ACC analyst EJ Manuel on Clemson having the most difficult schedule in the conference

ACC analyst EJ Manuel believes Clemson has the toughest schedule in the ACC this season.

The ACC recently released the complete schedule for the 2024 football season, with the Tigers having one of the most difficult schedules in the conference. 

ACC analyst EJ Manuel recently discussed the Tigers’ schedule on the ACC Huddle: 2024 Football Schedule Release show on Wednesday. Manuel shared the reasons why he thought this, and it all started with Georgia at Mercedes-Benz Stadium on Aug. 31.

“Like, you start the season off with Georgia,” Manuel said. “And the only reason I say this is one of the tougher schedules is because that game, if they don’t win it, then the narrative again nationally at times can then be the negative, right – people start chirping and all that kind of stuff. But if they do win it, ‘Clemson’s back,’ all those kind of things, which then adds a lot of pressure.”

In-conference, the Tigers have some battles. One of the biggest ones will be against rivals NC State, who took down the Tigers in 2023. Manuel expects this Wolfpack team to be even more improved next season and highlights how big of a matchup it is. 

“NC State’s going to be much improved this year – a quarterback that can certainly run that offense led by (offensive coordinator) Robert Anae, a bunch of other pieces, (wide receiver) KC Concepcion, and a returning defense. Move down to Florida State on the road, then you’ve got Louisville at home,” Manuel said.

“So you’ve got really good teams at different pockets of the season. So I think when you have injuries where you don’t show up in certain games – let’s say you play great the seventh game, the eighth game, you come out a little bit flat. I think it’s going to be really key for this Clemson team to try and sustain this throughout the entire year, and that’s always hard to do for anybody.”

Overall, the Tigers will face some of the best competition in the country in 2024 and will need to prepare appropriately. With competition comes opportunity. If Clemson proves they can finish games and compete at the highest level, they will be in the College Football Playoff hunt.

EJ Manuel on Cade Klubnik’s Gator Bowl: ‘He grew up’

EJ Manuel on Cade Klubnik growing up during the Tigers Gator Bowl win.

Clemson starting quarterback Cade Klubnik had a solid Gator Bowl performance as he helped lead the Tigers to a wild 38-35 win over Kentucky. 

In the game, Klubnik completed 30-of-41 passes for 264 yards, saving the best for last with his final offensive drive. On their final drive, Klubnik completed 8 of 8 pass attempts, setting up a Phil Mafah game-winning 3-yard touchdown run. 

During the ACC Network’s ACC PM show, former Florida State quarterback EJ Manuel discussed the Gator Bowl and Klubnik’s performance, saying how he grew up in the win. 

“He grew up,” Manuel said. “And we’ve talked about it, we watched the game, we watched the last quarter of this game, and the part where I would say I was most proud for him is just that he was poised. He didn’t put the ball in harm’s way. At times earlier in the season, he might’ve felt like, I needed to make the big play right now. But he was calm the entire time. He allowed (offensive coordinator) Garrett Riley to give him more opportunities with the football… So, that was a big moment for him.”

It wasn’t a perfect performance from Klubnik, but he showed up when the team needed him most. He ended the season completing 63.9 percent of his passes for 2,844 yards and 19 touchdowns with nine interceptions, adding 182 yards and four touchdowns rushing.

He has a huge offseason coming up, and he needs to take the next step.

Analysts give their takeaways from Tigers’ win over Louisville

Clemson got back in the win column on Saturday, bouncing back from an upset loss at Notre Dame a week earlier. On ACC Network’s ACC Huddle show, analysts Eric Mac Lain, EJ Manuel, Mark Richt and Eddie Royal gave their takeaways from the 10th-ranked …

Clemson got back in the win column on Saturday, bouncing back from an upset loss at Notre Dame a week earlier.

On ACC Network’s ACC Huddle show, analysts Eric Mac Lain, EJ Manuel, Mark Richt and Eddie Royal gave their takeaways from the 10th-ranked Tigers’ 31-16 victory over Louisville at Death Valley, where Will Shipley highlighted the win with a 25-yard touchdown run in the third quarter that saw him hurdle a defender at the 10-yard line and then split two other defenders en route to the end zone.

The epic play put Clemson up 24-7 less than five minutes into the second half and sent the Tigers on the way to their 39th consecutive home win, tying the 2005-11 Oklahoma Sooners for the ninth-longest home winning streak in FBS history.

“Man, he’s just a special talent,” Mac Lain, the former Clemson All-ACC offensive lineman, said of Shipley. “Bursting through the hole and jumping over a guy, and then showing some power, staying in the end zone. That’s a bad dude right there.”

Shipley finished with 97 yards and the touchdown on 19 carries, fellow sophomore running back Phil Mafah picked up 106 yards and a touchdown on 10 totes and quarterback DJ Uiagalelei ran for 32 yards and another score as the Tigers racked up 248 rushing yards on the day.

Meanwhile, Antonio Williams recorded 83 yards on a Clemson-freshman-record-tying 10 receptions and caught his third touchdown of the season on a 4-yard slant from Uiagalelei in the second quarter.

“I loved what I saw from the running game … which was huge for DJ,” said Royal, the former Virginia Tech standout and longtime NFL wide receiver. “Take a little bit of pressure off of him, and then Antonio Williams stepping up and really becoming that number one receiver that they need today.”

Uiagalelei completed 19 of his 27 passes against the Cardinals for 185 yards, accounted for two touchdowns and totaled 223 yards overall including a 6-yard catch from Williams in the third quarter.

Clemson (9-1, 7-0 ACC) opened the game with a 12-play, 75-yard scoring drive, which Uiagalelei started with two runs for 11 yards. The junior signal-caller later finished the drive with an 11-yard rushing touchdown, his career-high fifth of the season.

“DJ for whatever reason – I think it’s probably true with a lot of quarterbacks – everybody has a little bit of butterflies,” said Richt, the former Miami and Georgia head coach. “Sometimes you got a lot of butterflies, and just to take a shot or deliver a blow as a runner, sometimes it relieves that pressure and all the sudden, things start going well for you.

“But he made a lot of great throws today, a lot of great decisions, and he had a good bit of time in the pocket. But I think he played one of his cleanest games of the year.”

Meanwhile, Clemson’s defense registered two takeaways, four sacks and nine tackles for a loss against Louisville (6-4, 3-4), in addition to forcing five three-and-outs.

Linebacker Jeremiah Trotter Jr. led Clemson in total tackles with 12, while linebacker Barrett Carter posted eight tackles, 3.5 tackles for loss, two sacks and an interception. Defensive end KJ Henry chipped in six tackles, 0.5 tackles for loss, a pass breakup and two quarterback hurries, and defensive tackle Bryan Bresee notched a sack, 1.5 tackles for loss and a pass breakup.

“I felt like the Clemson defense really stepped up in this game because everybody watching the Notre Dame game, giving up over 200 yards rushing – extremely uncharacteristic for this Tiger defense,” said Manuel, the former Florida State and NFL quarterback. “But really just seeing KJ Henry get active, Bryan Bresee get active, and if they weren’t able to get home for sacks, knocking the ball down was huge, especially against (Louisville quarterback) Malik Cunningham.”

“Going back to the defense just for a moment, the good news was when they did get hit in the mouth, when they did get embarrassed, they turned it on and kicked some tail today, which was great to see,” Richt added.

Mac Lain added that Clemson’s defensive showing was the most important piece of Saturday’s game in his eyes.

“That was the aspect that we thought was going to be very dominant, elite, one-of-a-kind type stuff that quite frankly we have not seen this year yet,” he said. “They’re getting better, they’re figuring out, they’re putting stuff together. But why does it take a loss, why does it take an embarrassing loss to step up and show great effort and to show that you want to be there and dominate, but that’s what they did.”

Clemson clinched the ACC Atlantic Division outright with the victory, and while the Tigers are currently on the outside looking in at the College Football Playoff, another playoff appearance this season isn’t out of the question for Dabo Swinney’s team just yet.

After concluding the regular season with back-to-back home games against Miami and South Carolina over the next two weekends – beginning with Saturday’s 3:30 p.m. contest against the Hurricanes on ESPN – the Tigers will take on North Carolina in the ACC Championship Game in Charlotte on Dec. 3 (8 p.m., ABC).

“At the end of the day, a lot of goals still out there for Clemson,” Mac Lain said. “Chaos can happen, and who knows what you get. But I thought it was also great to see the confidence from DJ, to run him early, which really affected him in a positive way.”

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Analysts react to Clemson’s upset loss at Notre Dame

These analysts had plenty to say after fourth-ranked Clemson was blown away at Notre Dame on Saturday night. On ACC Network’s ACC Huddle show, Eric Mac Lain, EJ Manuel, Mark Richt and Eddie Royal offered a lot of thoughts on the Tigers’ upset 35-14 …

These analysts had plenty to say after fourth-ranked Clemson was blown away at Notre Dame on Saturday night.

On ACC Network’s ACC Huddle show, Eric Mac Lain, EJ Manuel, Mark Richt and Eddie Royal offered a lot of thoughts on the Tigers’ upset 35-14 loss to the Fighting Irish at Notre Dame Stadium in South Bend.

“The lack of juice from the offense – offense and defense, Clemson in general,” said Royal, the former Virginia Tech standout and longtime NFL wide receiver. “It was a statement game for them. Everybody’s watching this game, you’ve got a chance to represent the ACC, represent Clemson the right way, and they just came out flat.”

Notre Dame (6-3) set the tone early on Clemson’s first possession, forcing the Tigers to punt and then blocking that punt, which Prince Kollie returned 17 yards for a touchdown to give the Irish a 7-0 lead less than six minutes into the game.

Clemson (8-1), which saw its nation-leading 14-game winning streak get snapped, could never recover after that. The Tigers trailed 14-0 at halftime before eventually falling behind 28-0 in the fourth quarter and ultimately losing by 21 points.

Manuel, the former Florida State and NFL quarterback, wonders if the Tigers showed immaturity in their lack of response after the early special teams punch from Notre Dame.

“When you hear Coach Swinney talk about this team, he brings up immaturity a lot, and I’m curious if that’s something that had to do with their performance today,” he said. “Not to say they’re immature in the sense of they’re not grown men and all that kind of stuff, but just in the sense of when you have that punt get blocked early in the game and they score a touchdown, they weren’t able to come back from that. Like you said, Eddie, they lost their juice. They were almost stunned like wait, this team is actually jumping out on us, how do we react.”

Offensively, Clemson was only able to muster a season-low 281 yards of offense and had just 71 at halftime. Notre Dame scored 14 points off two turnovers – one interception apiece thrown by Cade Klubnik and DJ Uiagalelei, including Uiagalelei’s 96-yard pick-six in the fourth quarter.

Defensively, the Tigers allowed a season-high 263 rushing yards, while Clemson rushed for just 90 itself.

“Total domination on both sides – offensive line, defensive line, dominated,” said Richt, the former Miami and Georgia head coach. “And the thing about Clemson, they had two explosive plays – they had one 22-yard pass and one 21-yard run, and that was DJ running it. They got no shot.”

Both Audric Estime (18 carries, 104 yards, one touchdown) and Logan Diggs (17 carries, 114 yards) surpassed the century mark in rushing for the Irish as they averaged 5.6 yards per tote as a team.

“It was (dominant),” Manuel said. “We talked about it coming into the game, can Clemson stop the run? We thought they could personnel-wise, and they couldn’t. You have two rushers going over a hundred yards. I’m sure the home-field advantage for Notre Dame helped them in that benefit. But look, this was a Notre Dame team that was still ranked top five at the beginning of the season, and people can say, ‘Oh, they’re not a good team.’ Sometimes you have to find your ebb and you have to find your flow, and they’ve certainly found that now with their new coach, Marcus Freeman. So, they’re off to a great start.”

Clemson came into the game ranked seventh nationally in run defense, allowing less than 90 yards per game on the ground. But Saturday marked the second time this season that the Tigers have given up more than 200 yards on the ground in a game, with the other occasion being at Florida State back on Oct. 15 when the Seminoles ran for 206 yards and averaged 6.1 yards per carry.

“That big offensive line from Notre Dame said, ‘You see all those press clippings? Light them on fire. This is what we do at Notre Dame.’ They blew those guys over,” said Mac Lain, the former Clemson and All-ACC offensive lineman. “And I think it’s a little bit of the case of you think you’re a little better than you are, you’re not working your tail off like you’re supposed to be. This is supposed to be one of the best defensive lines ever in college football – not just Clemson. They’ve been embarrassed now by Florida State running for over 200 yards and by these guys running for 260.”

Mac Lain added that “this has not been the Clemson defense we’ve seen of years past” and mentioned the Tigers’ lackluster defensive showing against Furman in September when the FCS opponent outgained Dabo Swinney’s team in total yards (384 to 376).

“There’s like these little crumbs along the way if you’re really paying attention,” he said. “The Furman game, Coach Swinney lit into his defense, saying that it was an embarrassing effort, that defensive line, calling some guys out. And I think that’s just the deal, man. Where you’ve been told you’re so good, you’re so good, you’re so good, and then results like this start happening.”

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Analysts weigh in on Clemson’s QB situation after Syracuse game

Following fifth-ranked Clemson’s 27-21 win over then-No. 14 Syracuse on Saturday at Death Valley, several ACC analysts weighed in on the Tigers’ quarterback situation during The ACC Huddle on ACC Network. Eric Mac Lain, EJ Manuel, Mark Richt and …

Following fifth-ranked Clemson’s 27-21 win over then-No. 14 Syracuse on Saturday at Death Valley, several ACC analysts weighed in on the Tigers’ quarterback situation during The ACC Huddle on ACC Network.

Eric Mac Lain, EJ Manuel, Mark Richt and Eddie Royal all gave their thoughts on Clemson’s quarterback switch in the second half.

Dabo Swinney, of course, made the decision to remove struggling starter DJ Uiagalelei late in the third quarter and replace him with true freshman Cade Klubnik, who provided a spark for the Tigers’ offense in their comeback victory over the Orange.

Despite benching Uiagalelei, Swinney backed him following the game, saying he remains the Tigers’ starter and the team’s leader.

“The biggest and the toughest football decision that a head coach has to make is do you change your quarterback or not?” said Richt, the former Miami and Georgia head coach. “Now, he’s in the middle of the game saying, who’s going to give me my best shot at winning at this moment? … So, he did it. Now after the game and he’s looking down the future of the season, who gives us the best shot at continuing to win? DJ, and he made that decision. So, I don’t disagree with what he did.”

Prior to being replaced by Klubnik on Clemson’s fourth drive of the third quarter, Uiagalelei had just thrown his second interception of the game on the Tigers’ previous possession. He also turned the ball over on a fumble that was returned 90 yards for a touchdown in the second quarter.

Klubnik, the former five-star prospect from Austin, Texas, went just 2-of-4 passing for 19 yards in relief of Uiagalelei but helped ignite Clemson’s offense while doing his part to rally the team from an 11-point deficit in the come-from-behind win.

Mac Lain, the former Clemson and All-ACC offensive lineman, was asked if he was surprised the Tigers opted to sit Uiagalelei down in favor of Klubnik.

“I wasn’t just because of the situation, because there were five turnovers where half of them were his fault, where he just wasn’t controlling the game,” Mac Lain said. “You’ve got to do something. That’s for your season. You have to make a decision, what’s the best thing that we can do to win this, and they felt like that was a quarterback change. I think at the end of the day when you win the game, it’s a great decision. If Cade would’ve came in and turned the ball over or would’ve done something to put that in jeopardy, then you’re like man, why’d you do that. Or on the reverse side, if he comes in and lights it up for 200 and a couple of touchdowns, you’re like OK, maybe that’s the guy.

“But I think he managed the game enough. There was enough spark, there was enough energy and excitement to where everybody else rallied around him to where that decision was made. I love that Coach Swinney brought it up and he said, ‘DJ’s our guy.’ He just had to take a seat and take a breather, and that’s why the change was made.”

Contrary to Mac Lain, Royal — the former Virginia Tech standout and longtime NFL wide receiver — was “shocked” by Uiagalelei getting pulled from the game.

“I was shocked because we all talked about why DJ was playing well was his confidence, and when you get sat down, you get benched essentially and then you see the next guy come in and have success and win the game, that’s going to hurt your confidence,” Royal said. “So going into next week or whenever it is, after the bye week, it’s like we talked about – you’ve got to almost be perfect because you’re looking over your shoulder. So, confidence is everything for DJ, and that’s going to take a hit.”

“If I’m DJ, I’m boiling inside because I want to be out there helping my team win instead of sitting on the sideline,” Royal added. “Like, you’ve got to understand what he’s feeling as well. So, Dabo’s going to have to have some talks with DJ, a little sit-down and talk about what happened.”

Manuel, the former Florida State and NFL quarterback, was surprised that Uiagalelei got taken out as well and said he would have left the junior signal-caller in.

“If I’m Coach Swinney in that situation, that’s my starting quarterback, so I probably would’ve kept trying to make some plays, maybe make some adjustments offensively with plays that we’re calling, try to audible a little bit, run the ball more with Will Shipley,” he said. “Because again, Cade Klubnik didn’t do anything different that DJ wouldn’t have done. So to me, I would’ve still kept DJ in the game, but that’s just me.”

Manuel wonders how what went down on Saturday with Uiagalelei and Klubnik will impact the dynamic in the locker room moving forward.

“The locker room – my other thing is what are the teammates now saying as well?” he said. “Again, I’m not saying the decision was wrong. He (Swinney) can make whatever decision he wants. He’s a champion. But at the end of the day now, the thought process in there as a teammate, well who’s our guy?”

Uiagalelei came into Saturday’s game having thrown just two interceptions over the first seven games this season. Overall, after eight games, the former five-star prospect has completed 64.1 percent of his passes for 1,803 yards and 17 touchdowns with four interceptions, to go with 350 rushing yards and four more scores on the ground.

Klubnik has played in five games this season, completing 9 of 19 passes for 85 yards and a touchdown.

Clemson will have an open date next weekend before returning to action on Saturday, Nov. 5 at Notre Dame – where Uiagalelei started as a true freshman in 2020 and threw for a career-high 439 yards with two passing touchdowns while also adding a rushing touchdown.

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Analysts weigh in on Uiagalelei, Tigers’ win over Wake Forest

Following Clemson’s double-overtime win over Wake Forest in Saturday’s top-25 matchup in Winston-Salem, a few ACC analysts weighed in on DJ Uiagalelei’s stellar performance and gave their takeaways from the Tigers’ thrilling 51-45 victory. On “The …

Following Clemson’s double-overtime win over Wake Forest in Saturday’s top-25 matchup in Winston-Salem, a few ACC analysts weighed in on DJ Uiagalelei’s stellar performance and gave their takeaways from the Tigers’ thrilling 51-45 victory.

On “The ACC Huddle” on ACC Network, former Miami and Georgia head coach and current ACCN analyst Mark Richt was asked what he learned about Uiagalelei during his incredible afternoon against the Demon Deacons.

Clemson’s junior quarterback completed 26-of-41 passes for a season-high 371 passing yards and a career-high five touchdown passes while racking up 423 yards of total offense (371 passing, 52 rushing) to lead the Tigers to their 14th victory in a row over Wake Forest.

“He looked like the DJ U everybody got excited about when he lit up Notre Dame a couple years ago,” Richt said, referring to Uiagalelei’s epic game against the Irish as a true freshman in 2020, when he went 29-of-44 passing for 439 yards and threw two touchdown passes to go with a rushing score.

“That’s what he looked like, and it’s just so awesome to see him play the way he played. … It’s just great that Dabo and the rest of the staff stuck with him, and now it’s paying off.”

Against Wake Forest, Uiagalelei became the first Clemson player to throw for 300 or more yards, rush for 50 or more yards and throw at least three touchdowns in a game since Deshaun Watson accomplished the feat against Louisville on Oct. 1, 2016.

ACCN analyst EJ Manuel was impressed by the way Uiagalelei went toe-to-toe with Wake Forest quarterback Sam Hartman and helped the Tigers’ offense repeatedly punch back in response to the points put up by the Demon Deacons’ high-powered attack.

Clemson quarterback DJ Uiagalelei (5) and running back Will Shipley (1) during the third quarter at Truist Field in Winston-Salem Saturday, September 24, 2022. Bart Boatwright/The Clemson Insider

“DJ played like ‘Big Cinco’ (Saturday). No ‘Little Cinco’,” said Manuel, the former Florida State and NFL quarterback. “He’s playing like a big dog, man. But you’ve got to do it when you play against a Sam Hartman at quarterback. You know Sam can light up the scoreboard, whether he’s throwing the ball, running the ball, making plays. But DJ was answering every single time, and there were moments when they could’ve packed up and said hey, Wake got us – you know, we’re on the road, it’s a hostile environment. But he kept delivering.”

ACCN analyst Eddie Royal, the former Virginia Tech standout and longtime NFL wide receiver, pointed out that Uiagalelei got more help Saturday from his receivers.

Four different players (Joseph Ngata, 84; Jake Briningstool, 72; Beaux Collins, 60; Antonio Williams, 51) gained 50-plus receiving yards against Wake Forest, marking Clemson’s first game with four different 50-yard receivers since 2018 against South Carolina (Tee Higgins, 142; Hunter Renfrow, 80; Justyn Ross, 58; Derion Kendrick, 51).

“The receivers stepped up,” Royal said. “DJ had been playing similar to this all year long, it’s just the receivers weren’t making the plays. They stepped up big for him and made the plays, so it’s good to see.”

Richt gave a shoutout to Clemson sophomore running back Will Shipley, who rushed 20 times for 104 yards with a touchdown against the Demon Deacons.

Shipley has now rushed for 100 yards in consecutive games for the second time in his career and has now rushed for a touchdown in seven straight games, dating to last season. Shipley (1,091) surpassed 1,000 career rushing yards with a career-long 53-yard rush in the first quarter and scored on a 1-yard touchdown run on an impressive second effort in the fourth quarter.

“I’ve got to give props to Shipley, too,” Richt said. “Shipley took care of business. He did break out on a deep run. Little surprised he got caught. But then in the end zone area, he busted through some tacklers and made a touchdown run.”

Up next for fifth-ranked Clemson (4-0, 2-0 ACC) is a top-10 clash with No. 10 NC State this Saturday at Death Valley (7:30 p.m., ABC).

Royal was asked if he saw anything in the Wake Forest game that made him question whether the Tigers are a College Football Playoff-caliber team, or if Saturday’s game furthered his belief that they can make it into the four-team playoff field.

“It furthered my belief because everybody was worried about the quarterback position, and DJ stepped up (Saturday),” Royal said. “And like you said, Shipley stepped up as well, so they were balanced. DJ didn’t have to do it all. Shipley did enough as well. They’ve got three running backs that can get it done as well. … So, this is a complete offense, and we know that defense is gonna step up.”

“I felt like if DJ played like that, no one can be close to Clemson,” Richt added. “But Wake proved me wrong, too.”

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Analysts discuss what they saw from Uiagalelei, Clemson offense vs. La Tech

On ACC Network’s “The ACC Huddle” show following Clemson’s 48-20 win over Louisiana Tech at Death Valley on Saturday night, ACCN analysts Eric Mac Lain and EJ Manuel gave their takeaways from what they saw from DJ Uiagalelei and the Tigers’ offense …

On ACC Network’s “The ACC Huddle” show following Clemson’s 48-20 win over Louisiana Tech at Death Valley on Saturday night, ACCN analysts Eric Mac Lain and EJ Manuel gave their takeaways from what they saw from DJ Uiagalelei and the Tigers’ offense against the Bulldogs.

Uiagalelei was 17-of-29 for 221 yards and two scores through the air and picked up 62 yards on the ground on nine carries, guiding a Clemson offense that gained a season-high 521 total yards, including 280 rushing on 39 attempts (7.2 average).

The Tigers (3-0, 1-0 ACC) put up 35 points in the second half and outscored the Bulldogs by 21 over the final two quarters.

“I mean, that’s what you wanted to see,” said Mac Lain, the former Clemson and All-ACC offensive lineman. “We spoke about halftime adjustments, what do you need to see from this offensive line, and those guys picked it up. They ran the ball extremely well. When you outgain your opponent and you’re rushing for 7 yards every time you tote the rock, that’s an impressive thing.

“So, to see the growth there, the response there to put up 48 points, and then just the continued response from DJ – to see a guy that struggled so much a year ago and is just finding his groove, is proving people wrong each and every day, and to keep seeing that growth. He admitted that there were a couple of flashes where there were some drops or some miscues. But overall, a very impressive two weeks in a row for DJ.”

A week earlier against Furman, the junior quarterback threw for 231 yards and two touchdowns while completing 21 of 27 passes for a completion percentage of 77.8 percent — the highest completion percentage Uiagalelei has posted when attempting at least 25 passes.

Manuel, the former Florida State and NFL quarterback, believes Uiagalelei’s play so far this season has solidified his spot as Clemson’s QB1.

“When you talk about DJ Uiagalelei and this quarterback (controversy), that’s dead,” he said. “DJ’s the starter. I think that team obviously knows that. They’re going to follow as he goes, and he’s playing really clean football.”

Manuel added that he thought Uiagalelei’s wide receivers played better against Louisiana Tech.

Freshman Antonio Williams had a team-high 57 receiving yards on two catches and hauled in his first career touchdown reception on a beautifully thrown 19-yard pass from Uiagalelei. Sophomore Beaux Collins had two grabs for 47 yards, including a 32-yard touchdown reception from Uiagalelei, while senior Joseph Ngata notched three receptions for 54 yards, highlighted by a spectacular, diving 41-yard snag in the first quarter.

“Some of those deep balls, they brought in with one hand, two hands going up, catching those 50-50 passes,” Manuel said. “Against a team like Wake Forest next week, they’re going to have to do that. So, I thought this was a step in the right direction.”

Fifth-ranked Clemson’s game at No. 21 Wake Forest (3-0, 0-0 ACC) on Saturday will kick off at noon ET on ABC.

“Clemson hasn’t really been challenged yet,” Manuel said. “I think the first big challenge comes from a veteran quarterback in Sam Hartman at Wake Forest, a team that can run the football and then a team that does pretty good defensively as well. They’ve got some miscues, too, where they can’t tackle guys in the open field. But I think next week’s going to be a really good matchup to see which team is going to be who.”

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Analysts weigh in on Uiagalelei’s performance vs. Furman

Following Clemson’s 35-12 win over Furman on Saturday at Death Valley, a few ACC analysts weighed in on what they saw from DJ Uiagalelei. During “The ACC Huddle” on ACC Network, analysts Eric Mac Lain, EJ Manuel and Mark Richt gave their takeaways …

Following Clemson’s 35-12 win over Furman on Saturday at Death Valley, a few ACC analysts weighed in on what they saw from DJ Uiagalelei.

During “The ACC Huddle” on ACC Network, analysts Eric Mac Lain, EJ Manuel and Mark Richt gave their takeaways from Uiagalelei’s performance against the Paladins.

The junior quarterback threw for 231 yards and two touchdowns in Saturday’s contest while completing 21 of 27 passes for a completion percentage of 77.8 percent — the highest completion percentage Uiagalelei has posted when attempting at least 25 passes.

“DJ was very efficient,” said Mac Lain, the former Clemson and All-ACC offensive lineman. “Very proud of what we saw from him, moving the ball, moving the pocket, being excellent out there. And that was one of the biggest things is OK, we’ve got to see him do better. Well, how can we see him do better? Move that pocket, show that he’s mobile and drop some dimes. … People have to help him. I thought last game (against Georgia Tech), there were some things that he could’ve done better. This game, it was on full display. It’s really been a two-year process. Those receivers, they’ve got to help him out down the field.”

Manuel, the former Florida State and NFL quarterback, agreed with Mac Lain about Uiagalelei needing more help from his receivers in order for the Tigers to accomplish what they want to as a team this season.

“DJ had a very clean day,” Manuel said. “He was accurate in the intermediate and the short throws. For the routine throws, make them look easy, and that’s what DJ did well (Saturday) – also functioning within the offense.

“At some point, he’s going to have to sit down with his receivers and not necessarily say hey man, you guys aren’t catching the ball, but say look, we both have to do our job if we want to go win a national championship. We’re not just talking about winning the ACC, but we’re trying to go further than that. So, you’ve got to have that accountability amongst yourself as a quarterback and the guys around you.”

On Saturday, Uiagalelei surpassed 210 passing yards for the second straight game, something he did only twice all of last season. His one real mistake came in the third quarter when he was intercepted, a tipped ball into a tight window that head coach Dabo Swinney and offensive coordinator Brandon Streeter said was a poor decision on the quarterback’s part.

In the season opener against Georgia Tech, Uiagalelei settled in after a slow start and ended up going 19-of-32 passing for 210 yards and a passing touchdown with a rushing score to boot.

Through two games this season, Uiagalelei has completed 67.8 percent of his passes for 441 yards and three touchdowns with one interception following a season in 2021 during which he completed just 55.6 percent of his passes – the second-lowest mark among ACC starters – with more interceptions (10) than touchdown passes (nine).

“I think if (Saturday) was the first game of the year and we saw DJ do what he did, if he had done that last week, I think we all would’ve said he’s made improvements, he’s well on his way to doing what he needs to do to help them be champions,” said Richt, the former Miami and Georgia head coach. “But because the last week was a little shaky, this week was better. Hopefully it’ll continue.”

Mac Lain added that what Uiagalelei did against Furman was especially encouraging considering Clemson possessed the ball for just 25:15 of game time compared to the Paladins’ 34:45 time of possession.

“You see the 35 points, you’re like wow, this is really uninspired football. When you look at the play count and you look at the time of possession, they just didn’t have the ball a lot,” Mac Lain said. “And so what I think was also a positive about DJ is he didn’t get anxious, he didn’t feel like I’ve got to force it, I’ve got to force it. He stayed within the offense and was very efficient.”

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

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Analysts predict ACC title game matchup, one doesn’t pick Tigers to make it

During The ACC Huddle: Season Preview show on ACC Network recently, a few ACCN analysts gave their predictions for which teams will represent the Atlantic and Coastal Divisions in the ACC Championship Game this season. Former Clemson and All-ACC …

During The ACC Huddle: Season Preview show on ACC Network recently, a few ACCN analysts gave their predictions for which teams will represent the Atlantic and Coastal Divisions in the ACC Championship Game this season.

Former Clemson and All-ACC offensive lineman Eric Mac Lain picked Clemson and Pittsburgh as the ACC Championship Game matchup, with the Tigers winning the conference crown, while former Miami and Georgia head coach Mark Richt picked Clemson and Miami to play in the conference title game.

Former Florida State quarterback EJ Manuel did not pick Clemson to make it to the conference title game, however. Instead, he went with NC State to win the Atlantic and play Pittsburgh.

Here’s what Mac Lain, Manuel and Richt had to say regarding their ACC Championship Game matchup predictions and who will win the Atlantic and Coastal Divisions in 2022:

Mac Lain: “I think it’s return of the king. I think Clemson’s back. So, I think they’re going to be representing the Atlantic. I think they win it, but I think Pittsburgh’s going to make it tough. I think Pittsburgh is going to be representing back-to-back divisional champions, the last-ever Coastal. So, I’ve got Clemson and Pitt. I’ve got Clemson winning it.”

Manuel: “Yeah, I’m going Pitt from the Coastal. I think no matter which quarterback they decide to have (Kedon Slovis has since been named Pitt’s starting QB), that defense is going to be stout. They’re going to have enough playmakers around there, a three-headed monster at running back. The Atlantic side, I’m going NC State. I think (quarterback) Devin Leary’s going to do it. I think he’s going to have an excellent season. That defense is also primed and ready to go, too.”

Richt: “Two coaches I love – Narduzzi (Pitt’s Pat Narduzzi) and Doeren (NC State’s Dave Doeren). I’m doing this to help motivate their teams. I’m picking Clemson and Miami. I’m just giving them something to get mad about. They always want a chip on their shoulder, they want to be hunting instead of being the hunted. So here’s your fodder, coaches. Use it the way you want, baby.”

The 2022 ACC Championship Game will kick off at 8 p.m. on ABC on Saturday, Dec. 3, at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte.

These two analysts differ in confidence about Uiagalelei entering 2022

The first two years of DJ Uiagalelei’s Clemson career have been a tale of two different quarterbacks. After bursting onto the scene as a true freshman in 2020, when Uiagalelei threw for 781 yards and four touchdowns with no interceptions in two …

The first two years of DJ Uiagalelei’s Clemson career have been a tale of two different quarterbacks.

After bursting onto the scene as a true freshman in 2020, when Uiagalelei threw for 781 yards and four touchdowns with no interceptions in two starts against Boston College and Notre Dame, the former five-star prospect struggled in his first full season as the starter in 2021 while completing only 55.6 percent of his passes with more interceptions (10) than touchdown passes (nine).

So, which version of Uiagalelei will we see in 2022?

ESPN/ACC Network analyst EJ Manuel, the former Florida State and NFL quarterback, opined during a recent episode of ESPN’s College Football Live that Uiagalelei will return to 2020 form – thanks in part to the fact that his quarterbacks coach, Brandon Streeter, is now the Tigers’ offensive coordinator as well.

“We’re going to see the 2020 quarterback come back in DJ Uiagalelei,” Manuel said. “Look, it’s not easy to take over from the footsteps of Trevor Lawrence. Of course, when you play at Clemson, that’s the expectation. We know the standard of what they expect to be, but I really feel like the confidence with DJ is going to grow — one, because his new offensive coordinator is his old quarterback coach. And as a quarterback myself, I know how that continuity and that conversation, that level of comfort when you have that guy who’s been in the room with you since day one is now going to be calling those plays.

“And look, it doesn’t help that a lot of his guys were hurt. His offensive line was not continuous, he had a bunch of guys out with a couple of injuries. So, as long as the players around him show up, DJ’s going to have a great season.”

ESPN college football analyst David Pollack is not quite as confident as Manuel when it comes to Uiagalelei.

Pollack said on the same College Football Live episode that he’s “interested to see how short the leash is with DJ” this season, with touted true freshman Cade Klubnik waiting in the wings in the Tigers’ quarterback room.

“I think you’re a little bit more confident than me, EJ,” Pollack said. “I think DJ, you can see the talent, man. The dude can throw it through a car wash and not get it wet. He’s big, he’s strong. But I think with his reads, Brandon Streeter’s going to have a tall task on his hands because I don’t know that they’re going to be that much better up front where you’re going to consistently run the football. But I think when they ran him more throughout the season last year, he became better, and I think he’s a better quarterback because he has that ability. But I think he’s going to get pushed, I think he’s going to get challenged.”

Pollack went on to bring up the quarterback situation at Clemson in 2018, when Kelly Bryant began that season as the starter before being replaced by Trevor Lawrence after four games. Lawrence, of course, went on to become the first true freshman quarterback to lead his team to a national title since 1985.

“A couple years ago, remember, it wasn’t that long ago when Dabo Swinney was making hard decisions about Kelly Bryant and Trevor Lawrence and that decision to make the switch, and then end up winning a national championship because of it,” Pollack said. “So, I’ll be interested to see how short the leash is with D.J. I think he’s got a lot of promise, but he’s definitely got to get better with his eyes, trust his line more, and I think he’ll have to run the football a lot.”

Come out to support Clemson softball at Dear Old Clemson’s second event which is set for August 27 at the Madren Conference Center.  Clemson returns one of the top teams in the nation and adds some new talent to the mix.   If you sign up for certain club levels you get free access to all Dear Old Clemson events or purchase your tickets today at Dear Old Clemson.