Notre Dame’s latest legacy win didn’t just come with family ties attached. It also came with a pretty direct endorsement of Marcus Freeman.
Julius Jones, the former Fighting Irish and NFL running back, said he’s glad his sons are headed to his old school, but what really stood out to him was the coach they’ll be playing for. Jones recently appeared on the Always Irish podcast, and in a sneak peek shared by host Mike Kennedy, he laid out exactly why Freeman mattered in the decision.
“You know we've had that discussion before, and I think, from many of the conversations I've had with Coach Freeman, the impact that he's able to make on young men. And I'm not bulls-- you when I say this because, you know, I've seen it firsthand,” Jones said. “The impact that he's able to make on these young players, young men, young college students is way greater than in the NFL.”
Jones drew a sharp line between college football and pro football in the same conversation.
“When you get to the league, man, that's a job. Everybody's just hired.
If your a- isn't good, then you're fired. And there's really not much of an effect on a player.”
“They're going to do their job whether you're there or not because they have families to feed. In college, you actually get to, you know, take these kids and turn them into men and, you know. That's the difference.”
He said his view comes from spending the last two years around Freeman and getting to know him well.
“For me and the person that I know he is, you know, from the last two years of spending time with him and talking to him, I think he understands the impact that he has in college is much greater than he could in the NFL.”
That perspective helps explain why Jones was comfortable with both sons choosing Notre Dame at the same time. For him, it wasn’t only about the school itself or the family connection. It was about who would be guiding them.
Freeman’s pull at Notre Dame has also shown up in the way he’s handled constant NFL speculation. Over the past few years, he’s been linked to one rumor after another about leaving for the league or even another college job, but he’s stayed in South Bend.
Jones’ comments fit a broader pattern around Notre Dame, where the program has become a landing spot for NFL legacy families. Jerome Bettis, Plaxico Burress and Larry Fitzgerald are among the names that seem genuinely happy when their sons sign with the Irish. With Freeman still in place, Notre Dame has both the pitch and the proof to keep fighting off negative recruiting.
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