The Notre Dame Heisman Boost
When the Artist Formerly Known as the Downtown Athletic Club convenes tomorrow night, the will be handing the 2005 Heisman Trophy to Reggie Bush of USC. And make no mistake about it—the race won’t be close. Despite sharing the evening’s stage with his own teammate and 2004 winner, Matt Leinart, Bush will win by at least 500 points, as fewer voters will decide between the best player on the Trojans while more will split their votes between the best QB headed to Pasadena.
Yet the “boost” of which I refer to is not the questionable push given by Reggie Bush in aiding Matt Leinart across the goal line for the final touchdown in USC’s last-second 34-31 win over Notre Dame. Rather I am referring historically to same-year performances by eventual Heisman Trophy winners against the Fighting Irish. (Still, some observers have noted that without “The Push” and a USC loss to ND, the Heisman candidacies of Bush and Leinart may have taken a backseat to Texas QB Vince Young, since potentially he would remain as the only candidate left in the national championship game.)
It was widely regarded that Carson Palmer’s final regular season game in which he riddled Note Dame with four touchdowns in a 44-13 drubbing effectively sealed his claim to that year’s award. Not to be outdone, two years later, heir apparent Matt Leinart took ND behind his own private woodshed in a five touchdown, 41-10 performance.
I began to wonder if any trends existed between Heisman winners and their performance that year against Notre Dame. A subtle correlation can be extracted by noting that Heisman winners have most recently come from traditional powerhouse programs (USC, Oklahoma, Florida State, etc.), and such programs oftentimes sprinkle their schedules with a marquee match-up or two, in between tough tests against the Appalachian States and Ohio Universities of the collegiate gridiron. Many times that marquee match-up will involve Notre Dame.
Dating back to 1976—the first year after the Heisman Line of Demarcation—Notre Dame has played against the eventual Heisman trophy winner an amazing 13 times in 25 years (ND’s Tim Brown won the award in 1987; Bush makes it #13 this year.)
Here's a breakdown:
Year | Name | School | vs. ND | Game Notes |
2005 | Reggie Bush | USC | 34-31 (W) | 15 carries for 160 yards, with 3TDs and one assist; 4 catches for 35 yards; 7 returns for 70 yards. |
2004 | Matt Leinart | USC | 41-10 (W) | 24-34 passing for 400 yards, 5TDs and no INTs. |
2002 | Carson Palmer | USC | 44-13 (W) | 32-46 passing for 425 yards, 4TDs and 2 INTs. |
2001 | Eric Crouch | Nebraska | 27-10 (W) | 14 carries for 31 yards; 6-9 passing for 88 yards, 1TD, no INTs. |
1997 | Charles Woodson | Michigan | 21-14 (W) | 4 tackles (3 unassisted). |
1995 | Eddie George | Ohio State | 45-26 (W) | 32 carries for 207 yards, 2TDs. |
1994 | Rashan Salaam | Colorado | 41-24 (W) | (Fiesta Bowl) 27 carries for 83 yards, 3TDs. |
1993 | Charlie Ward | Florida State | 31-24 (L) | Florida State went on to win the national championship. |
1991 | Desmond Howard | Michigan | 24-14 (W) | Game featured Howard's highlight-reel endzone TD catch on 4th down. |
1981 | Marcus Allen | USC | 14-7 (W) | Damn that white horse! |
1979 | Charles White | USC | 42-23 (W) | Ran for 261 yards. |
1977 | Earl Campbell | Texas | 38-10 (L) | (Cotton Bowl) Win propelled ND to national championship. |
1976 | Tony Dorsett | Pittsburgh | 31-10 (W) | Ran for 303 yards; Pittsburgh went on to win the national championship. |
Of the 13 winners over those 25 years, the respective teams won an amazing 11 times. The formula for success is fairly simple: beat ND, and you’re on your way to Manhattan. One has to go all the way back to 1993 to find an eventual Heisman winner who did not beat ND in their head-to-head match-up. That year’s winner, Charlie Ward, received as a consolation prize the national championship trophy to accompany his Heisman. The only other team loss by an eventual Heisman winner over this time period was 1977, when ND defeated #1 Texas and Earl Campbell en route to their own national championship.

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