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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1958)
comeback trail in '57; have been worthy of successful-season consideration in themselves. The week after beating Oklahoma, the Irish took on a powerful Iowa team and almost worked the miracle of toppling two giants in a row. Notre Dame had a chance of beating the Hawkeyes going into the fourth quarter, but finally succumbed, 21-13. A key play in the hard-fought game was a touchdown pass that was touched by five players, two of them Notre Dame's, before it wound up in the hands of an Iowa player in the end zone. "Brennan gets my vote as Coach of the Year," Forrest Evashevski, the Iowa coach, commented. Ed (Moose) Krause, Notre Dame's mammoth sized director of athletics, who played and assisted in coaching football at Notre Dame, summed up the comeback: "We, of course, hoped for im provement over that dis mal '56 record. But what a job Terry did! It was astounding. He's going into the '58 season with a raise in salary, and no body deserved it more." In appraising prospects for this season, Brennan, acting in the manner of a smooth politician, says, "I think we have a good start on the way back to bid for national honors. We're on the way back, but it will take another year or so before we are in a position to be fighting for the national cham pionship. Our main prob lem now is finding depth for a truly dependable second unit one that we can send in without worry anytime during a game." There are many reasons why this 70th Notre Dame foot ball team may be a mem orable one: 1. Brennan's experi ence begins to pay off more each season. A coach has to stay super alert when he plays Notre Dame's schedule. 2. Brennan's coaching staff is getting stronger here's why they may win the national title this season. Athletic Director Ed Kraute gives coach credit for team's comeback. A goat in 1956, Terry Brennan is riding high after great 1957 season. - IT . i each year. Latest addition is Hugh Devore, who was brought in to coach the freshmen. Devore has 20 years of college and professional coaching experi ence. Last year Bernie Crimmins was rehired as a Notre Dame assistant after holding down a head coaching job. With such men as these on the staff, it wouldn't appear that Notre Dame is de-emphasizing. 3. Those sophomores who got pushed around in the '56 season are all seniors now, the nucleus of the '58 squad, and ready to finish their college playing careers in style. 4. Easier schedule. This r" "- - calls for quick explana tion. No Notre Dame schedule is ever easy, for there's a long line of schools which consider their season a success if they can beat Notre Dame. Two toughies Oklahoma and Michigan State are not on the ND schedule this year. The slate of Indiana, Southern Methodist, Arrny, Duke, Purdue, Navy, Pitt, North Carolina, Iowa, and Southern California, while rugged, doesn't measure up to 1957. 5. The possibility of strong All -American can didates at five positions: co-Capt. Al Ecuyer of New Orleans at guard; Bronko Nagurski, Inter national Falls, Minn., at tackle; Monty Stickles, Poughkecpsie, N. Y., at end; Bob Williams, Wilkes-Barre, Pa., at quarterback; and Nick Pietrosante, Ansonia, Conn., at fullback. 6. Dependable quarter backing. Any Notre Dame team which has made its mark always has had strong quarterbacking. This year the Irish have Williams, a senior, backed up by a fine junior, George Izo of Barberton, Ohio. Maybe neither is a Johnny Lujack or Paul Hornung, but both can do a great job. 7. Restored confidence with that 7-3 record after the 2-8 season. Brennan says the win over Army when the game seemed by Dave Warner Dave Warier received his journalism training at Notre Dame in the . post-war era when the Fighting Irish were in the habit of winning national titles. Warner is note a sports writer for the Rochester (N.Y.) Democrat, and Chronicle. ' He has written magazine articles on numerous sports subjects and is also the author of a book on Notre Dame coach Terry Brennan. Faintly Wsakly V hopelessly lost lifted the squad a long way last season. Confidence is half the battle. 8. Good squad balance. There are 25 returning lettermen, with monogram winners at all positions. Eight of the Irish's 10 top ground-gainers last season are back this year. Enthusiasm is definitely on the upswing at Notre Dame, not that it ever really died. When Brennan called for Spring football candidates, 104 of them, largest in five years, turned out In Jim Colisimo, Eveleth, Minn.; Stickles, hero of the Army game last year; Gary Meyers, Spokane; Dick Royer, Cincinnati; and Bob Wetoska, Minne apolis, Notre Dame may have five of the best ends in the country. And in breakaway runners Patrick Doyle of Sioux City, Iowa, and Jim Crotty of Seattle, the Irish may have two of the fleetest since Bob Livingstone, Creighton Miller, and Coy McGee were blazing the gridiron 10 to 15 years ago. The winning tradition has a strong flavor at Notre Dame, whose record of 185 wins, 49 losses, and 14 ties is the best of all major college football teams over the last 26 years. When Rockne was coaching Notre Dame teams, the wins very often- used to come as a result of deft psychological pitchforking. "Rock" had the knack of getting his players fighting mad with such needles as "Okay, girls, let's go." Or by opening the door of the Notre Dame dressing room after a poor first half and saying, "Sorry, I thought this was the Notre Dame dressing room," then closing the door on his stunned squad. Leahy got great results with a combination of perfecting his squad to the last detail while weeping to the press about a lack of material. He was a master at crooning the blues even while Notre Dame was racking up a record of 39 consecutive victories over a period of four years. Brennan, whose record is 26 wins, 14 defeats, plays it with a more matter-of-fact approach, neither try ing to kid himself, his players, or the press. He gets better results playing it straight. "Psychology in the dressing room is all right sometimes," he says, "but the game has changed so much that all you've got time for is to prepare your team for each game as best you can, then make the necessary changes at half-time. Besides, I can see where a lot of that psychology could backfire." His players have great respect for Terry. One of them recently summed it up this way: "If he asked me to run through a brick wall, I'd do it, because I'd figure he had a good reason." As for the football coach's time-honored crying towel, Brennan, who has a law degree, doesn't per mit himself the luxury of tears, instead rests his case on: "Excessive moaning never gained a yard on a football field yet" So this may be the year for the Fighting Irish to regain the national crown they abdicated 10 years ago. At any rate, they'll be the team to watch. They always have been. TmmUy Wrrfcly. September 21. IMS 9