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Defense has Irish moving up quickly in rankings

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What is with the increasingly smaller numbers that keep appearing next to Notre Dame's school name when I tune into broadcasts of Fighting Irish football?

The Irish have only occasionally had numbers next to their name the past several years, and when they have, they've almost always been double digits and begun with a "2." They're in single digits now, and if the Irish keep this up, they'll stay that way.

And these Irish, unlike so many teams in the past several years that have showed promise and flamed out, appear to have staying power. They're not reliant on a Brady Quinn to Jeff Samardzija connection clicking to win on a weekly basis. Instead, they're built around a defense that gives them a chance in every game.

Notre Dame has yet to allow more than 17 points in a game, and prior to Saturday's 20-13 overtime win over Stanford, it had held three consecutive opponents under seven. Nationally, only top-ranked Alabama is allowing fewer points per game (7.5) than Notre Dame's 8.7, and nobody else is close to the Irish in scoring defense (No. 3 Rutgers allows 11.5 PPG).

When yardage is used as the measuring stick, the Irish aren't quite as dominant. They're 11th in total yards allowed per game at 287.0, ranking 14th in passing defense (173.5 yards allowed per game) and 26th in rushing defense (113.5 YPG).

But the ineffectiveness of the Everett Golson (and, sometimes, Tommy Rees) led offense keeps the Irish defense on the field more than many of their rivals. Notre Dame has faced 31.2 pass attempts and 32.3 rush attempts per game. By comparison, Alabama's opponents are averaging just 26.3 passes and 31.5 rushes a contest.

What's amazing to me is that the Irish are where they are in spite of an offense that's been so inconsistent, to be kind. Take away the 50 points the Irish put up in their season opener against an overmatched Navy team and the 43 they hung on hapless Miami Oct. 6, and the Irish are averaging 18.25 points per game. Watching them play regularly, it doesn't seem like they score that much.

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