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Notre Dame CB Leonard Moore notches FWAA Freshman All-America accolades

Kyle Kellyby:Kyle Kellyabout 13 hours

ByKyleKelly

Leonard Moore ND
Notre Dame cornerback Leonard Moore. (Mike Miller/Blue & Gold)

On Tuesday, Leonard Moore added another accolade to his account. The Football Writers Association of America named the first-year Notre Dame cornerback to its FWAA Freshman All-America Team. 

Moore has now been recognized as a freshman All-American by six outlets: FWAA, College Football Network, 247Sports, Pro Football Focus, The Athletic and ESPN. The FWAA and The Athletic included redshirt freshmen on their respective freshman All-America teams. 

A product of Round Rock (Texas) High, the 6-foot-2, 191-pound Moore has appeared in 14 games for the Fighting Irish this season, starting in nine outings. He has accounted for 43 tackles (29 solo), 2 stops for loss, 2 forced fumbles, 10 pass breakups and 2 interceptions. 

Moore’s first start came in relief for an injured Christian Gray on Sept. 28 against Louisville. Then, he took over for preseason All-American Benjamin Morrison, who Irish coach Marcus Freeman ruled out for the season after the Stanford game Oct. 12. Moore has primarily played boundary cornerback. 

He is Notre Dame’s first freshman All-America cornerback since Morison earned those honors after the 2022 season. Moore and Morrison had comparable first-years in college. 

During Morrison’s freshman campaign, he surrendered 22 catches for 296 yards and 1 touchdown on 51 targets in 13 games. Meanwhile, Moore has only given up 23 receptions for 272 yards and 2 touchdowns on 52 targets in one more game. 

Few could have projected such a fast rise to stardom for Moore.  Morrison was one of them. Before the season, he projected Moore would finish his Notre Dame career among the elite. 

“This might be a stretch, but Leonard Moore will be better than I will be here,” Morrison said. “He’s a special kid.”

Freeman had a hunch during Moore’s recruitment. 

“I remember doing a home (recruiting) visit with (defensive backs) Coach (Mike) Mickens at (Moore’s) house,” Freeman said. “We spent some time with his mother and father, who are just some of the brightest individuals I’ve ever been around.” 

“I think all those things helped him develop into the football player he is today. He has God-given ability — athleticism. But he’s a very competitive individual. I think he helped expedite the process of getting to where he is now.” 

Moore was the No. 66 player in Texas, No. 42 cornerback nationally and No. 431 overall player in 2024. The three-star prospect also held scholarship offers from Arizona, Arizona State, California, Duke, Houston, Kansas State, Missouri, Oregon, TCU and Vanderbilt. 

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