Former Clemson wide receiver Brannon Spector announces transfer destination

Brannon Spector has announced where he will be playing football next season.

A former Tiger has announced where he will be playing football next season.

Wide receiver Brannon Spector took to X (Twitter) Wednesday to announce that he has transferred to Jacksonville State to continue his college football career. His time with the Tigers has come to an end after five seasons with the program.

From 2019-2023 with the Tigers, Spector recorded 38 career catches for 372 yards, two touchdowns, and two rushes for 21 yards. This season, he recorded 4 catches for 25 over 10 games played. His brother, Baylon, was a linebacker at Clemson, and his father, Robbie, was a wide receiver.

According to 247Sports composite rankings, Spector was the No.60 wide receiver and No.517 overall player in the 2019 class.

Clemson wide receiver Brannon Spector enters the transfer portal

A Clemson wide receiver’s time with the program is done as he enters the transfer portal.

A Clemson veteran wide receiver has entered the transfer portal.
Now, former Clemson receiver Brannon Spector has entered the transfer portal after four seasons with the program. Spector will likely look to move

on to a program where he can earn more consistent snaps.
From 2019-2023 with the Tigers, Spector recorded 38 career catches for 372 yards, two touchdowns, and two rushes for 21 yards. This season, he recorded 4 catches for 25 over 10 games played. His brother, Baylon, was a linebacker at Clemson, and his father, Robbie a wide receiver.

According to 247Sports composite rankings, Spector was the No.60 wide receiver and No.517 overall player in the 2019 class.

Clemson wide receiver out for Georgia Tech game

Clemson’s wide receiver room will be even more thin for Saturday’s game against Georgia Tech.

A Clemson wide receiver will not suit up for the Tigers’ game against Georgia Tech on Saturday.

After dealing with multiple injuries to the wide receiver room this season, Clemson will have to make do without Brannon Spector, who is expected to be unavailable for Saturday, Clemson Athletics has announced.

Playing in all nine of Clemson’s games this year, Spector has four receptions for 25 yards.

Along with Spector, Clemson will be without Antonio Williams, who suffered a toe injury in late October and has not played since then. Heading into Saturday, Spector was listed as the backup slot receiver to true freshman Tyler Brown.

Cornerback Sheridan Jones and safety R.J. Mickens are also expected to be unavailable, as head coach Dabo Swinney announced earlier this week.

The good news for the Tigers is that running back Will Shipley is expected to play after missing last week with a concussion.

Kickoff between Clemson and Georgia Tech is at noon.

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Who’s up next for Clemson at receiver?

Clemson’s receivers have seen their production drop off dramatically in recent weeks. Now the group is missing one of its top playmakers. Beaux Collins will miss Saturday’s game against Louisville with a separated shoulder he sustained in the second …

Clemson’s receivers have seen their production drop off dramatically in recent weeks. Now the group is missing one of its top playmakers.

Beaux Collins will miss Saturday’s game against Louisville with a separated shoulder he sustained in the second half of the Tigers’ loss at Notre Dame last week. Clemson coach Dabo Swinney said this week he’s hopeful the sophomore wideout can return against Miami next week, though there’s at least a chance the Tigers will have to make do without him for multiple games.

It’s a significant blow for a receiving corps that’s still searching for consistency. With at least three catches in four of Clemson’s first six games, Collins emerged as Uiagalelei’s go-to target during the first half of the season. But Collins has just two receptions over the last three games, a microcosm of the group’s collective involvement – or lack thereof – in the offense lately.

“We keep telling our guys that you don’t know when your number is going to be called,” passing-game coordinator Kyle Richardson said. “But at some point, your number is going to be called. And you’ve got to go out there and execute and you’ve got to make plays.”

In a group that also includes a healthy Joseph Ngata and juniors E.J. Williams and Brannon Spector, true freshman Antonio Williams has emerged as the primary target lately with five receptions in three of the last six games. No other receiver on the roster has caught more than four passes in a game all season, and, other than Collins (team-high five), none has more than two touchdown receptions.

Tight ends Davis Allen (three TD catches) and Jake Briningstool (four) have provided a boost to the passing game. But who are the Tigers looking at to not only fill in for Collins but also kickstart what’s been a largely dormant group wideouts of late?

E.J. Williams and Spector are now listed as co-starters at the outside receiver position opposite Ngata on Clemson’s updated depth chart. The pair has combined for just 17 catches this season. Williams doesn’t have a reception in the last four games.

“This is a great opportunity for both of those guys to step up and take advantage of it while Beaux is out,” Swinney said. “Excited for them. They’ve had a good week of practice. Ready to go.”

And don’t be surprised if another true freshman, Adam Randall, continues to see his reps increase.

Clemson has been gradually working Randall back into the mix after the 6-foot-2, 230-pounder spent the summer recovering from ACL surgery. He didn’t play more than 19 snaps in any of his first three games back, but he’s been averaging more than 26 over the last four. Randall caught two passes against Notre Dame, matching his season total going into that game.

“He’s a big-time playmaker for us in practice,” Richardson said of Randall. “He’s gotten more reps in a game and will slowly get more reps there.

“Spector is kind of a glue guy. He can go to any of the three positions, play any of the positions and be really consistent there. I think with Davis and Briny (Briningstool), you’ve got two guys there that can also plug and play. I know just because they have tight end beside their name, they don’t necessarily get lumped into that receiver group. But when you get into these types of situations, it’s about getting your best players on the field and getting your best players on the field surrounding your quarterback, especially when your quarterback is struggling a little bit.”

With that in mind, Richardson suggested being down one of its primary receivers for the time being may force Clemson to have to get more creative with how it uses its available pass-catchers.

“I won’t get into depth with it. I know Louisville is probably listening,” he said. “But we’ll have a plan with how we’re going to carve up our personnel packages moving forward.”

Dear Old Clemson is excited to announce a limited edition football and poster signed by Clemson’s Avengers.

Now there is a new way you can support Clemson student-athletes. Purchase collectibles from Dear Old Clemson and the proceeds with go to support Clemson student-athletes. Visit Dear Old Clemson to find out how you can help!

What We Heard: Brannon Spector

Clemson wide receiver Brannon Spector spoke to the media on Monday ahead of Saturday’s game versus Florida State. After catching a 13-yard touchdown pass on Saturday, Spector was riding on the confidence that he has for not only himself but the …

Clemson wide receiver Brannon Spector spoke to the media on Monday ahead of Saturday’s game versus Florida State.

After catching a 13-yard touchdown pass on Saturday, Spector was riding on the confidence that he has for not only himself but the entire chemistry of the offensive unit. Spector emphasized that D.J. throws a very unique ball, one that in Spector’s opinion mimics a pitch in baseball. It may be D.J.’s experience being a baseball player that contributes to the way he can throw hard passes downfield like we’ve seen this season.

“I think D.J. has a different approach to him,” he said. “I feel like the ball comes out higher. Trevor, I don’t really know, but D.J. is kind of up high. It’s almost like a pitcher, like a reliever or something.”

All season, the offense has been emphasizing confidence and preparation, but the wide receiver believes it’s those reps in practice that are translating the offensive success in the first six games of the season.

“It just comes with preparation and practice,” he said. “I feel like us just practicing every day and getting down each play, it all just kind of comes and it showed Saturday and two Saturdays ago.”

Even with a more dominant performance on offense this past week, D.J. had a lapse in judgment, throwing an interception early in the game. However, it’s how the offense bounced back right away that made the difference for the team. Spector believes Uiagalelei has transformed from last year, especially in how he deals with difficult situations as we saw on Saturday.

“I feel like D.J.’s whole approach this year is so much better,” he said. “I feel like he shaking back from adversity better and I feel like he’s able to pursue adversity a lot better in my opinion.”

Clemson has long been known for their talent at the wide receiver position. This year, there are many wide receivers that are making an impact on the field and coming up with big plays. Spector reflected on what it means for the offense when they know they can rotate receivers during the game.

“I do. I feel like it all helps,” he said. “Us all going in and staying fresh, that makes it really tough for teams to be able to handle us. It’s also just good for all of us to continue to grind off each other and learn from each other’s mistakes and then just go out there and execute.”

Spector believes the Clemson wide receiver room and its depth will be a threat as the season progresses.

Dear Old Clemson is excited to announce a limited edition football and poster signed by Clemson’s Avengers.

Now there is a new way you can support Clemson student-athletes. Purchase collectibles from Dear Old Clemson and the proceeds with go to support Clemson student-athletes. Visit Dear Old Clemson to find out how you can help!

Spector extends Clemson’s lead to 31-3 over Eagles

Clemson extended its lead for good thanks to a Brannon Spector touchdown reception for 13 yards.

Quarterback DJ Uiagalelei connected with his third receiver of the night in Brannon Spector for the fourth touchdown drive of the night.

It all came down to six plays in the fourth quarter where Uiagalelei targeted Spector three separate times, the third being for a 13-yard trip to the end zone.

Clemson came away with its third passing touchdown of the night in six plays for 88 yards in 2:12.

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Continuity playing a role in Uiagalelei’s fast start

D.J. Uiagalelei hasn’t been flawless this season, but Clemson’s quarterback isn’t where he was last season. The importance of that can’t be overstated for the Tigers’ offense, which spun its wheels for much of the 2021 campaign in plummeting from …

D.J. Uiagalelei hasn’t been flawless this season, but Clemson’s quarterback isn’t where he was last season.

The importance of that can’t be overstated for the Tigers’ offense, which spun its wheels for much of the 2021 campaign in plummeting from its usual production from recent years. A significant part of the downturn was quarterback play as Uiagalelei completed less than 56% of his passes and thew more interceptions (10) than touchdowns (9).

Through three games of his second season as the full-time starter, it’s been a different story for Uiagalelei. Turnovers have still popped up here and there with a lost fumble against Georgia Tech and an interception against Furman – and Clemson coach Dabo Swinney acknowledged Uiagalelei was fortunate to not have another on a particular ill-advised throw against Louisiana Tech last week – but Uiagalelei is completing his passes at a 65% rate while accounting three times as many touchdowns (6) as turnovers (2).

Fresh off a 48-point outing against Louisiana Tech, the Tigers have eclipsed the 40-point mark in two of their first three games. That’s something they did three times all of last season on their way to averaging just 26.3 points per game.

Individual growth in Uiagalelei’s game has helped. So have a lighter frame, improved mobility and a clean bill of health. Uiagalelei, who’s fully recovered from the sprained knee he played with toward the end of last season, is the Tigers’ second-leading rusher with 114 yards on the ground, 62 of those coming in the win over Louisiana Tech.

But Uiagalelei said having a supporting cast that’s remained the same has contributed to his fast start as much as anything.

“For me, it’s been really nice,” he said. “It’s been a pleasure to have the same guys each and every week and to be able to keep growing with the same guys each and every week.”

Swinney admitted coming into the season that Uiagalelei needed to raise his level of play, but he’s been adamant since the end of last season that the quarterback needs more consistent help around him, something that was hard to come by a season ago as injuries piled up.

Clemson started eight different combinations along the offensive line last fall. Running backs Will Shipley and Kobe Pace weren’t available for every game, and the Tigers’ top three receivers entering the season ended it on the shelf.

But there hasn’t been nearly as much fluidity in personnel so far this season. While there have been the usual substitutions for depth purposes, Clemson’s offense has had the same starting lineup in all three games.

“It’s important, man,” Uiagalelei said. “I’d be lying to you (if I said) it wasn’t important to be able to get that timing down.”

The consistency hasn’t always been there for the receivers, who’ve had their share of drops early on. But Uiagalelei’s top three targets so far this season – Beaux Collins, Brannon Spector and freshman Antonio Williams – have combined for 26 catches while senior wideout Joseph Ngata has caught six passes in the last two games. Tight end Davis Allen has made his share of big plays, too, averaging 16.8 yards on his five receptions so far.

“That’s everything for a quarterback and receivers is timing, to be able to know exactly where he’s going to be at and for receivers to know exactly where the ball is going to be at,” Uiagalelei said. “And the only time you get that is through repetition. To be able to continue to have those reps each and every week, it’s been great.”

Uiagalelei and the rest of the offense will try to build on the early momentum Saturday when Clemson hits the road for the time in ACC play against No. 21 Wake Forest.

Dear Old Clemson is excited to announce a limited edition football and poster signed by Clemson’s Avengers.

Now there is a new way you can support Clemson student-athletes. Purchase collectibles from Dear Old Clemson and the proceeds with go to support Clemson student-athletes. Visit Dear Old Clemson to find out how you can help!

Swinney disagrees with this notion about his WRs, says they’re ‘in the proving ground’

Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney disagrees with the notion that the Tigers have a lot of experience at wide receiver. While there are a few older players in the receiving corps, including senior Joseph Ngata, Swinney was quick to point out during his …

Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney disagrees with the notion that the Tigers have a lot of experience at wide receiver.

While there are a few older players in the receiving corps, including senior Joseph Ngata, Swinney was quick to point out during his Tuesday press conference that Ngata hasn’t been on the field a whole lot over the last couple of years while dealing with nagging injuries.

After appearing in 15 games as a true freshman in 2019, Ngata played just 122 snaps over seven games in 2020 while battling injury for much of the year, then saw action in 425 snaps across nine games last season while again missing substantial time due to injury.

“We don’t really have older guys. Everybody thinks we’ve got all these older, experienced receivers. Who are they?” Swinney said. “We have one guy, Ngata, and how much football has he played? He played as a freshman, and in ’20, he didn’t play. And then last year, how many games did he play in? Then he was out again. So, it’s not like he’s Tee Higgins on his third year here and he’s had all this experience. He’s an older guy, but he doesn’t have a lot of experience. So he’s working his way, and he’s done good. He made some nice plays.”

Another of the Tigers’ older receivers, redshirt junior Brannon Spector, missed the 2021 season with respiratory challenges and entered this season with 19 career catches for 152 yards in 221 snaps from 2019-20.

“Spector, how much football has he played? He redshirted,” Swinney said. “His redshirt freshman year, he’s out, and then last year he couldn’t even walk up the steps. So, he’s played two games since the first few games as a redshirt freshman, and he’s just learning.”

Meanwhile, junior E.J. Williams played only 250 snaps across eight games last season while being sidelined by various injuries following his freshman 2020 season when he posted 306 yards on 24 receptions, both fifth on the team.

Williams was out this spring after having his knee scoped and was limited in fall camp while dealing with a hematoma on his back.

“He had a good freshman year, and how much did he play last year? Out, surgery, and had a couple setbacks in camp, and I think his confidence isn’t what it needs to be,” Swinney said. “He’s an unbelievably talented guy, but kind of battling himself right now.”

Beaux Collins, meanwhile, is a true sophomore coming off a freshman season in which he finished second on the team in receptions (31) and third in receiving yards (407) while tying for the team lead with three touchdown catches over 11 games (six starts).

“He played last year as a freshman and ended up having to start for us,” Swinney said. “He’s a great player in the making, but he doesn’t have a lot of experience.”

As for Dacari Collins, Swinney admitted that he shouldn’t have played as a true freshman last season. But circumstances didn’t allow Clemson to redshirt him, and he ended up making a few starts for the Tigers down the stretch.

“Dacari Collins, really shouldn’t have played last year but he had to play, and not only did he have to play, he ended up having to start some games for us and he wasn’t ready for that, but that’s where we were,” Swinney said. “He’s a true sophomore. He’s not some old, experienced guy.”

Clemson also has a pair of true freshmen scholarship wideouts that will make an impact this season in Antonio Williams and Adam Randall, the latter of whom is set to make his debut in Saturday’s game against Louisiana Tech after tearing his ACL during the spring and undergoing surgery.

“Antonio’s a true freshman. So, they’re really kind of all right there in that same group. Adam is a true freshman, who we’re getting back this week, and excited about that,” Swinney said. “So, we don’t have any old guys. We don’t have these old, proven, established receivers at this point. Hopefully next year, we will have that as we go through the course of the season.”

Through two games this season, Beaux Collins leads all Clemson receivers with 111 receiving yards and two touchdown receptions and is tied with Antonio Williams in receptions (seven). Williams is second behind Collins with 76 receiving yards.

Spector has six catches for 28 yards thus far, Ngata has four for 51, E.J. Williams has four for 46, and Dacari Collins has one catch for 8 yards.

Sophomore Will Taylor, who played only 15 offensive snaps in five games last season prior to suffering a season-ending ACL injury in early October, has three catches for 21 yards and a touchdown.

“I think we’re really talented, and we’re just really young and inexperienced, and every single week we’re building on it,” Swinney said. “But I do love what I’m seeing out of Beaux. It’s great to see Ngata making a few plays. It’s great to see Antonio be what we think he is, Spector making some plays. So, they’re all doing some things. Dacari’s gotten a couple PIs. He hasn’t had much plays, but he’s put some pressure on some people down the field a couple times.”

Swinney is clearly high on the personnel and talent the Tigers have at receiver. But without a lot of proven experience, he says they’re “in the proving ground right now.”

“I love our guys and I love our group,” he said. “It’s a really deep group, and y’all are going to all look up in about four years from now, five years and go holy cow, all them guys were at Clemson at one time. You will.

“But right now, it’s just where we are developmentally. So, they’re doing some good stuff. But we don’t have any older guys that have all this proven experience. We’re trying to prove it, and that’s just where we are. We’re in the proving ground right now. But I love our guys, man. We’re doing some good stuff, and a lot we can keep building on.”

Dear Old Clemson is excited to announce a limited edition football and poster signed by Clemson’s Avengers.

Now there is a new way you can support Clemson student-athletes. Purchase collectibles from Dear Old Clemson and the proceeds with go to support Clemson student-athletes. Visit Dear Old Clemson to find out how you can help!

The good, the bad and the ugly from Clemson’s win over Furman

Clemson’s fast start was enough for the Tigers to keep their distance from Furman for a comfortable win Saturday at Memorial Stadium, but the Tigers were far from flawless against the in-state FCS opponent. Here’s the good, the bad and the ugly from …

Clemson’s fast start was enough for the Tigers to keep their distance from Furman for a comfortable win Saturday at Memorial Stadium, but the Tigers were far from flawless against the in-state FCS opponent.

Here’s the good, the bad and the ugly from the Tigers’ 35-12 victory:

The good

The last time Clemson played an FCS opponent before Saturday, D.J. Uiagalelei completed just 58% of his passes. Against Furman, his completion rate was nearly 20 percentage points higher.

Simply put, it’s been a while since Uiagalelei has shown as much precision and fluidity throwing the ball in a game as he did this weekend.

Building on his final three quarters against Georgia Tech, Uiagalelei started fast against the Paladins and stayed on the mark far more often than not. He hit on his first six passes, 12 of his first 13 and was 15 of 18 by halftime. Clemson found the end zone on each of the first five possessions led by Uiagalelei, who completed five third-down throws on four of those drives to keep them alive. Uiagalelei often stepped up in the pocket as he went through his progressions, and he used touch when he had to. His drop in the bucket over the shoulder of Beaux Collins for Clemson’s fourth touchdown was a thing of beauty.

By the time he was done, Uiagalelei was 21 of 27 passing for 231 yards. He’s completing 67% of his passes through two games, which is more along the lines of the kind of efficiency Clemson needs from him if it’s going to get back to being a College Football Playoff contender this season.

“Proud of D.J.,” Clemson coach Dabo Swinney said. “Just awesome to see him play the way he’s playing.”

Uiagalelei also got more help from his starting receivers, who combined for just four catches against Georgia Tech. They weren’t perfect – E.J. Williams had a couple of notable drops – but Collins, Williams, Joseph Ngata and Brannon Spector combined for 14 receptions. True freshman Antonio Williams, who tied Collins for the team lead with four catches, also continues to be a factor in the passing game.

The offense also got more assistance from a running game that averaged just 3 yards per carry in the opener. The offensive line opened up more holes up front, and Will Shipley, who went for 68 yards and two touchdowns on 10 carries, led a group of rushers that averaged 5.3 yards a tote this time around.

Defensively, the Tigers forced multiple turnovers for the first time this season, one of which ended a Furman scoring threat in the red zone during the first half. Clemson improved to 115-14 under Dabo Swinney when at least tying the turnover margin.

The bad

As improved as Uiagalelei has been so far this season in the accuracy department, he’s yet to play turnover-free football.

After losing a red-zone fumble against Georgia Tech, Uiagalelei was intercepted late in the third quarter when he threw in the direction of Brannon Spector. Uiagalelei, Swinney and offensive coordinator Brandon Streeter all agreed it was a poor decision on the quarterback’s part to try to force that pass with coverage coming in underneath, which led to a tipped ball and the pick. Uiagalelei hasn’t had many decision-making miscues through two games, but that’s one he’d like to have back.

Will Taylor later muffed a punt near midfield, and Clemson needed a goal-line stand afterward to keep Furman from scoring more points. It was part of a sluggish second half for the Tigers, who mustered just 14 yards of offense in the fourth quarter and went the final 25 minutes, 8 seconds without scoring. It didn’t help that Clemson’s defense was on the field for more than 34 minutes of game time.

“We definitely would love to have gone down there and gotten a couple of more scores in. Of course. And had more yards and all of that,” Streeter said. “Wished we could’ve gotten more guys in the game, but it was just one of those games right there where we had to play, a majority of the time, our first group. But it was good work for them as well.”

Speaking of defense…

The ugly

What exactly was that from Wesley Goodwin’s unit?

After suffocating Georgia Tech for the better part of the Tigers’ 41-10 win on Labor Day, the Tigers didn’t come close to duplicating that success despite having a distinct advantage in size, speed and athleticism. Behind the play of quarterback Tyler Huff, who completed his first 12 passes, Furman (384) outgained Clemson (376) in total yards. The Tigers’ offense, which had just two possessions apiece in the first and fourth quarters, ran just 59 plays in large part because the defense couldn’t get off the field.

Furman converted a whopping 10 of 18 third downs usually with chunk plays through the air. In particular, the Paladins dialed up multiple screen passes with Clemson seemingly making few adjustments to it. Huff finished 30 of 39 passing as Furman averaged nearly 9 yards per completion.

“I don’t remember the last time someone was 10 of 18 on third down on us,” Swinney said. “We did not play anywhere near what we need to defensively. So that was frustrating.”

Swinney also mentioned coverage that was too loose at times in the secondary. Furman didn’t do much on the ground (3.7 yards per carry), but the pass defense left a lot to be desired.

Defensive coordinator Wesley Goodwin chalked some of it up to his group being too aggressive and overpursuing at times, particularly on some of those screens. But it was an uncharacteristic performance that won’t cut it against the better teams on Clemson’s schedule.

“A lot of things to clean up obviously,” Goodwin said.

Dear Old Clemson is excited to announce a limited edition football and poster signed by Clemson’s Avengers.

Now there is a new way you can support Clemson student-athletes. Purchase collectibles from Dear Old Clemson and the proceeds with go to support Clemson student-athletes. Visit Dear Old Clemson to find out how you can help!

Clemson’s special teams tackle a Dabo Swinney era first

Clemson’s special teams had a historic night amidst the Tigers win over Georgia Tech.

In Clemson’s 41-10 victory over Georgia Tech on Monday, the Tigers defense wasn’t the only group that gave the Yellow Jackets trouble on the field.

Clemson’s special teams had a historic night, blocking two punts for the first time since back in 2007 when Nelson Faerber and La’Donte Harris recorded a pair against South Carolina.

The Tigers recorded their first successful blocked punt since 2015 in the second quarter. Safety Carson Donnelly came up with the big block which was returned by wide receiver Brannon Spector for 13 yards. Clemson’s second blocked punt of the night came later in the fourth quarter. True freshman Wade Woodaz came away with the second blocked punt, allowing linebacker LaVonta Bentley to recover the ball for 10 yards.

“It was just adrenaline… it was really cool,” Donnelly said. “We prepped for it, we schemed it up and then the moment, it just happened. It all happened so fast… I blocked it and looked up and the ball was there. Brannon [Spector] picked it up and I got to block for him, so it was a cool moment for sure and all the preparation that went into it.”

Both blocked punts were later cashed in for two of the Tiger’s five touchdowns on Monday and were a first for head coach Dabo Swinney at the helm of the Clemson program.

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