“If Dayne Crist never injures his knee last year, are we even having this conversation?” Kelly said, referring to a season-ending ruptured patellar tendon that knocked his No. 1 starter out of the final four games.
“

robably not. But it did happen, and it’s led us to an interesting place.”
Actually, it led Kelly to former Florida coach Urban Meyer. When Meyer came to ND to speak at Kelly’s coaching clinic last spring, Kelly took it a step further in private.
Specifically, Kelly wanted to know about the “Tim Tebow package” Meyer sprinkled in around starter Chris Leak’s longer stretches during the Gators’ 2006 national title run.
“Nobody really wants to play more than one quarterback,” Kelly said. “But in college football - more than you do in any other sport - sometimes you have two guys who have a skill set that can help you win. In Urban’s case, Chris Leak was very good, but he was not complete.
“If I had (Stanford’s) Andrew Luck, then there’s no question. We’ve got one guy, and all the other guys can watch from the sideline. But we don’t have that situation at Notre Dame. Neither did Urban, and he still won a national championship.”
Kelly has devised two offensive packages for the four quarterbacks. Offense “A” is for Crist and sophomore Tommy Rees, the latter being the most lightly recruited of the four and the quarterback perceived to have the lowest ceiling among them.
Offense “B” is for the spread offense prototypes, sophomore Andrew Hendrix and early-enrolled freshman Everett Golson.
“I never work with four quarterbacks in the fall,” Kelly said, “but because they’re so close, we’re going to develop all four of them. The thing about Andrew and Everett, in time, they may become that quarterback who can do everything. But they won’t be that guy when we open on Sept. 3.”