hit a total of five times while his teams went 42-0 in high school. At Notre Dame, he was sacked six times in his first start and was so beat up after seven games he missed the next two.
College football preview: Heisman Handicapping 101 (Philly.com) * Tim Tebow, junior quarterback, Florida: So where else you gonna start? You were expecting maybe Jimmy Clausen? * Chris "Beanie" Wells, junior running back, Ohio State: Should put up impressive numbers for a team that should be very prominent. Never a bad formula. And the nickname won't hurt.
Around the Independents (USA Today) Around the Independents
CHANGES LOOM FOR WEIS, UNLUCKY IRISH (New York Post) SOUTH BEND, Ind. - If nothing else, Notre Dame coach Charlie Weis is a straight shooter. That endears him to those who appreciate brutal honesty and it's a turnoff to those who can't handle the truth. Weis, too, is adamant about not being...
Non-BCS conferences (Fort Worth Star-Telegram) C-USA
Irish 'going to pound it' (The Naperville Sun) It sounded odd coming from a coach who has been accused of having a pass-first mentality and is best known for developing quarterbacks Tom Brady and Brady Quinn, but there was nothing about Charlie Weis' tone to suggest he wasn't being sincere while addressing the plan for his Notre Dame offense.
Football: The future (The Observer) Dayne Crist looked comfortable even though he had to collapse his 6-foot-4 frame into a folding seat.
We're still waiting for Weis to prove himself (Fox Sports) Charlie Weis came to Notre Dame talking trash. In 2007, they played like garbage. Ian O'Connor looks at the folly of the Weis Era.
Six Pack of Pressing Questions (Austin American-Statesman) Six pressing questions about the 2008 football season.