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Irish Throttle No. 5 Southern Cal

October 21, 1995

Notre Dame Southern Cal Final Stats

By Jack Schaller, The Scholastic 1995 Football Review

In one motion, a reborn Irish squad shocked the nation, turned in their best game of the season, threw themselves into the hunt for a major bowl and eliminated a national championship contender. That very smooth motion was the USC game, a story in domination.

On two October 21st possessions, the Notre Dame football team took a huge step towards becoming a great team instead of only a good one.

After a shocking first quarter in which the Irish thoroughly dominated the fifth-ranked Trojans, and less than six minutes of an equally impressive second quarter, all Notre Dame had to show for its efforts was a one­-point deficit.

The Irish defense had just sent the Tro­jans to the sidelines without points for the third time in three tries during the game when a series of events that most watching thought would spell disaster actually brought out the character of this Irish squad.

Junior Scott Sollman caught John Stonehouse’s punt and USC’s Jesse Davis jarred the ball loose. His teammates recov­ered, giving theTrojans the ball on the Irish 17-yard line. Two plays later, Keyshawn Johnson caught a pass on an out pattern, slipped out of an Allen Rossum tackle and pranced into the end zone.

A successful extra point, a feat Kevin Kopka was unable to pull off earlier, put the Trojans up 7-6.

But just as the television audience and fans at Notre Dame Stadium began to roll their eyes and think to themselves, “Here we go again,” the Irish came right back. The fumble could have sparked a Columbus­-esque turnover-fest But the Irish shrugged off the turnover just as they had the rain and the cold, which bothered the visiting Tro­jans all day.

An offsides and an illegal procedure pen­alty on the Trojans gave the Irish the ball at the USC 40. An 8-yard Autry Denson run and a 15-yard center screen to Denson got the drive going. Then a highlight reel block by fullback Marc Edwards on defensive end Israel Ifeanyi, which later appeared in Sports Illustrated, allowed Powlus to sneak out of trouble and scramble for six. Edwards and Denson then shared seven of the next eight carries, taking the Irish down the field before Edwards scored from two yards out. Maybe even more impressive was that the eight carry was made by Powlus. Criti­cized for his inability to run the option effectively, Powlus had asked Holtz to run it more in practice. ”I said, ‘Coach, I don’t mind running the option if you want to run it,”‘ he recalled. Practice didn’t make per­fect, but it made it at the very least effective, giving the Irish another weapon. “We felt we had to run a little bit of option,” Holtz said.

– Edwards, who staked his claim for player of the game honors with his 82 yards, three touchdowns and tremendous blocking, also showed his athleticism on a crazy two-point conversion attempt that put the Irish up 14-7. Edwards took a pitch right, ran and then pulled up. He looked for Mayes and back to Powlus, who he thought was covered.Doing his best Fran Tarkenton imitation, the big fullback reversed his field and danced away from the defenders. He then headed for the left corner of the end zone. The man cover­ing Powlus had to commit to Edwards, who then calmly lofted the ball to Powlus.

”The two-point conversion was a well­ executed play,” Edwards said. “I got great blocking from the line and USC took the bait. Ron was wide open in the comer of the end zone.”

The second series in which the Irish grew up came just before halftime. Denson had just given the Irish a 21-7 lead with a 4-yard touchdown run off of a delay. But the Trojans wanted to notch another touch­ down before the last 41 seconds of the first half evaporated. Good field position and two long strikes gave USC the ball at the Notre Dame 5-yard line with only 19 sec­onds to go. Shades of the Ohio State game, in which the Buckeyes tabbed a momentum changing touchdown just before half, danced through the heads of Irish faithful.

Quarterback Kyle Wachholtz tried un­ successfully to hit Johnson on corner pat­terns three times, but an interference pen­alty on the first of the three tries had given the Trojans the ball on the Notre Dame 2- yard line. On third and goal from the two, Wachholtz tried to go over the middle. Inside linebacker Lyron Cobbins batted the ball and USC running back Rodney Ser­mons collected it, but was swarmed short of pay dirt as time expired. 

Momentum saved. ‘”That was tremendous,” Edwards said of the stand. ”That was a huge boost.” Powlus agreed: ”The defense, they won the game.”

Notre Dame continued to slosh through the soaked Trojans in the second half of play. But tenacity and a little Fighting Irish luck kept the Trojans at arm’s length.

The defense had to step up first. Powlus, perhaps because of the wind, under threw Mayes to start the second half, and the ball was intercepted. Backed up to their own thirty, the Irish defense allowed the Trojans to advance to the six, but then slammed the door. USC settled for a field goal.

Later in the third quarter, the Trojans’ Larry Parker took a Hunter Smith punt at his own 41. He ran straight up the middle before breaking to the right sideline. Enter Irish luck. His jaunt which ended in the end zone, would have been a game-breaking play, save for a little yellow hanky. An illegal block on USC brought the ball back. The defense stepped up again later in the third quarter, after Kopka missed a chance to put the game away with a 29-yard field goal. This miss, however, provided one of the most striking visual images of the sea­ son. Intercepting Kopka as he made his way back to the sideline, Mayes grabbed the freshman to ensure eye-contact, and spoke to him for over a minute.

In the fourth quarter, the Irish iced the game. Kory Minor crumpled Wachholtz in the end zone for a safety, Powlus threw a touchdown pass, and Edwards notched his third touchdown of the game.

The spectacular plays, however, could not overshadow what was without a doubt the best, most complete win of the Irish season. After the game, USC coach John Robinson couldn’t even point to a single play as the turning point. ”There’s really not much to say,”he said. “We played bad, Notre Dame played good. It was a matter of their ability to run at us and our inability to make plays on third down. They had a good plan, they executed it and they overwhelmed us.”

The Trojans seemed upset by the cold, rainy weather, while the Irish fed off of it. The offensive line pushed the Trojan de­fense out of the way, and Irish backs ex­ploited it for 216 rushing yards. “[Edwards] was areal tough runner, and he was running behind a great offensive line,” senior line­ backer Scott Fields said. ”They were easily the best offensive line we have faced this year. Not only are they big, but they are athletic and they were able to execute to­ day.”

The line also gave Powlus plenty of time to turn in a solid performance. Not flashy, with huge numbers, but effective, the way Holtz likes it. The junior completed 18 passes in 29 tries for 189 yards and a nifty 2-yard flip to tight end Pete Chryplewicz.

After Notre Dame struggled against Army’s option wizardry, questions abounded before the USC game. But start­ing with Tatum’s mammoth hit, the Irish forced three turnovers and put the game away with a safety. Cobbins, who in two years had no interceptions, picked off two, returning one 37 yards. “We worked on pass drops during practice all week,” he explained. “We played our best to get the big plays we needed to produce a win.” Bert Berry contributed a drive-killing tackle, and Kory Minor a safety in a fine all-around effort by Notre Dame’s standout linebacking core.

Of all those certain of a USC victory, the Trojans themselves might have been the most cocksure. Pregame comments from the Men of Troy incited Irish fury. “Some people can do it with their mouth, and we proved that we could do it by action,” said Mayes.