SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Out he came with a double-tap to his chest and a finger pointed to the sky. Then Manti Te'o ran on to the field one last time, spinning around with his arms open to a Notre Dame Stadium crowd madly waving green and white leis for him and him alone.
As he approached midfield, the Irish linebacker ripped his helmet off before a bear hug from his father, who told his son he loved him, how proud of him he was. Everyone cried. And then Te'o was alone, off to a corner of the field, to blow kisses to the student section before going to work.
After No. 3 Notre Dame mushroom-clouded its way to a 38-0 obliteration of Wake Forest and its first 11-0 start in 23 years, Te'o wound up chin-deep in leis, made of everything from flowers to beef jerky packets. He received a standing ovation, he heard his name chanted, and his skin tingled.
"Just magic," Te'o said. "There are no words to describe this place and how I felt at that time. Just joy. Pure joy."
To think it was only the beginning of the end. The exhilarating run arrives in southern California next weekend, one game against punch-drunk rival USC, one game for a possible chance at a national title and a gilded page in the densest college football history tome there is.
Only, in essence, the most important game they ever have played.
"We're going to be more focused than ever," said receiver John Goodman, who had a 50-yard touchdown catch. "The program is at an all-time high. It's something we want to keep going. We won't let USC get in our way. We just know we have one more, and we're good to go for a national championship, hopefully."
As for this Saturday, the celebration raged on after Senior Day festivities ended. Quarterback Everett Golson's 20-for-30, 346-yard, three-touchdown day spurred 584 yards of offense and the defense's first shutout since the 2009 opener turned Wake Forest (5-6) into dust.
Four plays in, tailback Cierre Wood was in the end zone after a 68-yard run. Then came Golson's three scoring tosses: A 2-yarder to Tyler Eifert, the bomb to Goodman and a 34-yard floater to TJ Jones.
The Irish were up 31 at halftime. Notre Dame won five previous home games by 23 points, total. Wake Forest was rendered indistinguishable from the marshmallows squished on the sideline after the students hurled them from the stands.
"I thought everything came together," Golson said. "My head is down, my foot's on the gas. I'm never going to look up and lose focus."
So here comes USC, hated USC, the Trojans either swashbuckling in pursuit of ruining their rivals' dreams … or devastated as a season of disappointment grinds to a close.
"Our guys know what's at stake now," Irish coach Brian Kelly said. "This is about an undefeated season. They cannot do anything else but beat USC. The rest is up to other people to decide."
It all comes to an end for the Irish, one way or another. Early in the fourth quarter Saturday, at a timeout that became a send-off, Te'o followed seniors Kapron Lewis-Moore and Zeke Motta to the sideline. Te'o pounded his chest, then screamed and punched the night air all the way there.
One of the best nights of their lives, and here comes the biggest.
bchamilton@tribune.com
Twitter @ChiTribHamilton