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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Thursday, October 15, 2009

CFB: It’s now or never for Charlie Weis and Notre Dame


By Mike Kern
Philadelphia Daily News

Charlie Weis is in his fifth season at Notre Dame. So why is the Kodak moment of his tenure still the 34-31 loss to Southern Cal in his sixth game? Sure hope you weren’t leaning toward possibly last December’s 49-21 Hawaii Bowl win over, well, Hawaii. Sorry.

This is supposed to be a defining season for Weis. His Fighting Irish (4-1), who just jumped into the Top 25 coming off a bye, have dramatic wins against Michigan State, Washington and Purdue. They also lost at the buzzer to Michigan.
So what should America make of all that?
This is the fourth time they have been 4-1 under Weis. The first two, they made it to a BCS bowl, only to get exposed as fraudulent in both. Still, it was the best two-year showing since Lou Holtz departed. Last season, things deteriorated into 7-6. But they did win a bowl for the first time since, well, Holtz said goodbye.
Now, they’re facing their biggest game since that 2005 classic. Once again, No. 6 USC (4-1) — which lost at Washington without starting quarterback Matt Barkley — is the roadblock in South Bend. The Trojans also had a week off to get ready. They still think they can get to the national-title game, and maybe they can. Your Subway Alumni probably would take any kind of a BCS bid. Or perhaps they’re craving more.
ND can still have a successful season even if it loses, although another crash-and-burn wouldn’t be advisable. But a win would go a long way toward closing those credibility gaps. And perceptions do matter.
USC has rarely appeared more gettable.
“This is really about the team, not me,” Weis said. “I don’t think their expectations could be any higher than they are right now.”
Last November in Los Angeles, his team didn’t manage a first down until the last play of the third quarter.
“That can’t be happening anymore,” Weis insisted. “Let the chips roll where they may, but we’re at a different level now. We have enough top-line athletes to compete. I’d still say we don’t have as many across the roster, but we’re at the point where we have enough front-line guys to go toe-to-toe.”
His future could depend on it. Dittoo Irish quarterback Jimmy Clausen’s Heisman Trophy candidacy. When the Irish are tied or trailing this year, he’s thrown for eight touchdowns and no interceptions. That’s pose-like stuff.