QUINIX Sport News: Why Notre Dame’s Marcus Freeman should turn down NFL … for now

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Freeman’s Irish team is playing for the national title Monday and the program’s outlook hasn’t been this positive in decades. But with at least one NFL team interested in him, should he consider a jump to the pros?

Last week, at a news conference before the College Football Playoff semifinals, Penn State coach James Franklin turned to his counterpart, Notre Dame’s Marcus Freeman, and asked a question.

“How old are you now, Marcus?”

“Thirty-eight,” Freeman curtly answered.

Franklin, 52, was trying to make a joke about how Freeman’s full head of hair compared to his own bald dome (“I mean, look at the hairline on this guy”).

He went on to praise Freeman’s leadership and coaching acumen and, considering Franklin was just 39 when he was hired as the head coach of Vanderbilt, is probably empathetic to being a young coach.

Still, the question hung in the air. It felt dismissive. It felt condescending. It felt like a mental game. Whatever it was, it caused the self-deprecating joke to fall flat. Freeman didn’t look happy.

“He was angry,” Xavier Watts, a Notre Dame safety, told the Athletic. “He was angry with the press conference thing, whatever was going on between that. He was mad about that. All the anger went toward us and that anger went onto the field.”

Notre Dame 27, Penn State 24.

Freeman, who has since turned 39, will lead the Fighting Irish into Monday’s national title game against Ohio State.

The Chicago Bears have reportedly made overtures to interview Notre Dame's Marcus Freeman for its head coaching vacancy. (CFP/Getty Images)The Chicago Bears have reportedly made overtures to interview Notre Dame's Marcus Freeman for its head coaching vacancy. (CFP/Getty Images)
The Chicago Bears have reportedly made overtures to interview Notre Dame’s Marcus Freeman for its head coaching vacancy. (CFP/Getty Images)

If he is still considered youthful by college coaching standards — he’s the fifth-youngest in the power leagues — respect in his abilities is all grown up. Notre Dame’s three playoff victories, complete with excellent gameplans, second-half comebacks and wrinkle plays at key moments, have played a large role in that.

It’s why the Chicago Bears, according to the NFL Network, are interested in speaking with him about becoming their head coach.

And it’s also why Freeman should say thanks but no thanks to the NFL, at least for now.

Start with this: The Bears aren’t exactly the Kansas City Chiefs. The organization is a picture of dysfunction and even with a promising quarterback in Caleb Williams, this is not an opportunity that is too good to turn down.

The nature of Chicago’s job search is testament to that — they’ve already interviewed 10 men, have three more scheduled and, Freeman included, have been linked to requests with six more.

Why enter that mess? The NFL isn’t going anywhere.

This moment of momentum for Notre Dame is far more fluid. Know this: Freeman is almost solely focused on leading the Irish to an upset of the Buckeyes.

At a news conference Sunday, he brushed off the opportunity to offer benign thoughts on everything from how he played at Ohio State (“This has nothing to do with … where I went to school”) to his overall opinion of the inaugural 12-team playoff (“I have not spent a lot of time thinking about [it]”).

“I’m just trying to get this team ready to win,” Freeman said.

 

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