Sour ending for Notre Dame
SOUTH BEND, Ind. - Syracuse couldn't pull off a big win in time to save coach Greg Robinson's job. The Orange did nothing to help Notre Dame's Charlie Weis in the area of job security, either.
Cameron Dantley, son of one of Notre Dame's basketball greats, threw an 11-yard touchdown pass to Donte Davis with 42 seconds left to lead Syracuse to a 24-23 victory Saturday against the stunned and disheartened Irish.
Fifth-year Irish senior linebacker Maurice Crum Jr., who spent a year playing under Tyrone Willingham, said it was the worst loss of his career.
"Every loss hurts, but there's something added to it, being the total situation," Crum said.
The Orange trailed 23-10 in the fourth quarter before rallying as Notre Dame struggled mightily on offense. The Irish (6-5) came away with just 6 points after starting four times inside the Syracuse 23-yard line, including three times in the third quarter when they settled for a field goal.
"I really don't know why that happened," said Notre Dame's Jimmy Clausen, who threw 2 TD passes.
The victory allowed Syracuse (3-8) to avoid a third 10-loss season in four years under Robinson, who was fired last week, effective at the end of the season.
"It's a great day for our football team. Truly a great day for our program to come into South Bend and to pull it off," Robinson said. "It really isn't necessarily a surprise at all to our football team. They knew that somewhere along the line this team was going to do something special. This was an opportunity that they knew they had to make the most of."
Dantley, the son of former NBA star Adrian Dantley, was 13-of-25 passing for 126 yards.
For the Irish, losing to a 191/2-underdog ranks among the worst losses in school history and leaves Weis with a 28-20 record in four seasons. Weis's 58.3 winning percentage is the same that Bob Davie was fired with after five seasons and Willingham after three. Weis has seven years left after this season on a 10-year contract.
Weis, who appeared to get past all the talk about his job being in jeopardy a week earlier by hanging on for a 27-21 victory over Navy, now finds himself the target again. For the most part, Weis declined to talk about what the loss means for his future, saying he needed more time before commenting. But he said he is not worried.
"Fortunately or unfortunately, whichever way you look at it, that's just my makeup," he said.
He did say he felt terrible for the seniors playing their last game at Notre Dame Stadium.
"I feel sick to my stomach. Everyone at Notre Dame takes these losses personally, just like they feel good when they win. But right now I feel absolutely miserable for the seniors," he said.
Golden Tate had 2 TD catches for the Irish.
The Irish had one last chance to win in the closing seconds. With seven seconds left, the Irish could have run one last play before attempting a field goal, but Weis opted to go for a 53-yard kick by Brandon Walker, whose career long is 48. The kick fell well short. Walker was 3 of 6 on field-goal attempts for the game.