Clemson’s veteran defense ‘ready for the moment’ of marquee opener

There’s no escaping the magnitude of the season-opening moment awaiting Clemson. The Tigers’ marquee matchup with Georgia on Sept. 4 will officially be a top-5 clash following the release of the preseason coaches poll Tuesday. Clemson was ranked No. …

There’s no escaping the magnitude of the season-opening moment awaiting Clemson.

The Tigers’ marquee matchup with Georgia on Sept. 4 will officially be a top-5 clash following the release of the preseason coaches poll Tuesday. Clemson was ranked No. 2 while the Bulldogs came in at No. 5.

Not only is it a chance for Clemson to immediately start building its resume for a seventh straight College Football Playoff berth, but the Tigers may very well not get an opportunity this good to do so the rest of the season. The only other ACC teams to appear in the coaches poll are North Carolina (No. 9) and Miami (No. 16), and Clemson won’t play either of those Coastal Division teams unless the Tigers were to meet one in the ACC championship game.

So the moment looms large, but those who are a part of Clemson’s defense insist it won’t be too big for them.

“I think we’re definitely ready for the moment,” senior safety Nolan Turner said.

Turner has good reason to believe that. It would be one thing if the defense was starting over with a bunch of players who weren’t used to performing on the big stage, but that’s not the case with Clemson.

In fact, it’s quite the opposite.

The Tigers have all but one regular defensive starter back from last year’s 10-win team. Seven linemen on the roster have started at least one game along what should be one of the country’s deepest, most experienced defensive fronts. Meanwhile, the second and third levels are led by a couple of sixth-year players in Turner and middle linebacker James Skalski, who’ve combined to play in 111 games during their time at Clemson.

Skalski and Turner were both around for the Tigers’ last two national titles in 2016 and 2018. Every defensive starter and many of their backups have played in at least one ACC title game and one CFP game.

The ACC championship game is annually played at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, the same site as this year’s opener. So the Tigers will also have a good bit of familiarity with their surroundings.

“We’ve played in a lot of big games, and we know this is going to be a huge game,” Turner said. “We’re really looking forward to it. Excited to have the crowd back and be in a stadium like Charlotte. The atmosphere is going to be incredible.

“I think it definitely brings a lot of value being in those games and those situations before and kind of keeping that poise and that composure and not letting the moment be too big for you.”

Ironically enough, with Turner and Xavier Thomas deciding to return to school for another season and Justin Foster changing his mind after initially announcing his retirement from football, the only real attrition for Clemson’s defense this offseason was the dismissal of cornerback Derion Kendrick, who’s in line to face his former team now that he’s at Georgia. But there’s experience to make up for that, too.

Andrew Booth Jr., Mario Goodrich, Malcolm Greene and Sheridan Jones are still around at corner after combining for 19 starts last season. Fifth-year senior Baylon Spector joins Skalski among the starters at linebacker, and sophomore linemen Bryan Bresee and Myles Murphy will be looking to build on their freshmen All-America seasons.

They helped Clemson finish second in the ACC in points and rushing yards allowed last season. Last year’s unit also ranked ninth nationally in interceptions and second in tackles for loss.

This year’s defense will need to play like a more veteran group in order to give the Tigers a better chance than they had the last time they saw a top-5 opponent. Clemson yielded more than 600 yards to Ohio State in a 21-point playoff loss its last time out, a performance Spector said left the defense feeling embarrassed.

But being blinded by the bright lights of the national stage the Tigers’ defense will find itself on come the first Saturday in September? That’s not something the unit is particularly worried about.

“One of our goals is to win the opener, and we’re going to prepare the same,” Spector said. “But we’re excited for sure.”

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There’s no avoiding great expectations for Clemson’s deep, talented defensive line

Lemanski Hall wasn’t about to put the cart before the horse. Asked during the football program’s local media day how long into the season he thought it would take for Clemson’s defensive line to be able to call itself Power Rangers 2.0, the Tigers’ …

Lemanski Hall wasn’t about to put the cart before the horse.

Asked during the football program’s local media day how long into the season he thought it would take for Clemson’s defensive line to be able to call itself Power Rangers 2.0, the Tigers’ defensive ends coach didn’t do much more than chuckle at the inquiry.

“They’ve got to get permission from those guys first to be able to do that,” Hall said.

Of course, the Power Rangers is an affectionate reference to one of the best defensive fronts to ever don the purple and orange. Clelin Ferrell, Christian Wilkins, Dexter Lawrence and Austin Bryant wreaked havoc on opposing offenses during Clemson’s most recent national championship run in 2018. Headliners of a defense that finished top 5 nationally in points and yards allowed that season, all of them were drafted the following year, three of them within the first 17 picks.

But one thing this year’s group is embracing are the lofty expectations that have come with as much raw talent and perhaps even more depth up front than Clemson had three years ago. The combination of the two may be the best it’s been for the Tigers since, which has made comparisons between this version of Clemson’s defensive line and that one inevitable.

“We hear it often,” Hall said. “To me, the focus is there’s a high expectation with that group, and we’ve got to live up to that expectation. You can’t try to go out and do something you’re not comfortable doing. We’ve got to focus in on the little things and be who we are.”

Just how deep is Clemson up front heading into the new season? Not only are the Tigers returning all four starting linemen in coordinator Brent Venable’s defense, but Clemson has seven linemen that have started at least one game.

The majority of that depth is on the edges, where Clemson has starting-caliber defensive ends littered on its three-deep heading into fall camp. The Tigers got a boost there with Justin Foster’s decision to return for another season after he initially announced his retirement from football once he missed all of last season with a bout of COVID-19, bringing back with him 39 games worth of experience.

“I was leaping for joy because I know the type of young man this guy is,” said Todd Bates, who’s entering his fifth season coaching the Tigers’ interior defensive linemen. “He’s a rock-solid guy who’s going to be where he’s supposed to be and doing what he’s supposed to do. … We’re thrilled to have him back.”

Foster, an all-ACC honorable mention in 2019, and former five-star signee Myles Murphy are listed at the top of the depth chart for now, but Clemson has the “or” designation peppered throughout that position, a good indication of how the coaching staff feels about the caliber of players it has there. Xavier Thomas brings nine career sacks into his senior season, the most of anybody on the Tigers’ roster, while junior K.J. Henry is also back in the fold.

So is Justin Mascoll, who took advantage of some of the attrition at the position last season by posting 29 tackles and 4.5 tackles for loss in the first nine starts of his career. Hall mentioned the 6-foot-3, 255-pound junior as someone he expects to take a major step in his development as he works to become a more complete edge defender.

“I see Justin Mascoll just really taking off and having an awesome year doing the little things right,” Hall said. “I’m excited to see his progression as well.

“I don’t want to categorize him and put him as he’s just a run defender. He can rush the passer as well, but that’s where we’ve got to get better is in the pass rush with him. But physicality, man, just coming out of his hips on contact, that’s what you want. He does it better than anyone. Just need to get more consistent.”

Of course, the Tigers are counting on a natural step forward from youngsters like Murphy and defensive tackle Ben Bresee, who were among the most productive freshmen linemen in the country last season. Bresee, the nation’s No. 1 prospect in the 2020 recruiting cycle, returns to anchor the interior of the line along with junior Tyler Davis, who started all seven games he played last season and has started 20 of the 22 he’s played in his career.

Murphy had a team-high 12 tackles for loss last season while Bresee was just as disruptive on the inside en route to ACC Defensive Rookie of the Year honors. Bresee flashed his quick-twitch playmaking ability by recording 6.5 tackles for loss. Four of those were sacks, which tied him for second-most on the team.

“You can’t have a much better year than he had as a freshman, but he has really been working hard and had a great spring,” Bates said of Bresee. “Really starting to take it to another level. That’s what we’ve challenged him on is to max out his abilities and to get better in the run game and not just focus on pass rush.”

With Bresee and Davis entrenched as Clemson’s top two interior linemen heading into camp, the stiffest competition will be for the third spot on the depth chart there. Ruke Orhorhoro, Tre Williams, Darnell Jeffries and Etinosa Reuben are just some of the interior linemen that have been in the program for at least a year, and true freshman Payton Page has worked himself into good enough shape to where he could potentially be a contributor this season.

Page, a mid-year enrollee, arrived on campus around 380 pounds. Since then, he’s lost more than 40 pounds, Bates said.

“It could be a number of guys,” Bates said, referencing the candidates to be the third defensive tackle. “We’re looking forward to camp. It’ll sort itself out.”

Clemson added two more blue-chip pieces to the mix in edge signees Cade Denhoff and Zaire Patterson, so the Tigers have no shortage of options up and down their defensive front. But the unit isn’t exactly overconfident heading into a new season.

The group took some lumps last season and ended it with a dud in Clemson’s 49-28 loss to Ohio State in the College Football Playoff semifinals, allowing the Buckeyes to rack up a whopping 639 yards with more than 250 of those coming on the ground.

Bates said that performance served as a piece of humble pie that’s left a sour taste in the mouth of the collective group all offseason.

“Humble pie is the best kind of pie,” Bates said. “Sometimes you’ve got to get that chip back on your shoulder. Regardless of who tells you you’re great, you’ve got to come hungry every day, come humble every day to go out and work hard.”

As productive as some of the Tigers’ newcomers were up front last season, it was still baptism by fire for those going through their first season of college football. Bates said the biggest difference between last year and now is maturity for the unit as a whole. Everyone in line to be a significant contributor up front has experience and knows what to expect this time around.

And for a unit that, at least on paper, has the look of one of the nation’s best, expectations are about as high as they’ve ever been.

“We do have the luxury of some guys that have played a lot of football,” Hall said. “Now it’s just a matter of let’s utilize the depth that we have and get guys to play fast, play free and don’t think. Go out, execute and be productive.”

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