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The 1980 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team represented the University of Notre Dame in the 1980 NCAA Division I-A football season. [1] The team was coached by Dan Devine and played its home games at Notre Dame Stadium in South Bend, Indiana.
The Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team with a total of 25 National Championships, is the football team of the University of Notre Dame, Indiana, United States. The team competes as an Independent at the NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision level. Notre Dame has the most consensus national championships and has produced more All-Americans than ...
ESPN College Football Encyclopedia: The Complete History of the Game, (ESPN Books 2005) ISBN 1-4013-3703-1, pp 640–641. Eric Hansen, Stadium Stories: Notre Dame Fighting Irish, (The Globe Pequot Press 2004) ISBN 0-7627-3139-7, pp 198–200. Steele, Michael R. The Fighting Irish Football Encyclopedia. Champaign, IL: Sports Publishing LLC (1996).
During Gerry Faust's tenure (1981–85), Notre Dame's blue jerseys switched from the traditional navy (although Notre Dame wore green jerseys full-time between the 1977 game vs. USC and the end of the 1980 season) to royal blue with gold and white stripes on the sleeves (they also wore a green jersey with sleeve stripes for the 1983 game vs. USC).
The Notre Dame Fighting Irish football program is the college football team of the University of Notre Dame, located in South Bend, Indiana. The team competes as an Independent at the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision level. Notre Dame has produced more All-Americans than any other Football Bowl
End at Notre Dame and football coach for Notre Dame twice, the University of Dayton, and the Philadelphia Eagles [78] Sam Dolan: 1910 Player at Notre Dame and head coach at Oregon State [11] Gus Dorais: 1914 Quarterback at Notre Dame and Hall of Fame coach at the collegiate level [79] Eric Dorsey: 1986 Defensive end at Notre Dame and for the ...
SI's lens found Notre Dame football quarterbacks most often, with eventual Heisman Trophy winner Paul Hornung being the first to appear in 1956, SI's second year of publication. Tony Rice leading ...
The Bulldogs were ranked No. 1 at 11–0 as they were invited to play a traditional football power, coach Dan Devine's Notre Dame Fighting Irish (9–1–1), in the Sugar Bowl in New Orleans, La. on January 1, 1981. [28] With the score tied 3–3, Walker took center stage after Notre Dame failed to properly field a kickoff.