ORLANDO, Fla. -- Bob Davie didn't take Navy for granted, and neither did
Notre Dame's players.
"You're always paranoid, but I always believe that players follow the
coach's lead," Davie said Saturday after the Irish beat Navy 45-14 for their
37th consecutive victory in college football's longest continuous intersectional
rivalry.
"We as coaches worked harder, if that's possible, and spent more hours
(preparing) than we did for Nebraska. In no way was I looking at this as
something where we were going to win this game automatically by showing up in
Orlando."
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| Notre Dame's Julius Jones (top) leaps over Navy's defensive line to score a touchdown.(AP) | |
Matt LoVecchio threw for 183 yards and two touchdowns and Tony Driver scored
twice on fumble returns for the No. 20 Irish (4-2), who extended their NCAA
record for consecutive victories over an opponent and also stopped the longest
road losing streak in school history.
"I know it's going to be written every year about the Notre Dame winning
streak, but I don't really think it's fair to Charlie Weatherbie and to the
Naval Academy because those games have been so competitive."
LoVecchio threw TD passes of 11 yards to Dan O'Leary and 32 yards to Tony
Fisher before being replaced by Gary Godsey, whose 46-yard scoring pass to Jay
Johnson finished the rout at the Florida Citrus Bowl.
Julius Jones rushed for 105 yards and scored one touchdown as the Irish, who
began the day ranked 109th in offense, gained a season-high 447 yards against
the winless Midshipmen, who are 0-6 for the first time since 1992 when Navy
lost its first seven en route to a 1-10 record.
But it was the Irish defense that set the tone for the day with Driver
returning first-quarter fumbles 24 and 22 yards for touchdowns to help build a
21-0 lead. Navy avoided a shutout when Ed Malinowski threw fourth-quarter TD
passes of 46 yards to Brandon Rampani and 9 yards to Brian Williams.
"The defense put me in the position to make those plays ... I would have
been upset with myself if I didn't take it back to the house," said Driver, a
former running back who scored two touchdowns for the second time in his
career. "The guys are playing out there every play. You can see it in their
eyes that they've got big hearts."
Navy wore black anchors on the back of their helmets in memory of the
sailors who were killed, and in support of those injured, aboard the USS Cole
in the Arabian Peninsula on Thursday. The coaching staff wore black ribbons to
show their support, and a moment of silence was observed before the game.
"It puts the game in perspective," Navy safety Chris Lepore said. "It's
not as important as two days ago."
Despite Notre Dame's domination of the series, the Midshipmen have had their
chances to break the streak, including last year when they led 24-21 before the
Irish rallied in the closing minutes for a 28-24 victory.
Take away the fumbles Driver returned for touchdowns, and Saturday's game
might have wound up being a lot more competitive. Navy held the Irish to one
offensive TD in the opening half and also forced Notre Dame to settle for Nick
Setta's 23-yard field goal on an 18-play, 76-yard march that consumed more than
seven minutes of the second quarter.
Raheem Lambert's fumble squirted through a pile in the middle of the line on
Driver's first TD. On the second, the Notre Dame safety had a clear path up
the right sideline after Terence Coleman couldn't handle Malinowski's option
pitch and deflected the ball into Driver's hands.
LoVecchio completed 13 of 20 passes and was intercepted once in his second
start for the Irish, who beat Stanford 20-14 in his debut last week. O'Leary's
touchdown reception boosted the lead to 31-0 and Fisher's TD made it 38-0
before Malinowski threw Navy's first TD pass of the season.
Notre Dame won a road or neutral-site game for the first time since beating
Navy 30-0 at Jack Kent Cooke Stadium, outside Washington, in 1998. The Irish
lead the series 64-9-1, including a 41-6-1 edge in games played at nine neutral
sites.
"I don't have anything to do with 34 or 35 of the losses. I had something
to do with today and last year," Lepore said.
"It's disappointing. But I'd go out there and play them every single game
of the year because I think we can go out and beat them."
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