Swinney says it’s not even close who 2 most improved offensive players are

Through the first six days of preseason camp, there is no argument on who the most improved players are on Clemson’s offense. Since the spring, the Tigers’ offensive coaches have been bragging on wide receiver Ajou Ajou, and that has continued in …

Through the first six days of preseason camp, there is no argument on who the most improved players are on Clemson’s offense.

Since the spring, the Tigers’ offensive coaches have been bragging on wide receiver Ajou Ajou, and that has continued in camp. Another name that keeps popping up is tight end Jaelyn Lay.

“Just fundamentally, and all of that stuff, easily, you ask who the two most improved guys I have seen on this offense, all these guys have looked good, but J-Lay has really improved,” head coach Dabo Swinney said. “And Ajou? It is incredible where he is. He is going to help us in a big way.”

After offensive coordinator Tony Elliott compared Ajou to former Clemson great DeAndre Hopkins earlier in the week, Swinney took it a step further when he said the sophomore had the choice to be either Terrell Owens or Shannon Sharpe, who are both in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

For context, Swinney used the two Hall of Famers as examples of what Ajou’s body-type could be. The Canadian had to make a decision back in January which direction he wanted to go in after reaching 240 pounds, which Swinney says was a good 240 pounds on his 6-foot-3 frame.

“He was going to have to be one of the two and I think he could be either one. I really do,” Swinney said. “What he did not tell you is that he was 240 and was about ten percent body fat. I mean, just a freak. Unbelievable. Signs us all up for that right?

Ajou chose the route of Owens and has dropped to 222 pounds.

“Part of that was him, he comes from Canada, he is over in Clearwater and then all of sudden he gets in this program and the food is good and the next thing you know, ‘Wow! What happened?!’ He has never really trained like he has trained here with the lower body,” Swinney said. “So, he is putting on a bunch of muscle, so the next thing you know, he is 238. He is just in great shape, and he is probably five percent body fat now, and lean and confident.”

As for Lay, Swinney wants to see him put a hat on somebody now that they are finally in full pads.

Clemson will resume practice on Friday as it continues to get ready for its Sept. 4 opener against No. 5 Georgia in the Duke’s Mayo Kickoff Classic at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte.

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Bulldog fans, players giving Pace ‘hell’

There has always been a lot of cross over between Clemson and Georgia in terms of recruiting which fuels the bitterness between the two schools on the gridiron. Only 73 miles separate Clemson, S.C. and Athens, Ga. and both the Tigers and Bulldogs …

There has always been a lot of cross over between Clemson and Georgia in terms of recruiting which fuels the bitterness between the two schools on the gridiron.

Only 73 miles separate Clemson, S.C. and Athens, Ga. and both the Tigers and Bulldogs recruit the same areas.

Clemson running back Kobe Pace hails from one of those areas in Cedartown, Georgia north of Atlanta.

After the Tigers’ first day in full pads at Jervey Meadows on Thursday the sophomore pointed out that Bulldog fans and players blow up his phone on a daily basis in anticipation of the renewal of the Clemson-Georgia rivalry in Charlotte on Sept. 4.

“Actually yeah, I get a lot of texts everyday talking about the game,” Pace said. “But I just put my phone down and keep working because I know what’s going to happen on September 4.”

The sophomore is in the midst of a heated competition at running back with Lyn-J Dixon, Darien Rencher, Phil Mafah and Will Shipley.

Pace noted that a couple guys giving him the most grief play defense for the Bulldogs in junior defensive back Tykee Smith who transferred from West Virginia and senior linebacker Adam Anderson.

But he went on to joke that they didn’t say anything that would harm him they just tell him to ‘be ready.’

“I have a lot of guys on the other side at Georgia so they text me and give me hell,” Pace said.

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Swinney ‘hates’ having to play Kendrick in red and black

After playing the last three seasons at Clemson, cornerback Derion Kendrick will be on the opposite side of the field when the Tigers face Georgia in the two teams’ season opener Sept. 4 in Charlotte. Kendrick will be wearing the red and black after …

After playing the last three seasons at Clemson, cornerback Derion Kendrick will be on the opposite side of the field when the Tigers face Georgia in the two teams’ season opener Sept. 4 in Charlotte.

Kendrick will be wearing the red and black after transferring to UGA on June 1. Kenrick was dismissed from the Clemson team on Feb. 28 after failing to properly communicate with the Clemson coaching staff on why he was missing classes and practice.

Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney joined former UGA coach Jim Donnan for a UGASports.com interview recently and was asked to give his thoughts on Kendrick, a two-year starter for the Tigers, suiting up for the Bulldogs now.

“I love DK,” Swinney said. “He’s a baller. There’s just no doubt about that. DK loves to practice and he loves to play. But sometimes in a relationship, you need a change, you need a fresh start, and that’s kind of where we were. I’m happy for him. I hate we’ve got to play him, because he’s a great player. But I’m happy that he’s at a good place where he can hopefully finish up the right way, and hopefully he’s grown through the process and can be the best version of himself this year. But he’s a baller, there ain’t no doubt about that.”

You can watch Swinney’s full interview with Donnan and UGASports.com’s Dayne Young below.

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Notebook: Day 6 observations of Clemson’s offense

Clemson traveled across the mote to Jervey Meadows on Thursday for the sixth day of fall camp and first day of action in full pads. Another host of NFL teams journeyed to Clemson to scout potential pros. Representatives from the Eagles, Panthers, …

Clemson traveled across the mote to Jervey Meadows on Thursday for the sixth day of fall camp and first day of action in full pads.

Another host of NFL teams journeyed to Clemson to scout potential pros. Representatives from the Eagles, Panthers, Cowboys, Vikings, Jaguars, Bills and Titans were on hand to watch the Tigers suit up in live action.

On Wednesday head coach Dabo Swinney noted that he gave veteran players a day off to get a look at some of the younger players on the roster. A few players took a breather on Thursday including Braden Galloway,  B.T. Potter and Will Spiers.

The media was allowed to watch four periods of practice including special teams and individual drills here is what The Clemson Insider observed from the Tigers’ offense.

  • A few players on offense were in green jerseys meaning they could participate in individual drill but with no contact. Tight end Luke Price was in green for the first time during camp. And wide receivers Beaux Collins and Troy Stellato upgraded from yellow to green.
  • As usual offensive line coach Robbie Caldwell brought a lot of intensity to practice on Thursday. Caldwell jumped on freshman Tristan Leigh during a drill for letting go of a dummy too soon. He did this for a couple of other players during the drill.
  • Center Hunter Rayburn looks like a warrior with a bull collar, padded gloves and tape on his wrists.
  • Head coach Dabo Swinney jumped on Joseph Ngata for having his hands down during punt block drills and coached.
  • Swinney also gave some extra coaching to freshman wideout Troy Stellato on a toe tap drill to improve his technique. Stellato responded well to the coaching.
  • Former Clemson wide receiver Artavis Scott led a couple of drills with that unit during practice on Thursday and played an active role in assisting wide receivers coach Tyler Grisham.
  • Tight end Davis Allen received plenty of compliments from offensive coordinator and tight ends coach Tony Elliott during a blocking drill for his technique.

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Podcast: Backup quarterback situation starting to take shape

Clemson’s Football team is right in the heart of preseason camp. Today, Levon Kirkland and myself have an interview with quarterback D.J. Uiagalelei. We also discuss Uiagalelei’s new deal with Dr Pepper and what it means for the Tigers’ QB. We also …

Clemson’s Football team is right in the heart of preseason camp. Today, Levon Kirkland and myself have an interview with quarterback D.J. Uiagalelei.

We also discuss Uiagalelei’s new deal with Dr Pepper and what it means for the Tigers’ QB. We also analyze the backup quarterback situation and have the latest on Taisun Phommachanh and where he is at in his recovery from a torn Achilles in the spring.

Also, it appears the Tigers have a new playmaker at wide receiver. We discuss these things and much more in today’s podcast.

You can listen to today’s podcast here (LINK), or listen to it and download it where you listen to all of your podcast at either Apple Podcasts, Stitcher or Spotify.

Tigers will live modern, but train old the next few days

The Clemson football team caught a break on Wednesday when clouds rolled in prior to the start of practice and cooled things down. “It has been hot, hot, hot, and somehow we got lucky today,” head coach Dabo Swinney said after practice behind the …

The Clemson football team caught a break on Wednesday when clouds rolled in prior to the start of practice and cooled things down.

“It has been hot, hot, hot, and somehow we got lucky today,” head coach Dabo Swinney said after practice behind the Allen Reeves Football Complex in Clemson. “We got a good practice in. We had a good competitive today. I think we had ten periods of Clemson on Clemson, so that is a tough day’s work.”

Things will get tougher on Thursday.

The football team will make its annual pilgrimage across the moat to Jervey Meadows, where it will have its first of three practices there during preseason camp.

“This is that time of camp. We have been going a week. It is that time where they are getting a little fatigued, so we want to make it a little tougher,” Swinney said.

Swinney calls it old-school training. Getting away from the modern facility they have at the Allen Reeves Complex and the Poe Indoor Practice Facility.

“We do it for a lot of reasons. We are so blessed here,” the Tigers’ head man said. “Live modern, train old. Just a little few days of training old. Hopefully, we can continue to have that appreciation for what we have here. It is just kind of a rite of passage for us in camp around here.”

Besides practicing at Jervey Meadows, Clemson will also have a quick turnaround between practices.

“We are right back on the field at 9:30 in the morning. So, it is just a little different challenge this next couple of days,” Swinney said. “We will be in the Valley tomorrow night with a walkthrough and then right back Friday morning (to Jervey Meadows).

“So, between today and Friday, there is a lot going on. Hopefully, we will get the work done that we need to get done and then on Friday afternoon we will get a little break and we will go hang out at the lake and cool off and be ready for a full scrimmage.”

The scrimmage will be at Death Valley on Saturday.

What will also make tomorrow tough is that it will be the first day in full pads for Clemson.

“We get our first live work tomorrow. It will be the first day in full pads,” Swinney said. “We got a lot of the situations in (today). Tomorrow we will get some short-yardage and some goal line. Get a little two-minute (drill) on Friday and then on Saturday we will touch on a bunch of situations on offense and defense.”

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Swinney compared Taylor to college football legend

Will Taylor turned down a lot of money from the 2021 MLB Draft to play football and baseball at Clemson. After Day 5 of fall camp on Wednesday on the practice fields behind the Allen Reeves Football Complex head coach Dabo Swinney compared Taylor to …

Will Taylor turned down a lot of money from the 2021 MLB Draft to play football and baseball at Clemson.

After Day 5 of fall camp on Wednesday on the practice fields behind the Allen Reeves Football Complex head coach Dabo Swinney compared Taylor to the most unassuming quarterback in college football who went on to assert himself as a legend, Doug Flutie.

“Will Taylor can do anything. I called him Doug Flutie the other day, I imagine that’s what Doug Flutie looked like,” Swinney said.

Flutie played quarterback at Boston College from 1981-84 and had an illustrious career and won the 1984 Heisman Trophy.

He also completed one of the greatest plays in college football history with the “Hail Mary” to stun Miami on the road in Nov. 1984.

“He’s electric, makes all these throws from crazy angles and you wonder how did he even see that guy? But he sees them all and gets the ball off,” Swinney said of Taylor. “I’m sure that’s what people said about Doug Flutie back in the day. He’s a special dude, has ice water in his veins and we got us a good one right there.”

Taylor played quarterback at Dutch Fork High School and led the Silver Foxes to a fifth straight South Carolina state championship last fall. He also excelled on the diamond as a centerfielder and won a state championship in baseball for the Silver Foxes. And he won a wrestling state championship early in his high school career.

Eventually Swinney plans to move Taylor over to wide receiver but with Taisun Phommachanh limited due to an achilles injury sustained in the spring game Taylor adds a layer of depth to the quarterback room. Right now the focus of camp for Taylor is mastering the playbook.

Swinney also plans for Taylor to get some playing time returning punts this year because of his athleticism and eye for the ball.

“Heck yeah, he’s a natural,” Swinney said. “He plays centerfield, knows how to get behind the ball, knows how to see it off the foot, understands elements of the game, he’s so coachable and easy. So you will definitely see him returning some punts this year.”

Swinney loves the plan the coaching staff made for Taylor to help the Tigers in a variety of ways and said he can’t wait to watch him play on the gridiron this fall and for Monte Lee’s Tigers in the spring.

But he made sure to emphasize not to count the true freshman out from taking a few snaps this year and throughout his career at Clemson.

“Eventually he’ll move but he’s going to play some quarterback in his day here regardless of if we move him,” Swinney said. “He brings some things to the table that are unique.”

Time to get the latest Clemson apparel to show your Tiger pride. Order your officially licensed Clemson gear right here!

When he failed at hockey, Ajou decided football was his best bet

When he was growing up, Clemson’s Ajou Ajou did not think of himself as a football player. In fact, the Alberta, Canada native did not know what sport he wanted to play, so he tried his hand at pretty much all of them. “I remember in grade two I …

When he was growing up, Clemson’s Ajou Ajou did not think of himself as a football player.

In fact, the Alberta, Canada native did not know what sport he wanted to play, so he tried his hand at pretty much all of them.

“I remember in grade two I told my teacher I wanted to be a professional sports player because I played so many sports, I could not pick one,” Ajou said following Tuesday’s practice inside the Poe Indoor Practice Facility in Clemson.

Ajou played Lacrosse, soccer, football, basketball, handball, and was a high jumper on the tack team. Ajou loves sports so much, he even tried out hockey for a little bit.

“I am good skater, I just have to get the two-foot stop down,” Ajou said. “I have to get that down, but it is good though.”

Since he could not get the two-foot stop down, Ajou figured it was not good for his health to keep slamming into the walls.

“I tried one day. He was like, ‘You have to lean this way and your momentum will stop you,’” Ajou recalled on how one of his coaches tried to teach him the two-foot stop. “So, I start skating and I am going and going, and I go (to stop), and I am flying. I mean flying. I said, ‘Yeah, this is not for me. I am just going to stick to staying upright.’”

Despite his lack of skating skills and his second-grade teacher trying to discourage him by pulling up a statistic that only 0.3 people make it as a professional athlete, Ajou was not hearing none of it.

“I was like, watch me. I love to prove people wrong,” he said.

Clemson’s 6-foot-3, 222-pound receiver eventually settled on playing basketball and football. Basketball was his first love and is still his favorite sport, but he eventually realized playing football was his best chance to make it as a professional athlete.

Though he is raw as a college wide receiver, Ajou showed off his potential at Georgia Tech last season when he hauled in a slant pass from Hunter Helms and then ran through almost every Yellow Jacket defender on his way to a 35-yard touchdown.

In the spring, Ajou continued to make strides as he caught the eye of his coaches with one big play after another, including a 16-yard touchdown catch over All-ACC corner Andrew Booth in the Spring Game.

“Ajou, he has put in the work. You can just tell that his confidence is there,” offensive coordinator Tony Elliott said. “He is not perfect, and we do not expect him to be. But what you are seeing, he has a desire now to give a perfect effort. He is learning how to do that and that is where that challenging from Coach [Dabo] Swinney has really taken hold. And he is pushing Jo.”

Swinney’s challenge began with Ajou’s diet. The sophomore said he weighed 240 pounds at the end of the last season.

“I was not really watching what I was eating,” he said. “It just blew up on me. I was like, ‘Whoa!’”

Ajou got with Clemson’s nutritionist, Paul Harrington, and started to get lean. He stopped his bad eating habits and only drinks water. The receiver says he is down to eight-percent body fat.

As for on the field and in meeting rooms, Ajou admits he has taken his preparation to another level.

“I had a lot of mental errors as a freshman, and I am not going to lie to y’all,” he said. “But now I am really buying into that playbook. I am studying every day and every night. If I can get fifteen minutes, I am in there. It has really helped me. It has made me a lot better.”

The game has also slowed down for Ajou. He says when he lines up, he can see the coverage, and everything seems to be clicking.

“What you are starting to see is us potentially being what we have been in the past, with that one-two punch at the nine-man,” Elliott said. “He is a lot more consistent. He is a lot more fluid because he is not thinking, and he is a lot more confident.

“So, it has been fun to watch his evolution.”

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Finebaum thinks Clemson is overrated

Paul Finebaum gave a strong take on Clemson’s second overall ranking in the AFCA preseason coaches poll this week. On Keyshawn, JWill and Zubin with Keyshawn Johnson on Tuesday Finebaum stated that he’s not buying the hype surrounding the Tigers and …

Paul Finebaum gave a strong take on Clemson’s second overall ranking in the AFCA preseason coaches poll this week.

On Keyshawn, JWill and Zubin with Keyshawn Johnson on Tuesday Finebaum stated that he’s not buying the hype surrounding the Tigers and thinks they will be exposed in the opener against Georgia.

“I think Clemson is too high. I’m not buying Clemson this year, I think they’ll lose to Georgia in the first game. And then they have really nowhere to go because they play a rather pedestrian ACC schedule,” Finebaum said.

Johnson pushed back specifically in terms of the matchup with the Bulldogs and said he’s not a big believer in Georgia entering the 2021 season. But Finebaum stuck to his guns citing Clemson’s loss in the Sugar Bowl to Ohio State as a key reason why it will lose in Charlotte.

“Well Keyshawn, I didn’t like the way Clemson finished last season. I thought their defense was very vulnerable,” Finebaum said. “I don’t think the quarterback is going to be that big of a deal because they have really great wide receivers and D.J. is not Trevor Lawrence but he’s still really good. To me the defense has trailed off ever so slightly the last two years and that’s the issue.”

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Uiagalelei charting his own path

D.J. Uiagalelei does not want to be Trevor Lawrence and that’s okay. Lawrence’s list of accomplishments at Clemson runs long from winning a national championship as a freshman to his first overall selection in the 2021 NFL Draft. But Uiagalelei …

D.J. Uiagalelei does not want to be Trevor Lawrence and that’s okay.

Lawrence’s list of accomplishments at Clemson runs long from winning a national championship as a freshman to his first overall selection in the 2021 NFL Draft. But Uiagalelei differs from Lawrence in personality, style and skillset which does not bother the sophomore signal caller.

When a reporter asked Uiagalelei whether it is fair for fans and media members to compare him to Lawrence the sophomore quarterback gave Lawrence credit for his accomplishments but made it clear he is his own man.

“Shoot, Trevor Lawrence is probably the best quarterback to ever play college football. I think everyone should give their respect to Trevor, I’m just D.J,” Uiagalelei said after Monday’s practice during fall camp. “I don’t think there’s anything that should be compared Trevor is Trevor and I’m D.J.”

Uiagalelei falls into a legacy of great quarterback play at Clemson and stepped onto campus with lofty expectations just like his predecessor. Both entered college as five-star recruits with plenty of hype for their ability to win and change games at the high school level.

Physically their makeup differs distinctly Uiagalelei boasts a stout frame at 6-foot-4 250-pounds while Lawrence stood tall and thin at 6-foot-6 220-pounds.

The two quarterbacks also hail from opposite sides of the country with different culture. Uiagalelei grew up in Southern California surrounded by stardom while Lawrence spent his formative years in the small-town environment of North Georgia.

“We are just two different people with two different personalities. I think we just come from two different locations,” Uiagalelei said. “He grew up in Georgia and I grew up in California, so we are two different people.”

One thing both Tiger quarterbacks share is a laid-back approach which helps keep the big moments from getting two big.

“I mean we are both laid back, I’m just might listen to a little different music, I may talk a little different than Trevor and stuff like that because he’s Trevor and I’m D.J.,” Uiagalelei said.

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