All-Pro NFL linebacker salutes Clemson cornerback

One of the NFL’s top linebackers was impressed by Clemson senior cornerback Mario Goodrich’s game-sealing forced fumble at the end of Wednesday’s Cheez-It Bowl between the No. 19 Tigers and Iowa State. Darius Leonard, a two-time first-team All-Pro …

One of the NFL’s top linebackers was impressed by Clemson senior cornerback Mario Goodrich’s game-sealing forced fumble at the end of Wednesday’s Cheez-It Bowl between the No. 19 Tigers and Iowa State.

Darius Leonard, a two-time first-team All-Pro and three-time Pro Bowl selection who is in his fourth season with the Indianapolis Colts, took to Twitter on Wednesday night after Goodrich stripped the ball from Iowa State quarterback Brock Purdy on a fourth-and-2 run with 33 seconds remaining.

Leonard saluted Goodrich for punching the ball away from Purdy to preserve Clemson’s 20-13 victory over the Cyclones at Camping World Stadium in Orlando, Fla.

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Bart Boatwright’s Photo Gallery: Clemson ends season on high note with Cheez-It Bowl win

ORLANDO, Fla. – No. 19 Clemson (10-3) finished the 2021 season on a high note with its 20-13 win over Iowa State (7-6) in the Cheez-It Bowl on Wednesday night at Camping World Stadium in Orlando, Fla. Check out Bart Boatwright’s photo gallery for …

ORLANDO, Fla. — No. 19 Clemson (10-3) finished the 2021 season on a high note with its 20-13 win over Iowa State (7-6) in the Cheez-It Bowl on Wednesday night at Camping World Stadium in Orlando, Fla.

Check out Bart Boatwright’s photo gallery for The Clemson Insider of the Tigers’ Cheez-It Bowl victory: LINK.

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Skalski speaks after final game as a Tiger, talks possibility of coaching at Clemson

Clemson super senior James Skalski spoke with the media on Wednesday night following his final game as a Tiger. The sixth-year linebacker discussed Mario Goodrich’s MVP performance in the 19th-ranked Tigers’ 20-13 victory over Iowa State in the …

Clemson super senior James Skalski spoke with the media on Wednesday night following his final game as a Tiger.

The sixth-year linebacker discussed Mario Goodrich’s MVP performance in the 19th-ranked Tigers’ 20-13 victory over Iowa State in the Cheez-It Bowl, Wes Goodwin’s first game as Clemson’s new co-defensive coordinator and more.

Skalski, who was injured in the first half, stayed active on the sideline while coaching up some other players when they came off the field.

Skalski was asked about that and said he would love to return to Clemson as a coach for the Tigers one day.

“I hope I’m lucky enough to coach at a place like Clemson, or wherever,” he said.

Watch Skalski’s postgame interview on TCITV:

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Swinney ‘really can’t process’ milestone victory

ORLANDO, Fla. – Dabo Swinney has joined some exclusive company, and he can hardly believe it. Clemson’s Cheez-It Bowl win over Iowa State on Wednesday inside Camping World Stadium wasn’t just the Tigers’ eighth bowl win in their last 10 tries. It …

ORLANDO, Fla. — Dabo Swinney has joined some exclusive company, and he can hardly believe it.

Clemson’s Cheez-It Bowl win over Iowa State on Wednesday inside Camping World Stadium wasn’t just the Tigers’ eighth bowl win in their last 10 tries. It wasn’t just their 10th win of the season or their sixth straight to end it.

For Swinney, it was also the 150th victory of his head coaching career, which, counting the 2008 season in which he was Clemson’s interim head coach, has spanned 14 years so far.

“I really can’t process that, to be honest with you,” Swinney said.

Swinney is one of just three coaches in Football Bowl Subdivision history to win 150 games in the first 15 years of a head coaching career, joining Urban Meyer (165) and Bob Stoops (160). He passed former Oklahoma coach Barry Switzer for the third-most wins in the first 15 years of an FBS coaching career.

Swinney has won 131 of those games over the last 11 seasons, all of which have been of the double-digit win variety. Clemson has averaged 12.7 wins over the last seven seasons, which has included the Tigers’ last two national championships.

Swinney credited the players he’s had over the years for much of his success.

“This game is about players. It’s about players and players buying in,” Swinney said. “I’m incredibly blessed that I can’t even really process that, but the same things that won the first game are the same things that won the
game (Wednesday). The same exact things: Effort, toughness, physicality, no-quit attitude, discipline, belief in self and team, and just uncommon effort.

“I’m just really thankful. It’s really cool to be a part of
something like that.”

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Goodwin’s defense passes its first test

ORLANDO, Fla. – The passing of Clemson’s defensive torch from Brent Venables to his much lesser-known right-hand man has been well-documented over the last few weeks. Without that tidbit of information, though, you likely would’ve never suspected …

ORLANDO, Fla. – The passing of Clemson’s defensive torch from Brent Venables to his much lesser-known right-hand man has been well-documented over the last few weeks.

Without that tidbit of information, though, you likely would’ve never suspected anything had changed.

Because there Clemson’s defense was, being its usual stingy self against a team the Tigers had literally never seen in person before their Cheez-It Bowl matchup Wednesday at Camping World Stadium. Iowa State came in with the Big 12’s leading passer in veteran quarterback Brock Purdy, and while he may not have had his full artillery of weapons there to help – All-American running back Breece Hall opted out of the game while Iowa State’s leading receiver, Xavier Hutchinson, wasn’t much of a factor with a broken thumb – the Cyclones looked like most offenses have this season against Venables’ defense.

Only it’s not Venables’ defense anymore.

At least not in a leadership sense. With Venables off to run his own program at Oklahoma, Wesley Goodwin called the plays for the first time as Clemson’s new defensive coordinator. Before getting that promotion, Goodwin was Clemson’s senior defensive assistant, though that, of course, only begins to tell the story.

“Everyone counted our defense out because they thought Coach V was gone, but we’ve got Wes and coach (co-defensive coordinator Mickey) Conn,” senior cornerback Mario Goodrich said, who was named game MVP. “They’ve been here a while, and everybody has got faith in them.”

It’s hard to find anybody that doesn’t when it comes to Goodwin’s intellectual ability on a football field or in a meeting room. This is, after all, the same person that then-Arizona Cardinals coach Bruce Arians hired away from Clemson in 2015 to be his personal assistant before Clemson coach Dabo Swinney brought him back a few years later. Other NFL teams have tried to hire him and his football acumen since then.

But amid suddenly lofty expectations given the way those inside and outside of Clemson’s program gush about him, Goodwin was in charge of his own defense for the first time Wednesday. If his debut as Swinney’s new defensive play caller didn’t meet the hype, it came awfully close.

“Really proud of Wes,” Clemson coach Dabo Swinney said.

Clemson’s defense wasn’t at full strength either. The Tigers were without safety Nolan Turner (foot injury) and linebacker Baylon Spector (hand surgery). Then fellow linebacker James Skalski left in the first half with an injury and never returned, and likely first-round draft pick Andrew Booth later did the same. 

Yet the Tigers held Iowa State to 270 total yards and made Purdy, who just finished playing his 48th and final game in a Cyclone uniform, look average. Clemson held Iowa State’s veteran signal caller to a 59% completion rate with as many interceptions (1) as he had scoring tosses, which accounted for Iowa State’s lone touchdown.

The Cyclones’ other seven points came on the right foot of kicker Andrew Mevis as the nation’s No. 2 scoring defense held Iowa State to two fewer points than it allowed on average during the regular season. The Cyclones mustered just 14 first downs and 4.5 yards per play.

Problem was, Clemson’s offense largely looked the same, too. The Tigers averaged more than 36 points in the final five games of the regular season, but a unit that’s dealt with inconsistency and attrition all season scored just 13 points itself, never allowing Clemson to comfortably pull away.

The Tigers took their largest lead at 20-3 on a touchdown from Goodwin’s unit when Goodrich intercepted a batted ball and housed it late in the third quarter, but D.J. Uiagalelei’s tipped-ball interception on Clemson’s next possession got the Cyclones right back in business. Clemson was able to hold the Cyclones to a field goal on the short field, but Petty’s 6-yard touchdown pass to a wide-open Charlie Kolar with 9 minutes, 42 seconds put Goodwin and his group to the test.

“We had one mistake down there on the touchdown, and I loved the call,” Swinney said. “(Goodwin) brought the house and went after them, and we had a young guy out there that thought he had inside help on Cover 0.”

The offense couldn’t extend the lead again, so Iowa State had two chances in the final 6:55 to march for the tying score. Starting that first drive at their own 3, the Cyclones mustered just 8 yards on six plays before punting. Their final drive started at the 11 with 1:52 remaining and ended 26 yards later when Goodrich punched the ball away from Purdy, who initially had more than the 2 yards he needed on a fourth-down run to extend the drive. But the fumble went backward and was short of a first down by the time Purdy got to it for the recovery.

“As soon as they jumped on the ball, it was over with because you saw it was well short of the first-down marker,” Goodwin said. “Just excitement that we closed it out.”

Swinney gave Goodwin an A+ for the work he did not only in the moment Wednesday but also for the nearly month-long preparation leading up to the game following Venables’ departure. It’s a high grade that Goodwin won’t soon forget.

“It was like I just put those headphones on, and I was in the moment,” Goodwin said. “It was the most fun I’ve ever had at a football game. It was fun in the moment just coaching in those situations, making adjustments and being the guy.”

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Swinney says there was a time when Goodrich ‘would have probably been in the portal’

Sitting at the podium during Clemson’s postgame press conference following the 19th-ranked Tigers’ 20-13 win over Iowa State in the Cheez-It Bowl in Orlando on Wednesday night, Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney made it clear how he feels about the …

Sitting at the podium during Clemson’s postgame press conference following the 19th-ranked Tigers’ 20-13 win over Iowa State in the Cheez-It Bowl in Orlando on Wednesday night, Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney made it clear how he feels about the Cheez-It Bowl MVP — Mario Goodrich.

The senior cornerback had an 18-yard interception return for a touchdown with 4:01 left in third quarter, which gave Clemson a 17-point lead at the time.

Later, after Iowa State scored 10 straight points to cut its deficit to 7, Goodrich sealed Clemson’s victory with 33 seconds remaining when he forced a fumble by Iowa State quarterback Brock Purdy on a fourth-and-2 run.

“Really proud of Mario,” Swinney said. “I was talking to the team about Mario a week or so ago, about this young man. Because he didn’t get off to a good start. Like a lot of 18-year-olds, a little immature, not quite as focused, a little distracted. In my office a couple times when he didn’t need to be in my office. Got my foot in his rear a few times. But you don’t know what you don’t know. And now, here is is.”

A first-team All-ACC selection in 2021, Goodrich entered the Cheez-It Bowl with 47 total tackles, seven pass breakups, one quarterback pressure and an interception in 11 games (11 starts) this season.

The Kansas City, Mo., native accepted his invitation to the Senior Bowl and will have the chance to play in front of NFL scouts on Feb. 5, 2022.

Swinney believes there was a point earlier in Goodrich’s career when he likely would have put his name in the NCAA transfer portal and continued his career elsewhere.

But obviously, he didn’t, and his sticking around at Clemson paid off.

“First-team all-conference. Had his best semester academically in his entire career, like a 3.46 GPA in the fall. Was voted team captain by his team. Going to the Senior Bowl,” Swinney said, listing Goodrich’s accomplishments.

“I mean, that’s what is great about coaching is seeing transformation and seeing young men buy in. He would have probably been in the portal if the portal had been around back in his sophomore year. But to be up here in this moment with this guy right now… he knows. Man, this is a winner.”

Swinney says Goodrich is “equipped” to play at the NFL level and deserves the opportunity.

“Whoever gets Mario, man — this dude right here, he’s a grown man, and he gets it and he’s equipped because of what he’s been through and because he hung in there,” Swinney said. “Man, I’m just so proud. Nobody deserves it more than this guy. He’s been amazing.”

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Cheez-It Bowl Postgame Press Conference Report

ORLANDO – Clemson once again celebrated a bowl victory as the Tigers defeated Iowa State to win the Cheez-It bowl. Following the win head coach Dabo Swinney, MVP Mario Goodrich and quarterback D.J. Uiagalelei attended the winner’s press conference. …

ORLANDO — Clemson once again celebrated a bowl victory as the Tigers defeated Iowa State to win the Cheez-It bowl.

Following the win head coach Dabo Swinney, MVP Mario Goodrich and quarterback D.J. Uiagalelei attended the winner’s press conference.

Watch the entire press conference on TCITV:

Goodwin goes surfing after win

Clemson wins, Clemson dances. Following the 19th-ranked Tigers’ 20-13 win over Iowa State in the Cheez-It Bowl on Wednesday night, the Tigers had their customary postgame victory celebration in the locker room. Check out the following tweet from …

Clemson wins, Clemson dances.

Following the 19th-ranked Tigers’ 20-13 win over Iowa State in the Cheez-It Bowl on Wednesday night, the Tigers had their customary postgame victory celebration in the locker room.

Check out the following tweet from Clemson defensive end Xavier Thomas with a video of the Tigers’ party in the locker room featuring new co-defensive coordinator Wes Goodwin surfing on the players’ shoulders:

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The 411 on Clemson’s bowl win over Iowa State

ORLANDO, Fla – Clemson (10-3) notched its 11th straight double-digit win season with a win over Iowa State (7-5) on Wednesday in the Cheez-It Bowl. Here are four sequences that went a long way in determining the outcome, a turning point and a …

ORLANDO, Fla – Clemson (10-3) notched its 11th straight double-digit win season with a win over Iowa State (7-5) on Wednesday in the Cheez-It Bowl. Here are four sequences that went a long way in determining the outcome, a turning point and a telling stat from the Tigers’ 20-13 victory.

  • Clemson’s first offensive possession in more than a month ended in points when the Tigers took the opening kickoff and drove 69 yards on 15 plays, converting three third downs to get inside ISU’s 10-yard line before settling for B.T. Potter’s chip-shot field goal. ISU immediately answered with a field goal of its own and started its second possession at its own 38 early in the second quarter after forcing a three-and-out, but Andrew Mevis’ 43-yard field goal attempt missed the mark after the Cyclones moved into Clemson territory. The Tigers moved 41 yards on their next drive with some assistance from Greg Eisworth’s late hit on Will Swinney along the sideline that gave Clemson 15 penalty yards, and Potter banged home a season-long 51-yarder to give the Tigers a 6-3 lead with 4:07 left in the second quarter.
  • Clemson’s defense got the ball back to the offense with 2 minutes left in the first half, and the Tigers began marching from their own 19. D.J. Uiagalelei kept the drive alive a couple of times, buying enough time to find Beaux Collins for 12 yards on third-and-7 out near midfield before checking his next third-down pass down to Kobe Pace for a 16-yard gainer down to ISU’s 31. The Tigers eventually moved into the red zone and spiked the ball on first down to preserve some clock as time ticked way. But Clemson halted its own momentum on its next two snaps, including a dropped pass by Collins on third down. Potter then missed a 36-yard field goal as time expired on the half to snap a string of 13 straight makes for the veteran kicker, and a promising drive turned hollow for the Tigers going into the break.
  • Clemson forced a punt on ISU’s opening possession of the second half, and the Tigers’ offense again started marching with more key conversions. First, Uiagalelei got bailed out by Collins, who boxed out a pair of ISU defenders on a floater for a 11-yard catch on third-and-4 out near midfield . Six plays later, with Clemson facing fourth-and-1 from inside the Cyclones’ 30, Uiagalelei was initially stacked up on a designed run but powered his way forward for just enough yardage for a fresh set of downs. Uiagalelei then kept for 7 yards on third-and-short to move the Tigers to ISU’s 12 before Shipley took a delayed handoff on the next play and bounced it outside untouched to the end zone, giving Clemson a 13-3 with less than 5 minutes left in the third quarter.
  • Clemson grabbed its first two-score lead late in the third quarter and didn’t need much time to further take control in unusual fashion. ISU got out of the shadow of its own end zone when quarterback Brock Purdy started the Cyclones’ next possession with a 10-yard completion to Darren Wilson, but Purdy’s next pass was batted high in the air by defensive end Justin Mascoll. Purdy tried to knock the ball to the ground, but he tipped it instead into the waiting hands of Mario Goodrich. Clemson’s senior cornerback cut across the field to return the interception 18 yards for the Tigers’ second touchdown in a span of 53 seconds. But a tipped pass on Clemson’s ensuing possession turned into an interception for ISU, which scored 10 straight points after that to get back in the game.

Turning point

ISU had one last shot to send the game to overtime, taking over possession with a little more than 2 minutes left deep in its own territory. The Cyclones moved the ball out near midfield, where they faced fourth-and-2 in the final minute. Purdy escaped the pocket and scrambled beyond the line to gain, but Goodrich punched the ball from his grasp. The ball bounced backward and was short of the line to gain once Purdy recovered his own fumble, turning the ball over to the Tigers on downs with less than 30 seconds left.

Telling stat: 0

That how many points ISU scored on its final two possessions after spending some of the third quarter and most of the fourth cutting into a 17-point deficit. In Wesley Goodwin’s first game as defensive coordinator, Clemson allowed just one offensive touchdown.

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Double deflection turns into pick-six for Clemson in Cheez-it Bowl

The Clemson Tigers turned a double-deflection into six points against Iowa State

Iowa State wasn’t going anywhere against Clemson in the Cheez-It Bowl on Wednesday. Then, the Cyclones found a play that pretty much summed up their day.

Watch as Brock Purdy tries to find a receiver. The pass is deflected in the air. An Iowa State player decides rather than doing the prudent thing and smashing the ball into the turf, deflects it forward …

… into the hands of Clemson’s Mario Goodrich, who was more than happy to take the present 18 yards into the end zone.

The PAT gave Clemson a 20-3 lead as they sought to win their 10th game of what is considered a down year for the Tigers.