About halfway through the second quarter of yesterday’s BC-Notre Dame football game, a participant in the local gamewatch used her phone to take a picture of the big television screen. It showed the Eagles leading, 7-6. She was taking the picture in case that would be BC’s only time leading in the game. It was.
The Boston Globe headline on its story today about Notre Dame’s 40-7 win was “Holy War was barely a fight as Notre Dame rolls late on BC.”
The first quarter at South Bend had ended with Notre Dame up 3-0. Other numbers were not as close. BC ran seven plays in the opening quarter, gaining 16 yards, while the Irish had gained 132 yards in 24 plays. At halftime, ND was ahead 16-7, supplementing one touchdown with three field goals. They had gained 253 yards in offense, one yard short of doubling the Eagles’ output.
The game’s second half wasn’t even a fight. It was more a beating. While BC gained 64 yards offense the second half, scoring zero points, the Irish gained another 248 yards offense, tacking on 24 points. For the game, total offense for the Eagles was 191 yards, for ND 501 yards.
BC quarterback Dennis Grosel was 9-20 passing, with one interception, for 63 yards, no touchdowns. Running back AJ Dillon had his least productive performance of the season, gaining 56 yards on 14 carries.
The victory was Notre Dame’s seventh straight over BC. Before that streak started, the series between the teams had been tied 9-9.
BC icon Doug Flutie is the color commentator for NBC’s television coverage of Notre Dame football. Yesterday was the 35th anniversary of his all-time-great pass against Miami to win that 1984 game on national television. The NBC broadcast yesterday showed the reenactment of the play that he and pass recipient Gerard Phelan performed at the BC-Florida State game on November 9, BC’s last home game of the season.
Video highlights
BC falls to 5-6 for the season. They need to win the last regular season game Saturday against Pitt to become bowl eligible.