Clemson baseball defeats Miami for latest ACC series win

NCAA Baseball: No. 2 Clemson picked up a 7-0 shutout victory over the Miami Hurricanes at Mark Light Field Saturday. The Tigers won two of three in the series to improve to 24-3 overall and 7-2 in the ACC.

CORAL GABLES, FLA. – Freshman righthander Aidan Knaak pitched 7.0 scoreless innings of two-hit ball with 10 strikeouts to lead No. 2 Clemson to a 7-0 victory over Miami (Fla.) at Mark Light Field on Saturday afternoon. The Tigers, who won the series 2-1, improved to 24-3 overall and 7-2 in the ACC. The Hurricanes dropped to 15-12 overall and 6-6 in ACC play.

It marked Clemson’s first series win over the Hurricanes since 2012 and first at Miami since 2006. It was also the Tigers’ 14th regular-season weekend series win in a row dating to 2023. That includes 10 straight in ACC regular-season play.

Knaak (2-0), a native of Fort Myers, Fla., earned the win by setting career highs for innings pitched and strikeouts while walking just one batter. He only allowed one baserunner past first base and none past second base. Reed Garris and Rocco Reid pitched the final two innings to close out the shutout, Clemson’s first since 2022. Miami starter Herick Hernandez (2-3) suffered the loss, as he yielded seven hits, seven runs (five earned) and three walks with five strikeouts in 5.1 innings pitched.

In the first inning, Jacob Hinderleider’s infield single and error on the play plated three runs, then Hinderleider blooped a two-out, run-scoring single in the third inning. Cam Cannarella laced a three-run double in the sixth inning to give Clemson a 7-0 lead.

The Tigers travel to Fluor Field in Greenville, S.C. to take on USC Upstate on Tuesday at 6 p.m. on ESPN+. Clemson is the designated visiting team and occupies the third-base dugout.

–via Clemson Athletic Department

NCAA Baseball: Series preview and where to watch/stream/listen to No. 2 Clemson vs. Miami

Clemson Baseball: Here’s a look at where Clemson Tigers fans can watch, stream, and listen to this weekend’s NCAA baseball series against the Miami Hurricanes.

Entering Easter Weekend, Clemson has been the best team in the ACC — if not the best team in the country.

The Tigers’ 22-2 start is the program’s best mark since 2002 when that year’s club began the year 23-1 and ended the season one win shy of the championship game of the College World Series.

Clemson moved to No. 2 in the nation in this week’s Baseball America’s Top 25 rankings. Coach Erik Bakich’s team also moved up two spots to No. 3 in the USA TODAY Sports coaches poll following a dramatic three-game sweep of previously unbeaten Florida State that produced two incredible come-from-behind victories.

The threat of inclement weather postponed a scheduled Top 25 midweek matchup between Clemson and No. 20 Coastal Carolina earlier this week.

As a team, the Tigers are batting .303 with an OPS (on-base percentage plus slugging) of .964. Opponents are batting .238 against Clemson pitching, which boasts a 4.29 staff ERA that ranks fifth in the ACC.

Blake Wright hit six home runs and drove in 21 runs in five games last week to take home ACC Player of the Week honors. Wright was also tabbed as the Dick Howser Trophy National Player of the Week by the National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association (NCBWA).

Next up for the Tigers is Miami (14-10 overall, 5-4 conference) in Coral Gables. The Hurricanes took two out of three games in series against nationally-ranked programs Virginia (No. 8) and North Carolina (No. 11) before dropping two games at Notre Dame last weekend. Miami defeated FIU, 14-7, in midweek play on Tuesday.

The ‘Canes have averaged 8.5 runs per game this season while batting .306 as a team. They’ve struggled on the bump with a staff ERA of 5.75.

Clemson will go with a different rotation for this weekend’s series due to an ankle injury to left-hander Tristan Smith. Smith (2-0, 2.55 ERA) has been the team’s best starter this season but missed his usual Saturday start against Florida State and will be out at least one more week, Bakich said.

In Smith’s place, the Tigers will go with left-hander Ethan Darden. Darden (4-0, 5.09 ERA) pitched a career-high 6 1/3 innings against FSU, allowing four earned runs and seven hits.

Matthew Marchal will make his first start of the season in Thursday’s series opener. In eight relief appearances this season, Marchal is 4-0 with a 3.55 ERA. Freshman right-hander Aidan Knaak (1-0, 4.60 ERA) is scheduled to make his seventh start in Saturday’s finale.

Series History

Miami leads the all-time head to head series with Clemson, 45-32-1. The two programs first met in 1977. Clemson defeated Miami, 11-5, in the championship game of last season’s ACC Tournament in Durham.

Where to Watch/Stream/Listen

Here’s s a look at where Clemson fans can watch, stream, and listen to this weekend’s series at Miami’s Mark Light Field.

Start Times (ET)

Thursday, 7 p.m.

Friday, 7 p.m.

Saturday: 1 p.m.

Broadcast Info

TV: ACC Network (Thursday only)

Live Stream: ACC Network Extra, ESPN+ (Friday, Saturday)

Radio: Clemson Athletic Network | ClemsonTigers.com

Brad Brownell offers explanation for Clemson’s recent turnaround

Clemson won its third straight contest on Wednesday night when the Tigers defeated ACC rival Miami, 77-60, at Littlejohn Coliseum.

Clemson won its third straight contest on Wednesday night when the Tigers defeated ACC rival Miami, 77-60, at Littlejohn Coliseum.

The game was a stark contrast compared to the first time the Tigers (17-7 overall, 7-6 ACC) and Hurricanes met back on January 3 in Coral Gables. In that game, Miami scored 60 points in the second half to blow past Clemson, which would soon find itself with a three-game losing streak to begin the new year.

Those three losses dropped the Tigers out of the Top 25 polls altogether, plus several spots in various bracketology projections. For a period, it even looked like Clemson might be playing its way out of an almost sure-fire NCAA Tournament bid.

Then came an improbable victory over then-No. 3 North Carolina in Chapel Hill, where the Tigers broke a trend by closing out a win in the final minutes of a game — something they’d failed to do previously in close losses to Duke, Virginia, and Georgia Tech.

Wednesday’s rematch against the Hurricanes was another example of Clemson taking control when the game was on the line.

After falling behind 54-48 just past the midway point of the second half, the Tigers would outscore Miami, 24-3, over the final eight-plus minutes.

Afterwards, Clemson coach Brad Brownell offered a fairly simple answer when asked what had contributed to his team’s recent dominance in the final minutes of games.

“Good players. It’s mostly good players making plays,” Brownell offered.

Put another way, the Tigers are simply making plays they weren’t making a month or even two weeks back. They’re shooting the ball better, getting better looks, making better passes, and putting themselves in better positions to win.

“You’ve got to get stops and then your guys have to make basketball plays. You try to put them in some (favorable) positions. We’re helping them with some plays. There are certainly some actions and things we’ve taught them to help. But at the end of the day, they’ve got to execute.,” Brownell told reporters after Wednesday’s game.

Clemson made 13 3-pointers in its win over Miami. That was a far cry from the Tigers’ contest against Virginia 10 days earlier after Brownell had bemoaned that the team had been having some woeful shooting nights in their own arena.

Against Virginia, Clemson made only 35 percent of its shots. Against Miami, they made 44.6 percent. And against Syracuse last Saturday, they connected on 61 percent of their shots.

Those numbers may not last, but the Tigers have started to regain their poise and show the things that got them out to an 11-1 start and playing like one of the biggest threats in the ACC.

“You look like a good coach when guys make shots. When we miss them and it doesn’t turn out well, there’s not a lot of difference sometimes. You just keep trying to put your guys in position to be successful and give them confidence to finish plays,” Brownell said.

Clemson returns to action Saturday when they it hosts NC State. The game is a scheduled 7:45 p.m. EST. tipoff and will be broadcast regionally by the CW Network.

Clemson closes out Miami, 77-60, for third straight win

Chase Hunter scored 20 points, and Clemson won its third straight in a 77-60 win over Miami on Wednesday night at Littlejohn Coliseum.

Chase Hunter scored a season-high 20 points and made five 3-pointers, and Clemson won its third straight in ACC play with a 77-60 victory over Miami at Littlejohn Coliseum Wednesday.

Both teams traded a pair 9-0 runs in the second half before Clemson pulled away. The Tigers (17-7 overall, 7-6 ACC) throughly dominated the Hurricanes (15-10, 6-8) down the stretch after leading just 31-30 at halftime and after trailing by six at one point in the second half.

Hunter broke a 57-all tie with his fourth 3-pointer of the night with 5:44 to play to put the Tigers ahead for good. PJ Hall added a 3-pointer with just over a minute left to run the Tigers’ lead to 74-60.

The game was well in hand even before then.

All told, Clemson closed the game on a 24-3 run over the final 6:45 of play. It was the third straight night in which the Tigers took control of the final 10 minutes of action.

“That was an incredible last 10 minutes,” Clemson coach Brad Brownell said after his team’s win. “Incredible shot-making but good defense (too). I’m proud of our guys. We only had one turnover in the second half and 18 assisted baskets.”

Joe Girard added 18 points and Hall finished with 13 to give the Tigers three players in double figures for the night.

Then there was Hunter, the fifth-year senior who closed out the Tigers’ scoring when he sank his fifth 3-pointer of the game with 20 seconds to play. Hunter had 12 points in the second half.

“I’m so happy to see him shoot the ball like that in a big game when we needed it down the stretch,” Brownell said of Hunter. “They were doing a really good job of packing it in and it was really hard to get the ball to PJ and to Ian Schieffelin, so our guys had to make some shots from the perimeter.”

Clemson finished with 13 baskets from beyond the arc. Norchad Omier led Miami with 18 points. Nigel Pack played 25 minutes and was held scoreless in a game for the first time in his four-year career.

All told, Miami scored just three points over the final nine-plus minutes of play. Matthew Cleveland’s 3-pointer with 9:50 left gave the Hurricanes a six-point lead — their largest of the night — at 54-48. Clemson closed with a 24-3 run from there.

UP NEXT: Clemson is in a stretch of four out of five games at home. The Tigers return to Littlejohn Coliseum Saturday when they host NC State at 7:45 p.m. EST. The game will be televised regionally by the CW Network. The Wolfpack fell to Wake Forest, 83-79, last Saturday in Winston-Salem.

Clemson Tigers vs. Miami Hurricanes: How to Watch/Stream/Listen

Fresh off a pair of clutch road wins at No. 3 North Carolina and Syracuse, Clemson will look to build on its recent momentum when it returns to Littlejohn Coliseum Wednesday against Miami. Wednesday’s contest will mark the second meeting between the …

Fresh off a pair of clutch road wins at No. 3 North Carolina and Syracuse, Clemson will look to build on its recent momentum when it returns to Littlejohn Coliseum Wednesday against Miami.

Wednesday’s contest will mark the second meeting between the two schools this season, and Clemson (16-7 overall, 6-6 ACC) is hoping the second time around will go better than the first. When the Tigers and Hurricanes (15-9 overall, 6-7 ACC) met just over a month ago on January 3, Miami scored 60 points in the second half to storm past Clemson, 95-82.

Things haven’t gone exactly as either team had hoped since then.

Clemson entered that night ranked No. 16 nationally but proceeded to drop its first three games in conference play to start the new year. Miami, like much of the ACC, has underperformed this season. Despite returning three starters from a team that made an unexpected run to the Final Four last year, the ‘Canes have yet to show much consistency.

Miami has dropped three of its last four contests and is coming off a 75-72 loss to North Carolina last Saturday in Chapel Hill. With his team trailing by four with two seconds remaining, Miami’s Wooga Poplar intentionally missed a free-throw attempt in an effort to give the Hurricanes a chance at a rebound and a four-point play. Officials ruled that Miami had committed a lane violation.

The loss came five days after coach Jim Larrañaga’s team tallied a season-low 38 points in a Monday night loss at Virginia.

Norchad Omier leads Miami in scoring with an average of 17.7 points per game. He’s also averaging 10 rebounds a night. Nigel Pack is second with 14 points per game and averages a team-best 34 minutes.

For Clemson, Joe Girard had a big performance in his return to Syracuse — where he spent four years in Jim Boeheim’s program — over the past weekend. Girard scored a game-high 18 points in the Tigers’ 77-68 victory and is averaging 15 points per game this season.

PJ Hall has led Clemson in scoring this season and averages 20 points a game.

Series Notes and Recent History

The all-time series is tied, 17-17. Miami has won the last four meetings against Clemson dating back to the 2021 ACC Tournament.

How To Watch

Here’s a look at how and where Clemson fans can watch, listen, and stream Wednesday’s game against Miami.

Date: Wednesday, Feb. 14

Time: 7 p.m. EST

Where: Littlejohn Coliseum

TV Channel: ESPN2

Live Stream: ESPN+

Radio: Clemson Athletic Network | TuneIn App | SiriusXM (Channel 371)

Broadcast Teams

ESPN2: Dan Shulman, Jay Bilas

Clemson Radio: Don Munson, Tim Bourret

Bracketology: Clemson on the move in Joe Lunardi’s latest projections

A look at where Clemson ranks in Joe Lunardi’s latest Bracketology projections for ESPN.

Clemson’s NCAA tournament hopes received a huge shot in the arm with road wins at No. 3 North Carolina and Syracuse last week.

The Tigers begin the second week of February at 16-7 overall and 6-6 in ACC play. They entered the year on a tear at 11-1 through their first 12 games but then proceeded to drop six of their next nine contests in conference play.

Thanks to the past week, the Tigers are on the move again, if only slightly. Clemson moved up two spots to a projected No. 6 seed in Joe Lunardi’s latest bracketology update for ESPN.

Lunardi’s new projections have Clemson facing the winner of a play-in game between Nevada and Utah from the First Four competition in Dayton, Ohio.

The projected 6 vs. 11 matchup would be at Memphis’ FedEx Forum in the West Region of NCAA Tournament games, Lunardi forecasts.

Lunardi predicts that only four ACC teams will make this year’s NCAA Tournament: Clemson, North Carolina, Duke, and Virginia.

The lack of strong ACC presence in the tournament is something Lunardi points to as part of the conference’s overall decline in the past five years.

“For the first two decades of this century, the ACC averaged at least one top seed per year. The conference peaked in 2019, landing three of four No. 1 seeds, including national champion Virginia. Since then, there’s not been a single top line selection from the ACC, its longest drought since seeding began in 1979,” he writes.

Lunardi awards the SEC and Big 12 with the most bids by conference with nine apiece.

Clemson returns to the floor Wednesday night at Littlejohn Coliseum when it hosts Miami (15-9, 6-7) in a rematch at 7 p.m. EST. The Tigers fell to the Hurricanes on Jan. 3 at Miami’s Watsco Center, 95-82. Wednesday’s game will be televised by ESPN2.

Dabo Swinney on if Tyler from Spartanburg motivated the Tigers: ‘No, that had nothing to do with it’

According to Dabo Swinney, Tyler from Spartanburg had nothing to do with Clemson’s huge win over Notre Dame.

Dabo Swinney’s interaction with ‘Tyler from Spartanburg’ was a massive story this week, and the reasons for that are obvious.

Swinney unleashed on Tyler during his weekly radio call-in show after being criticized by the caller for Clemson’s record, considering his salary. Following the Tigers’ massive 31-23 win over Notre Dame, ESPN’s Andrea Adelson asked Swinney if the caller motivated the Tigers to go out and get this win.

No, that had nothing to do with it,” Swinney said. “These guys want to win. I’m sure he’s a great guy (Tyler from Spartanburg). We all do things that sometimes we regret or say things that we probably shouldn’t say in a moment. We’ve all done that. Certainly, I have, as well. But no, I don’t think that had anything to do with our team at all.” 

With the win, Swinney became Clemson football’s all-time winningest head coach. It was a great Saturday for Swinney and the Clemson football program, and the win proved to many that the Tigers can still win big games. 

 

Putnam on Clemson’s offensive line, the Yips the Tigers are dealing with

Though the Yips is usually a term for kickers, the Tigers’ offensive line seems to have them.

Have you ever heard of the yips? 

Typically, it is a term for kickers, but technically, it can be used for anyone. Basically, when the lights shine their brightest, a player will have a “sudden and unexplained loss of ability to execute certain skills in experienced athletes.” For this 2023 Clemson team, we’ve seen this on the offensive line. 

It has been this way for most of the season, with the Tigers’ loss against Miami once again highlighting this struggle. The Miami defensive line bullied the Tigers’ offensive line, especially on the ground, where Clemson reached just 31 yards on 34 carries. In a situation where it mattered most, 1st and goal on the 2-yard line, this offensive line got bullied. 

Starting center Will Putnam discussed the Yips following the loss to Miami. From what Putnam had to say, it sounds like what’s happening with this unit. 

“That definitely could be the case. A lot of guys really are thinking or maybe guys a little timid, and that’s just the thing,” Putnam said. “This isn’t a game to be timid, this isn’t a game to overthink. That’s why you practice. You practice because you come into a game, and you don’t have to think. You practice because you get confidence, and you don’t have to be timid, so yeah, it’s definitely disappointing.”

“I think stuff like that definitely is probably one of the issues guys are really having. Obviously, we do have a really talented team, but again, I think kind of the accumulation of stuff like that was our end result.” 

It’s a cold reality for the Clemson football team. For Clemson’s offense to be successful, they need this offensive line to figure it out and perform at a higher level. If they don’t, a long season for the Tigers will feel even longer.

Swinney on Clemson’s final play against Miami: ‘No, it was a handoff. 100 percent, and we didn’t hand it off’

According to Dabo Swinney, Clemson’s final play was not an RPO.

Dabo Swinny and the Tigers fell in double overtime on the road to Miami, with a seemingly questionable final play call on 4th and 1 that saw starting quarterback Cade Klubnik tackled well behind the line of scrimmage. 

I say, seemingly because it turns out the call was straightforward. According to Swinney, the final play call was not an RPO but a run play. Swinney had this to say when asked about the final play following the game.

“No, it was a handoff. 100 percent. And we didn’t hand it off,” Swinney said. “(He) just pulled it. I got no answer. Just trying to do too much. No RPO. It’s a give. He just didn’t do it. He made a lot of plays, but again, you gotta play within the system.”

“We liked the play that we had,” Swinney said. “We were trying to protect the edges. It’s a give-all the way. We just got about a yard and a half on the previous play. We felt good about whatever it was. 5 inches, maybe. I don’t have an answer.”

Not great for the Tigers.

Social media reacts: Clemson falls apart against Miami in double-overtime

A look at how social media reacted to Clemson’s double-overtime loss to Miami.

Dabo Swinney and the Tigers experienced a tough 28-20 road loss to Miami in a double-overtime battle, marking another stumble for Clemson this season as they continue their poor run of form.

Clemson had every opportunity to win this game, but bad turnovers and sloppy, inconsistent football remain a significant piece of this football team’s identity. Getting outscored 21-3 in the fourth quarter, this loss felt like another low point for a Clemson football program that has been trending in the wrong direction.

With losses like this, reactions will come. Here is a look at how social media reacted to Clemson’s meltdown loss against Miami.