SOUTH BEND—Malik Zaire showed he’s more than a runner, picking apart the Texas defense in a dominant performance in his first home start.Zaire threw for 313 yards and three touchdowns, and No. 11 Notre Dame held Texas to 163 yards of total offense in a 38-3 victory Saturday night.Zaire was 19-of-22 passing, an 86.6 percent completion rate that was second-best in school history. Steve Beuerlein completed 10 of 11 passes against Colorado in 1984, a 90.9 percent completion rate. Ten of those passes went for 15 yards or more.
”He threw precision routes,” Kelly said. ”We knew what he was capable of. I think he put it together tonight, and he has room to grow.”
Zaire credited his line.
”They gave me some great protection. The receivers did a good job catching the ball. The whole team collectively as a unit did a great job,” he said.
Texas coach Charlie Strong said his defense didn’t do enough to pressure Zaire.
”We just gave him too much time to throw it and they have really outstanding receivers,” Strong said. ”When you allow him the time and he can find him, which he did, he’s going to make those throws.”
Will Fuller caught a pair of touchdown passes – one a 66-yarder – and finished with 142 yards receiving. Chris Brown added a 6-yard touchdown catch. Freshman Josh Adams ran for a pair of TDs, including 14-yard score on his first career carry, and C.J. Prosise added 98 yards rushing on 20 carries.Kelly said Tarean Folston, the leading rusher from last season, sustained an injury to the ACL on his right knee, and is out for the season.Notre Dame took advantage of an inexperienced Longhorns squad starting three players who were in high school a year ago, amassing 527 yards of total offense.The Irish had seven runs of 10 yards or more, with the longest being a 25-yard run by Adams.The Irish improved to 9-2 against Texas, and to 10-2 in home night games. The Longhorns, coming off a 6-7 season, lost a season opener for the first time since 1999. It also marked their third straight blowout loss, finishing 2014 losing 48-10 to TCU and 31-7 to Arkansas.
”We have to get better. We have to improve. We’re just a better football team than what we showed,” Strong said. ”We have to believe it and our players have to believe it. Because we can’t go out and not execute.”
The 11th meeting between the programs that rank second and third in victories (Notre Dame with 883 and Texas with 881) didn’t match the significance of their three meetings in the Cotton Bowl in the 1970s when national championships were on the line each time. But there was still a big-game atmosphere, with burnt orange visible throughout the stands and with some in the crowd paying more than $500 a ticket.Kelly didn’t want to get overly excited about the win.
”A good victory. It’s only one,” Kelly said. ”It’s a long journey for our football team. We’re excited about the win, but we have a long way to go.”