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Notre Dame’s Golson the eye of the storm

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(MCT) — FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — In his first official appearance as a Notre Dame quarterback about to play for a national championship, Everett Golson followed a phalanx of teammates and security through hotel doors and into a wall of waiting cameras. His head and eyes darted back and forth before he spotted the entrance to a small ballroom, and he headed toward it.

It was a bit of misdirection by the sophomore. Golson heard officials call his name for a reroute. He was escorted to the cavernous ballroom next door with dozens of rows of chairs and a bank of still more cameras in the back. He climbed a few steps and took a seat on the dais, inextricably on the big stage, in the middle of everything.

There may be just one player who, alone, can swing Notre Dame’s fortunes in the BCS championship against Alabama on Monday with jaw-unhinging plays or stomach-turning errors. It is the soft-spoken Myrtle Beach, S.C., native humbled time after time for two years and steeled by all the failures, now staring down monumental success.

“I don’t see myself being rattled,” Golson said. “There is going to be some adversity in this game, but it’s about how you handle it, how you come out on the back end of it.”

It may be that, at the ground level of Notre Dame’s restructuring plan for 2012, everything was to be done to ensure that Golson and his robust arm and speedball feet would be the starter. Nothing before or after was as unswerving.

He was an early-enrollee freshman treading furiously to stay afloat and, ultimately, shunted to the scout team. He was a sophomore starter yanked from a game once, then again, then again, each a new welt upon his confidence until he was anesthetized to it and motivated by it.

The quarterback who was barely audible in spring can say everything about what transpires at Sun Life Stadium on Monday.

“The thing I love about Everett is, through the adversity, he has grown,” Irish coach Brian Kelly said. “We certainly wouldn’t be here without him. He’s put himself in a position now that everybody trusts that he’ll lead this football team.”

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