Everything Brad Brownell said after Clemson’s loss to Virginia

Here’s what Clemson coach Brad Brownell said after the Tigers’ 66-65 loss to Virginia on Saturday.

Clemson suffered a 66-65 loss to Virginia on Saturday at Littlejohn Coliseum to drop the Tigers to just 4-6 in ACC play.

Clemson (14-7 overall) has now lost six of its first nine games to start the new year. Saturday’s loss was also the Tigers’ third defeat decided by just one possession in that span.

Jack Clark missed what would have been a game-winning 3-pointer as time expired to secure the latest victory for a streaking Virginia (17-5, 8-3) team that has won its last six games.

Here’s everything Tigers coach Brad Brownell said after the game.

Opening statement: 

“Man, hard one. We’ve had several here lately so (it’s) challenging. What a good basketball game. I thought two teams just played so hard. Scoring was hard to come by. Give credit to Virginia, their staff and players on a good road win. They’re playing very good basketball right now. Obviously Jacob Groves’ 3’s and those points are huge. Jordan Minor is doing a really nice job with physicality on defense and rebounding. I think Tony (Bennett) has found something with that here recently and it’s helped them.

“I’m proud of my guys. I just thought we played very hard. Virginia does an unbelievable job. They play a very grinding style. They wear you down with their offense, and you’ve got to sustain like that in a game with them. When you’re not making shots and you’re not getting any energy, the crowd doesn’t help you as much. It becomes hard, but I thought our guys just kept fighting. We’d make a couple in a row and then Virginia would answer. Then we’d have another little drought and we’d battle back. Obviously we had a pretty good look at the top of the key to win that didn’t go in. Again, we were a basket short. It’s happened to us about three times in the league now.

“We’ve just got to hang in there and keep working, but again, I’m really proud of the effort. Another thing is the quality of play… when there’s a bunch of missed shots, maybe the quality doesn’t look as good. For us to only have four turnovers (and) for Virginia to only have six, you’ve got teams on both ends of the court that are executing their stuff and defenses that are fighting their tails off. Just a really well-played game on both sides. I loved the fact that we attacked the basket. We had more free throws than Virginia, which is hard to do, so I thought we played with great physicality and toughness. We just needed to make another couple of shots. I thought we had some great shots around the basket that we needed to get in and certainly could have made another (3-pointer) or two.”

On what options he drew up for the game-winning shot:

“Not a lot. We didn’t do a lot of specific stuff. We’re basically just trying to get the court spread, get the ball into Chase Hunter’s hands. Depending on where PJ Hall was, he could be around the rim for a quick post-up. Jack (Clark) probably had a chance when he caught the ball, if he wanted to, he might have been able to hit PJ in the middle of the lane. That’s not easy for a kid. If there had been (a few) more seconds, he probably does throw it inside to PJ, but he catches it with 2.5 so he’s a little less (inclined) to do that.

“But basically I told Chase, ‘We’re going to put it in your hands. Joe’s going to be in a spot. Josh (Beadle) is out, PJ will probably be rim-running unless he rebounds, in which case he might be in the trail. If I think they slow us down and we don’t have any thrust, then I’ll probably call timeout. But if there’s open court, we’re going to let you drive and see what you do.’ He kind of drew Ryan Dunn to him. Dunn did a great job, kind of what we tried to do to Duke. (Hunter) flipped it to Jack for the shot.”

Oh PJ Hall making a good play to draw a foul on a 3-point shot with 15 seconds left:

“Yeah, it was a good play. We had a couple of options. It’s always hard, especially against a team like Virginia that’s so good defensively to get a clean look like that. That’s one of the reasons why it’s like, ‘Bring it down there and call timeout. There’s going to be 3 seconds left and Virginia’s going to make it hard on you.’ So we just settled, but that was a great play by PJ to draw the foul. A big-time play by an experienced player.”

On the inability to sustain momentum in conference play:

“What’s been hard is we win a game, lose a game, win a game, lose a game. We can’t win back to back games to really get the momentum back on our side all the way. We’ve lost three games, one in double overtime and two in the last second (of regulation). That’s the emotional drain. I thought a little bit during the Louisville game that we had a hard time getting ourselves emotionally charged all the way. I think we found it in the middle of the (Louisville) game and got the lead, but even after the win, the guys were saying we were still pretty flatline. I spent all of the last two days being a cheerleader as much as their coach and just trying to pump energy into them, reaffirm that they’re good players and a good team, and let’s be excited and ready to go.

“We were ready and had great spirit. A lot of coaching isn’t always the X’s and O’s. You’re coaching the spirit of your team. Where is your team spirit, your morale? A lot of times, it’s not always who you play but when you play them. We’re catching some teams that are some tough breaks. Everybody we’re playing is on a five-game win streak, so they feel pretty good about themselves and come in with a really good mindset. For the months of November and December, Clemson was that team, and we were in a really good mindset. We’ve just gotten knocked back a little bit. I think we have a good group of guys and we’ll continue to rally and gain our traction, and eventually the worm will turn and we’ll win a couple of these that have gotten away from us and be back in a good place.”

On having so many missed shots around the rim: 

“It was physical in there, both ways. I am surprised that we didn’t finish with a little more than we normally do, but some of that is Virginia’s defense. Both teams, physical play, disciplined play. Baskets are hard. When you don’t get any easy ones in transition (and) you don’t get an offensive rebound and try to lay it back in,.. you’ve got to grind on every possession. It’s a low-possession game and it’s real work. That’s why sometimes when you don’t have as many good opportunities and you get one, you’re a little (anxious) to make one. Sometimes you try too hard and you don’t get it in.”

On finding more consistency from his bench: 

“I thought those guys did some good things for us. Obviously (Chauncey) Wiggins and Jack had a tough day shooting. I think combined, they were 1-for-10. Having said that, Jack had eight rebounds. Josh Beadle gave us a spurt. Dillon (Hunter) was solid defensively. I’d actually planned, until Bas (Leyte) got hurt, of doing five in and five out. I thought that was one of the ways that I could get our spirit back this week. We kind of went at it with our first unit and second unit Thursday in practice. It was good and got some of our competitive juices going again. Then Bas got hurt on Friday. I thought those guys gave us energy. You’ve got to play the long game with Virginia. It’s hard to sustain because of their style. They can wear you down. You can grind it up pretty well just by guarding that stuff so that you’re going to have to play some folks. I thought our bench did some nice things and really helped us.”

On Alex Hemenway’s setback and Bas Leyte’s shoulder injury:

“I really haven’t had time to get into it all and where we are. It hasn’t been easy (with Hemenway)… Bas’ shoulder popped back out, so I don’t know what that means for Tuesday yet, either.”

On Joe Girard launching a 3-pointer from 28 feet:

“I thought he felt good today, and he made one long one early. I don’t want him to do it a lot, but if makes one and he’s feeling good, he’s got the green light for the most part. Do I say stuff to him occasionally? Yeah, I do. But he’s a good player that’s made a lot of plays. We’re going to trust him 98 percent of the time to do what he has to do to help us win.”

On Ian Schieffelin’s ” chef hat” fans in the student section and overall school spirit:

“We’re certainly very proud of Ian and his development. We’ve certainly bragged about his play to the team a lot and showed a bunch of clips throughout the year of him just making incredible effort plays. I don’t know that we’ve gotten into the chef hats yet, but I’m excited to see it. I couldn’t remember if it was today of some other time, but I knew at some point that somebody had decided they wanted to do that. I’m not sure if it was marketing or who it was, but I think it’s pretty cool.”

Women’s basketball fall short at home against Rutgers 71-70

The Huskers remained home following their win against Purdue to face Rutgers on Saturday afternoon.

The Huskers remained home following their win against Purdue to face Rutgers on Saturday afternoon. Though Nebraska put up a fight with the Scarlet Knights, Rutgers squeaked out the win.

The Scarlet Knights won the battle through their shooting efficiency, going 28-of-47 while Nebraska completed 23-of-68. The Huskers remained in the battle through trips to the free-throw line (17) and points off turnovers (25).  But Rutgers’ third-quarter surge put Nebraska down 60-49, forcing the Huskers to climb out of the hole in the fourth.

Alexis Markowski and Jaz Shelley finished the game as Nebraska’s top scorers. The duo dropped double-digit points for the Huskers, with Markowski scoring 13 and Shelley landing 11.

Freshmen Jessica Petrie and Logan Nissley each put together a solid game for Nebraska, with Petrie scoring nine points and Nissley dropping eight.

Kendall Moriarty also scored eight points, going 2-of-2 in total shooting, landing both of her shots from beyond the arc while also being 2-of-2 from the free throw line.

The Huskers now fall to 14-8 on the season and 6-5 in conference play. Nebraska will travel to Michigan for its next game Tuesday night. Tipoff is set for 6 p.m. and can be viewed on B1G+.

Clemson falls to Virginia in latest ACC heartbreaker

Clemson lost a heartbreaker to Virginia in ACC play Saturday, 66-65.

Jack Clark missed an open 3-point attempt at the buzzer, and Clemson suffered its latest setback in ACC play Saturday with a heartbreaking 66-65 loss to Virginia at Littlejohn Coliseum.

Clemson (14-7 overall, 4-6 ACC) trailed by as many as 12 points in the second period after yet another uninspiring first half start saw them trailing 34-26 at halftime.

The Tigers fought their way back to claim the lead at 57-56 after back PJ Hall drained a 3-pointer that got the crowd on its feet with 5:38 to play. Little did they know it would be the Tigers’ last field goal of the day; Clemson’s final eight points would all be scored on foul shots.

Virginia (17-5, 8-3 ACC) picked up a 3-pointer from Isaac McNeely with 2:11 to play to put the Cavaliers ahead by five at 63-58.

Clemson kept hanging around, and when Dante Harris missed the front end of a 1-and-1 foul shot with just seven seconds to play, Clark made a rebound and lined up what would have been a game-winning shot.

“Jack was wide open. He just missed it,” Clemson coach Brad Brownell said afterwards. “We missed a lot of shots.”

Again.

After Tuesday’s win over Louisville, Brownell was asked about his team’s recent shooting woes, particularly in home games. He said that he didn’t have an explanation and cautioned that it wasn’t something to “make a mountain out of a molehill” over.

The molehill keeps growing.

All told, Saturday’s contest was another anemic performance from the floor for Clemson, which made only 35 percent of its shots in the game.

“We had a bunch of wide open 3’s that we’re just not making. That’s really hurting us in league play,” Brownell said Saturday.

Jacob Groves had 17 points — including 3 of 4 from 3-point range in the first half — to lead Virginia in scoring. Reece Beekman finished with 14.

Hall led Clemson with 19 points.

UP NEXT: the Tigers will face No. 3 North Carolina Tuesday in Chapel Hill. Tipoff is scheduled for 7 p.m. EST. The game will be televised by ESPN.

Clemson Tigers vs. Virginia Cavaliers: How to Watch/Stream/Listen

A look at how and where Clemson fans can watch, stream, and listen to Saturday’s game against Virginia.

After a much-needed victory against Louisville earlier in the week, Clemson will face a streaking Virginia team trying to play its way into NCAA Tournament consideration Saturday at Littlejohn Coliseum.

Virginia (16-5 overall, 7-3 conference) enters the weekend as one of the ACC’s hottest teams, having won each of its last five games — all by six points or more.

The Cavaliers defeated Notre Dame, 65-53, on Wednesday night to move into third place in a crowded conference where only No. 3 North Carolina has stood out all season.

Virginia sank 13-of-24 3-point attempts in its win over Notre Dame, punctuated by Reese Beekman’s 21 points. Beekman is the Cavaliers’ leading scorer this season with an average of 13.3 points per game. He’s also averaging six assists per game.

For its part, Clemson (14-6, 4-5) held off a last-place Louisville team that was down by 24 points at one point in the second half before making a late charge and getting to within four points of tying the game. PJ Hall led the Tigers with 25 points, marking the 10th time this season he has scored 20 or more in a game.

Chase Hunter added 16 to carry him over 1,000 points for his Clemson career.

The Tigers have yet to win back-to-back games since ACC play resumed on Jan. 3. They’ve also been struggling with getting shots to fall, particularly at home — something coach Brad Brownell acknowledged after his team shot 43 percent from the floor against Louisville and was only 5-for-21 from 3-point range.

“I don’t know that I know,” Brownell said when asked about the team’s cold shooting at home. “I don’t think you make a mountain out of a molehill. We’ve done a lot of shooting (in practice). Guys are coming in and shooting with coaches before practice, after practice, during the day. You just kind of work your way through it.”

The Tigers still have some time to work through things, but they’ve slipped noticeably in the past month. Once ranked No. 16 in the nation, Clemson has fallen completely out of the AP and USA TODAY Coaches Top 25 polls in recent weeks.

Series Notes and Recent History

Virginia leads the all-time head to head series, 82-52. The two schools met twice last year — once in the regular season and again in the postseason. Virginia won both contests, a 64-57 victory in Charlottesville and a 76-56 rematch in the semifinal round of the ACC Tournament in Greensboro.

How To Watch

Here’s a look at how and where Clemson fans can watch, listen, and stream Saturday’s game vs. Virginia.

Date: Saturday, Feb. 3

Time: 2 p.m. EST

Where: Littlejohn Coliseum

TV Channel: ESPN

Live Stream: ESPN+

Radio: Clemson Athletic Network | TuneIn App | SiriusXM (Channel 193)

Broadcast Teams

ESPN: Kevin Brown, Chris Spatola

Clemson Radio: Don Munson, Tim Bourret

Social media reacts to SEC-Big Ten joint agreement

Social media reaction to the SEC and Big Ten’s announcement of a joint alignment on matters regarding the future of college sports.

Citing “mountain pressures,” the SEC and Big Ten, college sports’ two wealthiest conferences, agreed to form a joint advisory group Friday to address the future of the college sports landscape.

News of the unnamed joint alignment was first reported by Yahoo! Sports’ Ross Dellenger. The advisory group will consist of school chancellors, university presidents, and athletic directors from the two conferences.

The SEC and Big Ten have long been considered bitter enemies, both on and off the field, for their distinctive clash of cultures, academic-related matters, and other issues that made the two conferences stand apart.

But much of that was before things like “name, image and likeness” and “transfer portal” entered the public vocabulary, to say nothing of mass antitrust lawsuits and outright disagreement over long-held NCAA traditions. In short, what many believe and have alleged is an ongoing effort by the SEC and Big Ten to potentially “break” from the NCAA altogether.

Both SEC commissioner Greg Sankey and Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti strongly deny that, but there’s no question the two leagues hold more weight and leverage than at any other time before. In turn, that has also raised the question about the long-term health and future of other leagues, including the ACC.

Here’s how Twitter/X users reacted to the news of the SEC-Big Ten joint agreement.

 

 

Huskers complete major comeback in overtime victory over No. 6 Wisconsin

Nebraska men’s basketball had an uphill battle on Thursday night, returning home after a road loss to face No. 6 Wisconsin in Lincoln.

Nebraska men’s basketball had an uphill battle on Thursday night, returning home after a road loss to face No. 6 Wisconsin in Lincoln. The Huskers found themselves in trouble in the first half, down 43-27. But Nebraska exited the locker rooms on fire, erasing the deficit before upsetting Wisconsin 80-72 in overtime.

The Huskers outscored the Badgers 40-24 in the second half, nearly ending it in regulation before Wisconsin secured a layup to force overtime. Nebraska pulled away in the end, achieving its second top-10 upset this season. A key stat of the game came at the free throw line, where the Huskers landed 19-of-26 while Wisconsin only shot 8-of-12.

C.J. Wilcher led Nebraska in scoring after dropping only six points in the first half. Wilcher helped the Huskers roar back in the second half and overtime, finishing the game with a career-high 22 points. Wilcher’s scoring came primarily from beyond the arc, landing five of seven shots.

Rienk Mast finished behind Wilcher in scoring, landing 20 points on the night for Nebraska. Brice Williams rounded out the Huskers’ double-digit scorers, tallying up 17 points. Williams also led the team in rebounds with nine and free throws with eight.

Nebraska moves to 16-6 on the season, matching its win total from last year with nine regular-season games remaining. The Huskers will hit the road to play Illinois on Sunday night. Tipoff is set for 5:30 p.m. and can be viewed on the Big Ten Network.

Women’s basketball takes off in second half to take down Purdue 68-54

The Huskers returned home to play Purdue following two straight losses on the road.

The Huskers returned home to play Purdue following two straight losses on the road. Nebraska snapped its two-game skid by taking down the Boilermakers 68-54.

The Huskers battled it out with Purdue throughout the first half and entered the locker rooms up 32-29. However, Nebraska took off in third quarter, outscoring the Boilermakers 22-14 to enter the fourth up 54-43.

The Huskers finished the game with five players scoring double-digit points. Alexis Markowski and Darian White shared the top spot as Nebraska’s top scorer with both players delivering 14 points on the night.

Natalie Potts and Kendall Moriarty both finished runner-up in scoring for the Huskers in the win, dropping 11 points. Moriarty’s 11 points in the game also tied her career high. Jaz Shelley rounded out the double-digit scorers for Nebraska, tallying up 10 points on the night.

The Huskers move to 14-7 on the season and 6-4 in conference play. They will remain home to host Rutgers on Saturday afternoon. Tipoff is set 2 p.m. and can be viewed on B1G+ and Nebraska Public Media.

What Clemson coach Brad Brownell said after Tigers win over Louisville

Everything Brad Brownell said after Clemson’s 70-64 victory over Louisville at Littlejohn Coliseum on Tuesday.

Clemson overcame both a slow start and a near second-half collapse to get a 70-64 must-win victory over Louisville in ACC play on Tuesday night at Littlejohn Coliseum.

The Tigers (14-6 overall, 4-5 conference) had a 24-point lead at one point in the second half before sloppy and lackadaisical play allowed Louisville (6-15, 1-9) to get to within four points with possession of the ball in the final 30 seconds.

Here’s what Tigers coach Brad Brownell said after the game.

Opening Statement:

“Well, that was harder than I would have liked, but give the Louisville kids and coaches a lot of credit. Man, they just kept battling. I told our guys, you watch them on film and they’re playing really hard. All you’ve got to do is just look at the rebounding. We’ve had probably two of our best rebounding games of the season against Duke and Florida State — defensive rebounding. We played some zone and I think they got some rebounding against our zone. But I don’t think our guards did a good job at all tonight of rebounding and obviously that was a big factor in (Louisville) having a chance to come back.

“Having said all that… we didn’t shoot the ball well again. Very slow start because we missed some good shots again, but there was a stretch there (between) the last 10 minutes of the first half and the first 10 minutes of the second half where we played really well. Obviously we built a big lead. I think our defense is improving. We got a lot of first-shot misses, so that part was really good. We had some very careless turnovers down the stretch. They made some shots and sometimes that happens.

“You get behind and you’re really kind of playing with a free mind. There’s a lot less stress, and I think that’s part of the reason why you see comebacks in college basketball. The swings are so great. The team that has the lead gets a little tight, which we did. And then the team that gets behind is kind of free. But again, we’ll take it. Really happy with the way we played for about 25 minutes of the game, and give the Louisville kids and coaches a lot of credit. I thought they really busted us and competed and really whipped us on the glass.”

On Chase Hunter scoring 1,000 career points:

“Chase has been playing better. I’m really happy for him. He’s had a lot going on. (He’s a) new father, just had a baby. He’s really beaming from that, which I think is really cool, but I think he’s played well these past couple weeks. He made a couple of 3’s. Certainly it’s been fun to coach him. In his career here, he’s had a lot of adversity, ups and downs, especially as a young player with injuries and then just trying to find your way like most freshmen and sophomores do. But he’s really blossomed into a nice player and he’s had a nice career. To score 1,000 points speaks to how good he is. I’ve enjoyed coaching him and I’m really happy for him.”

On how big it was to rebound with a win after a close loss to Duke:

“This is what it is. We win a game, lose a game. Win a game, lose a game. We haven’t been able to build a streak. Hopefully we play well Saturday (vs. Virginia). Again, that was a heartbreaking, emotional, brutal loss (to Duke). It sticks with you for a while. That’s human nature, but I thought we came out fine. If we make shots, we’d have (had) a good lead early. Maybe they’d say the same thing. I thought we got a lot of good shots. For whatever reason, in this building, we’re having a hard time making them. But defensively, I thought we played hard. We mixed in some zone defense tonight, which was good for us. But there was a little segment where I thought a couple of guys off the bench maybe had not quite as much juice as I would have liked. But again, I thought we played great in the middle half of the game and that’s why we had a 20-point lead.”

On having a better killer instinct:

“I’d love it. I don’t think the Georgia Tech game (was) a good example of killer instinct. Tonight is. We just made a couple of dumb plays on defense at the end of the game, and they made some big shots. I was imploring them at the 12-minute mark, ‘Let’s finish them. Knock them out right here. This is our chance.’ And then the next timeout, ‘This is our chance.’ We just didn’t get that done. Some of that is credit to Louisville. Some of it is we missed some shots, had a couple of silly turnovers, and they started making a few. So they got confidence and they start putting a little game pressure on us. But give our guys credit, too. We did make four (clutch) free throws down the stretch. Got a couple of stops.”

On how to snap out of cold shooting:

“I don’t know that I know. I don’t talk about it a lot. I don’t think you make a mountain out of a molehill. We’ve done a lot of shooting. Guys are coming in and shooting with coaches before practice, after practice, during the day. You just kind of work your way through it. Chase had made a couple lately. He didn’t make as many at Duke. PJ (Hall) just had a tough shooting night from 3. I think five of the six shots are probably really good shots. Usually he’s going to make at least two of them. Tonight they just didn’t go down.”

On the comfort of having PJ Hall down the stretch and his ability to make clutch baskets:

“Yeah, huge. Huge player. He’s a stud. He’s a first-team All-Conference player. We’re trying to go to him when we can. Most of the time, he delivers. That’s why he’s good; he makes plays at crunch time. He makes plays when you need them. He wants the ball. He’s an outstanding player and I’m lucky to coach him.”

On whether a hard-fought win can springboard the team moving forward:

“I hope so. I’m sure our guys all felt a little pressure to win this game. It’s a home game, you need to win it. It’s part of doing well in your league and you’re just battling. The thing I’m really tired about is the narrative around our league. The narrative with our league is ridiculous. And there’s going to be stats. Somebody said we’re 9-3 against the Big 12. Teams are different, right? Teams improve. These guys battled some good teams in non-conference (play). Maybe they lost by a basket or two to Indiana and Texas. Georgia Tech is completely different… So they’re good enough to beat Carolina, Duke and Clemson, but they’re not very good? That’s insane. Let’s get some other teams to try to beat all three of us. Those guys are completely different.

“It’s obviously frustrating for the coaches, the players and the league, the narrative that is not right. Hopefully everybody else and our league will do more, but this is what happens. We cannibalize each other. I think the NET is an overreach because you can completely pad your stats by playing a weak schedule and winning by 40, and pad your offensive and defensive efficiency. So they cap it at 10, but your numbers change. So then the question is: we probably over-schedule. The last two years, we’ve scheduled less-guaranteed games. This year, we’re winning (those) so maybe that will prove to be the real big help. But I’m watching other teams that are doing the opposite. They’re scheduling seven or eight guaranteed games and winning by 30 as much as they can, and they’re NET numbers are higher than I would expect them to be. A lot of the Big 12 is doing that. We need to study it better as a league. If that’s part of the trick, then we need to study it better because I don’t think our league does that as much, and partly because we play 20 league games. Maybe we need to advocate again for 18 (league games).”

Clemson survives late scare to get past Louisville

A brief rundown of the Tigers’ 70-64 victory over Louisville Tuesday night.

Clemson overcame a sluggish start to build a 24-point lead midway through the second half, then had to do everything it could to hold on for a 70-64 victory over Louisville in ACC play Tuesday night at Littlejohn Coliseum.

The Tigers (14-6 overall, 4-5 ACC) used a 33-9 run from the two-minute mark of the first half to the 13-minute clip of the second half to open up a 55-31 lead that was capped off by a dunk from Jack Clark.

But some sloppy play down the stretch by Clemson — including turnovers and lackadaisical, uninspired play — allowed the Cardinals (6-15, 1-9) to crawl back into it and trim the lead to four at 66-62 with 29 seconds to play.

Clemson held on after Louisville turned the ball back over with 26 seconds left. The Tigers made four free throws from there to close out the win.

PJ Hall had another strong outing for Clemson with 25 points, the 10th time this season that Hall has reached the 20-point plateau. Chase Hunter added 16 points and Joe Girard had 13.

Tre White scored a game-high 29 points to lead Louisville. Mike James, the Cardinals’ leading scorer coming into the night, was held to just 1-of-5 shooting from the floor and managed only eight points.

Clemson returns to action Saturday when the Tigers host Virginia (15-5, 6-3) at 2 p.m. EST at Littlejohn Coliseum. The game will be televised by ESPN.

Where Clemson ranks in Joe Lunardi’s Tuesday Bracketology

Clemson is up a spot in Joe Lunardi’s Bracketology projections for ESPN as of Jan. 30.

Clemson has fallen sharply both in the Top 25 polls and in different Bracketology projections since the beginning of the year, but a hard-fought stumble at No. 7 Duke, a game the Tigers could have easily won, moved Clemson up a spot in Joe Lunardi’s latest Bracketology projections for ESPN.

The Tigers (13-6 overall) entered New Year’s Day with an 11-1 record and a No. 16 ranking in both the Associated Press and USA TODAY Coaches Polls. They’ve since won just two games and can only hope that things get a little easier with four of their next six contests at home, including Tuesday night’s tussle with Louisville. The game is scheduled to tip off at 9 p.m. EST and will be broadcast by ACC Network.

For now, though,  Clemson received a bit of a boost when the team moved slightly upwards in Lunardi’s latest Bracketology update — from a projected No. 7 seed to a 6 seed.

Lunardi now projects the Tigers to face the winner of a play-in game between Seton Hall and Colorado, who would qualify as a No. 11 seed.

The theoretical Clemson vs. Seton Hall/Colorado matchup would take place in the East Region, which is scheduled to host games in Memphis, Indianapolis, Spokane and Brooklyn before the regional finals a week later at Boston’s TD Garden.

Other teams in the East Region, according to Lunardi’s forecasts, are No. 1 seed Connecticut, the defending national champions and current No. 1 team in both the AP and Coaches Poll rankings; projected No. 2 seed Wisconsin, 3 seed Alabama, and 4th-seeded Duke. Lunardi sees both the Badgers and Crimson Tide winning their respective conference tournaments to earn higher seeds as automatic qualifiers.

The three other No. 6 seeds in Lunardi’s new Bracketology predictions are Utah State (Midwest Regional), Oklahoma (South), and Florida Atlantic (West).

Lunardi’s projections still award the most tournament bids per conference to the Big 12 with nine total. The SEC is second with eight schools projected to make the field of 68.

Only Clemson, Duke, and No. 3 North Carolina are currently projected by Lunardi to make the NCAA Tournament from the ACC. That’s tied with the Pac-12 and American Conferences for the fewest projected schools of any major conference.

North Carolina (18-3) is projected as a 1 seed in the West Regional, to be completed at Los Angeles’ Crypto.com Arena (formerly Staples Center).