Gallery: Clemson vs. Louisville through the years

Dating back to 2014, when Lousiville first joined the ACC, Clemson has won all seven meetings with the Cardinals and will play for an eighth time on Saturday.

The college football regular season is rapidly coming to a close, and as with every season, the closing games carry significant weight in postseason discussions.

Clemson, one of many teams with College Football Playoff (CFP) aspirations, hopes to earn a spot in the Top 4 when the final rankings come out on Dec. 4, but the Tigers will first have a critical in-division game this week.

Following a brutal loss to Notre Dame last week, Clemson (8-1) will take on Louisville (6-3) on Saturday at 3:30 p.m. ET in Memorial Stadium.

The meeting will be the eighth matchup between the Tigers and the Cardinals, with Clemson winning the previous seven dating back to 2014 when Lousiville first joined the ACC.

Last year’s matchup between the two teams featured a last-minute goal-line stand by the Tigers that secured a 30-24 victory. Including the game last season, three of the seven previous meetings have been one-possession games.

Although the Tigers already clinched the Atlantic Division and a trip to the ACC Championship game, they will need to win out to have any chance of a CFP appearance, and it all starts with Lousiville.

That said, here are some of the best photos from Clemson vs. Louisville through the years.

Identity crisis?

What is the identity of Clemson’s offense? That was a question posed by The Clemson Insider to players and coaches this week, including head coach Dabo Swinney. The answers were varied and far from concrete. “That’s a good question,” said tight ends …

What is the identity of Clemson’s offense?

That was a question posed by The Clemson Insider to players and coaches this week, including head coach Dabo Swinney. The answers were varied and far from concrete.

“That’s a good question,” said tight ends coach Kyle Richardson, who doubles as the passing-game coordinator.

Nine games into this season, it’s hard to pinpoint exactly what the strength of the unit is. At least consistently.

“One thing that sticks out to me about this offense is just the love that we have for each other,” senior tight end Davis Allen said. “We’re extremely, extremely close. Closer than what I’ve noticed in the past, but we’re fast, physical, smart and confident.”

Not everyone agrees with the latter part of Allen’s sentiment.

“I think it’s just a lack of confidence and not just with the quarterback,” Richardson said. “It’s across the board, and we’ve just got to get that back and get back to being consistent.”

The best thing Clemson has going for it at the moment is the running game. Swinney went as far as to say the Tigers are “built to run the football,” but that may be a stretch. Statistically, Clemson’s running game is among the top 50 in the country, ranking 49th at 174 yards per game, but those numbers have been inflated by what have been a pair of outliers so far.

Even with former five-star signee Will Shipley atop the running back depth chart, a bruising complement in 230-pounder Phil Mafah, help from a more mobile D.J. Uiagalelei and a more cohesive offensive line, Clemson has only eclipsed the 200-yard rushing mark twice this season. One of those performances came against Louisiana Tech, which statistically owns the worst run defense in the FBS (234.2 yards allowed per game).

Clemson has averaged just 142 yards on the ground in its other seven games and is coming off its worst rushing performance of the season with just 90 yards against Notre Dame. 

The most consistent the Tigers have been is with their situational offense. Clemson’s third-down and red-zone conversion percentages both rank in the top 20 nationally, but with a running game that goes hot and cold and a passing game that’s spinning its wheels, there’s no clear answer on the best way for Clemson to go about trying to move the ball between the 20-yard lines.

Uiagalelei and his receiving corps had the look early on of a group that was ready to leave their 2021 struggles behind. The Tigers averaged nearly 280 yards passing through the first four games, including that brilliant 371-yard, five-touchdown performance from Uiagalelei that helped the Tigers hold off what was then a ranked Wake Forest team on the road in late September. 

It’s been a regression since. The Tigers haven’t thrown for more than 220 yards in any of the last five games, and the explosiveness that had returned through the air early on has largely vanished with a group of receivers that has been hit or miss.

Beaux Collins, who had four touchdown grabs through the first four games, has caught just two passes in the last three. Freshman Antonio Williams has recently emerged as Uiagalelei’s primary target (team-leading 33 receptions), but the speedy slot receiver has averaged 6.5 yards or less per catch in three of his last four games.

Shipley has as many receptions as Joseph Ngata (24). Shipley and tight ends Davis Allen (second on the team with 27 catches) and Jake Briningstool (four TD receptions) have been targeted just as much if not more than the receivers, none of which have more than five catches in a game this season. Collins is the only wideout with more than two touchdown catches.

“I think the identity for us is we’re one play away from being great and we’re one play away from being just average. And that’s where we are right now,” Richardson said. “There have been a couple of balls that are thrown uncatchable that if they’re thrown catchable, it’s a different ballgame. There’s a couple of balls that have been very catchable that are not caught, and it’s a different ballgame. That comes from the receiver room and the tight end room. Then there’s a couple of plays where we’ve handed it off to Shipley or Mafah and we are one block away and it looks like it’s there and we get a shoestring tackle based off of one block.”

The production through the air has been worse than it’s been at any point this season in recent weeks. Clemson had a season-low 157 passing yards against Syracuse and followed that up with just 191 last week against Notre Dame. Uiagalelei was benched in both of those games for freshman Cade Klubnik, but the quarterbacks have combined to throw as many interceptions as touchdown passes (4) in the last three games.

Those turnovers have been part of another inconsistency for the offense. Clemson has coughed it up six times the last two games after turning it over just five times in the first seven.

“Right now, we’re just in a rut, and we’ve got to find a way to get out of it,” Richardson said.

Given the current state of the passing game, Clemson’s best bet going forward may be to lean on the running game. But Clemson hasn’t always committed to it despite Swinney’s belief in the Tigers needing to use the run to set up the pass.

Clemson did in wins over Florida State and Syracuse, getting Shipley 47 carries in those two games. But even after rushing for a season-high 293 yards against the Orange – and with strong winds swirling inside Notre Dame Stadium – Clemson quickly went away from the running game against the Fighting Irish even before things got out of hand.

Shipley, who’s averaging nearly 6 yards a pop for the season, got just seven carries in the first half despite averaging 7.4 yards on those attempts. And Uiagalelei was hardly used at all in the run game, a peculiar development considering the 6-foot-4, 230-pounder was averaging nearly 44 yards on the ground coming into the game. His first designed run wasn’t called until early in the third quarter.

“I think the biggest reason was sometimes there were calls where he had a run and he threw it, so there were some RPO (run-pass option) thoughts there, too,” offensive coordinator Brandon Streeter said afterward. “It was kind of a mixture there, but I probably should’ve gotten him the ball a little bit more as a runner there in the first half.”

So what is the Tigers’ offensive identity? Depends on who you ask.

“Up until two games ago, it was an offense that was really, really good on third down, and we’re still good on third down,” Swinney said. “It’s an offense that was taking care of the football and an offense that was scoring and had some explosiveness built into it. Led the nation in red-zone scoring until a couple of games ago, and I think we’re still top 5 in the country.

“All of those things. But we’ve got to get back to doing what we need to do.”

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

Now there is a new way you can support Clemson student-athletes. Purchase collectibles from Dear Old Clemson and the proceeds with go to support Clemson student-athletes. Visit Dear Old Clemson to find out how you can help!

Five Clemson players to keep an eye on vs. Syracuse

Ahead of Clemson’s Top 15 matchup with Syracuse on Saturday, here are five Clemson players fans should watch closely.

No. 5 Clemson has yet another Top 15 matchup on its hands on Saturday, and this time it’s against No. 14 Syracuse.

Coming off a six-point victory over Florida State last week, the Tigers enter Week 7 atop the ACC Atlantic Divison with a perfect 7-0 record on the 2022 season.

The Orange are right behind the Tigers, however, as they are also undefeated on the year with a 6-0 record.

Although Death Valley has hosted some incredible games through the years, Saturday’s noon kickoff between these two teams will be the first time that two 6-0 or better ACC teams have faced off in Memorial Stadium.

With such high stakes, both teams will be hungry for a victory, and for the Tigers, a win will give them a gigantic leg up on the rest of the Atlantic Divison.

That said, here are five Tigers fans should watch closely during Saturday’s game.

Box Score Breakdown: Clemson’s stat leaders from road win over Boston College

Check out the stat leaders from Clemson’s latest win over Boston College.

No. 5 Clemson remains undefeated after another ACC matchup and win on the road at Boston College on Saturday.

In the Tigers 31-3 win over the Eagles, quarterback DJ Uiagalelei put together another impressive performance at the helm, completing 18-for-32 passes (roughly 56%) for 220 yards and three touchdowns.

Uiagalelei led Clemson on the ground for the second straight week, garnering 12 carries for 36 yards.

En route to the win, Uiagalelei connected with five different receivers for at least two receptions and 20 yards.

Check out Clemson Wire’s breakdown of the box score and stats recorded in the Tigers win over Boston College.

3 offensive keys to a Clemson win over Boston College

Here are three offensive keys for the Tigers to walk away from Boston College with a win.

Dabo Swinney and the Clemson football program are coming off substantial wins in back-to-back weeks, defeating top ACC opponents in Wake Forest and NC State.

Following back-to-back weeks with wins over two teams ranked in the top 25 teams, the Tigers travel to Massachusetts to take on Boston College in a game that should be much easier for the team on paper. Though it should be an easier matchup, anything can happen in college football, with Clemson’s Saturday matchup with the Golden Eagles no different.

The Tigers’ offense will have to continue to perform and show their week-to-week improvement against Boston College to continue their excellent start to the 2022 season.

Here are three offensive keys for the Tigers to walk away from their matchup with Boston College with a win.

Five takeaways from Clemson’s double OT win over Wake Forest

What we learned from Clemson’s huge double OT win over Wake Forest.

Clemson improved to 4-0 Saturday as Dabo Swinney and the Tigers walked away from Truist Field in Winston-Salem (N.C.) with a 51-45 double overtime win over Wake Forest.

It was a massive in-conference win for No.5 Clemson as starting quarterback DJ Uiagalelei and the Tigers’ offense had their best performance of the season. While the Clemson offense was performing at the highest level we’ve seen so far this season, the defense struggled mightily, allowing Sam Hartman to complete 20-29 passes for 337-yard and six touchdowns.

Game after game, we learn a little bit more about this Clemson team, with their wild win over No.21 Wake Forest being no different.

Here are five takeaways I believe to be some of the most important from Clemson’s Week 4 win over Wake Forest.

Continuity playing a role in Uiagalelei’s fast start

D.J. Uiagalelei hasn’t been flawless this season, but Clemson’s quarterback isn’t where he was last season. The importance of that can’t be overstated for the Tigers’ offense, which spun its wheels for much of the 2021 campaign in plummeting from …

D.J. Uiagalelei hasn’t been flawless this season, but Clemson’s quarterback isn’t where he was last season.

The importance of that can’t be overstated for the Tigers’ offense, which spun its wheels for much of the 2021 campaign in plummeting from its usual production from recent years. A significant part of the downturn was quarterback play as Uiagalelei completed less than 56% of his passes and thew more interceptions (10) than touchdowns (9).

Through three games of his second season as the full-time starter, it’s been a different story for Uiagalelei. Turnovers have still popped up here and there with a lost fumble against Georgia Tech and an interception against Furman – and Clemson coach Dabo Swinney acknowledged Uiagalelei was fortunate to not have another on a particular ill-advised throw against Louisiana Tech last week – but Uiagalelei is completing his passes at a 65% rate while accounting three times as many touchdowns (6) as turnovers (2).

Fresh off a 48-point outing against Louisiana Tech, the Tigers have eclipsed the 40-point mark in two of their first three games. That’s something they did three times all of last season on their way to averaging just 26.3 points per game.

Individual growth in Uiagalelei’s game has helped. So have a lighter frame, improved mobility and a clean bill of health. Uiagalelei, who’s fully recovered from the sprained knee he played with toward the end of last season, is the Tigers’ second-leading rusher with 114 yards on the ground, 62 of those coming in the win over Louisiana Tech.

But Uiagalelei said having a supporting cast that’s remained the same has contributed to his fast start as much as anything.

“For me, it’s been really nice,” he said. “It’s been a pleasure to have the same guys each and every week and to be able to keep growing with the same guys each and every week.”

Swinney admitted coming into the season that Uiagalelei needed to raise his level of play, but he’s been adamant since the end of last season that the quarterback needs more consistent help around him, something that was hard to come by a season ago as injuries piled up.

Clemson started eight different combinations along the offensive line last fall. Running backs Will Shipley and Kobe Pace weren’t available for every game, and the Tigers’ top three receivers entering the season ended it on the shelf.

But there hasn’t been nearly as much fluidity in personnel so far this season. While there have been the usual substitutions for depth purposes, Clemson’s offense has had the same starting lineup in all three games.

“It’s important, man,” Uiagalelei said. “I’d be lying to you (if I said) it wasn’t important to be able to get that timing down.”

The consistency hasn’t always been there for the receivers, who’ve had their share of drops early on. But Uiagalelei’s top three targets so far this season – Beaux Collins, Brannon Spector and freshman Antonio Williams – have combined for 26 catches while senior wideout Joseph Ngata has caught six passes in the last two games. Tight end Davis Allen has made his share of big plays, too, averaging 16.8 yards on his five receptions so far.

“That’s everything for a quarterback and receivers is timing, to be able to know exactly where he’s going to be at and for receivers to know exactly where the ball is going to be at,” Uiagalelei said. “And the only time you get that is through repetition. To be able to continue to have those reps each and every week, it’s been great.”

Uiagalelei and the rest of the offense will try to build on the early momentum Saturday when Clemson hits the road for the time in ACC play against No. 21 Wake Forest.

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

Now there is a new way you can support Clemson student-athletes. Purchase collectibles from Dear Old Clemson and the proceeds with go to support Clemson student-athletes. Visit Dear Old Clemson to find out how you can help!

The good, the bad and the ugly from Clemson’s win over Louisiana Tech

Clemson overcame a sluggish start to pull away from Louisiana Tech for its latest win late Saturday night at Memorial Stadium. The victory moved the Tigers to 3-0 with their first ACC road test looming against Wake Forest next weekend. Here’s the …

Clemson overcame a sluggish start to pull away from Louisiana Tech for its latest win late Saturday night at Memorial Stadium. The victory moved the Tigers to 3-0 with their first ACC road test looming against Wake Forest next weekend.

Here’s the good, the bad and the ugly from the Tigers’ 48-20 victory:

The good

Clemson has been nearly unbeatable when rushing for at least 200 yards during Dabo Swinney’s tenure. Until Saturday, though, the Tigers had not been able to add to their impressive record when pulling off that feat this season.

Clemson’s ground game put it all together against Tech as the Tigers rushed for a season-high 280 yards, improving their record under Swinney to 73-1 when reaching the 200-yard mark. At the center of it was Will Shipley once Clemson started feeding him the ball with more regularity (more on that later).

With Tech opting to play man defense for much of the night, Clemson’s offensive line blocked things up well in the box and seemed to get more consistent push, creating plenty of running lanes for Shipley and company. Shipley rushed for a career-high 139 yards and two scores on just 12 carries. 

Clemson kept its perfect red-zone scoring percentage intact by coming away with points on all six of their trips inside the Bulldogs’ 20-yard line, continuing a strong start to the season in terms of Clemson’s execution near the goal line. The Tigers found the end zone on each of their final three red-zone trips after having to settle for field goals on two of their first three. Clemson is one of just two teams nationally (Michigan) that’s had at least 19 red-zone possessions and scored on all of them.

And the offense got more help in the turnover department from the defense, which had four more takeaways. Clemson scored 21 points off those turnovers, which helped the Tigers pull away in the second half. Clemson, which also had its first turnover-free game of the season on offense, sits at plus-3 in turnover margin through three games.

The Tigers also blocked a field-goal attempt in the first half, running their tally to three blocked kicks on the season.

The bad

As explosive as Clemson’s offense was at times, the Tigers are still trying to put together a four-quarter game in the consistency department.

Clemson started fast the previous week against Furman but ended slow. It was the opposite Saturday when the Tigers mustered just 13 first-half points against what’s been one of the worst defenses in Conference USA this season. After putting together a 79-touchdown drive midway through the first quarter, Clemson punted on three of its final four possessions of the first half, accumulating just 26 yards on those drives.

Uiagalelei wasn’t as precise with his accuracy as he had been the week before, overthrowing a couple of shot plays early before finding a groove in the second half. He didn’t always get consistent help from his receivers. Joseph Ngata’s diving catch to set up the Tigers’ first touchdown followed by a drop on a well-placed ball later in the first half was a prime example.

Defensively, Clemson’s back seven continues to struggle in coverage. A week earlier, it was Furman’s quick passing game and screens that gave the Tigers fits. Tech’s Air-Raid offense went vertical more often than not, either burning the Tigers’ man coverage or finding soft spots in a zone. Tech quarterback Parker McNeil needed just 23 completions to throw for 311 yards, an average of nearly 14 yards per completion.

Clemson’s defense wasn’t all that disruptive up front with just one sack on more than 40 pass attempts and seven tackles for loss, though the Tigers were playing without a handful of significant contributors on that side of the ball.

The ugly

While the offense struggled to find its overall footing early, Shipley ripped off 20 yards on his first run. He later scored on a 2-yard plunge. Yet despite averaging 7 yards on his five carries in the first quarter, Shipley didn’t get another carry for the rest of the first half.

In a perplexing move, Clemson went away from Shipley and the running game for most of the second quarter despite averaging 6.6 yards a carry as a team through the first 15 minutes, a decision offensive coordinator Brandon Streeter acknowledged afterward was made too quickly.

The Tigers opted to throw a bunch of 50-50 balls to receivers instead trying to take advantage of those one-on-one matchups on the perimeter, but Uiagalelei completed just 5 of 12 passes during a second quarter that saw Clemson muster just 79 total yards. When Streeter went back to the running game with more regularity in the second half – Clemson ran it 25 times in the final two quarters to just 14 times in the first half – the Tigers averaged 7.7 yards on the ground.

Meanwhile, injuries keep mounting. While defensive linemen Tyler Davis (undisclosed) and Xavier Thomas (foot) were held another week as a precaution, fellow defensive lineman Tre Williams (knee), safety Andrew Mukuba (elbow) and cornerback Nate Wiggins (hip flexor) also didn’t play. Starting corner Sheridan Jones got banged up during the game and was unable to finish.

Swinney said he’s not worried about any of those injuries long term. But for a team that was ravaged by injuries early and often a season ago, it’s a situation worth monitoring.

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

Now there is a new way you can support Clemson student-athletes. Purchase collectibles from Dear Old Clemson and the proceeds with go to support Clemson student-athletes. Visit Dear Old Clemson to find out how you can help!

 

Social media reacts to the first half of Clemson vs. LA Tech

Clemson in a one possession game at the half.

The first half of Clemson’s matchup versus Louisiana Tech in Memorial Stadium is officially in the books with the Tigers holding a 13-6 lead over the Bulldogs at the half.

Clemson’s offense recorded two field goals and one touchdown over the course of the half. Quarterback DJ Uiagalelei completed 12-for-22 for 144 yards, 42 yards rushing and a 55% completion rate. Uiagalelei had two monster throws for 41 yards and 38 yards to Joseph Ngata and Antonio Williams respectively, one of which resulted in the Tigers lone touchdown of the half.

On the other hand, Clemson’s defense struggled to contain Louisiana Tech’s offense which garnered 156 yards of offense and two field goals.

Here’s a look at how Twitter reacted to the first half of the Clemson-Louisiana Tech game:

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Huge throw from Uiagalelei extends Clemson’s lead 10-0

Clemson extends its lead to 10-0 in the first thanks to a huge drive for quarterback DJ Uiagalelei.

Clemson extended its lead to 10-0 thanks to a huge 41-yard connection between quarterback DJ Uiagalelei and wide receiver Joseph Ngata in the second drive of the first quarter.

The Tigers started off with two back-to-back rushing plays for a combined 18 yard gain. The next two plays Uiagalelei threw a 15 yarder and a 41-yard missile to Beaux Collins and Ngata respectively to get Clemson to the 5 yard line. Running back Will Shipley eventually ran it in for the Tigers for their first trip to the end zone of the night.

The drive took place in six plays for 79 yards and one touchdown in 2:27.

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