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Notre Dame adapts on the fly to its longest season and changing schedule as CFP semifinal arrives

Sport

Notre Dame adapts on the fly to its longest season and changing schedule as CFP semifinal arrives
Sport

Sport

Notre Dame adapts on the fly to its longest season and changing schedule as CFP semifinal arrives

2025-01-08 18:10 Last Updated At:18:31

Notre Dame receiver Beaux Collins will remember this College Football Playoff run for several reasons and one of them is how he sprinted through the team’s New Orleans hotel hallways like a fun-loving child.

That is how some of the Fighting Irish coped with an unexpected day off before last week's Sugar Bowl, a timeline driven by tragedy after a man used his speeding truck as a weapon in the nearby French Quarter, killing more than a dozen people.

Collins, his Notre Dame teammates and their coaches are now in Florida, about to face Penn State in the Orange Bowl for a trip to the national championship game. They have deftly navigated a number of challenges in their march through the postseason.

“It was wild," Collins said. "Hearing the news was definitely sad, hearing about the people who lost their lives. So we had to take the time to reflect on how fortunate we are to still be alive, breathing, being able to play a game called football. There are people out there, putting their lives on the line for us; we have to acknowledge that.”

While each school selected for the first 12-team playoff has its own tales of overcoming adversity, Notre Dame's playoff journey has been historic.

The Irish (13-1) have already played — and won — more games than any team in the program's illustrious history and have moved within two wins of snapping a 36-year national championship drought, the school's longest since claiming its first title in 1924.

The playoff semifinal Thursday night against the Nittany Lions (13-2) will mark the deepest into January that Notre Dame has ever played; one more win would extend the Irish's longest season to 16 games. Coach Marcus Freeman responded by reducing the amount of contact at practice to keep players fresh, good training for the NFL's 17-game schedule.

Players took their finals before the first-round victory over Indiana, At least classes don't resume until next Monday.

Notre Dame's challenges stretch far beyond football and include family, faith and fate.

The Irish split their first-round practice week balancing finals and football, something near and dear to cornerback Christian Gray's mother, who still tracks his grades. Notre Dame spent the following week planning for second-seeded Georgia while taking time off to celebrate the Christmas holiday that is so sacrosanct at this Catholic institution.

Then last Wednesday everything suddenly was put on hold by what unfolded in the French Quarter. Inside the team hotel, players started reflecting on life while contemplating what they could do to help.

That's when center Pat Coogan and right guard Rocco Spindler decided somebody needed to lead Notre Dame onto the field with an American flag. Coogan did.

“It was me and Rocco just talking in our room, we shared a room in the hotel and then I went to (associate athletic director) Katy Lonergan and our equipment manager and asked if we could find one,” Coogan said after again sending condolences to the grieving families. “That was really special, and football is a game that can unite people in the midst of tragedy. no matter the color that they're wearing.”

Back in the hotel, Notre Dame's closely followed game-day schedule was in tatters.

Instead of playing a prime-time game Wednesday, organizers moved to the game to mid-afternoon Thursday, forcing coaches to adapt on the fly and costing the winner a day of prep for this week's semifinal.

While all that was taking place, Collins and his teammates found other ways to cope.

“We had a few extra team meetings. We ran like sprints in the hallway of the hotel,” Collins said. “It was a fun experience, getting to spend some extra time with your guys down there. The biggest thing was just keeping the focus of why we were down there in the first place, which was to win a game.”

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Notre Dame head coach Marcus Freeman celebrates with fans after quarterfinal game against Georgia in a College Football Playoff, Thursday, Jan. 2, 2025, in New Orleans. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

Notre Dame head coach Marcus Freeman celebrates with fans after quarterfinal game against Georgia in a College Football Playoff, Thursday, Jan. 2, 2025, in New Orleans. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

WINDER, Ga. (AP) — A 14-year-old student has been arrested after bringing a gun on Wednesday to Apalachee High School, the same Georgia high school where a shooting in September killed two teachers and two students and wounded others.

The Barrow County Sheriff's Office said school resource officers arrested the boy “without incident” Wednesday afternoon at the school in Winder, about 40 miles (65 kilometers) northeast of Atlanta. Deputies said the student was “cooperative and compliant when encountered by law enforcement officers and there have been no reports of the student threatening anyone with the gun.”

The student, who wasn't named because of his age, was taken to a juvenile detention center in Gainesville. He's charged with two counts of possessing a weapon on school grounds, theft and being a minor in possession of a gun. Deputies didn't say what kind of gun was seized. Authorities said the student was arrested shortly after 2 p.m. at school, but they did not say when he arrived or release details of the circumstances of the arrest.

The Barrow County school district canceled classes on Thursday at the high school with nearly 2,000 students, located about 45 miles (70 kilometers) northeast of downtown Atlanta.

The Sept. 4 shooting killed teachers Richard Aspinwall, 39, and Cristina Irimie, 53, and students Mason Schermerhorn and Christian Angulo, both 14. Another teacher and eight more students were wounded, seven of them hit by gunfire.

Colt Gray, who was 14 at the time, was charged as an adult after the September shooting and was indicted on 55 counts, including murder and 25 counts of aggravated assault at the high school. He has pleaded not guilty. His father, Colin Gray, was indicted on 29 counts, including two counts of second-degree murder and two counts of involuntary manslaughter, based on prosecutors' contention that Colin Gray let his son access guns and ammunition “after receiving sufficient warning” that the boy would harm others. Colin Gray has also pleaded not guilty.

The district told parents that students and staff should not report to school Thursday and that on-campus extracurricular activities were canceled. The district also canceled an open house to view new portable classrooms that were erected on campus to replace classrooms in the now closed-off hallway where the shooting took place

Wednesday's arrest came after some students, teachers and parents attended a Barrow County school board meeting on Tuesday to demand that the district take additional visible measures to enhance security at Apalachee. They suggested even more school resource officers, mandating clear backpacks and buying a computerized camera system that the maker says can detect guns using artificial intelligence.

Superintendent Dallas LeDuff said at the meeting that the district will present results from a security survey later this month and has met with school resource officers to discuss what security measures they recommend.

“It has been a very intentional process,” LeDuff said. “I think I am proud of the work our staff has done.”

FILE - A memorial is seen at Apalachee High School after a school shooting, Sept. 7, 2024, in Winder, Ga. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart, File)

FILE - A memorial is seen at Apalachee High School after a school shooting, Sept. 7, 2024, in Winder, Ga. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart, File)

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