Excerpt from: Odyssey, Chapter VII
By Aaron M. Smith
Notre Dame vs. Navy, Dublin, Ireland |
Marc
Edwards squeezed into his undersized airline seat and tried to get as
comfortable as a 240-pound fullback could be on a jetliner. It was a Tuesday
and the Irish settled in for an all-night flight to the Emerald Isle. At
roughly 12:30 p.m. on Wednesday, the Notre Dame jet emerged from the clouded
cover and touched down in Dublin.
In
an attempt to stave off jet lag, the Irish had a full day of tourism scheduled
after their arrival. After a quick lunch at Sussex Restaurant, the team made
its way to Croke (pronounced: crow) Park, the stadium in which the Irish and
Middies would do battle.
The
stadium didn’t look like the round bowls of Notre Dame Stadium and the Big
House in Ann Arbor.
It was more of a block-C structure with higher sections of bleachers on the
sides and shorter sections on either end zone. The field was larger than an
American football gridiron; there was plenty of green space surrounding the
football field outline. The pitch was traditionally used by soccer, hurling,
and Gaelic football teams, which use larger fields. The Notre Dame vs. Navy
tilt would be the first American football game played at Croke Park.
Following
the quick visit to the stadium, the team gathered on a bus and traveled the
serpentine roads through the Irish countryside.
Through
the bus windows, a velvet green tapestry wrapped itself around cliffs and
mounds while small white cottages speckled the vast landscape. Ribbons of
pavement swerved left then right and up and over and down and around leading
eventually to somewhere. Chimneys puffed white smoke into the air while cold
empty castles sat lifelessly where souls once gathered hundreds of years in the
past.
“It
was incredible,” Marc said. “I had never seen anything like it.”
Between
football practices and team dinners, the players traveled the streets of Dublin and sat on the ivory stone steps at Trinity College where scribes such as Samuel
Becket and Oscar Wilde once scribbled their thoughts onto paper.
Before
the team had traveled overseas, a man from Ireland joined the squad for a
luncheon. One of his bits of advice was against the law of Lou Holtz.
“When
you guys get over there,” the man said, “you’ve got to try the Guinness.”
Holtz
had a team rule that no one – regardless of age – could drink a drop of alcohol
during the football season. But Guinness is an Irish treasure and the team
would be in Ireland.
The team tried to convince their coach to look the other way on this particular
transgression.
Holtz
was not happy.
“OK,”
the coach said reluctantly. “You can have one
Guinness while you’re over there if
you are 21. And that’s final.”
Marc
was a little unclear on Holtz’s new rule.
“Now,
does that mean one keg?” he asked rhetorically to his friends. “Does that mean
one bottomless pint at a local pub?
“I
guess it was up to our interpretation of what ‘one’ meant,” Marc said. “After the game, we’d definitely have that one Guinness.”
But
before the team could make merry in the waning hours of Saturday night, it had
business to take care of under the gray skies of Saturday afternoon.
In
the Dublin
newspapers that morning, the editors printed the rules of American football so
that those attending the game would have some idea of what was happening. This
type of football was rarely seen this far from the States. Some fans in
attendance, though, knew exactly what to expect.
A
small group from Norwood, Ohio,
made the trip to Europe to see their native
son play across the pond. Matt Ventura, one of Marc’s teammates at Norwood High School, was among those who
ventured east.
“We
flew into London
and spent a little time there,” he said. “And then a few of us went to Dublin to see the game.
It was incredible; what a culture change.”
Ventura found himself explaining American
football to those around him in the bleachers of Croke Park.
He anxiously awaited the start of the game so he could see his friend trample
all over the Irish gridiron.
The
game was listed as a home contest for Navy, but the Fighting Irish clearly felt
at home on the Irish sod.
To
beat the water-based service academy, Notre Dame kept the attack on the ground.
Ten minutes into the contest, Marc blasted into the end zone from five yards
away to score the game’s first points.
To
the Norwood
contingent, Marc’s touchdown was something special.
“That
was amazing,” Ventura
said. “After he scored that first touchdown, they put his picture up on the big
screen. It’s pretty cool to see one of your best friends from high school up on
the big screen in Ireland.
That’s one of the coolest things I’ve ever experienced.”
Ventura would have plenty more chances to
see his friend on the big screen.
A
touchdown reception by Pete Chryplewicz and a 33-yard scamper for another score
by Autry Denson sandwiched a Navy score in the second quarter and the Irish led
21-7 at the break.
Marc Edwards on his way to another touchdown. (Getty Images) |
Notre
Dame’s lead would expand to 28-7 early in the third quarter when Renaldo Wynn
returned a fumble recovery 24 yards to pay dirt. But the pesky Middies kept
coming back, keeping the game within reach. Two Navy touchdowns in the third
quarter and another touchdown by Denson kept the margin at 14 (35-21) going
into the fourth quarter.
Holtz
wasn’t enjoying his trip. In his mind, the game should have been far out of
hand in favor of his Irish. He took out his frustrations on the same offensive
lineman he booted to the ground in training camp before Marc’s freshman season.
It made Holtz furious when an offensive lineman would lean forward on running
plays and lean back on passing plays, therefore advertising to the defense the
intention of the Irish offense.
When
the lineman came to the sideline after a stalled drive, Holtz went ballistic.
He grabbed the lineman’s facemask while spit and screams spewed from his mouth.
At one point during the tirade, Holtz slammed his face into the lineman’s
facemask. The coach shattered his glasses and bloodied his own mouth in getting
his point across.
“He
head-butted the guy,” Marc said. “You don’t head butt a guy who’s got a helmet
on. He’s screaming like crazy and it looks like his face just exploded. I guess
he needed to just get that off his chest.”
The
fourth quarter had been Marc’s time before that season, and on a cool day on a
slice of green in the North Atlantic, it would
be again.
Marc
blasted into the end zone twice more in the fourth quarter to push the Irish’s
lead to 47-21. His backup, Jamie Spencer, pounded into the end zone for Notre
Dame’s final touchdown late in the game before Navy tacked on a meaningless touchdown.
Marc
finished the 54-27 victory with 47 yards rushing and three touchdowns as Notre
Dame amassed 303 yards on the ground and six rushing touchdowns. That was the
Notre Dame way and the Irish crowd witnessed a clinic in old-school American
football.
After
the game, Ventura and the other Norwood faithful made their way toward the
field. They wanted to greet their friend before leaving the stadium.
“I
didn’t even know a Norwood
contingent was there,” Marc said. “That was awesome and it was great to see
them after the game.”
Marc
signed a jersey they had brought with them, which they brought home to hang on
the wall of a Norwood
tavern.
“This
whole trip to Ireland
was one of my best experiences from my Notre Dame days,” Marc said.
It
wasn’t over just yet.
The
Irish plane bound for Chicago
wasn’t due to leave until Sunday afternoon and Saturday night was still young.
Temple Bar and the nightlife of Dublin,
like a Siren, beckoned the Irish players. One thing stood in their way,
however: curfew.
The
assistant coach in charge of bed checks was willing to be a little lax in his
responsibilities that night. He understood the special circumstances
surrounding this last night on foreign soil. He knew some of his players may
never travel outside of the United
States again.
“Gentlemen,
listen up,” he quietly told the team. “I am
coming for bed check. I’m going to check once and then that’s it. I’m not
coming back around. Just be there when I check. You understand what I’m
saying?”
Oh,
they understood.
“We
closed down all the pubs that night,” Marc said. “We had an absolutely great
time hanging with the locals and hanging with each other. And we had a great
time enjoying that one Guinness coach
let us have.”
To
no one’s surprise, that one Guinness
lasted deep into the night.
“Hey,
we never saw the bottom of the pint,” Marc said. “They kept filling it up.”
The
sojourn in Ireland
was over and the players squeezed into their airplane seats for the long ride
back to reality.
Up
next for Notre Dame was a trip to Boston
College for its annual
holy war.
Marc
did not know it would be the last time he would suit up and fight alongside his
Notre Dame teammates.
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