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Time for Charlie to give up some control

Some advice for Notre Dame's coach heading into the 2009 season

Image: Charlie Weis
Christian Petersen / Getty Images
After a great first season, times have been tough for Charlie Weis at Notre Dame, and he may need to make some changes if he hopes to last beyond next season.
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OPINION
By John Walters
NBCSports.com
updated 8:29 a.m. ET Dec. 4, 2008

Image: John Walters
John Walters
The message struck me like a slap in the face.

Rain fell heavily in the East Lansing night in 2006. After one quarter Notre Dame trailed Michigan State 17-0 as a hostile crowd fed on the bedlam. High above the field, inside the Spartan Stadium press box, I opened the email and read this simple sentence: “The fat guy can’t coach.”

Gazing far down below and across the turf to the Notre Dame sideline, I took my first honest look at Charlie Weis. Here was a guy who had somehow climbed from the Notre Dame student section to being mentioned in the same sentence with Ara and Lou. This was akin to going from being a spectator at Cape Canaveral to becoming commander of the space shuttle. 'Who is this guy?', I thought. Had he fooled everyone?

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Eight days earlier the Fighting Irish had been the No. 2 ranked team in the nation. On the eve of Notre Dame’s home game vs. Michigan, two of its best and most colorful players, best friends and heroes of the renaissance, Jeff Samardzija and Tom Zbikowski, endured a quick photo shoot for a Sports Illustrated photographer. If the Irish were to beat the No. 11 Wolverines the next day, surely there would be a story on the two. Perhaps even a cover.

Michigan won, 47-21.

Now, looking across Spartan Stadium at the man with the 10-year deal, a Domer whose own Notre Dame gridiron story was even more incredible than Rudy’s, I began to wonder. What was closer to the truth, bluster or brilliance? Or was Charlie Weis a bit of both?

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I thought of Steve Belles. A former back-up quarterback and special teams standout on the 1988 national championship team, Belles is now the head coach at Arizona’s premiere prep football program, Chandler Hamilton High School. Belles may not have a Super Bowl ring, but he is a Notre Dame alumnus who won a state high school championship as both a player and a coach, as well as a national championship with the Irish. Did Belles, I wondered, have any less impressive a resume than Weis?

The Irish staged a remarkable comeback to beat Michigan State that evening, and the legend — or myth — of Charlie Weis was preserved for the time being. Since that night, though, they are 16-17. After four seasons the same questions haunt anyone who cares about Notre Dame football: Who is Charlie Weis? Can he coach?

Notre Dame and Weis renewed their wedding vows on Wednesday. The four-year marriage has fallen upon rocky times of late, but in the end they chose to stay together for the reason that most married couples do: for the kids.

“It has a host of implications,” first-year Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick told the Chicago Tribune on Wednesday evening, referring to the celebrity with which the decision to retain Weis was made. “It has implications on recruiting. Our current student-athletes were walking around on eggshells. You want to relieve them of that.”

The kids. The Notre Dame starting lineup boasts a nucleus of 10 freshmen and sophomores, the ripening fruit of back-to-back top-10 recruiting classes in 2007 and 2008. The incoming class may not be quite as spectacular, but one or two instant five-star players in key positions, such as running back Cierre Wood (verbal commitment) of Oxnard, Calif. and outside linebacker Manti T’eo (undecided) of Honolulu, is all they need.

Has Charlie Weis met expectations as a head coach the past two years? If he had, do you think his boss would need to release a statement assuring outsiders that an employee in the midst of a 10-year contract “will continue as head football coach”? 

Weis and his staff, however, have excelled in terms of recruiting. That is why Swarbrick said, “I am confident that Charlie has a strong foundation in place for future success.” That is why he remains the head football coach at Notre Dame.

The first decisive act of Swarbrick’s tenure was not retaining Weis so much as it was resolving this matter swiftly. By doing so, Swarbrick put a stop to the speculation. He ended the “How big is the buyout?” parlor game. He reassured the kids ... those already on campus and those who are considering joining them.

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This much we have gleaned from four years of observing Weis: He is highly intelligent, blessed with gigabytes of memory storage within that cranium of his; he cares; he is a workaholic; his job comes before his health and his slumber; the closest thing he has to a hobby is watching even more film; and he can recruit. Lord, can he sell Notre Dame to 17-year-olds (or, in Jimmy Clausen’s case, 18-year-olds).

But can he coach? Can he lead? What answers would his current players give to that question, if truly they could speak candidly? And how many prep players being recruited by Notre Dame, blue-chip recruits who have watched their suitor drop four of their past five games, are wondering the same thing?

You cannot dismiss 2005. Weis and his staff did an outstanding job in his inaugural season prior to the Fiesta Bowl. The Irish won nine of 11 games, the only two losses coming 1) in overtime and 2) in the final moments to the nation’s No. 1 team. Even the most vitriolic critic of Weis’ must admit, whilst uttering the name “Ty Willingham’s recruits” under his breath, that Charlie completely turned the program around that season.


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