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Notre Dame-Southern Cal Preview
Notre Dame Fighting Irish at USC Trojans
- This will be the 84th meeting all-time between Notre Dame and USC. The Irish own a series lead of 43-35-5, but the Trojans have won 12 of the past 16. Notre Dame won the last time the two met in Los Angeles, a 20-16 win on November 27, 2010, ending an eight-game losing streak against the Trojans at the time.
- Notre Dame finds itself as the top ranked team in the nation for the first time since the week of November 15, 1993. The Irish are the first team since Missouri in 2007 to reach No. 1 after being unranked at some point in the season and could move to 12-0 for only the second time in their 125-year history.
- After going every season from 2002 to 2008 without losing more than two games, USC has now lost at least four games in three of the last four years (9-4 in 2009; 8-5 in 2010). The Trojans have won four of their last five regular season finales.
- Notre Dame is tied with Alabama allowing the fewest opponent points per game (10.1). The Irish's five games holding an opponent to six points or fewer are the most in the country and matches their total from 2004 through last season. Only two teams since 1996 kept six opponents to under seven points (2008 USC and 2006 Virginia Tech).
- Marqise Lee's 1605 receiving yards are a new Pac-12 single-season record and his 107 receptions are just four shy of the Pac-12 record of 111 set by Robert Woods last season. Lee has six games this season with 150+ receiving yards and could become the first player since Texas Tech's Michael Crabtree in 2007 with seven such games.
- Theo Riddick (734/4), Cierre Wood (720/4), George Atkinson (346/5), and Everett Golson (258/5) give Notre Dame four players with at least 250 rushing yards and four rushing touchdowns -- tied for the most in the nation (Air Force, Georgia Tech, Oklahoma State, Texas A&M).
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) - Coach Brian Kelly was doing the same thing Notre Dame fans around the country were doing last Saturday night, flipping back and forth between the Kansas State and Oregon games and cheering loudly for one of the top two teams in the BCS standings to lose so the Fighting Irish could have a shot at the title game.
When both went down, though, he says he felt neither a sense of elation nor satisfaction. It was more a feeling of control. The Fighting Irish (11-0) were now in control of their own destiny, knowing a win Saturday over rival Southern California (7-4) puts the Irish in the BCS title game.
"We get a chance to play for the national championship provided we win this week," he said.
It's been 19 years since the Irish were last able to think like that. Actually, 18 years, 11 months and 29 days. But who's counting?
That's how many days it had been since Notre Dame was last ranked No. 1. That's a span that began after Boston College shocked the Fighting Irish with a 41-39 victory in 1993 a week after second-ranked Notre Dame upset top-ranked Florida State to claim that No. 1 ranking.
That's the same ranking the Irish held in 1990, 1989, 1988 and for 77 games over the years until ending the longest streak ever without a No. 1 ranking in Notre Dame history with a 38-0 win over Wake Forest last Saturday.
The Irish aren't just No. 1, they are a unanimous No. 1 in the Associated Press poll after improving to 11-0 for the first time since 1989. A week earlier some scoffed at Kelly for ranking the Irish No. 1 in the coaches' poll. This week 55 of his 59 colleagues agreed with him. Kelly said he didn't feel any sense of vindication.
"I was just being consistent with my rankings," he said. "I told our team that I felt like they were the best team in the country because I knew more about our team than the other two."
The longest Notre Dame had ever gone previously without being ranked No. 1 was 10 years and 30 days, which was the gap between the time No. 19 Purdue beat a top-ranked Notre Dame squad coached by Terry Brennan in 1954 and the Irish coached by Ara Parseghian reclaimed the top-ranking after a 40-0 win over Navy in 1964.
That team's hopes for a national title fell just short when the top-ranked Irish were upset by Southern California 20-17.
USC will be trying to end Notre Dame's title hopes again this week, and it has the manpower to do it. After all, the Trojans were the preseason No. 1, while the Irish started the year unranked. But the Irish are undefeated, while the Trojans have lost three of their last four and will be without quarterback Matt Barkley, who suffered a sprained right shoulder in a 38-28 loss to UCLA last Saturday.
That gave the Bruins the Pac-12 South title, although USC coach Lane Kiffin has been assured he will be back next season.
"We're extremely disappointed with this season," Kiffin said. "We're too talented to have that many losses."
Filling in for Barkley, freshman Max Wittek will have quite the stage to make his first career start Saturday, facing a Manti Te'o-led defense that has allowed one total touchdown in three road games. Wittek will have some great weapons, though, with Marqise Lee having totaled 924 receiving yards and seven touchdowns in his last five games.
Notre Dame will still have a first-year starter under center, but Everett Golson is looking more and more like a seasoned veteran. The sophomore posted career highs with 346 yards and three touchdown passes against Wake Forest, his third straight game with three total TDs.
"He played the best game of his life and it just shows how much he's grown as a person and as a player," receiver John Goodman said. "He is taking his coaching and taking his leadership and he's the guy that we want to lead us to the promised land."
The Trojans have dominated this rivalry in recent years, posting a 12-5-1 record over Notre Dame since the Irish were last ranked No. 1.
That includes a 38-0 loss by Notre Dame in 2007, a 38-3 loss in 2008, 31-point losses in 2002, '03 and '04 and the 34-31 loss in 2005 that became known as the "Bush Push" because USC tailback Reggie Bush nudged quarterback Matt Leinart into the end zone with 3 seconds left. During that time the Trojans have won national championships in 2003 and 2004, finished No. 2 in 2005 and No. 3 in 2007 and 2008 and fourth in 2002 and 2006. Notre Dame finished No. 2 in 1993 and No. 9 in 2005. That's it for top 10 finishes.
So there's no arguing USC has been the better team in recent years. The Trojans have won nine of the last 10 games in the rivalry, the only win for the Irish a 20-16 victory in Los Angeles two years ago. Despite that, Kelly said the current Irish squad doesn't feel dominated by the Trojans.
"I don't think they look at USC and think of dominance," Kelly said. "They felt like last year they let a game slip through their hands with sloppy play. Beat them at their place. So, no, our guys are excited about playing a rival in USC. But there's no trepidation. There's a great deal of respect for USC and what they've done. But our guys are very confident in themselves as well."
Updated November 20, 2012

