Tigers headed back to Charlotte for ACC Championship

Clemson is headed back to Charlotte after a one-year hiatus from the ACC Championship Game. With Syracuse’s 19-9 loss to Pittsburgh on Saturday, the Tigers (8-0, 6-0 ACC, No. 4 CFP) have clinched the ACC’s Atlantic Division. After failing to make …

Clemson is headed back to Charlotte after a one-year hiatus from the ACC Championship Game.

With Syracuse’s 19-9 loss to Pittsburgh on Saturday, the Tigers (8-0, 6-0 ACC, No. 4 CFP) have clinched the ACC’s Atlantic Division.

After failing to make the ACC Championship Game last year following a run of six straight appearances in the conference title game, Clemson is now set to play for the league championship for the seventh time in eight years dating to 2015 and the eighth time since 2011.

Since 2011, the Tigers have won seven ACC Championships, including six straight from 2015-20.

Clemson will vie for its eighth ACC title under Dabo Swinney when the 2022 ACC Championship Game takes place on Saturday, Dec. 3. Kickoff at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte is set for 8 p.m. on ABC.

The Tigers take the field at Notre Dame tonight (7:30 p.m., NBC) before concluding the regular season with a three-game homestand against Louisville, Miami and South Carolina at Death Valley.

Clemson’s likely opponent in the ACC title game is North Carolina (8-1, 5-0, No. 17 CFP), which beat Virginia on Saturday in Charlottesville.

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ACC analyst expects a ‘slugfest’ in the Atlantic Division this season

On Packer and Durham on ACC Network this week, Mark Packer opined that America will fall asleep on the quality of the ACC’s Atlantic Division. Packer believes the Atlantic will be “outstanding” with a trio of expected preseason top-25 teams (if not …

On Packer and Durham on ACC Network this week, Mark Packer opined that America will fall asleep on the quality of the ACC’s Atlantic Division.

Packer believes the Atlantic will be “outstanding” with a trio of expected preseason top-25 teams (if not top-20 or top-15 teams) in Clemson, Wake Forest and NC State, to go with teams like Louisville, Florida State and Boston College that he thinks “are legit and can cause problems.”

Former Georgia Tech running back and current ACC Network analyst Roddy Jones, who joined Packer and Durham as a guest this week, agreed with Packer’s take on the Atlantic Division heading into the 2022 season.

“If the national media does fall asleep on it, then maybe we should take their credentials,” Jones said. “Because you’re going to have teams that are fighting in that top 10 really all season, I think, and I think it will be a couple of them. Now, Clemson and Wake Forest play early on in the season, so that’s going to hurt one of them in terms of that race. But NC State is going to be really good. Clemson is going to be really good. Wake Forest, we saw them, they’re going to be really good. … So, the Atlantic Division is going to be a slugfest.”

The Tigers, Demon Deacons and Wolfpack enter the season with high expectations and hype around them, but Jones believes it’s the other teams in the division — Louisville, Florida State, Syracuse and Boston College — that may catch people by surprise with their play this season.

“I think that second tier is going to be the place that people are the most surprised, if you haven’t been paying attention,” Jones said.

“Louisville, offensively, is going to be as good as I think they’ve been under Scott Satterfield. You look at Florida State, which the arrow was pointing up and to the right on Florida State. Constant improvement. They really figured that offense out and how to move the ball with Jordan Travis last year, and I think they’re only going to expand on that as they get better on offense, get older on defense as well, which is going to be a big one. Syracuse defensively last year was really good, and I think they will be again this year. Offensively, can they throw the ball a little bit better? But they’ve got maybe the best player on that side of the conference in Sean Tucker, and then you’ve got Garrett Shrader, a guy who’s going to give people a lot of problems. Then you mentioned Boston College. They’ve got to replace a lot on the offensive line, but you get Phil Jurkovec back.”

Looking at the division right now on paper, Jones doesn’t see a team that opponents can circle as an “easy win.”

“There’s no team in the Atlantic that you look at right now and say alright, that’s an easy win, which is going to make the division really fun,” he said.

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Analysts react to Clemson’s chances of winning Atlantic Division, ACC

On Thursday, ESPN released its preseason FPI (Football Power Index) rankings. According to the ESPN FPI, Clemson has by far the best chance to win the ACC this season at 58.7%, with defending conference champion Pittsburgh owning the second-best …

On Thursday, ESPN released its preseason FPI (Football Power Index) rankings.

According to the ESPN FPI, Clemson has by far the best chance to win the ACC this season at 58.7%, with defending conference champion Pittsburgh owning the second-best chances at 15.8% ahead of Miami (8.6%), North Carolina (6.0%), Wake Forest (3.1%) and NC State (3.0%).

The Tigers also have a whopping 74.7% chance to win the ACC Atlantic Division, according to the ESPN FPI, which gives Wake Forest a 7.7% chance to claim the division title and NC State a 7.0% chance to come out on top in the division, followed by Florida State (6.3%), Louisville (3.4%), Boston College (0.7%) and Syracuse (0.2%).

On Packer and Durham on ACC Network, Mark Packer and Wes Durham reacted to the FPI preseason projections and gave their thoughts on the Tigers being the heavy favorites to win the Atlantic and ACC title.

You can check out their commentary in the following videos:

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ACC Atlantic coach thinks his team is as good as any in the division

This ACC Atlantic Division coach is confident in his football team heading into the 2022 season. Despite his team’s 6-7 record last season, including a 4-4 mark in ACC play, Louisville head coach Scott Satterfield said during an appearance on Packer …

This ACC Atlantic Division coach is confident in his football team heading into the 2022 season.

Despite his team’s 6-7 record last season, including a 4-4 mark in ACC play, Louisville head coach Scott Satterfield said during an appearance on Packer and Durham on ACC Network this week that he feels Louisville has “just as good a team as any” in the Atlantic Division, including Wake Forest, NC State, Boston College, Florida State and Clemson, which the Cardinals lost to, 30-24, at Cardinal Stadium last season.

You can read what Mark Packer had to say about the ACC Atlantic Division on Packer and Durham this week and Satterfield’s response below:

Packer: “You don’t worry about noise or hype. That’s for us idiots in the media. But I look at the Atlantic Division in the ACC for ’22, and Clemson’s Clemson, right. They do their thing. Wake’s got everybody and their brother back. Dave Clawson, of course, what he did last year, winning the division. Dave Doeren’s got a thousand guys back. NC State, I’ve seen them as high as the top 10. Those are three. And then I love what Hafley’s doing at BC. Sounds like you are loaded and just waiting in the weeds. Norvell’s doing his thing at Florida State. I mean, the Atlantic Division of the ACC … and I know they will have the national narrative of nobody who pays attention to the conference, ‘it’s Clemson, everybody else,’ which is just stupid. I really sense that the Atlantic Division this upcoming season has a chance to be filthy good. I mean, really, incredibly competitive.”

Satterfield: “Yeah, I agree. You start mentioning those teams, and you’re like, ‘Well, that’s true, yeah, wow.’ I mean, there’s a lot of good players coming back on our side, which is unfortunate. We’re sitting in that side and there’s a lot of good players and a lot of good coaches. You start thinking, NC State will be as talented as any team out there, with a ton of experience and won a lot of games last year. For us, fortunately, NC State comes to Louisville. Wake Forest comes here. We do have to go down to Clemson, which we played them down to the wire last year, which I think gave our club a lot of confidence. BC’s a great program. It’s interesting. Florida State is a good program. They’re coming up here as well. We play them early, third game.

“So, it’s going to be fun to watch, and I feel like we’ve got just as good a team as any of those teams you just mentioned. We’ll be right there, and really it’s going to come down to who’s going to show up on those days you play, who’s the most hungry and who’s got a great plan and who’s going to show up to go out and win that day. But it’s going to be very, very competitive, particularly in our side of the conference.”

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Assessing the difficulty of Clemson’s remaining ACC schedule

Seeing how a two-loss team has never made the College Football Playoff, Clemson is a long shot at best to get there this season. But that doesn’t mean the Tigers don’t still have some attainable goals. Specifically, No. 19 Clemson (2-2, 1-1 ACC) can …

Seeing how a two-loss team has never made the College Football Playoff, Clemson is a long shot at best to get there this season.

But that doesn’t mean the Tigers don’t still have some attainable goals.

Specifically, No. 19 Clemson (2-2, 1-1 ACC) can still win a seventh straight ACC championship, though there’s significant work to do. The Tigers need to make real strides sooner rather than later, start reeling off some wins and get some help along the way after dropping their first Atlantic Division game last week at North Carolina State, but in a league where no dominant teams exist, it’s not far-fetched. And N.C. State is the only division opponent Clemson has played to this point, meaning there are plenty of chances for the Tigers to make up some ground beginning Saturday when Boston College (4-0, 0-0) visits Memorial Stadium.

The offense is still trying to find chemistry and consistency (and an identity) while a defense that’s carried Clemson so far is starting to get bitten by the injury bug, so no conference game remaining on the schedule looks like a gimme anymore as the Tigers try to stay in the conference title race.

Which are the toughest games left? Here’s an assessment of that with each remaining opponent in the order the teams appear on the Tigers’ schedule based largely on how Clemson is currently playing, how each opponent is performing, personnel and where the game will be played.

NOTE: Clemson also has non-conference games left with UConn and South Carolina, but those games were omitted since they will not factor into the ACC race.

Boston College

The Eagles are off to a fast start as one of two ACC unbeatens through the first month of the season, though this weekend’s trip to Clemson will be their first game against a conference opponent. Is Boston College really this good or have the Eagles taken advantage of a weak non-conference slate? It might still be too early to tell, but Boston College has certainly been one of the league’s more complete teams so far. The Eagles rank 15th nationally in scoring, 18th in rushing and 21st in total defense. Clemson (45th nationally) will be by far the best run defense Boston College has seen. And Boston College’s star quarterback, Phil Jurkovec, is out for the season with an injury.

If the Tigers are able to contain the running game, it will likely force Boston College to put the ball in the hands of backup Dennis Grosel more than it would like on the road at night in the most hostile environment he’s played in so far. But Boston College’s defense, which is also giving up the fifth-fewest points in America (12 per game), isn’t exactly a cure for Clemson’s ailing offense. If the Tigers are going to avoid their first losing streak of the season, they’re going to have to earn it against a Boston College team that nearly pulled the upset in Death Valley last season. Difficulty level: High

Syracuse (Oct. 15)

Clemson has won three straight over Syracuse and seven of the last eight in the series, but as N.C. State just reminded everyone (snapping Clemson’s 36-game winning streak against unranked teams), the past has nothing to do with the present. The Orange are off to a 3-1 start, though two of those wins came against the Group of Five (Ohio) and the FCS (Albany). Syracuse mustered just seven points in its lone game against a Power Five opponent so far (17-7 loss to Rutgers) but knocked off Liberty with a last-second field goal last week.

It’s clear Dino Babers’ squad is improved after winning just one game all of last season. Syracuse has the ACC’s top rusher, Sean Tucker (134 yards per game), leading the nation’s 19th-best rushing offense (216), and the defense, which is allowing the 10th-fewest yards in the country on a per-game average, is yielding less than 86 yards per game on the ground, which doesn’t bode well for the second-worst rushing offense in the ACC through four games. This is also Clemson’s next road test, and the Tigers not only have not yet won away from Memorial Stadium but haven’t looked good doing it either. But the Tigers are the more talented team here, and if they can find a way to get past Boston College, they’ll take some momentum into a bye week where they can heal up and work on some things before making the trip to New York. Difficulty level: Moderate to high

Pittsburgh (Oct. 23)

Pitt has been its usual Jekyll-and-Hyde self under Pat Narduzzi in the early going. The Panthers went to Knoxville and pulled out a solid win over Tennessee only to return home and lay an egg the following week in a three-point loss to Western Michigan. Pitt’s other two wins have been blowouts against a winless UMass team and FCS member New Hampshire, so whatever. Weak competition or not, though, the Panthers are capable of putting up points and yards in bunches. They’re second (52.5 points per game) and sixth (548) nationally in those categories, respectively, and only Fresno State has amassed more first downs than Pitt among FBS teams.

Who knows what Clemson’s defense will look like in late October from an attrition standpoint, but regardless, the Tigers’ offense will likely have to score some points to keep up. Add the fact Clemson will be traveling to Heinz Field — a venue the Tigers have never played in before — and it could be the stiffest road test left on the schedule. Difficulty level: High

Florida State (Oct. 30)

The Seminoles hoped to start showing some real progress in Year 2 of the Mike Norvell era. Instead, they’re trending in the opposite direction. After pushing Notre Dame to overtime in its opener (a survival that’s looking worse for the Fighting Irish with each passing week), Florida State suffered one of the worst losses in program history at the hands of FCS foe Jacksonville State and has lost its first two ACC games by a combined score of 66-37. The offense can’t quit turning the ball over (11 turnovers in four games), and the defense hasn’t been able to stop much of anything (415 yards allowed per game). It could be just what the doctor ordered for Clemson’s offense, though the Seminoles haven’t been bad against the run (132 rushing yards allowed per game).

How motivated will Florida State be if it keeps losing before this game rolls around? You could ask the same thing of Clemson if the Tigers are dealt another loss or two. But the Seminoles have to make the trip to Memorial Stadium, and if there’s a team in this game that still’s going to have something to play for other than pride by this point, it will be Clemson. The Tigers are the better team, though the gap between the two doesn’t appear to be nearly as wide this season. Difficulty level: Moderate

Louisville (Nov. 6)

Clemson will head to bourbon country in early November for a matchup with a team that’s awoken from its drunken stupor. We’ll find out a lot more about the Cardinals this weekend when they travel to Wake Forest, but Louisville has bounced back with three straight wins after getting blasted by Ole Miss in its season opener. One of those was against Group of Five darling Central Florida, and the Cardinals are coming off an eight-point win at Florida State to open ACC play. Clemson will have to deal with one of the conference’s top dual-threat quarterbacks in Malik Cunningham, whose 315 yards per game rank 16th nationally in total offense. Louisville’s offense is also doing a good job keeping the ball away from the opposition by averaging 33 minutes, 9 seconds in time of possession, which is good for 17th in the FBS.

The Cardinals’ defense has helped with that by getting the ball back to the offense quickly. Only eight FBS teams are holding offenses to a lower conversion rate on third down than Louisville, which is only allowing teams to convert 27.7% of the time. That’s not good news for a Clemson offense that’s having as much trouble as any in America at sustaining drives. There’s a chance both teams look a little different by this point as they develop over the course of the season, but based on what the Cardinals have shown this season, there are enough components here to make this another uncomfortable game for the Tigers away from home. Difficulty level: High

Wake Forest (Nov. 20)

Did Clemson save the toughest for last? There’s a long way to go before making that determination, but the Tigers’ ACC finale will come against a team that’s been as impressive as any so far. No. 25 Wake Forest is the only other unbeaten left in the league, winning its first four games by an average of nearly 25 points. Two of those have been conference games, including a 20-point win at Virginia last week. Sam Hartman has been arguably the ACC’s top quarterback on the strength of good efficiency, completing better than 66% of his passes with nine touchdown passes and just one interception.

The Demon Deacons are in the top 20 nationally in scoring and points allowed while their 36.2 yards per kick return rank seventh in the FBS, so they’re a solid team all around. The defense has also been opportunistic once offenses get inside the 20-yard line, allowing teams to score just 54% of the time in the red zone. The good news for Clemson is Wake Forest has to make the trip to Death Valley. And if both teams can find a way to keep the wins coming from this point forward, it’s not outside the realm of possibility that this matchup could decide which one represents the Atlantic Division in the ACC championship game. Difficulty level: High

Football season has finally arrived. Time to represent your Tigers and show your stripes!