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1988 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team

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1988 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football
Consensus national champion
Fiesta Bowl champion
Fiesta Bowl, W 34–21 vs. West Virginia
ConferenceIndependent
Ranking
CoachesNo. 1
APNo. 1
Record12–0
Head coach
Offensive coordinatorJim Strong (1st season)
Offensive schemeOption
Defensive coordinatorBarry Alvarez (1st season)
Base defense5–2
Captains
Home stadiumNotre Dame Stadium
Seasons
← 1987
1989 →
1988 NCAA Division I-A independents football records
Conf Overall
Team W   L   T W   L   T
No. 1 Notre Dame       12 0 0
No. 2 Miami (FL)       11 1 0
No. 3 Florida State       11 1 0
No. 5 West Virginia       11 1 0
Southern Miss       10 2 0
No. 13 Syracuse       10 2 0
Army       9 3 0
Louisville       8 3 0
South Carolina       8 4 0
Northern Illinois       7 4 0
Pittsburgh       6 5 0
Memphis State       6 5 0
Southwestern Louisiana       6 5 0
Rutgers       5 6 0
Akron       5 6 0
Penn State       5 6 0
Tulane       5 6 0
Temple       4 7 0
Tulsa       4 7 0
Boston College       3 8 0
Cincinnati       3 8 0
East Carolina       3 8 0
Navy       3 8 0
Virginia Tech       3 8 0
Rankings from AP Poll

The 1988 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team represented the University of Notre Dame during the 1988 NCAA Division I-A football season. The Irish, coached by Lou Holtz, ended the season with 12 wins and no losses, winning the national championship. The Fighting Irish won the title by defeating the previously unbeaten and No. 3 ranked West Virginia Mountaineers in the Sunkist Fiesta Bowl in Tempe, Arizona, by a score of 34–21. The 1988 squad, one of 11 national title squads for the Irish, is considered to be one of the best undefeated teams in the history of college football.[1] The Irish beat the teams which finished the season ranked #2, #4, #5, and #7 in the AP Poll.[1] They also won 10 of 12 games by double digits.[1] The 1988 squad is best remembered for its 31–30 upset of No. 1 ranked Miami, ending their 36-game regular season winning streak.[2] The game is remembered to this day as one of the most memorable games in all of college football.[3][4][5]

Schedule

[edit]
DateTimeOpponentRankSiteTVResultAttendanceSource
September 108:00 p.m.No. 9 MichiganNo. 13CBSW 19–1759,075
September 1711:00 a.m.at Michigan StateNo. 8ABCW 20–377,472
September 2412:00 p.m.PurdueNo. 8
  • Notre Dame Stadium
  • Notre Dame, IN (rivalry)
W 52–759,075
October 17:00 p.m.StanfordNo. 5
  • Notre Dame Stadium
  • Notre Dame, IN (rivalry)
ESPNW 42–2159,075
October 83:00 p.m.at PittsburghNo. 5ESPNW 30–2056,500
October 151:30 p.m.No. 1 Miami (FL)No. 4
CBSW 31–3059,075
October 2212:00 p.m.Air ForceNo. 2
  • Notre Dame Stadium
  • Notre Dame, IN (rivalry)
W 41–1359,075
October 2911:00 a.m.vs. NavyNo. 2W 22–754,929
November 512:00 p.m.RiceNo. 1
  • Notre Dame Stadium
  • Notre Dame, IN
WGN-TVW 54–1159,075
November 1912:00 p.m.Penn StateNo. 1
  • Notre Dame Stadium
  • Notre Dame, IN (rivalry)
CBSW 21–359,075
November 263:30 p.m.at No. 2 USCNo. 1ABCW 27–1093,829
January 2, 19894:30 p.m.vs. No. 3 West VirginiaNo. 1NBCW 34–2174,911[6]

Rankings

[edit]
Ranking movements
Legend: ██ Increase in ranking ██ Decrease in ranking
( ) = First-place votes
Week
PollPre123456789101112131415Final
AP13 (1)1313885542 (22)2 (19)1 (44)1 (42)1 (40)1 (35)1 (57)1 (49)1 (58 12)
Coaches121211985542 (10)2 (8)1 (30)1 (32)1 (31)1 (29)1 (42)1 (42)1 (42)

[7]

Game summaries

[edit]

Michigan

[edit]
#9 Michigan at #13 Notre Dame
1 234Total
No. 9 Wolverines 0 773 17
No. 13 Fighting Irish 10 306 19

13th ranked Notre Dame debuted its season against No. 9 Michigan in Notre Dame Stadium.[8] In a 19-17 thriller, walk-on kicker Reggie Ho kicked a 26-yard field goal winner with 1:13 remaining.[8] Lou Holtz's concerns about his youthful offense and green receivers were realized as the Irish offense did not score a single offensive touchdown.[8] In addition to Reggie Ho's game winner, the Irish kicker scored 3 other field goals.[9] The lone touchdown from Notre Dame came from a Ricky Watters punt return, an 81-yard runback.[9] Michigan's Mike Gillette, who had given the Wolverines the lead with 5:34 left by kicking a 49-yard field goal, had one final chance to give Michigan the win, narrowly missing from 48 yards as the final gun sounded.[9]

At Michigan State

[edit]
#8 Notre Dame at Michigan State
1 234Total
No. 8 Fighting Irish 0 677 20
Spartans 3 000 3

MSU threatened Notre Dame early with a 1st-quarter field goal, but that would be the only points of the day the Notre Dame defense would allow as the Irish downed MSU 20–3.[10] Notre Dame struggled early in the contest, accumulating only 50 yards running on 21 carries.[10] Reggie Ho tied the game with 31-yarder in the second quarter and put the Irish ahead 6–3 at the half with a 22-yard field goal.[10] The second half was a different story for the Irish offense, as quarterback Tony Rice and company amassed 195 yards on 33 carries in the second half.[10] 156 yards came on 19 carries in the third quarter alone.[10] Tony Rice ran for an 8-yard touchdown and Michael Stonebreaker added a 39-yard interception return for a touchdown in the final quarter to end any hopes of a Spartan upset.[10] The star of the game was Notre Dame's defense, which held the Spartans to 89 yards rushing for the game.[10] Running back Mark Green led the Irish rushing attack with 125 yards on the ground.[11]

Purdue

[edit]
Purdue at #8 Notre Dame
1 234Total
Boilermakers 0 007 7
No. 8 Fighting Irish 14 2837 52

Tony Rice passed for two touchdowns and ran for another as Notre Dame shredded Purdue 52–7.[12] It was one of the worst losses by Purdue in the history of the series, and its worst loss since a 48-0 drubbing in 1970.[12] Notre Dame scored early and often, starting with a 38-yard Rice option run for a touchdown.[12] Tony Rice's first passing touchdown on the year was an 8-yarder to freshman tight end Derek Brown.[12] The Irish exploded for 28 points in the second quarter, highlighted by a 54-yard Rice touchdown pass to Rocket Ismail.[12] Tailback Mark Green added a 7-yard touchdown run and Ricky Watters returned a punt 66 yards for a score.[12] Coach Lou Holtz used three separate quarterbacks in the second quarter and four total in the game.[12] 3rd-string quarterback Steve Belles hit running back Tony Brooks for a 34-yard score to put the Irish up 42–0 at half-time.[12] The second half saw the Irish score ten points with back-ups, a 44-yard field goal by Billy Hackett and a 36-yard run from freshman fullback Rodney Culver.[12] Purdue's lone touchdown was a fourth quarter 7-yard pass from Brian Fox to Calvin Williams.[12] The Irish improved to 3-0 while the Boilermakers dropped to 1–2 on the year.[12]

Stanford

[edit]
Stanford at #5 Notre Dame
1 234Total
Cardinal 0 777 21
No. 5 Fighting Irish 6 2277 42

Tony Rice rushed for two touchdowns and passed for a third to lead the Fighting Irish to a 42-14 blowout of Stanford.[13] Rice completed 11 of 14 passes for 129 yards and rushed for 107 yards.[13] Rice scored runs of 30 yards and 6 yards while the Irish tailbacks added 3 other scores with touchdowns from Mark Green, Tony Brooks, and Anthony Johnson.[13] Despite the lopsided score, Stanford did mount two of the longest scoring drives against the Irish to date, with a 68-yard drive by quarterback Brian Johnson and a 73-yard drive by back-up quarterback Jason Palumbis.[13] Freshman standout tight end Derek Brown added the Irish's sole passing touchdown in the 3rd quarter.[13] The Irish defense stymied the Cardinal, holding them to just 111 yards in the first half.[13]

At Pittsburgh

[edit]
#5 Notre Dame at Pittsburgh
1 234Total
No. 5 Fighting Irish 14 367 30
Panthers 7 733 20

Notre Dame, a loser to Pittsburgh three years in a row, narrowly avoided another such upset as the Irish improved to 5–0 on the season.[14] The 30–20 victory in the rain did little to inspire confidence that Notre Dame could beat No. 1 Miami the following week.[14] The Panthers made a number of critical mistakes that led the Panthers to believe they did more to lose the game more than Notre Dame did to win it.[14] "We could have won the game," said Panther coach Mike Gottfried, "but we made just enough mistakes to lose it."[14]

Notre Dame struggled to contain Panther quarterback Darnell Dickerson, who at times had 10 seconds or more per play.[14] The Panthers came out strong early, starting the game with an impressive drive, but before the Panthers could score, Irish cornerback Todd Lyght forced a fumble, which Chris Zorich recovered.[14] After a stalled Irish drive, the Panthers got the ball back and took a 7–0 lead on a Dickerson touchdown.[14] Notre Dame answered back with a 52-yard Tony Brooks run to the 2-yard line. The large run was the result of a failed Panther blitz attempt.[14] Tony Rice scored on a 2-yard keeper to tie the game 7-7.[14] After an Anthony Johnson touchdown gave the Irish a 14–7 lead, Dickerson scored his second touchdown to tie the game again at 14-14.[14] Reggie Ho scored a 37-yard field goal to give the Irish a 17-14 half time lead.[14]

The critical moment of the game came in the second half, when late into the fourth quarter the Irish were clinging to a 23–20 lead when the Panthers forced the Irish into a 4th and long from their own 23-yard line.[14] But a late 12 men on the field penalty against the Panthers gave the Irish new life.[14] The 15-yard penalty gave Notre Dame the ball on its 48-yard line, and 11 plays later Mark Green ran for an 8-yard touchdown with 4:30 left in the game to put victory out of reach for the Panthers.[14] Tony Rice went 8-14 passing for the game and a third quarter Braxston Banks touchdown gave the Irish the lead for good.[14]

Miami

[edit]
#1 Miami (FL) at #4 Notre Dame
1 234Total
No. 1 Hurricanes 0 2109 30
No. 4 Fighting Irish 7 14100 31
  • Source:

The October 15, 1988, game between Notre Dame and the University of Miami Hurricanes is colloquially referred to as the "Catholics vs. Convicts" game. The University of Notre Dame was dubbed the "Catholics" and the University of Miami was dubbed as "the Convicts".[15][16]

Air Force

[edit]
Air Force at #2 Notre Dame
1 234Total
Falcons 6 700 13
No. 2 Fighting Irish 6 14147 41

A potential letdown after defeating No. 1 Miami the previous week never materialized for the now 2nd ranked Irish, who used a second half onslaught of power running to down the Falcons 41–13.[17] Coach Holtz admitted he was scared all week of a potential upset of his young Notre Dame squad.[17] Of main concern was Air Force's wishbone ground attack, which came into Notre Dame Stadium averaging 46 points and 432 rushing yards a game.[17] Falcons coach Fisher DeBerry's squad had the best ground gaining offense in the nation.[17] Holtz's fears seemed to be valid during the rain in the first half as Notre Dame only held a 7-point lead at the half.[17]

Air Force opened the game with an impressive ground attack.[17] Air Force quarterback Dee Dowis took his team inside the Irish 20 on the game's first offensive drive.[17] But Pat Terrell, the defensive hero of last week's victory over Miami, stepped into the spotlight again, this time with Stan Smagala.[17] Albert Booker, an Air Force halfback, was carrying the ball on second down when Smagala hit him hard.[17] The ball popped free and Terrell recovered the fumble at the Notre Dame 16.[17] After the turnover, Air Force answered with its first field goal by Steve Yarborough from 22 yards out.[17] But Notre Dame matched that by going 71 yards to score on Mark Green's 7-yard touchdown run.[17] In the second quarter, The Irish continued to run the ball, with quarterback Tony Rice and running back Anthony Johnson both running for touchdowns.[17] Air Force answered before the end of the half with a touchdown to cut Notre Dame's lead to just seven points.[17]

The third quarter was all Irish, as five Irish running backs combined for 283 yards, all running for 23 yards or more.[17] One of the highlights was a 50-yard halfback pass late in the third quarter thrown by 3rd-string quarterback Steve Belles.[17] In at running back, Belles took a pitch from Tony Rice, stepped back to his right and threw to a wide open Ricky Watters.[17] The flanker took the ball inside the Air Force 10 and battled his way just over the goal line late in the third quarter.[17] Other scores included a Tony Brooks 42-yard touchdown in the third quarter and another Ricky Watters touchdown catch; this time a 28-yarder from Rice.[17] In the end, the Irish defense held the explosive Falcons to 54 yards rushing in the second half and 195 for the game, 237 yards below its season average.[17]

At Navy

[edit]
#2 Notre Dame at Navy
1 234Total
No. 2 Fighting Irish 7 960 22
Midshipmen 0 070 7

Although unbeaten and No. 2 Notre Dame posted its 25th consecutive victory of the Naval Academy, coach Lou Holtz was not happy.[18] "We couldn't control the line of scrimmage," Holtz said after the victory.[18] "We couldn't throw consistently, we weren't mentally alert and that's my fault. Our offensive line got beat up, we couldn't run inside. We weren't good enough to beat them inside. We're not a very good team right now. We feel fortunate to win."[18] Favored to beat Navy by five touchdowns, the Irish dropped five passes, lost two fumbles, shanked a punt for a mere 10 yds., and got whistled for having twelve men on the field - all before winning the game 22–7.[19] The Midshipmen fumbled on their second play from scrimmage and six plays later Notre Dame led 7–0 on a 10-yard touchdown pass from Rice to Derek Brown, before a crowd of 54,926 at Memorial Stadium.[20] Rodney Culver and Ryan Mihalko ran for touchdowns as Notre Dame opened up a 22–0 lead early in the third quarter en route to reaching an 8–0 record for the first time since 1973.[18] One positive Lou Holtz saw was the play of the defense.[18] "Our defense played really well, but was on the field too long."[18] Notre Dame amassed 396 total yards and held Navy to 192 yards, the lowest for an Irish opponent this year.[18]

Rice

[edit]
Rice at #1 Notre Dame
1 234Total
Owls 3 305 11
No. 1 Fighting Irish 14 17716 54

The Irish scored early and often as Notre Dame dazzled their home crowd of 59,075 with a 54–11 victory.[19] After Rice scored an early field goal in the first quarter, Rocket Ismail returned his first of two kickoffs, a 78-yard return for a score.[19] The Irish offense quickly followed with three touchdowns on their first three offensive possessions.[19] Junior fullback Anthony Johnson rushed for two of Notre Dame's seven TDs, while Tony Brooks and Rodney Culver also added touchdowns.[19] Late in the game, after Rice's third field goal made the score 38–9, Rocket Ismail returned the ensuing kickoff 83 yards for another touchdown.[19] Ismail became the first Notre Dame player to return two kick-offs for touchdowns in a game since Paul Castner in 1922 against Kalamazoo.[21] After Notre Dame's final touchdown, Rice LB Billy Stone returned the blocked extra-point all the way for two points to account for the final score of 54–11. This was the first time a team scored by returning a failed conversion in NCAA Div I history (the rule allowing for the defense to score this way instituted at the start of the 1988–89 season).

Penn State

[edit]
Penn State at #1 Notre Dame
1 234Total
Nittany Lions 0 300 3
No. 1 Fighting Irish 7 770 21

The Irish came into the game at 9-0 while Penn State was 5-5, on the verge of their first losing season in 50 years. Notre Dame got started early, scoring on their first possession, an 87-yard on 12 play drive.[22] On second-and-5 from Penn State's 48-yard line, Tony Rice threw a 17-yard pass to Ricky Watters, who was wide open 15 yards downfield.[22] Five plays later, Notre Dame scored from Penn State's two. Rice optioned left, froze the Penn State linebacker Eddie Johnson with a pump-fake, then ran into the end zone.[22] Reggie Ho's extra point made it 7–0.[22] In the second quarter, Notre Dame drove 60 yards in five plays to go ahead, 14–0.[22] Rice set up the score with another pass to Watters - a 27-yard play that moved the ball to Penn State's 33-yard line.[22] Two plays later, running back Mark Green took a handoff up the middle, then found daylight to his right and ran 22 yards for a touchdown.[22] Penn State's only score came on the last play of the first half, when Eric Etze kicked a 52-yard field goal.[22]

After leading by 14–3 at halftime, Notre Dame struck quickly for its final score in the third quarter.[22] On first down after a Penn State punt, Tony Rice threw a 67-yard touchdown pass to Raghib Ismail.[22] It was the first time the Fighting Irish had thrown deep all game, and the long pass caught Penn State defensive backs off guard.[22] Ismail was so wide open, he scored even though he had to wait for Rice's underthrown pass.[22] After making the catch at Penn State's 20-yard line, Ismail broke Eddie Johnson's attempted tackle and jogged into the end zone.[22] The win set the stage for the next week's showdown vs. USC, the final hurdle to the national championship game.

At USC

[edit]
#1 Notre Dame at #2 USC
1 234Total
No. 1 Fighting Irish 14 607 27
No. 2 Trojans 0 730 10

Notre Dame and USC entered the game undefeated and ranked number one and two respectively for the first time ever in their storied series. It was also the 24th time No. 1 faced No. 2 in college football history.[8][23] In a controversial move, coach Lou Holtz took his 10-0 Irish squad to L.A. without stars Ricky Watters and Tony Brooks, whom he suspended for disciplinary reasons.[24] The USC Trojans were having a great season under head coach Larry Smith and standout quarterback Rodney Peete.[23] The Irish came into the game as underdogs, but spectacular play of defensive end Frank Stams and cornerback Stan Smagala aided the Irish offense, led by Tony Rice, to an Irish victory.[25] Notre Dame started out fast with Tony Rice surprising the crowd by throwing deep to Raghib Ismail on Notre Dame’s first play of scrimmage. On the next drive, Tony Rice optioned left for a 65-yard touchdown play. The Trojans were listless, committing four turnovers, including a back-breaking Rodney Peete interception to Stan Smagala for another Notre Dame touchdown. In the second half, running back Mark Green added the final touchdown of the day(aided by a key 22-yard gain on a 3rd down screen play by Anthony Johnson) to help defeat the Trojans. The sellout crowd of 93,829 was the largest in this rivalry since 1955.[23]

Fiesta Bowl

[edit]
1989 Sunkist Fiesta Bowl: #3 West Virginia vs. #1 Notre Dame
1 234Total
No. 3 Mountaineers 0 678 21
No. 1 Fighting Irish 9 1438 34

Aftermath

[edit]

The 1988 Irish squad won their 11th consensus national title in Lou Holtz's third year as an Irish head coach, equaling the trend of Irish coaches winning the title in their third year.[8] Irish head coaches Frank Leahy, Ara Parseghian and Dan Devine also won titles in their third years as head coach.[8] Holtz was named national coach of the year for taking the Irish squad from an 8–4 record the previous year to national title winners the following year.[8] His 1989 and 1993 squads narrowly missed repeating the feat.[8]

As of 2023, the 1988 Irish squad is also the most recent to win the national title.[8]

Personnel

[edit]
1988 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team roster
Players Coaches
Offense
Pos. # Name Class
WR 80 Steve Alaniz Sr
OT 72 Joe Allen
RB 39 Braxston Banks
QB 8 Steve Belles Sr
OT 64 Mike Brennan Sr
RB 40 Tony Brooks Fr
OT 71 Dean Brown
TE 86 Derek Brown Fr
RB 5 Rodney Culver Fr
WR 13 Pat Eilers Sr
G 61 Tom Gorman
QB 17 Kent Graham So
QB 11 Pete Graham Sr
RB 24 Mark Green Sr
G 75 Tim Grunhard
OT 73 Justin Hall
OT 66 Andy Heck Sr
C 55 Mike Heldt So
RB 41 Joe Jarosz Sr
WR 25 Raghib Ismail Fr
TE 88 Frank Jacobs
RB 22 Anthony Johnson Jr
C 76 Gene McGuire Fr
RB 35 Ryan Mihalko
QB 9 Tony Rice Jr
WR 21 Aaron Robb Sr
RB 32 Mike Gatti Sr
G 52 Tim Ryan So
G 53 Winston Sandri
WR 21 Rod Smith
WR 12 Ricky Watters So
TE 43 Rod West
Defense
Pos. # Name Class
DE 97 Arnold Ale Fr
DT 90 Jeff Alm Jr
LB 47 Ned Bolcar Jr
DT 93 Bob Dahl So
SS 26 Greg Davis So
DE 92 Bryan Flannery
CB 32 D'Juan Francisco Sr
LB 36 Donn Grimm So
DE 38 Darrell Gordon Sr
DE 7 Andre Jones So
DT 74 Mirko Jurkovic Fr
LB 37 Scott Kowalkowski So
CB 1 Todd Lyght So
LB 34 Wes Pritchett Sr
CB 29 Stan Smagala Jr
FS 31 Corny Southall
DE 30 Frank Stams Sr
LB 42 Mike Stonebreaker Jr
SS 27 George Streeter Sr
FS 15 Pat Terrell Jr
DT 69 George Williams So
DT 50 Chris Zorich So
Special teams
Pos. # Name Class
K 18 Billy Hackett
K 2 Reggie Ho Jr
P 16 Jim Sexton So
P 14 Peter Hartweger Sr
Head coach
Coordinators/assistant coaches

Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • (S) Suspended
  • (I) Ineligible
  • Injured Injured
  • Redshirt Redshirt

Awards and honors

[edit]

All-Americans

Name AP UPI NEA FC SN FW FN WCF CW
Frank Stams, DE 1 1 2 2 1 2
Andy Heck, OT 1 1 1 1 1 2
Michael Stonebreaker, LB 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1
Chris Zorich, DT 1 3
Wes Pritchett, LB 2
Ricky Watters, FL 2
†denotes consensus selection       Source:[8]

Paul "Bear" Bryant Award Coach of the Year

Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year Award

College Football Hall of Fame inductees

Name Position Year Inducted
Lou Holtz Coach 2008
Chris Zorich Defensive Tackle 2007
Raghib Ismail Wide Receiver 2019

Notre Dame leads all universities in players inducted.[28]

Future NFL players

[edit]

The following is a list of Notre Dame players that would go on to play or be drafted to play in the National Football League over the next four years. All players listed played for the 1988 team.

Name Year Team Round Pick
Jeff Alm 1990 Houston Oilers 2 41
Ned Bolcar 1990 Seattle Seahawks 6 146
Mike Brennan 1990 Cincinnati Bengals 4 91
Tony Brooks 1992 Philadelphia Eagles 4 92
Dean Brown 1990 Indianapolis Colts 12 316
Derek Brown 1992 New York Giants 1 14
Rodney Culver 1992 Indianapolis Colts 4 85
Bob Dahl 1991 Cincinnati Bengals 3 72
D'Juan Francisco 1990 Washington Redskins 10 262
Mark Green 1989 Chicago Bears 5 130
Tim Grunhard 1990 Kansas City Chiefs 2 40
Andy Heck 1989 Seattle Seahawks 1 15
Mike Heldt 1991 San Diego Chargers 10 257
Raghib Ismail 1991 Los Angeles Raiders 4 100
Anthony Johnson 1990 Indianapolis Colts 2 36
Andre Jones 1991 Pittsburgh Steelers 7 185
Mirko Jurkovic 1992 Chicago Bears 9 246
Scott Kowalkowski 1991 Philadelphia Eagles 8 216
Todd Lyght 1991 Los Angeles Rams 1 5
Gene McGuire 1992 New Orleans Saints 4 95
Wes Pritchett 1989 Miami Dolphins 6 147
Rod Smith 1992 New England Patriots 2 35
Frank Stams 1989 Los Angeles Rams 2 45
Mike Stonebreaker 1991 Chicago Bears
Pat Terrell 1990 Los Angeles Rams 2 49
Ricky Watters 1991 San Francisco 49ers 2 45
George Williams 1992 Cleveland Browns 6 163
Chris Zorich 1991 Chicago Bears 2 49
Pat Eilers 1990 Minnesota Vikings
Stan Smagala 1990 Dallas Cowboys
George Streeter 1989 Chicago Bears

Source:[29]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c McAllister, Mike (January 5, 2005). "Top 10 Perfect Seasons". si.com. Archived from the original on December 18, 2005. Retrieved July 20, 2008.
  2. ^ Burns, Marty (July 17, 2007). "Catholics vs. Convicts The Irish pulled out a gritty win over a bitter foe". si.com. Archived from the original on June 29, 2008. Retrieved July 23, 2008.
  3. ^ Walters, John (July 21, 2004). Notre Dame Golden Moments. Rutledge Hill Press. ISBN 1-59186-042-3.
  4. ^ "College football's best of the last 20 years". usatoday.com. November 19, 2002. Retrieved July 23, 2008.
  5. ^ Fiutak, Pete; Cirminiello, Richard; Harris, John; Zemek, Matthew (August 28, 2006). "CFN's Tuesday Question - The All-Time Greatest Regular Season Games". CollegeFootballNews.com. Archived from the original on August 21, 2008. Retrieved July 23, 2008.
  6. ^ "Defense, Rice lead Irish to 8th title". Detroit Free Press. January 3, 1989. Retrieved February 2, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  7. ^ "Notre Dame 1988 AP Football Rankings". collegepollarchive.com. Retrieved August 26, 2018.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "2007 Notre Dame Media Guide: History and Records (pages 131-175)". und.cstv.com. Archived from the original on June 10, 2008. Retrieved July 10, 2008.
  9. ^ a b c White Jr., Gordon S. (September 12, 1988). "Kicking Saves Notre Dame". nytimes.com. Retrieved July 10, 2008.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g "Notre Dame 20, Michigan State 3". NYTimes. Associated Press. September 18, 1988.
  11. ^ "MIDWEST ROUNDUP;No. 8 Irish Leave Spartans Smartin'". washingtonpost.com. September 18, 1988. p. d.14. Archived from the original on February 1, 2013. Retrieved July 11, 2008.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Notre Dame 52, Purdue 7". NYTimes. Associated Press. September 25, 1988.
  13. ^ a b c d e f "Notre Dame (4-0) Rolls, 42-14". New York Times. Associated Press. October 2, 1988.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o White, Gordon S (October 9, 1988). "Undefeated Irish Avert an Upset". New York Times. p. S11.
  15. ^ Telander, Rick (October 24, 1988). "Pluck of the Irish – Spunky Notre Dame laid claim to the top spot in the national rankings by outlasting No. 1 Miami 31-30". Sports Illustrated. Archived from the original on October 25, 2012. Retrieved October 10, 2009.
  16. ^ "25 years of college football's memorable games". USA Today. December 1, 2007. Retrieved October 10, 2009.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t White Jr., Gordon S. (October 23, 1988). "COLLEGE FOOTBALL; Unbeaten Notre Dame Posts 7th Victory". nytimes.com. Retrieved July 11, 2008.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g "Notre Dame (8-0) Gets by Navy, 22-7". New York Times. Associated Press. October 30, 1988. p. S4.
  19. ^ a b c d e f Reed, J.D. (November 21, 1988). "A New Crusade at Notre Dame". time.com. Archived from the original on March 4, 2008. Retrieved July 20, 2008.
  20. ^ "Notre Dame Rolls On, Stomps on Navy". Chicago Tribune. Associated Press. October 30, 1988. Archived from the original on January 31, 2013. Retrieved July 20, 2008.
  21. ^ "Notre Dame 54, Rice 11". New York Times. Associated Press. November 6, 1988. p. S6.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Brown, Clifton (November 20, 1988). "10-0 Irish Send Penn State to 5-6". nytimes.com. Retrieved July 10, 2008.
  23. ^ a b c "2006 USC Media Guide: USC Football History" (PDF). usctrojans.cstv.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 24, 2008. Retrieved April 25, 2008.
  24. ^ Anderson, Dave (November 27, 1988). "SPORTS OF THE TIMES; Lou Holtz of Notre Dame Raps the Gavel Again". nytimes.com. Retrieved July 10, 2008.
  25. ^ "2007 Notre Dame Media Guide: 2007 Supplement (page 165)". und.cstv.com. Archived from the original on May 11, 2008. Retrieved April 26, 2008.
  26. ^ "Paul "Bear" Bryant College Football Coaching Awards" (PDF). The American Heart Association. Retrieved July 20, 2007.
  27. ^ "Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year Award". Football Writers Association of America. Archived from the original on January 9, 2008. Retrieved July 20, 2008.
  28. ^ "Hall of Fame: Select group by school". College Football Hall of Fame. Football Foundation. Retrieved April 22, 2008.
  29. ^ "The Football Database". Archived from the original on July 24, 2008. Retrieved July 21, 2008.