Notre Dame Basketball Faces A March Reality Irish Fans Can't Accept

Fueled by the painful end to last season, Notre Dame basketball is on a mission to transform disappointment into triumph by making a triumphant return to the ACC Tournament.

Notre Dame basketball is carrying one unmistakable message into the new season: never let last March happen again.

That’s the backdrop for everything as the Irish head into 2026-27, because last year didn’t just end poorly - it ended early. Notre Dame finished 13-18 overall and 4-14 in the ACC, then missed the league tournament entirely for the first time in program history, and for the first time since the school’s independent days. The season shut down after the regular-season finale at Boston College, and that was that.

For a program that used to treat conference tournament week as a built-in reset button, it was a jarring break from the norm. During its 18 years in the Big East and its first 12 in the ACC, Notre Dame often found a way to keep playing in March.

Sometimes the league tournament was a lifeline. Sometimes it was a springboard.

Last season, it was simply gone.

“It was wild,” said sophomore power forward Brady Koehler. “Losing that game, immediately you know, it’s over.”

“It’s an awful feeling,” said senior guard Braeden Shrewsberry. “That was embarrassing.

You never want to feel like that again in your life. It was a bad feeling, but it also motivated you to get back in the guy and get better and get better as a team.

“We can’t let that happen again.”

Those comments came Wednesday, July 8, after an offseason conditioning session that also featured some boxing-ring work across the way in the Joyce Center. It was the first time the remaining holdovers from last year’s team talked publicly about missing the ACC Tournament.

The lesson is simple enough to fit on a wall: get to Greensboro.

That’s the destination Notre Dame wants burned into every corner of the program this season - locker room, team room, practice court at Rolfs Hall, coaches’ meeting room, all of it. Under the current ACC setup, the bottom three teams after 18 league games stay home in early March. Last season, Notre Dame was one of them.

This year’s group doesn’t plan on repeating that fate. The Irish still have the usual goals every Division I team chases, but one of them has to be more basic than the rest: survive the league season long enough to reach the tournament.

“You could lose every ACC game (in the past), but it’s a whole new season when you get to the ACC Tournament,” said senior guard Logan Imes. “When it ended, it didn’t feel right.”

The ending hit even harder because it came during spring break. Once Notre Dame returned to campus, the season was already closed out. Imes said he left and reconnected with friends elsewhere, asking a simple question about the timing of it all.

“How often do you get a week off?” Imes said.

Plenty of people around the sport may look at Notre Dame and expect a similar finish next spring, with too much idle time and no postseason games waiting. That skepticism is understandable. The Irish didn’t do enough last season to earn much trust.

But the players back in the building are talking like a group with something to prove. They’re older now.

They’re carrying chips on their shoulders. And they know exactly what they want to avoid.

“That hunger can take you a long way,” Shrewsberry said. “It’s not always about talent or athleticism; it’s about who wants it more. We have a lot of guys who want to prove themselves and win badly.

“It’s a different feeling around here, for sure.”

That feeling has to last all the way into the second week of March.

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