Notre Dame's 2026 Defense Already Has One Huge Reason To Worry

Notre Dame's defense faces a formidable challenge in 2026 as it prepares to take on a lineup of highly skilled quarterbacks who each bring unique strengths to the field.

Notre Dame’s 2026 schedule is going to put the Irish defense in front of a pretty serious quarterback lineup, and the names at the top of that list bring very different problems. Some are polished passers.

Some are runners who can wreck a game with their legs. A few are both.

Darien Mensah is the headline act. The Duke transfer was one of the offseason’s biggest portal pickups, and he arrives at Miami after a huge year with the Blue Devils.

Mensah helped Duke win the ACC title while throwing for 3,973 yards, 34 touchdowns and six interceptions, and he completed 66.8 percent of his passes. Now he lands in a Miami offense loaded with skill talent and backed by a defense that should be significantly better than what he had in 2025.

The question for Mensah is less about arm talent and more about how he handles the biggest moments. He also has to be more willing to take off and use his legs.

He is not a “dual-threat” quarterback, but the Irish would not want to see him finish a season with -32 rushing yards.

Kevin Jennings is right there with him, and maybe even more dangerous if everything clicks. The SMU quarterback is the most experienced and productive passer Notre Dame will see in 2026, and he brings real athletic juice too.

Over the last two seasons, the 6-0, 192-pound Texas native has thrown for 6,886 yards and 49 touchdowns while also rushing for 408 yards and nine scores. The issue has been turnovers.

Jennings has thrown 24 interceptions over those two seasons, and that has to come down. Like Mensah, he’d also help himself by leaning more on his legs.

Of those 408 rushing yards, 354 came in 2024. If he cuts down the mistakes and taps into that athleticism more often, Jennings could end up being the most dangerous quarterback on the Irish schedule.

Then there’s Bachmeier, who already showed he can carry a team with his legs and still make enough plays through the air to matter. He took over at BYU as a true freshman and led the Cougars to a 12-2 record.

Last season, the 6-2, 230-pound California native threw for 3,033 yards, rushed for 527 yards, totaled 26 touchdowns and threw just seven interceptions. He finished his freshman year by outdueling Georgia Tech quarterback Haynes King in the Pop-Tarts Bowl, a 25-21 BYU win in which Bachmeier threw for 325 yards against the Yellow Jackets defense.

The big question now is whether he can keep growing as a passer. The running ability is already there.

If the throwing game takes another step in 2026, he could climb even higher on this list.

Notre Dame opens the season against Colton Joseph and Wisconsin, which makes that one especially worth watching. Joseph came to the Badgers from Old Dominion, and his athletic profile is one reason there’s so much optimism around Wisconsin.

At 6-2, 200 pounds, he’s one of the most athletic quarterbacks on the Irish schedule. There is still some uncertainty about how his game translates from the G6 to the P4, but he already gave a glimpse of what he can do against that level of competition.

Against Indiana in the season opener last year, he rushed for 179 yards and two touchdowns. Two weeks later against Virginia Tech, he passed for 276 yards, rushed for 63 more and accounted for three total touchdowns.

Syracuse also brings a familiar face into the picture with Angeli. His season ended in unfortunate fashion after he engineered an upset win over Clemson on the road in 2025, and at the time of his injury he was the nation’s leading passer in yards.

What stands out most about him is his poise. The moment has never seemed too big for him, and that has shown up again and again during his time at Notre Dame and now at Syracuse.

If the rest of the supporting cast can perform at the same level as the 2025 skill group, Angeli should put together a productive year before the Irish meet the Orange in the final week of the regular season.

A few more quarterbacks are worth keeping an eye on too: Braxton Woodson at Navy, Ryan Browne at Purdue and Alessio Milivojevic at Michigan State.

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