Ashton Craig has spent much of his Notre Dame career forcing his way into the picture, and now he’s trying to do it again.
The center’s path has been marked by opportunity, trust and two brutal setbacks. He first got his chance late in the 2023 season, when starting center Zeke Correll went down against Clemson and Craig stepped in during a 31-23 loss.
Once Correll was healthy, offensive line coach Joe Rudolph stayed with Craig anyway, and Correll eventually transferred to N.C. State for the 2024 season.
Rudolph remembered that moment simply: "I think we both felt the same thing. When I looked at him, I go, 'You're ready,' and he goes, 'I know.' I said, 'Okay, let's go,' and that was it."
Craig arrived in the Class of 2023 as a four-star 247Sports prospect and a three-star composite recruit from Lawrenceburg, Ind. He entered campus with less attention than classmates Aamil Wagner, Joey Tanona, Billy Schrauth and Ty Chan, all of whom were rated ahead of him.
But he moved quickly. Correll’s departure left Craig as the clear answer at center heading into 2024.
That season started well enough before disaster struck in Game 3 at Purdue, when Craig tore his left ACL and missed the rest of the year. Pat Coogan stepped in and handled the job, later going on to national-title fame at Indiana in ’25.
Then the cycle repeated. Coogan saw the path and headed to Bloomington, and Craig returned healthy enough to open the 2025 season as the starter.
But in Game 6 against N.C. State, he tore the same left ACL again.
Now Craig is in his fifth season in a Notre Dame uniform and has 12 career starts - three in 2023, three in 2024 and six in 2025. When he’s been on the field, he’s been viewed as a technician and a leader, and that leadership role now overlaps with Anthonie Knapp, who has shifted from left tackle to left guard.
Craig sounded encouraged in April.
"Strength-wise, I feel like I'm in a great spot," said Craig the second week of April. "That's something I could compare to the previous injury around this time. I feel like I'm in a better spot now than I was then."
The timeline is tighter this time, with about four fewer weeks of recovery than he had after the first ACL tear. Still, the spring outlook was positive. Head football trainer Rob Hunt said Craig "is in a good spot" to make it back for the coming season and added, "He'll have a good summer."
The real checkpoint comes when camp opens the first week of August. For now, though, Craig is convinced he’ll be ready.
"I expect to be ready to go for the first game," Craig said. "I'm confident in that.
I felt good heading into Week 1 (last year) and this is the same thing. I feel confident in myself and my ability to lay it out there for the guys next to me."
In Other News...
Brian Kelly Is Trying To Recast His Notre Dame Exit Again
Brian Kelly is revisiting his Notre Dame departure again, this time in an interview with The Independent Podcast, and the former Irish coach is still trying to frame the move in a way that softens the old blow. His comments come years after he left South Bend for LSU, a decision that has remained one of the defining coaching exits in recent college football memory, especially for a program that still measures itself against the standard Kelly once helped set.
Kelly said the reaction to his exit has not always matched what he believes he actually meant, and he also pointed to the broader messiness of coaches changing schools in the middle of the sports churn. For Notre Dame fans, the familiar tension is less about the explanation itself than the fact that Kelly keeps returning to it, trying once more to separate his own version of the story from the one that has followed him ever since. [Read more 🡒]
Notre Dames Center Spot Carries One Huge Concern Into 2026
Ashton Craig remains one of the more important pieces in Notre Dames offensive line picture because the talent has never really been the question. When he has been healthy, the veteran center has shown the kind of play that can stabilize the middle of the line, and the Irish are still counting on that upside as they look ahead to 2026.
The concern, of course, is whether he can stay on the field long enough to make it matter. Craig is expected to be cleared for fall camp, but after the recent injury setbacks, durability is now the central storyline around him, and Notre Dame needs a full season from him to get the most out of a spot that could otherwise be a real strength. [Read more 🡒]
Notre Dames True Recruiting Stronghold Is Not Where Fans Think
For all the talk about Notre Dame needing to dominate its own backyard, the recruiting map over the last decade tells a different story. From 2016 to 2026, the Irish have built real pipelines far from South Bend, with Florida, California, Georgia and Texas all supplying major talent and helping shape the roster in ways that go well beyond the Midwest footprint fans usually picture.
Florida has been especially important, sending 24 commitments to Notre Dame over that span, while California was close behind with 23 and an especially strong haul of blue-chip prospects. Georgia and Texas have also become reliable sources, and Texas in particular has stood out for the quality of the players it has produced, a reminder that Notre Dames recruiting reach is now national in a way that would have looked far less likely a generation ago. [Read more 🡒]
