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Underdog in Irish’s DNA

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SOUTH BEND, Ind. – The rankings say Notre Dame is No. 1 going into the BCS championship against Alabama. Plenty of folks aren’t buying it, starting with the oddsmakers who have the Crimson Tide as about a 10-point favorite for the Jan. 7 meeting in Miami between two of college football’s proudest programs.

The Fighting Irish aren’t sweating the point spread. In fact, it’s pretty much business as usual for Notre Dame, which has a chance to become the first team since 1984 to start the season unranked and end it as national champions.

“Everybody thought everybody was better than us,” defensive tackle Louis Nix III said Monday. “Oklahoma was better than us. USC was better than us.

“We get it. We know how everyone thinks. We’re just Notre Dame. Overrated Notre Dame. No one gives us credit for anything. Just the luck of the Irish, I guess.”

History suggests that being the underdog in the BCS title game hasn’t been a bad thing. Of the 14 BCS championship games played since the system was implemented in 1998, seven have been won by the underdog.

It’s impossible to quantify what, if any, effect being the underdog has actually had on any of those “upsets.” Any team that gets to a championship game must be good in the first place.

Whether Notre Dame can or will use the slights – real or perceived – as motivation remains to be seen.

“I’ve used the technique before during my time as a head coach,” Notre Dame coach Brian Kelly said about playing the underdog card. “I don’t know that that is pertinent because it’s a one-game deal. It’s all or nothing.

“Both teams have different dynamics to deal with because of the long layoff. Preparation is more important than any kind of fire and brimstone speech that I can bring to them.”

Offensive coordinator Chuck Martin said the coaches don’t even need to bring it up. The Fighting Irish have played all season like a team with something to prove.

“I think it’s a little bit part of our kids’ DNA now,” he said. “We don’t have to use it as much as maybe early in the year when we went on the road to Michigan State and they were ranked eighth and nobody was thinking we were very good. I think we’ve kind of just built it into who we are. Everybody likes telling us what we’re not good at – which is fine by us. One of our strengths is knowing what we’re not very good at. We try to play to our strengths and play away from our weaknesses.”

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