Golden State standout DB likes the ‘vibe’ at Clemson

Clemson has become connected to a California high school powerhouse because of its starting quarterback. That’s allowed for others from St. John Bosco (Bellflower, CA.) to make that cross-country trip to The Valley. Prospects like 2024 DB Peyton …

Clemson has become connected to a California high school powerhouse because of its starting quarterback.

That’s allowed for others from St. John Bosco (Bellflower, CA.) to make that cross-country trip to The Valley. Prospects like 2024 DB Peyton Woodyard, who camped and had the opportunity to visit Clemson earlier this summer.

Woodyard recently caught up with The Clemson Insider regarding his time at Clemson and just what he’s been hearing as far as his recruitment is concerned.

Woodyard hasn’t been in contact with Clemson since his visit, but when he was on campus, he spoke at length with three members of the Tigers’ defensive coaching staff — defensive coordinator Brent Venables, cornerbacks coach Mike Reed and safeties coach Mickey Conn.

“They really like me,” Woodyard told TCI. “Coach Conn said they would have offered me if I wasn’t a ’24, but I definitely want to get back up there after this season.”

Hailing from California, distance isn’t going to play a factor in Woodyard’s eventual decision. He’s just looking for the best fit, whether that be Clemson or somewhere closer to home.

“I had a great time at Clemson, the whole vibe there was awesome,” he said. “They’re a real faith-based program. I got to meet Coach Reed, Coach Conn, Coach Venables and also got to meet the head coach, Coach Swinney. It was just a really awesome experience, there’s just a great vibe that you get from being at Clemson.”

‘They’re definitely a school that I would like to keep up there in my recruiting in the future,” Woodyard added. 

Obviously, playing at St. John Bosco, Woodyard is connected to the Uiagalelei family. He hangs out with Matayo on the weekends and has had some opportunities to speak with D.J. Woodyard conversed with them when he visited Clemson last month.

“They have nothing but good things to say about the program,” Woodyard said of the Uiagalelei family. 

For Woodyard, that gives him great confidence in continuing to build a relationship with the coaching staff at Clemson.

During his time at Swinney Camp, Woodyard spent his time working in a group with defensive backs. He got to work out with both Reed and Conn, where he participated in 1-on-1s, pressing at corner and playing off and inside.

What type of feedback did Woodyard get from Clemson’s coaches?

“Definitely just my readiness and being able to go out there and compete with all the upperclassmen, being an incoming sophomore,” he said.

Woodyard takes great pride in being able to play beyond his age group, which is something he’s done for all of his football career.

Woodyard certainly views himself as more of a defensive back. At Bosco, he’s labeled as a safety, but his school really has him play all over the defensive backfield. Woodyard considers himself a fast and physical ballhawk, who’s a complete defensive back that can more than hold his own at cornerback, nickel and safety.

That level of versatility should give him an upper edge at the next level.

Speaking of the next level, in addition to Clemson, Woodyard took visits to Alabama, Georgia, Notre Dame and Southern Cal. He’s planning on making his way to UCLA later this month.

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

ACC Announces Football Kickoff Attendees

GREENSBORO, N.C. – The Atlantic Coast Conference announced Monday the 42 football student-athletes selected by its 14 league schools to attend the 2021 ACC Football Kickoff, July 21-22, at The Westin Charlotte in Charlotte, North Carolina. For the …

GREENSBORO, N.C. – The Atlantic Coast Conference announced Monday the 42 football student-athletes selected by its 14 league schools to attend the 2021 ACC Football Kickoff, July 21-22, at The Westin Charlotte in Charlotte, North Carolina. For the first time, each team will bring three players to the annual media event.

ACC Network will be live from the ACC Football Kickoff in Charlotte for the first time on July 21-22, for two days of expansive coverage. The 24/7 national network dedicated to ACC sports will provide the event’s most robust television coverage to date.

The attendees to the 2021 ACC Football Kickoff are:

Boston College

Head Coach Jeff Hafley

Zion Johnson, OL, Bowie, Maryland

Phil Jurkovec, QB, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Marcus Valdez, DE, Perth Amboy, New Jersey

Clemson

Head Coach Dabo Swinney

Matt Bockhorst, OG, Cincinnati, Ohio

James Skalski, LB, Sharpsburg, Georgia

D.J. Uiagalelei, QB, Inland Empire, California

Duke

Head Coach David Cutcliffe

DeWayne Carter, DT, Pickerington, Ohio

Mataeo Durant, RB, McCormick, South Carolina

Gunnar Holmberg, QB, Wake Forest, North Carolina

Florida State

Head Coach Mike Norvell

Jermaine Johnson II, DE, Eden Prairie, Minnesota

McKenzie Milton, QB, Kapolei, Hawaii

Jordan Travis, QB, West Palm Beach, Florida

Georgia Tech

Head Coach Geoff Collins

Ayinde Eley, LB, Olney, Maryland

Jeff Sims, QB, Jacksonville, Florida

Juanyeh Thomas, DB, Niceville, Florida

Louisville

Head Coach Scott Satterfield

C.J. Avery, LB, Grenada, Mississippi

Malik Cunningham, QB, Montgomery, Alabama

Marshon Ford, TE, Louisville, Kentucky

Miami

Head Coach Manny Diaz

Bubba Bolden, S, Las Vegas, Nevada

Michael Harley Jr., WR, Fort Lauderdale, Florida

D’Eriq King, QB, Manvel, Texas

North Carolina

Head Coach Mack Brown

Tomon Fox, LB, Lawrenceville, Georgia

Jeremiah Gemmel, LB, Newnan, Georgia

Sam Howell, QB, Indian Trail, North Carolina

NC State

Head Coach Dave Doeren

Grant Gibson, C, Charlotte, North Carolina

Devin Leary, QB, Sicklerville, New Jersey

Payton Wilson, LB, Hillsborough, North Carolina

Pitt

Head Coach Pat Narduzzi

Jordan Addison, WR, Frederick, Maryland

Deslin Alexandre, DL, Pompano Beach, Florida

Kenny Pickett, QB, Oakhurst, New Jersey

Syracuse

Head Coach Dino Babers

Josh Black, DL, Loves Park, Illinois

Taj Harris, WR, Beverly, New Jersey

Airon Servais, OL, Green Bay, Wisconsin

Virginia

Head Coach Bronco Mendenhall

Brennan Armstrong, QB, Shelby, Ohio

Joey Blount, S, Atlanta, Georgia

Keytaon Thompson, WR/QB, New Orleans, Louisiana

Virginia Tech

Head Coach Justin Fuente

Braxton Burmeister, QB, La Jolla, California

Chamarri Conner, DB, Jacksonville, Florida

James Mitchell, TE, Big Stone Gap, Virginia

Wake Forest

Head Coach Dave Clawson

Sam Hartman, QB, Charlotte, North Carolina

Luke Masterson, LB, Naples, Florida

Jaquarii Roberson, WR, Murfreesboro, North Carolina

Among the offensive players in attendance at ACC Kickoff will be 15 quarterbacks, five wide receivers, four offensive linemen, two tight ends and one running back. Defensively, seven linebackers, five defensive linemen and four defensive backs will attend. Virginia’s Keytaon Thompson is listed as a QB/WR.

Thirteen teams will bring at least one quarterback with Florida State (McKenzie Milton and Jordan Travis) and Virginia (Brennan Armstrong and Keytaon Thompson) bringing two.

The ACC Kickoff student-athletes hail from 20 states with seven from Florida, six from North Carolina, four each from Georgia and New Jersey and three from Maryland and Ohio. There are two players from California, and one apiece from Alabama, Hawaii, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, Nevada, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Texas, Virginia and Wisconsin.

Thirteen of 14 ACC teams will return a quarterback this season with starting experience led by Pitt’s Kenny Pickett with 36 career starts and Miami’s King with 33. FSU’s McKenzie Milton started 33 games at UCF before transferring to the Seminoles for the 2021 season.

–courtesy of ACC Communications

Notre Dame gives offer to safety recruit Peyton Woodyard

How would you like to see this guy patrolling the Irish’s secondary?

When Kyle Hamilton leaves Notre Dame, he will leave a big gap to fill in the Irish’s secondary. Even if he isn’t around for the distant future, his legacy will be felt, at least in the short term. That’s why new defensive coordinator Marcus Freeman must prepare for that inevitability. To that end, he has presented an offer to Peyton Woodyard, a safety recruit out of St. John Bosco in Bellflower, California:

Woodyard only has completed his freshman season, so his potential time in South Bend wouldn’t overlap with that of Hamilton, who’s about to begin his junior year. Still, he’s getting a taste of what it’s like to play for a school with a rich athletic history, which he is at St. John Bosco with alumni like D.J. Uiagalelei and Josh Rosen. With his school’s reputation and his talent, he’s already gotten offers from programs like Florida State, Alabama, Georgia, USC, Michigan, Arizona State and Penn State. This undoubtedly is an exciting time for him.

Notre Dame vs. Clemson: Overtime Analysis

When you root for a team, there are moments when it does the unthinkable, and you have no choice but to participate in the exhilaration.

When you root for a team, there are moments when it does the unthinkable, and you have no choice but to participate in the exhilaration. Saturday was one of those moments as Notre Dame upset top-ranked Clemson, 47-40, in double overtime. It’s possible the Irish (7-0, 6-0) will face the Tigers (7-1, 6-1) again in the ACC title game next month, and Trevor Lawrence surely will be suiting up this time. But this time of celebration is not the time to think about that.

At the start of the first overtime, the Tigers decided giving the Irish any breathing room was a chance they couldn’t take. On the very first play, D.J. Uiagalelei successfully executed a play-action pass and found Cornell Powell for what appeared to be a 25-yard touchdown. A lengthy replay review (and there were a lot of them in this game) ruled Powell down at the half-yard line, but it didn’t matter because Uiagalelei promptly took the ball into the end zone himself.

When the Irish got their turn with the ball, Ian Book found Michael Mayer for a 15-yard completion, putting them in good position. Two plays later, Kyren Williams ran 3 yards for the game-tying touchdown. To a second overtime we went.

The Irish got the ball first this time and had a little bit of difficulty at first. But Book’s 10-yard completion to Ben Skowronek set the Irish up at the Tigers’ 3-yard line. Williams was in the end zone two plays later, so the defense needed to do its part.

What followed ensured that Adetokunbo Ogundeji will be a legend in South Bend forevermore. He sacked Uiagalelei on back-to-back plays, getting help from Jeremiah Owusu-Koramoah the first time around. The moment Nick McCloud recovered a fumble when the Tigers absolutely needed a first down to stay alive, bedlam erupted at Notre Dame Stadium. There’s no reason it shouldn’t have either.

This is a moment to celebrate. The criticism that Notre Dame can’t show up when the stakes are raised has been vanquished. It took long enough, but we’ve finally arrived. The future has arrived, and it’s a bright one.

Notre Dame vs. Clemson: Fourth-Quarter Analysis

It’s a game that has lived up to its billing. Notre Dame and Clemson have been competitive the entire way.

It’s a game that has lived up to its billing. Notre Dame and Clemson have been competitive the entire way. As a generation of Irish fans has come to expect, there’s no room for their team when it comes to beating the best of the best. But that might not be the case for long. We’re headed to overtime with these teams tied at 33.

After Jonathan Doerer and B.T. Potter traded field goals to begin the fourth quarter, the Tigers began a key drive at their own 26-yard line. Thanks to D.J. Uiagalelei’s play and leadership, Travis Etienne living up to his reputation as the ACC’s all-time leading rusher, and the Irish taking an uncharacteristic amount of penalties, it was inevitable that the nation’s top-ranked team would reach the end zone. That’s exactly what happened on a 3-yard run from Etienne.

The Irish then had a chance to march down the field and tie the game or even retake the lead. They picked up a couple of first downs but never got past the Clemson 47. It didn’t help that the final series included a questionable decision to pick up a pass interference flag against the Tigers. But the Notre Dame offense had been shaky the entire game, so it’s not like it deserved breaks at that point in the game anyway.

The Tigers went three and out on their next possession, giving the Irish one final opportunity. Looking to make the play that would put his team in position to do it, Ian Book found Avery Davis for a 53-yard completion to the Tigers’ 4. Three plays later, Book connected with Davis again, this time in the end zone to tie the score.

Notre Dame vs. Clemson: Third-Quarter Analysis

Well, we finally have the barn burner we were expecting in South Bend. Is it because Clemson is figuring out Notre Dame’s defense?

Well, we finally have the barn burner we were expecting in South Bend. Is it because Clemson is figuring out Notre Dame’s defense? Perhaps it’s the long time of possession the Tigers had in the third quarter. Whatever the reason, the final 15 minutes of regulation will begin with a 23-all game.

The Tigers took the ball to begin the second half and got far enough down field for B.T. Potter to kick a 46-yard field goal. The Irish promptly went three and out, Jay Bramblett had a short punt, and that began a Clemson possession that lasted nearly six-and-a-half minutes longer than anyone in gold and blue would have liked. Led by D.J. Uiagalelei, the Tigers used every offensive weapon in their arsenal to pick up a third down, a fourth down and finally, a 10-yard touchdown caught by Davis Allen. The Tigers had scored 13 unanswered to knot it up.

The Irish appeared poised to take the lead right back. Ian Book opened the next drive with a 45-yard pass to Javon McKinley that required a replay review to confirm. Another review had to confirm a much shorter catch by Michael Mayer. Finally, Book was about to run for the touchdown from 7 yards out, only to lose the ball and have Baylon Spector recover it in the end zone for a touchback.

Notre Dame vs. Clemson: First-Quarter Analysis

If Notre Dame wanted to get off to a fast start against Clemson, mission accomplished.

If Notre Dame wanted to get off to a fast start against Clemson, mission accomplished. Almost before the crowd at Notre Dame Stadium had settled in, the Irish already had the lead. Then, they were up by more than one score. We don’t know if they’ll win this game, but at least we can say they had a 10-7 lead after the first quarter.

The Irish took the ball first and immediately benefited from a Tigers holding penalty. Just as quickly, Kyren Williams found an opening and was off to the end zone from 65 yards out. The defense then came out for its first series and forced a three-and-out. The offense started its next possession on the 44-yard line and, on a drive highlighted by a 28-yard pass from Ian Book to Javon McKinley, got agonizingly close to another touchdown before settling for a 24-yard field goal from Jonathan Doerer.

Scoring on its first two possessions turned out to be necessary for Notre Dame. Clemson wasted no time march downfield when it got the ball next, needing only four plays to score its first touchdown of the contest. That came on a 53-yard pass from D.J. Uiagalelei to Cornell Powell. With all of the weapons they have, look for the Tigers’ offense to do that a lot throughout.

Which Clemson Tigers could give Notre Dame problems today?

Clemson Tigers including D.J. Uiagalelei, Baylon Spector, Jackson Carman, Bryan Bresee, Myles Murphy and Amari Rodgers could give Notre Dame problems.

We all know Trevor Lawrence would normally be at the top of this list, but due to ACC protocols after a positive COVID-19 test, the Clemson star quarterback will watch from the sidelines. Dabo Swinney has finally gotten his recruiting to acumen to match his on-field status, since ’17 each of his classes have been ranked inside the top 10 according to the 247Sports composite team rankings. The Tigers have plenty of talent on both sides of the ball. Here are a few of them that you should be hearing their names called early and often.

Tale of the Tape: Team Stats – Notre Dame vs. Clemson

When Notre Dame and Clemson square off, it will come down to which elite unit blinks first.

When Notre Dame and Clemson square off, it will come down to which elite unit blinks first. For the Irish, you have a defense that can do everything very well. Whether it’s preventing points, yards or third-down conversions, Clark Lea has coached his unit incredibly well. If there’s anything the offense can do to support it, it’s keep the ball for extended periods of time and advance it on the ground, both of which are the clear strengths for Tommy Rees’ crew.

The Tigers easily can combat all of that with its impressive offense, which will be led this week by former five-star recruit D.J. Uiagalelei. Trevor Lawrence won’t be far away from him as he’ll be guiding the freshman from the sideline. The points and first downs will be plentiful, and a defense on par with the Irish’s will complement that offense just fine. To say the least, this is a complete team heading into Notre Dame Stadium.

Notre Dame vs. Clemson: Positional breakdown advantages

A breakdown of each position for Notre Dame and Clemson and who has the advantage.

This is the game of the year in the ACC, if not all college football, at least in the regular season. No. 1 Clemson travels to South Bend to take on No. 4 Notre Dame. This highly anticipated game will feature a number of future NFL stars.

A look at each position and which team has the advantage in Saturday’s huge contest.

Don’t forget to take a look at each of our tales of the tape as well (wide receivers, running backs, and quarterbacks)

(Some photo’s courtesy of Notre Dame Athletics)