Notre Dame back to where it should be

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Enter Kelly, whose evolution as the Notre Dame head coach explains this magical season as much as any factor.

Kelly came to South Bend confident in his abilities as a head coach based on success at Cincinnati, Central Michigan and Grand Valley State. He underestimated how different being a Notre Dame head coach would be. A disastrous first season marked more by tragedy than triumph educated Kelly.

He made choices that deserved scrutiny in the unfortunate aftermath of the deaths of Lizzy Seeberg, the Saint Mary's student who killed herself after an alleged attack by a football player, and Declan Sullivan, the team's videographer who died when wind blew over the elevated scissor lift he was standing on.

But one can think Kelly could have handled those situations better and still respect his growth on the job. Gradually, Kelly changed perhaps because Notre Dame doesn't.

He got tougher with discipline and smarter with game plans, but nothing offers more evidence of change than Kelly's handling of starting quarterback Everett Golson.

A redshirt freshman, Golson represented an unknown commodity to everybody but Kelly. Inexperience and inconsistency showed. Had Kelly berated Golson on the sideline as he had done previously to Notre Dame quarterbacks, he risked ruining him.

Whatever Kelly did to nurture Golson worked. Whatever Kelly did to inspire loyalty from Manti Te'o, the leader of Notre Dame's best defense since 1988, worked. Whatever Kelly did in '12 eventually will be football literature provided Notre Dame beats USC to go 12-0.

Campus tradition calls for Grace Hall to light up "No. 1" whenever Notre Dame ascends there in any sport.

This time, it won't be for women's basketball, fencing or soccer. This time will be for football.

About time.

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