Notre Dame is heading into fall camp with a familiar kind of question at tight end: who grabs the job and runs with it? This time, the leading candidate is redshirt junior Cooper Flanagan, a physical California native who returns healthy after a lost 2025 season and now has a real shot to become the starter.
Flanagan’s path has been bumpy. He was a key part of the tight end rotation in his first two seasons, but injuries wrecked his 2025 campaign. He injured his Achilles in Notre Dame’s playoff win over Indiana in December of 2024, and while the expectation at the time was that he would be back in 2025, he ended up playing only four snaps all season while working through the recovery.
The encouraging sign for Notre Dame is that Flanagan was back on the field for spring and looked healthy. He also looked like a player with something to prove.
Throughout spring, he brought plenty of edge, getting into dust ups with teammates after plays and showing the kind of fire and intensity that stood out every day. That energy should carry into fall camp, where he enters in pole position for the starting job.
Health will be the first thing to watch. Flanagan also dealt with a couple of minor injuries in 2024, so staying on the field is part of the assignment now. After that, Notre Dame wants the same thing from him that it always has from its tight ends: strong work in the run game, plus enough growth as a receiver to matter when the ball is in the air.
The run game should be where Flanagan makes his earliest impact. During his first two seasons, he logged 422 snaps and earned a reputation as a strong blocker.
He was used heavily in 12 and 13 personnel packages, and 66.7-percent of his snaps came in the run game, according to PFF. His size, physicality and attitude fit exactly what Notre Dame wants from the position.
He was also a strong pass blocker in 2024, and with the Irish asking tight ends to help in protection, that part of his game should again be a real asset. Eli Raridon was asked to pass block 78 times last season, and Flanagan is expected to handle a similar workload.
The bigger swing factor is whether Flanagan can become a real threat as a receiver. That’s what separates a steady rotational tight end from the player who truly owns the spot.
He has been targeted only eight times in his career, but he has made the most of those chances. The tape has shown flashes of what he can do downfield, whether it was the corner route for a big play against Texas A&M in 2024, the downfield touchdown as a freshman against Pitt, or the RPO touchdown in the 2024 win over Purdue.
The challenge now is proving he can consistently win with route running and ball skills so defenses have to account for him in the pass game.
Notre Dame has a history of one tight end stepping aside and another stepping into the spotlight without much drop-off, and that is the standard Flanagan is chasing in 2026. There are talented younger players behind him, so nothing will be handed to him. But if he stays healthy and plays to his potential, he has a chance to be a real factor for the Irish this season.
A good season for Flanagan would mean staying healthy, dominating as a blocker and showing he can make plays in the passing game too. If that happens, Notre Dame may have its next tight end ready to carry the load.
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