It has been 52 weeks since Charles Jagusah’s UTV accident in Cody, Wyoming changed the course of his Notre Dame career.
Since then, the recovery has been long and complicated: at least five surgical procedures, with the possibility of another, and what is now reportedly a fully healed humerus bone. For Notre Dame offensive line coach Joe Rudolph, it’s also meant life without the luxury of a simple Plan A up front. And for anyone tracking Jagusah’s standing inside the program, the last year has been a hard reset.
That was a sharp fall from the view Notre Dame had of him before the injury. In the annual Counting Down the Irish series, Tim Prister and this writer had Jagusah at No. 3 on the team, behind only Jeremiyah Love and Leonard Moore. That kind of placement tells you everything about how high the ceiling was.
The latest update, though, brought better news than the one Notre Dame was dealing with in early June. As of 22 hours ago, Irish Illustrated received positive news on Jagusah’s return for the 2026 Football Season. That is a shift from the prevailing negative outlook the outlet and others had heard just weeks earlier.
The path back has been anything but straightforward. Notre Dame head football athletic trainer Rob Hunt laid out the sequence on March 18, describing a severe humerus injury, a rough recovery, and a chain of setbacks that included four subsequent surgeries.
Hunt said Jagusah had a final surgery that day, after the injury itself, then a cleanout procedure about two weeks later tied to wound closure. He also explained that in September the hardware failed because the bone was not healing, leading to an exchange of hardware.
In January, the hardware came out again and infection was identified, likely from the original injury. Hunt said the staff hoped that removing the infection would finally allow the bone to heal.
"Obviously everyone knows that he injured himself over the 4th of July weekend and had a really severe injury to his humerus. And I'm going to explain it in a little bit more detail.
He's had a bumpy road relatively in terms of that recovery. It's a complex injury and a severe injury, and he's just had ups and downs through it.
"He's had four subsequent surgeries. He's got a final surgery today, but [he had surgery after] the injury itself.
[Then], about two weeks afterwards, he had a cleanout procedure just relative to his wound closure, so that was surgery No. 2.
In September, the hardware, due to the bone not healing, failed, so the hardware was exchanged in September, and we were hopeful at that time that the injury would begin to heal. It did not.
"In January, the hardware was taken out again, and we were able to identify some infection that was in there, probably from the initial injury. So, he's gone through a sense of antibiotics and antibiotic seeding into the bone.
That hardware now is going to go back in, so the bone will be grafted again today, and we're extremely hopeful. We're really optimistic.
We think that the infection was probably inhibiting some of his bone growth, and now he's in a position without infection. The bone will be grafted and stabilized, and this will allow him to fully heal.
He's got more to go. There's a lot more rehab involved.
"There's a lot more time that he's got to put in there, but he's gone through a lot, and, again, we're really optimistic. We do think that he'll return, but his timeline, as we kind of shared at the early onset, is undetermined at this point. Once his bone heals and his muscles are strong, we'll enter into the return-to-play side of things, but really optimistic there.
Jagusah’s value to Notre Dame was on full display in January 2025, when he stepped in at right guard against Penn State and then started at left tackle just over a week later with the national championship on the line. He hasn’t played in football pads since.
At 6-foot-6 and 330 pounds, the former 247Sports No. 46 overall player remains a major figure in Notre Dame’s offensive future, even after a year defined by surgeries, rehab, and uncertainty.
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