Clemson’s frontcourt ranked as top-20 group in nation

With the Tigers returning two of their best players from last season, one analyst ranked Clemson’s frontcourt in the top three of the ACC.

Clemson experienced a good deal of roster turnover and assistant coaching changes this offseason, but one aspect of the team that has remained constant is the Tigers’ dynamic duo in the frontcourt.

Rising junior forward/center PJ Hall and soon-to-be fifth-year forward Hunter Tyson both decided to remain with the program, giving head coach Brad Brownell a dependable pairing in the frontcourt.

Compared to the rest of the nation, 247Sports’ Isaac Trotter recently ranked Clemson’s frontcourt at No. 17.

Here’s what he had to say about the Tigers.

P.J. Hall may be one of college basketball’s best-kept secrets. The Clemson big man was fantastic, averaging 15.5 points and 5.8 rebounds while being the engine of the Tigers’ offense. Hall rated in the 91st percentile in post-ups, per Synergy, averaging a terrific 1.07 points per possession. Hall even drained 24 treys and shot 78% from the charity stripe. Clemson also has veteran forward Hunter Tyson who simply just refuses to make mistakes. Hall and Tyson are winning players.

Last season, Hall and Tyson both battled through injuries. Hall was on-and-off the court with a foot injury, while Tyson missed significant time with a broken clavicle.

Still, in terms of minutes played per game, Hall and Tyson are the most experienced players returning from last season’s team.

Trotter only had two ACC teams, North Carolina and Duke, ahead of the Tigers, so if Hall and Tyson can stay healthy, they’ll compete for the conference’s top frontcourt.

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Clemson basketball ranked in bottom half of 247Sports’ ACC power rankings

Finishing last season 17-16, Clemson was recently ranked in the bottom half of the ACC power rankings.

247Sports released its ACC basketball power rankings on Sunday, and Clemson is in the bottom half of the mix.

With the Tigers coming off a 17-16 season and an offseason filled with roster turnover, 247Sports’ Isaac Trotter ranked the Tigers at No. 9. Meanwhile, unsurprisingly, North Carolina and Duke took the No. 1 and No. 2 spots, respectively, while Pittsburgh and Georgia Tech rounded out the list.

Here’s Trotter’s reasoning behind Clemson’s ranking and his prediction of the team’s starting five.

Projected starting lineup: G Brevin Galloway, G Chase Hunter, G Dillon Hunter, F Hunter Tyson, F PJ Hall

Hall and Tyson are two dependable, reliable pieces for Clemson. Hall averaged 15.5 points per game this past season, but even bigger things could be in store. The junior big man has everything it takes to be a superstar and a potential ACC Player of the Year contender. Clemson’s guard play will be the thing to really watch. They’ll play defense. They’ll get great production from hall and Tyson. But if Clemson’s unproven guards do not step up, the Tigers can’t compete with the ACC big dogs.

Clemson finished 10th in the ACC standings last season, so Trotter’s ranking can’t be judged. However, if the Tigers can remain healthy, the team has the talent to return to the NCAA Tournament.

Last season, Hall was in-and-out of the lineup with a foot injury that later required surgery, while Tyson suffered a broken collarbone that sidelined him for eight games.

Hall is the unquestioned offensive leader of the program and, as Trotter points out, has the potential to be one of the most productive players in the ACC. If Hall can stay on the court and carry the load for the Tigers, there’s a real chance of the team finishing in the top half of the ACC standings.

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Clemson to host Penn State in ACC/Big Ten Challenge

Clemson basketball now has a third game on its schedule for next season.

Clemson basketball will host the Penn State Nittany Lions on Tuesday, Nov. 29 as a part of the ACC/Big Ten Challenge.

Clemson boasts a 3-1 record against Penn State all-time and is 1-0 at home when facing the Nittany Lions.

Finishing last season 17-16, Clemson will enter the 2022 season with two of its top four scorers from last season. Rising junior center PJ Hall averaged a team-high 15.5 points while forward Hunter Tyson will play his fifth season for the Tigers after averaging a career-high 10.0 points per game.

Meanwhile, Penn State went 14-17 last season and was 1-10 on the road.

With Friday’s announcement, Clemson now has three games scheduled, the other two matchups being against Iowa and either Cal or TCU in the Emerald Coast Classic. Those two games will take place on Nov. 25 and 26.

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Brownell gives early assessment of Clemson’s retooled roster

Clemson’s men’s basketball still has one last scholarship available for next season’s roster, though there’s no guarantee at this point the Tigers are going to use it. In other words, Brad Brownell largely knows what he has to work with from a …

Clemson’s men’s basketball still has one last scholarship available for next season’s roster, though there’s no guarantee at this point the Tigers are going to use it.

In other words, Brad Brownell largely knows what he has to work with from a personnel standpoint. He is entering his 13th season in charge of Clemson’s program with a roster that features its share of turnover as the Tigers try to get back to the NCAA Tournament after a 10th-place finish in the ACC this past season.

Clemson is welcoming five signees to campus this summer, three of which are guards that will be part of a revamped backcourt after the Tigers lost David Collins (eligibility exhausted), Nick Honor (transfer) and Al-Amir Dawes (transfer) off last season’s team. The group is headlined by Boston College transfer Brevin Galloway and combo guard Dillon Hunter, the brother of current Tiger Chase Hunter.

There are also seven holdovers from last year’s squad, most notably the starting frontcourt tandem of Hunter Tyson and leading scorer PJ Hall. With the roster getting a head start in preparation for next season with an international trip to France looming in August, Brownell recently gave The Clemson Insider an early assessment of the group’s similarities and differences compared to last year’s team.

“It’ll be interesting to see what our team is like next year,” Brownell said. “I think we’ll still play through PJ a good bit because he’s one of the better players in the league.”

As a sophomore, Hall averaged 15.5 points and 5.8 rebounds as one of the ACC’s most improved players. He did it while playing through a fractured left foot that has since been surgically repaired.

Regardless of who’s handling the ball in the backcourt, Brownell said the Tigers will continue to make sure the 6-foot-10, 240-pound is involved on the interior, something Brownell didn’t feel like they did well enough in the early going last season. Hall averaged just 3.5 points in 9.8 minutes per game as a true freshman.

“That was one of the challenges of last year’s team was I think he emerged as a high-profile player and really our most talented, best player earlier than everyone anticipated, even myself,” Brownell said. “I thought it’d take him until the middle of December or Christmas to really become (that kind of player), but it didn’t. He was ready to go in November, and I think it was challenging for some other guys on our team to understand that here’s a guy that didn’t play much as a freshman, but he’s really our most talented player and we’ve got to do some things within the way we play to make sure he’s our No. 1 option.”

With Galloway, true freshman Chauncey Gibson and the Hunter brothers part of a backcourt that includes Alex Hemenway and redshirt freshman Josh Beadle, Brownell said Clemson will “still look to shoot the 3, try to share the basketball and play the right way.” As for how he expects next year’s team to differentiate, Brownell said having and keeping a clean bill of health will go a long way in determining that.

“We couldn’t do some things defensively that maybe we like to do because of PJ’s injury,” Brownell said. “He just wasn’t as mobile. … If he gets healthy, we can play a little bit different defensively if we want to.”

Brownell threw Tyson into that equation, too. Clemson’s fifth-year senior decided to return for one more season with the Tigers after missing eight ACC games with a broken collarbone this past season. Tyson still finished as Clemson’s fourth-leading scorer (10.0 points per game) and third-leading rebounder (5.5). 

“There was obviously a major dropoff when he wasn’t out there not only because of his points and rebounds but leadership and just his toughness. A captain,” Brownell said. “He’s a competitive guy that just brings a lot to our team, so having him back will be huge for us. I’m excited for him. He’s going to have a good year next year.”

Foreign tour a chance for Clemson hoops to ‘begin to put the pieces together’

Clemson’s men’s basketball team won’t have to wait until the fall to start playing games again. Head coach Brad Brownell confirmed to The Clemson Insider on Thursday that his team will take a preseason trip to France this summer. The Tigers’ …

Clemson’s men’s basketball team won’t have to wait until the fall to start playing games again.

Head coach Brad Brownell confirmed to The Clemson Insider on Thursday that his team will take a preseason trip to France this summer. The Tigers’ international tour will take place Aug. 3-13, according to Stadium’s Jeff Goodman.

Not since 2019 has Clemson traveled overseas, something the NCAA allows basketball teams to do once every four years. Brownell said those European trips, which have included Italy and Spain, have been productive for his teams in the past.

“We’ve done well every time we’ve gone overseas,” Brownell said. “Obviously the chance to go out and experience a little bit of a different culture and learn some other things beyond the United States is really good for our guys. It gives us a great chance to blend and get to know each other a little bit better and spend more time away from basketball, which is good.”

It will give the Tigers a head start on not only preparation for the 2022-23 season but also cohesion within a team that will have its share of new pieces. With four-star combo guard Dillon Hunter freshly in the mix, Clemson is making five new additions, including Boston College transfer Brevin Galloway, to a roster that includes notable holdovers Hunter Tyson and PJ Hall, the Tigers’ leading scorer a season ago.

The number of newcomers could increase by one should Clemson use its final available scholarship for next season’s roster, something the Tigers will do through the transfer portal if it happens. Clemson will get 10 days to practice before making the trip and then play numerous exhibition games against international competition during its 11 days overseas.

“We can practice a little bit more, play some games over there and just kind of begin to put the pieces together for this year’s team,” Brownell said. “So it should be good.”

Particularly for the incoming freshmen. Joining Hunter in the Tigers’ freshmen class are fellow guard Chauncey Gardner and forwards Chauncey Wiggins and R.J. Godfrey, all of whom signed with Clemson in November. It might not come against other Division I players, but Brownell said the overseas competition will help give the Tigers’ first-year players an idea of what to expect at the college level.

“Get acclimated to what life is going to be like,” Brownell said. “The games aren’t the same as the high-major games, but just to be able to play and get used to playing with each other and practicing I think is really important.”

Whether or not Hall will be available to play during the international tour is unknown. Brownell said he expects the Tigers’ sophomore big to be somewhat limited until at least mid-July after Hall recently underwent surgery to repair his fractured left foot.

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‘It’s necessary’: Coaches, athletes weigh in on impact of Clemson’s NIL opportunities

Clemson basketball star PJ Hall will soon begin working in partnership with Carolina Miracle League, a charitable organization based in his hometown of Spartanburg that’s spent the last 15 years giving children with mental and physical challenges …

Clemson basketball star PJ Hall will soon begin working in partnership with Carolina Miracle League, a charitable organization based in his hometown of Spartanburg that’s spent the last 15 years giving children with mental and physical challenges the opportunity to play baseball.

In exchange, Hall will be compensated an undisclosed amount through TigerImpact, Clemson’s first known name, image and likeness (NIL) collective. Hall is one of several athletes across multiple sports at the university that have already signed on with the group, which has raised more than $5 million to be paid out to athletes for the promotional work they will be doing with a charity of their choice.

“So far, (Clemson) has done everything great with us,” Hall said of the collective. “This new NIL collective is definitely huge and will definitely even the playing field a lot for South Carolina schools, whether that be us, (South) Carolina or even Coastal Carolina or something like that. … It’ll change the landscape of it for sure.”

It’s not stopping there.

At least one other local third-party group is in the process of being formed to pay Clemson athletes through NIL deals, a trend that’s been popping up at schools across the country after the NCAA adopted an interim policy last summer to make profiting off their name, image and likeness legal for participating athletes.

In comparison to some schools, Clemson is late to the party. TigerImpact, which was started by three former Tiger football players, didn’t announce the formation of its collective until last week, the same time the school revealed its NIL educational program. The timing is well behind some of Clemson’s Power Five counterparts that already had collectives and other third-party fundraising efforts in place in the NIL space. 

At Texas, a non-profit charity organization revealed in December that it will pay $50,000 to each of the Longhorns’ offensive linemen as part of an NIL program. A collective at Tennessee has agreed to a deal with a 2023 blue-chip recruit that could end up being worth as much as $8 million. South Carolina had at least one collective set up before last week as did some of the schools Clemson recruits against in the ACC, including North Carolina and Florida State.

As Clemson’s head football coach, Dabo Swinney’s players likely stand to cash in the most on NIL opportunities given the immense popularity of the sport. Swinney said he figured NIL collectives were coming at Clemson and that the inclusiveness of the one in place is a positive development for all of the Tigers’ athletes, but Swinney didn’t voice an opinion one way or the other on the impact NIL opportunities could have on the Tigers’ ability to continue recruiting top-tier talent.

“I don’t think anything about (collectives). I just focus on coaching my team,” Swinney said. “I think that whatever is out there, it’s a natural progression. If one school has a good chef, the other school is going to get a good chef. If one school has three strength coaches, the other school is eventually going to get three strength coaches.

“If (the athletes) have got an opportunity to do something on their own and on their time, good for them. My focus is what’s going on when they show up and preparing our team. And then making sure they’ve got the resources they need to help navigate those external things.”

Men’s basketball coach Brad Brownell was more expressive with his thoughts about how NIL opportunities could affect his ability to build and maintain his future rosters. With collectives existing at more high-major programs than not – and some of them funneling more money to athletes than Clemson can – Brownell said he doesn’t know if it’s going to be enough to elevate the Tigers’ recruiting efforts in terms of the caliber of prospect they’re able to sign, but he acknowledged Clemson had to get in the NIL game in order to keep his program from being at a disadvantage.

“It’s necessary,” Brownell said. “(NIL opportunities) is part of what people are looking for now, an opportunity to build off their name, image and likeness. I think it’s terrific that we have Clemson people that have put that together and are going to be able to help the student-athletes as they can. I think it’s cool what they’re doing with charities. I think that’s really a neat piece. But it’s definitely part of what’s going on in the recruiting world right now, and if you don’t have something of that nature, it could hurt you in certain situations.”

Hall agreed with that sentiment, adding that simply knowing NIL opportunities are available at Clemson could help the program not only lure prospects on the front end of the recruiting process but also keep them from transferring later in their career.

“I think that’s a possibility,” Hall said. “Obviously you can get stuff anywhere you go, but I think the way Clemson takes care of people, it’ll definitely be a big help for us.”

Meanwhile, every NCAA member is waiting to see if an umbrella policy ever emerges from college sports governing body or the federal government. The NCAA didn’t implement uniformed rules for every school to follow when its NIL policy went into effect, leaving it up to each state to adopt its own NIL laws.

Some states’ laws are more aggressive in what they allow than others, including South Carolina. Earlier this year, though, the House of Representatives passed a proviso that would temporarily suspend the state’s NIL legislation for one year beginning July 1. During that time, the NCAA’s policy would govern the parameters of NIL deals for South Carolina’s college athletes. It would also give the state a chance to amend its current bill or wait for uniformity from the NCAA or Congress that would eliminate discrepancies from state to state, the latter of which is far less likely. 

The provision isn’t official yet. It still has to get through the Senate and then get a signature of approval from Gov. Henry McCaster. But fellow basketball player Hunter Tyson said he’s liked watching Clemson and the state take more proactive measures when it comes to NIL, which he believes will help the Tigers’ athletic programs remain competitive moving forward.

“If you have a state that’s allowed to be more involved in their players’ NIL opportunities and then Clemson wouldn’t be able to be as involved, then it can put us at a disadvantage a little bit,” Tyson said. “It was a great job by Clemson’s athletic department and our state government to (start the process to) lift that legislation to even the playing field.”

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Back in the fold at Clemson, Tyson eager for ‘one last run’

Hunter Tyson had three options heading into the offseason. The way Clemson’s senior forward saw it, though, only two of them were viable. Tyson said he couldn’t envision himself playing college basketball anywhere else, so transferring never crossed …

Hunter Tyson had three options heading into the offseason. The way Clemson’s senior forward saw it, though, only two of them were viable.

Tyson said he couldn’t envision himself playing college basketball anywhere else, so transferring never crossed his mind if chose to stay in school. But having already spent four years at Clemson – and with a degree in hand – Tyson could have opted to get started on life after college. When Tyson was recognized as part of the Senior Day festivities during the Tigers’ home finale against Virginia Tech, it led to assumptions that this past season may be it for Tyson in a Clemson uniform.

But Tyson said he simply wasn’t ready for his ride at Clemson to be over.

“It just comes down to my teammates and coaches and the relationships I’ve built over the past few years,” Tyson said. “I wasn’t ready to leave Clemson yet, so I want to give it one last run. I’m really excited about next year and the success I believe we can have.”

Tyson made his decision official when he announced via social media late last month that he would be using his COVID year to return to Clemson for a fifth season, giving the Tigers a much-needed boost heading into the offseason. A two-year starter, Tyson averaged 10 points and 5.5 rebounds in 25 games while shooting nearly 47% from the field this past season, though his running mate in the frontcourt, PJ Hall, said Tyson’s impact on the roster goes beyond the stat sheet.

“The experience he has,” Hall said. “The mental toughness, the physical toughness, the determination, it’s literally the full package. He’s a great player and also a great teammate. Whether we’re in 6 a.m. (workouts) or a late practice, he’s always the loudest one in the gym. He’s making sure everybody’s doing their thing, so he’s definitely a huge leader for us.”

Tyson still finished as the Tigers’ fourth-leading scorer and third-leading rebounder despite missing eight consecutive games with a broken collarbone he sustained against Florida State on Feb. 2. Clemson lost the first six games it played without Tyson during that stretch, making for its longest losing streak of the season.

Tyson returned to action against Georgia Tech on March 2 and played in the Tigers’ final four games, averaging 7.7 points in those contests. He scored 12 points in the season finale against Virginia Tech in the ACC Tournament.

It’s not the first time Tyson has had to push through pain to get on the court during his time at Clemson. During his junior season, the 6-foot-8, 215-pounder fractured a bone in his face during the non-conference portion of Clemson’s schedule that forced him to miss a handful of games. Upon returning to action that season, he wore a protective facemask.

And before sustaining the collarbone injury this past season, Tyson also sprained both of his ankles. Hall said his teammate still isn’t completely healed from all of his ailments, but there’s plenty of time for that. Tyson said he just hopes he’s able to stay away from the injury bug once his final season as a Tiger begins in November.

“It’d be awesome,” Tyson said. “I really hope that’s the case next year.”

While Tyson would like to show what he’s fully capable with the help of an injury-free season, he reiterated his primary reason for returning to Clemson was simple. The potential of the holdovers from this past season’s roster mixed with the Tigers’ three incoming freshmen and at least one transfer (former Princeton guard Jaelin Llewellyn) is appealing to Tyson, who played on Clemson’s most recent NCAA Tournament team in 2021.

With the Tigers missing the postseason all together this past season, Tyson has experienced both ends of the spectrum during his time at Clemson. He’s got one last chance to help Clemson inject some momentum back into the program.

“Really I think I just wasn’t ready to leave because I wanted to go out on a better note,” Tyson said. “I have a lot of confidence in my teammates and the coaching staff this coming year. So I really just wanted to give it one last push, give it everything I had for one last year and hopefully have a really successful season.”

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Great news for Clemson basketball

Clemson University men’s basketball senior forward Hunter Tyson (Monroe, N.C./Piedmont) has announced his commitment to return for the upcoming 2022-23 season, announced by Tyson on Thursday evening. Tyson will be using his COVID year of eligibility …

Clemson University men’s basketball senior forward Hunter Tyson (Monroe, N.C./Piedmont) has announced his commitment to return for the upcoming 2022-23 season, announced by Tyson on Thursday evening. Tyson will be using his COVID year of eligibility

Tyson enjoyed a breakout season in 2021-22 and started a career-best 24 games despite a broken clavicle suffered on Feb. 2 against Florida State. Tyson returned on March 2 and played the final four games of the season.

The Monroe, N.C. native averaged a career-high 10.0 points, 5.5 rebounds 1.3 assists, while shooting a career-high 46.6 percent from the field. Tyson totaled 20 steals and eight blocked shots.

Already having played in 106 career games, Tyson needs just 29 games played to become the all-time leader in Clemson history.

Clemson hoops gets final word on postseason fate

Clemson’s men’s basketball team found out Sunday night whether or not its season will continue. After missing out on the NCAA Tournament, the Tigers won’t play in the National Invitation Tournament (NIT) or the College Basketball Invitational (CBI), …

Clemson’s men’s basketball team found out Sunday night whether or not its season will continue.

After missing out on the NCAA Tournament, the Tigers won’t play in the National Invitation Tournament (NIT) or the College Basketball Invitational (CBI), officially bringing Clemson’s season to an end.

It will be the first year since 2017 that Clemson won’t be part of college basketball’s postseason (the 2020 postseason was canceled in response to the coronavirus pandemic). The Tigers finished this season 17-16 overall and 8-12 in ACC play to finish 10th in the league standings during the regular season.

Before a buzzer-beating loss to eventual champion Virginia Tech in the quarterfinals of the ACC Tournament last week, Clemson had won five games in a row, including a win over Tech, to avoid a losing season and stoke hope that the Tigers might be able to sneak into some sort of postseason tournament.

But it didn’t happen as inconsistency and attrition proved to be too much for Clemson to overcome in Brad Brownell’s 12th season at the helm. The Tigers lost out on chances for quality wins against St. Bonaventure, Rutgers and Miami in November and December and also lost at home to Boston College and at Georgia Tech, teams that finished in the bottom third of the ACC standings.

Senior forward Hunter Tyson went down with a broken clavicle in early February, and Clemson lost its next six games to fall to a season-worst three games under .500. Tyson’s frontcourt mate and leading scorer PJ Hall then aggravated his left foot injury in the final loss during that stretch at Louisville and missed the next three games.

Yet Clemson won each of those games without its sophomore big to start its late-season winning streak. The Tigers then knocked off North Carolina State in the opening round of the ACC Tournament, but it was too little, too late once Tech stunned Clemson with its walk-off win Wednesday.

Clemson finished the season at No. 84 in the NET rankings and had a combined 4-12 record in Quadrant 1 and 2 games. The Tigers’ lone Quad 1 victory didn’t come until March 5 when they beat Tech in both teams’ regular-season finale.

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A look at Clemson’s draw in the ACC Tournament

Clemson will take as much momentum as it’s had all season into the ACC Tournament this week, but the Tigers know they have to cut down nets inside the Barclays Center if they want to get back to the NCAA Tournament. Brad Brownell’s team ended the …

Clemson will take as much momentum as it’s had all season into the ACC Tournament this week, but the Tigers know they have to cut down nets inside the Barclays Center if they want to get back to the NCAA Tournament.

Brad Brownell’s team ended the regular season on a four-game winning streak after taking down Virginia Tech on Saturday. It’s a much more positive place than the Tigers (16-15, 8-12 ACC) found themselves nearly three weeks ago when they had lost six straight games to drop to a season-worst three-games under .500 following another setback at Louisville on Feb. 19.

That was when leading scorer PJ Hall reaggravated his foot injury that sidelined him for two more games. But Hall and senior forward Hunter Tyson (broken clavicle) have since returned, putting Clemson as close to full strength as it’s been in a while needing to win five games in five days in Brooklyn to earn the ACC’s automatic berth into the NCAA Tournament.

“I think we feel pretty good,” Tyson said. “Just got to take it one day at a time and one practice at a time. Just keep the momentum rolling, keep playing together as a team, and I like our chances.”

Clemson’s winning streak, which is tied for its longest of the season, elevated the Tigers to the No. 10 seed, which earned them a first-round matchup Tuesday with the league’s last-place team during the regular season, North Carolina State. The Wolf Pack (11-20, 4-16) enter the postseason reeling with 10 losses in their last 11 games.

Clemson has already beaten N.C. State away from home once, winning 70-65 in the teams’ lone regular-season matchup. Tuesday’s 4:30 p.m. rematch will mark exactly two months since the Tigers won that game on Jan. 8 in Raleigh.

Should Clemson advance to Wednesday’s second round, the Tigers would get another rematch with the team it most recently beat. Virginia Tech, the tournament’s 7 seed, has a first-round bye and awaits the winner between Clemson and N.C. State.

If Clemson is still playing past the middle of the week, the Tigers would likely start running into some teams they have yet to beat this season. In that scenario, Notre Dame, which received a double bye as the No. 2 seed, would be awaiting Clemson in Thursday’s quarterfinals. The Fighting Irish swept the Tigers during the regular season, handling Clemson 72-56 back in January before notching a 76-61 victory inside Littlejohn Coliseum on Feb. 12.

But a win in the teams’ final meeting this season would move Clemson into Friday’s semifinals against, in all likelihood, North Carolina or Virginia (14th-seeded Georgia Tech and 11th-seeded Louisville are also on Clemson’s side of the tournament bracket). Clemson played UNC, which finished third in the regular-season standings, to a one-possession game in a home loss on Feb. 8, the teams’ lone meeting so far. The Tigers split their regular-season series with Virginia with the road team winning each time.

The semifinal winner from Clemson’s side of the bracket would likely meet top-seeded Duke, Miami or Wake Forest in Sunday’s championship game. Duke swept Clemson during the regular season, though the Tigers pushed Mike Krzyzewski’s team to the brink at Cameron Indoor Stadium in a two-point loss on Jan. 25. 

Miami (4) and Wake Forest (5) will also be top-5 seeds in Brooklyn. Clemson lost by five to the Hurricanes on the road back on Dec. 4, but the Tigers beat Wake Forest by double digits at home in the teams’ lone meeting on Feb. 23.

“We’ve played a lot of good teams in this league very close,” Brownell said. “Just haven’t had as many wins as we’d like. But there are a lot of us that are all very similar. What team plays a little better that day? Does somebody get in foul trouble on the other team? It’s so close most of the way up.”

Boston College (13 seed), Pittsburgh (12), Syracuse (9) and Florida State (8) are also on the opposite side of the bracket as teams Clemson could potentially run into Sunday if the tournament doesn’t go chalk. Clemson is entering the postseason riding a wave of confidence as big as any of them.

“There are certainly a couple of teams that are a little more talented and have been more consistent, and a lot of those teams are the bye teams,” Brownell said. “But we’re good enough to win some games up there for sure.”

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