logo
What's next for Notre Dame at wide receiver with position again in rebuilding mode?

What's next for Notre Dame at wide receiver with position again in rebuilding mode?

New York Times08-04-2025

SOUTH BEND, Ind. — The wideouts sprinted 10 yards, turned, then came back to the football, bursting between two tackling dummies. Receivers coach Mike Brown fired the footballs, one after the other, until the entire position group took a rep. Almost every football was caught, which still isn't enough for a group seemingly stuck in rebuilding mode the past few seasons.
Advertisement
Notre Dame would love greatness at wide receiver, the position that produced Golden Tate, Michael Floyd, Will Fuller and Chase Claypool not that long ago. But it probably would settle for competently good, considering an actual wide receiver hasn't led Notre Dame in receptions in six years, going back to Claypool's senior year. Head coaches, offensive coordinators and quarterbacks have changed. The production has not.
Now it's Brown's turn to solve the problem, which begins with doing the basics better. It's why those rudimentary drills during last weekend's spring practice were worth watching. Forget 50-50 catches. Notre Dame is simply trying to figure out how to make the automatics automatic.
'Obviously there's way too many (drops). There's no excuses for it,' Brown said. 'We got to make plays when the ball's thrown our way. It just comes through repetition, man, repetition and then obviously a point of emphasis for us in the room.'
Beaux Collins (seven) and Jordan Faison (six) led Notre Dame in drops last season, with their drop percentages, per Pro Football Focus — their number of drops divided by their number of targets — among the worst by starting Irish receivers in the past five years. Faison dropped 16.7 percent of his targets, the highest percentage by a frontline receiver since Claypool's sophomore year. Collins wasn't much better at 14.6 percent.
Considering the scarce opportunities in Notre Dame's pass game with Riley Leonard at the controls, those basic failures were compounded by the lack of targets. That should change no matter who wins the quarterback job among CJ Carr, Steve Angeli and Kenny Minchey. But the receiver position must improve alongside that offensive development.
'I don't know if you'd call them ordinary plays, but we need to make the plays — the ones that are 100 out of 100, we gotta be 100 out of 100. That comes with consistency in depth, consistency in route running,' offensive coordinator Mike Denbrock said. 'For a receiver, to be honest with you, it really shouldn't matter who the quarterback is. I need to understand space and spacing and depth and specifics of techniques of route running.'
Advertisement
That was a problem much of last season and a dire one early as Leonard didn't throw his first touchdown pass until the season's fourth game. Route concepts were off. Spacing didn't match how it looked in practice. And when wideouts did get an opportunity, it bounced off their hands. Jaden Greathouse was dinged with just one drop last season, but it came against Northern Illinois, which would have been a 25-yard gain.
Make that catch, and the worst loss of the college football season might not happen.
Yet, considering how Greathouse finished the season — 13 catches for 233 yards and three touchdowns against Ohio State and Penn State — there's reason to think the position can take a step forward. Greathouse and Faison return for their junior years. Will Pauling, a transfer from Wisconsin, joined for spring practice. Malachi Fields, a transfer from Virginia, will arrive during the summer. There's younger talent, too, although there appears to be a gap between the top four and everybody else.
Pauling could offer something last year's three-man receiver transfer class couldn't: prior knowledge of Brown's coaching and Denbrock's system. Pauling signed with Cincinnati and played two years for Denbrock and Brown with the Bearcats before transferring to Wisconsin, where he played for Brown again.
'He understands what things are supposed to look like. He's played in this exact offense,' Brown said. 'He's technically probably played in the system longer than anybody else that's here, which is kind of weird with him being a new guy.'
Pauling was limited during Saturday's open practice, still recovering from foot surgery, but his ability to know where to be and when to be there showed. During a seven-on-seven period, Pauling found an opening in Notre Dame's zone defense and Angeli hit him for a 25-yard gain. The pitch-and-catch was hardly spectacular. Knowing exactly how to run the route meant it didn't need to be.
Advertisement
'We were not very confident in anything we did in the passing game a year ago,' Denbrock said. 'That I think you'll see take a huge leap into year two. I think that will come from a number of positions, not just the wide receivers.'
Yet it's the receiver group Notre Dame needs to grow the most, whether that's doing the basics better or making contested catches more than once per month. When Denbrock demanded the position improve, he basically put the receivers on notice that a repeat of last year won't be tolerated. The Irish can't afford it with its tight end room thinned out and the quarterback position not the run threat it was under Leonard.
Basically, Notre Dame needs a growth arc like Greathouse had in the College Football Playoff, but applied to the entire position. There are signs it can be.
'We got a little bit more juice than last year, maybe because we're a younger team and have a lot of young guys who are ready to be stars now,' Greathouse said. 'Everybody is more familiar with how things are supposed to be going, besides the freshmen of course. Everything is more in a flow now and we're just tuning up the small details.'
Maybe there will be a step behind the basics, too. But for now, Notre Dame's receiver room needs to sweat the small stuff. If there's something bigger, it will have to wait.
(Top photo of Jordan Faison: Trevor Ruszkowski / Imagn Images)

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Best of Canadian soccer star Adriana Leon in images
Best of Canadian soccer star Adriana Leon in images

USA Today

time15 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Best of Canadian soccer star Adriana Leon in images

Best of Canadian soccer star Adriana Leon in images Adriana Leon is a veteran soccer player with experience on the national team level and for international squads. She played college soccer at Notre Dame. Leon played in 43 matches for the Fighting Irish before finishing her career at the University of Florida. She has played for multiple teams in the Women's National Super League, including Aston Villa. The same can be said about the NWSL. Leon also plays for Team Canada being from Mississauga, Ontario, Canada. Adriana Leon Adriana Leon Adriana Leon Adriana Leon Adriana Leon Adriana Leon Adriana Leon Adriana Leon Adriana Leon Adriana Leon Adriana Leon Adriana Leon Adriana Leon Adriana Leon Adriana Leon

New York Giants' Dexter Lawrence among stars 'on the radar' for potential new contract
New York Giants' Dexter Lawrence among stars 'on the radar' for potential new contract

USA Today

time23 minutes ago

  • USA Today

New York Giants' Dexter Lawrence among stars 'on the radar' for potential new contract

New York Giants' Dexter Lawrence among stars 'on the radar' for potential new contract Star defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence is the engine that drives the New York Giants' defense. Though he still has three years remaining on the four-year, $87.5 million contract extension he signed during the 2023 offseason, there's a chance discussions of a new deal may arise sooner rather than later. When looking at the potential big deals coming down the pike, Anthony Holzman-Escareno of included Lawrence as a player who could be on the radar for a new deal following the 2025 campaign. Lawrence is the best interior defensive linemen this side of Chris Jones. Lawrence led the NFL in sacks through the first eight weeks of the 2024 season, despite being double-teamed at the league's highest rate (63.8%). He has three years remaining on his current deal, but if he can put together a dominant 2025 season, Lawrence is the type of building block you make sure to keep around and keep happy. Lawrence was firmly in the discussion for the Defensive Player of the Year Award before he suffered a season-ending elbow injury in Week 12. Per Pro Football Focus, Lawrence recorded 36 total pressures to go along with nine sacks and 16 QB hits. Over the next three seasons, Lawrence carries salary-cap hits of $23.7 million, $26.96 million, and $26.5 million, respectively, per Spotrac. A new deal may seem premature, but an extension could help the Giants free up some future money with Malik Nabers (after 2026) and Kayvon Thibodeaux likely seeking new contracts soon as well. If Lawrence continues to play at this elite level, which is possible for defensive tackles going into their 30s, there is certainly a conversation that will need to be had potentially after the 2025 season.

Two former Wisconsin Badgers land on PFF's list of the NFL's top guards for 2025
Two former Wisconsin Badgers land on PFF's list of the NFL's top guards for 2025

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Two former Wisconsin Badgers land on PFF's list of the NFL's top guards for 2025

A pair of former Wisconsin Badgers appeared on ProFootballFocus' recent list of the NFL's top 32 guards entering the 2025 season. Detroit Lions right guard Kevin Zeitler, a three-year Badger from 2009-11, and Buffalo Bills left guard David Edwards, who represented the Badgers from 2015-18, earned designations on the outlet's 32-man hierarchy. Advertisement Zeitler, a native of Waukesha, Wisconsin, landed at No. 9 on the list between Los Angeles Rams guard Kevin Dotson (No. 8) and San Francisco 49ers run-blocker Dominick Puni. The former Badger signed with the Detroit Lions ahead of the 2024 slate following his 2023 Pro Bowl campaign with the Baltimore Ravens. He's now entering his 14th professional campaign. In offensive coordinator Ben Johnson's scheme, Zeitler helped the Lions rush 534 times for 2,488 yards and 29 scores with David Montgomery and Jahmyr Gibbs starring in the backfield. Zeitler started at right guard in all 16 of his appearances. Despite being one of the older players at his position, Zeitler is about as effective as anyone not named Joe Thuney, Chris Lindstrom, or Quenton Nelson. Here's PFF's analysis: "Although Zeitler enters 2025 at age 35, he continues to prove he isn't slowing down. In his lone season in Detroit, Zeitler earned his highest PFF overall grade (86.5) in a decade, finishing as the NFL's third-highest-graded guard. While his pass protection dipped a bit in 2024, his 87.2 PFF run-blocking grade stands as the best of his career." Meanwhile, PFF ranked Edwards down at No. 29. The 2019 First-team All-Big Ten team member has played six professional seasons with the Los Angeles Rams and Buffalo Bills. Shortly after winning a Super Bowl with the Rams in 2021, the lineman joined the Bills in 2023 as a backup before starting all 16 games during the 2024 campaign. Advertisement With reigning MVP Josh Allen and dynamic rusher James Cook as primary ball-carriers, the Bills rushed for 2,230 yards and a league-best 32 touchdowns a season ago. Here's what PFF said about Edwards ahead of his third season in Buffalo: "2024 marked Edwards' first season in a starting role since 2021. He earned solid PFF overall grades, but really stood out as a zone blocker, recording a 78.1 PFF run-blocking grade on zone concepts — good for the 93rd percentile and the fifth-highest mark among qualifying guards." Zeitler's Lions will square off against the Packers on Sept. 7 to begin the season, while Edwards' Bills will play the Ravens the same day, beginning their quest for a second straight AFC Championship game appearance. Contact/Follow @TheBadgersWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Wisconsin Badgers news, notes and opinion This article originally appeared on Badgers Wire: Wisconsin Badgers in NFL on PFF's Ranking top guards for 2025

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store