Kenny Minchey Takes Surprising CJ Carr Stance

Kenny Minchey's transfer to Kentucky speaks volumes about his ambitions and Notre Dame's quarterback dynamics as the season unfolds.

Kenny Minchey didn’t leave Notre Dame with any bad blood, and he made that much clear when talking about CJ Carr and the Irish.

After spending three seasons in South Bend and backing up a string of quarterbacks, Minchey moved on to Kentucky through the transfer portal once Carr won the job last fall. Now set to begin his first year as a college starter, he said he wants Carr and Notre Dame to thrive.

“Unless we play them in the playoffs, I hope he goes out and kills it,” Minchey said about Carr and Notre Dame. “I hope the whole team does. I’m excited to be able to tune in and watch some of their games whenever we’re not playing because I still have a bunch of buddies there who are hoping to have a really good season.”

Minchey’s path at Notre Dame was crowded from the start. He arrived in South Bend as the 11th-ranked quarterback in the 2023 class after throwing for 3,280 yards and 32 touchdowns as a junior in high school.

An injury shortened his senior season, but he still came in with the kind of arm and running ability that made him a real contender for the job. Timing, more than talent, kept getting in his way.

He spent his first two years behind transfer quarterbacks Sam Hartman and Riley Leonard, with Steve Angeli also ahead of him on the depth chart. Angeli had been viewed as the “heir apparent” before leaving for the transfer portal ahead of the 2025 quarterback battle.

Minchey saw only limited action, playing in 10 games over three years. He completed 23 of 29 passes for 212 yards without an interception and added 96 rushing yards and a touchdown.

His best shot at the starting role came during last spring and fall, when the competition with Carr was tight. Carr eventually won it, and then backed that up with an excellent 2025 regular season. That left Minchey looking elsewhere for his own opportunity.

At Kentucky, he pointed to the new staff and the quarterback development reputation of Will Stein and OC Joe Sloan as part of the appeal, but said the move really came down to one thing.

“It was just that I wasn’t playing there, so that was really the main reason,” Minchey said about his reason to enter the portal. “These are basically the best two guys (Will Stein and OC Joe Sloan) at their positions across the country, and with what they’ve been able to do in terms of quarterback development, I think it ended up being a no-brainer.”

Notre Dame, meanwhile, would not mind seeing Minchey again - but only in a setting where that would mean both teams reached the College Football Playoff.

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