Top performers from Clemson’s Orange and White spring game

Here are Clemson’s top performers from the Orange and White spring game.

Clemson just wrapped up its annual Orange and White spring game Saturday, April 9th, at Memorial Stadium, with the White team defeating the Orange team 15-7. In the final piece of football for Clemson this season, we will have a long wait till the next time we get to see the Tigers put on the pads. 

The defenses were in control throughout the game, with some players on the defensive line putting on a show for the Clemson faithful. Though the offenses had a little more trouble, several players found a way to put together some impressive performances.

Here are the top performers from Clemson’s spring game.

Defense dominates first half of Clemson spring game

Defense takes control in the first half of the Orange and White Game.

The defenses came out to play in Clemson’s Orange and the White spring game as the Orange team leads the White team 7-3 at the end of the first half.

It was a slow-paced first half as neither offense found a way to put together an inspiring drive. Both Jonathan Weitz’s 29-yard field goal for the White team and Phil Mafah’s 6-yard touchdown rush for the Orange team were products of muffed snaps on punts. If the punters hadn’t made these mistakes, the game would have likely been 0-0 heading into the half.

While K.J. Henry put on a show for the White team’s defense, Myles Murphy did the same for the Orange team. In just one half of play, Henry racked up 3.5 sacks and 3.5 tackles for loss as Murphy contributed three sacks to go along with four tackles for loss.

The defenses combined for nine sacks to go along with seventeen tackles for loss in just a half of football and I’m sure the guys on the defensive lines would argue there were more.

Both sophomore DJ Uiagalelei and Freshman Cade Klubnik have struggled to get their offenses going in the much-awaited quarterback battle. Uiagalelei went 10-24 for 116 yards in the first half, while Klubnik completed 13-19 passes for 93 yards.

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Hall says this defensive end has stood out in spring practice

One of Clemson’s defensive ends has stood out above the rest with what he’s shown this spring, according to Clemson defensive ends coach Lemanski Hall. Hall spoke with the media Monday following the Tigers’ spring practice and said, “KJ Henry, in my …

One of Clemson’s defensive ends has stood out above the rest with what he’s shown this spring, according to Clemson defensive ends coach Lemanski Hall.

Hall spoke with the media Monday following the Tigers’ spring practice and said, “KJ Henry, in my opinion, has probably had the best camp out of all the guys.”

“Really explosive,” Hall continued. “At first, I thought the knee was going to be a issue, but he spent a lot of time fundamentally working on just his balance, his flexibility, stability and all those things. So, his point of attack has been strong. His pass-rush, we’ve moved him around to different spots to kind of show his versatility. He’s done a good job with that.”

Henry, who is entering his fifth year as a member of Clemson’s football program, sustained a left knee injury a year ago that forced him to miss the spring.

The 6-foot-4, 260-pounder had the best season of his career statistically this past season with 28 tackles, 6.5 tackles for loss and 4.5 sacks despite wearing a knee brace for most of it.

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Former Tiger on ‘a big reason’ why he thinks Clemson will go unbeaten in ’22

The Avengers have this former Clemson standout very excited for the Tigers’ 2022 football season. No, of course not the superheroes portrayed in Marvel’s film and comic book series, but rather the Clemson defensive linemen who have adopted those …

The Avengers have this former Clemson standout very excited for the Tigers’ 2022 football season.

No, of course not the superheroes portrayed in Marvel’s film and comic book series, but rather the Clemson defensive linemen who have adopted those superhero identities heading into next season – namely guys like 2021 All-ACC selections Xavier Thomas, Myles Murphy, Bryan Bresee and Tyler Davis, and fellow returning standout K.J. Henry, among others on the loaded defensive front.

On the Gramlich and Mac Lain podcast with Kelly Gramlich this week, former Clemson and All-ACC offensive lineman Eric Mac Lain discussed what he is most excited for as it pertains to the Tigers entering the 2022 campaign.

As you’d expect, Mac Lain mentioned Clemson’s quarterback competition between rising junior D.J. Uiagalelei and five-star freshman Cade Klubnik.

But the Tigers’ defensive line — which is calling itself The Avengers and has drawn comparisons to Clemson’s 2018 D-line that dubbed itself as the Power Rangers — has Mac Lain pumped about the potential of Dabo Swinney’s team in 2022, a team that Mac Lain believes can run the table in the ACC and get through the regular season without a loss.

“That quarterback position battle, for sure, and just seeing who can rise up from that. But then also this defensive line,” Mac Lain said of what excites him most about Clemson. “I spoke about it last year, shades of that 2018 team, and then some injuries kind of threw a curveball into that. If they can stay healthy, these guys will be the best defensive line in all of college football. And a lot of people, as myself, have compared them to that defensive line that were called the Power Rangers. They say no man, we have so much depth, we are The Avengers. And they all went out on Twitter and kind of named who they were, which I thought was super cool and just fun for fans and for people to be able to talk about. But those guys have proven it, and you have a couple of older guys in KJ Henry and Xavier Thomas that could’ve left but decided to come back – and Tyler Davis – for this final run, like a lot of those guys on that ’18 team did.

“So, I think something special is brewing there and a big reason why I believe Clemson is going to go undefeated in this regular season.”

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Shipley, Jay Courie jump into action to help KJ Henry’s family

When Jay Courie and Will Shipley found out that KJ Henry’s father, Keith, required a kidney transplant, they immediately sprung into action. Shipley talked with Courie, who does the Clemson sophomore running back’s marketing representation and he …

When Jay Courie and Will Shipley found out that KJ Henry’s father, Keith, required a kidney transplant, they immediately sprung into action.

Shipley talked with Courie, who does the Clemson sophomore running back’s marketing representation and he wanted to help organize something for the Henry family. On Sunday, they put together a player-led autograph session, which served as a fundraiser to help raise money for Keith’s kidney transplant.

“It was just a problem at hand and we wanted to get to a conclusion and help in any way that we possibly could,” Shipley told The Clemson Insider Sunday. “Jay Courie came to me and asked me if we wanted to do something and was just quick to jump to it.”

KJ announced on Feb. 9 that his father was in need of a kidney. Not even a month later and his teammates, led by Shipley, were able to host a player-led fundraiser Sunday.

“We both thought that was such a great idea,” Courie said. “We put this together and we thought this would be a good way to do it. We just had so many players that were willing to come out and give their time for KJ. I just think it’s a great show of team unity and how much they care about each other. As you’ll see, this is just a great group of young men.”

According to Courie, KJ was so happy and so excited that people were willing to do this and take their time to do this for him and his family.

In addition to KJ, Shipley was joined by nine of his fellow teammates: Jordan McFadden, Xavier Thomas, Beaux Collins, Marcus Tate, Phil Mafah, Jake Briningstool, BT Potter, Davis Allen and Cade Klubnik.

“Probably the biggest problem was limiting how many players could come,” Courie added. “Not so much how many could get here, but how many we had to tell no.”

As Courie previously indicated, not a single player is earning a dime, all the proceeds earned from Sunday’s fundraiser will be going to the Keith Henry Fund. Something like this could have probably happened before NIL, but there still would have been a lot of compliance hurdles in the way.

NIL definitely made an event like Sunday’s easier to have.

“Everybody was just so quick to jump to it and to be able to get something set up in a short amount of time with a good crowd, a great panel,” Shipley said. “We’re all really pumped and just glad we could get something together so quickly.”

“All of us love KJ like a brother,” Shipley added. “His family is our family. That’s something that spreads throughout our locker room. I think anyone could say that for anyone in this room, anyone back in the facility. We love each other on the field and off the field.”

Courie has already had conversations about making further charitable efforts in the future.

“He’s just a tremendous young man,” Courie said of Shipley. He’s a servant leader. He cares about his teammates. He cares about everyone. He’s just got incredible ethics and leadership qualities. He’s pretty special and he’s not a bad football player either.”

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Support a ‘blessing’ for Keith Henry as he waits for kidney transplant

As Keith Henry watched one person after another file into the auditorium inside the Clemson Madren Center, tears welled in his eyes. “I’m full today,” Henry said before pausing to collect himself. With the help of his son, Clemson defensive end K.J. …

As Keith Henry watched one person after another file into the auditorium inside the Clemson Madren Center, tears welled in his eyes.

“I’m full today,” Henry said before pausing to collect himself.

With the help of his son, Clemson defensive end K.J. Henry, and some of K.J.’s teammates, those people were there for Keith. The elder Henry has been dealing with chronic kidney disease for years and recently found out he will need a kidney transplant.

K.J. took to Twitter early last month to publicly reveal his father’s condition. Soon thereafter, he and some of his teammates came up with a way to help cover the cost of Keith’s medical bills: an autograph fundraiser. K.J. publicized the event via social media a week ago, which caught his mother, Nicole, by surprise.

“I didn’t even know about this event. K.J. did it on his own,” said Nicole, who’s been married to Keith for 27 years. “I was in the grocery store and I just happened to be in line checking out and said, ‘Let me look through Twitter.’ I saw it, and I busted out in the grocery store crying.”

The emotion carried over to Sunday afternoon when hundreds of fans showed up at the Madren Center in support of the cause. Each one bought a $100 ticket in exchange for having posters, helmets, footballs and other memorabilia signed by K.J. and other prominent Clemson players, including offensive lineman Jordan McFadden, defensive lineman Tyler Davis, running back Will Shipley and freshman quarterback Cade Klubnik.

“Blessed to be at a university like this and able to have a platform where we can help him,” K.J. said. “Really all the people around here have been great about it.”

The turnout was in the hundreds. The line for autographs snaked up multiple tiers of stairs and out of the auditorium’s doors. As they finished going through the autograph line, some fans stopped to chat with Keith and Nicole, who looked on from a distance. Many offered up well wishes.

“It’s a blessing,” Keith said. “I look at life a little bit different now. You take things for granted, and I thank the Lord every day for giving me another day.”

Football runs in the Henry bloodlines, which is how Keith’s kidney issues were initially discovered. Keith described himself as “semi” retired at this point, but he was a college football coach for more than three decades. That included an 11-year stint as an assistant at Wake Forest under then-head coach Jim Grobe, whom Nicole credited for encouraging her husband and the rest of his staff to undergo annual physicals.

“He often would run them out of the office. Go get your yearly, know your numbers, know your blood type. He really campaigned to them,” Nicole said. “We’re thankful for that because Keith started having checkups, and they were noticing his blood pressure being high. From there, it started looking like his kidney levels were high. And he got referred to a kidney doctor. So we were told years ago it was inevitable.”

Keith said he got word last summer that he would need a new kidney after learning his condition had deteriorated to pre-dialysis levels. After passing a series of tests that took months to complete but ultimately deemed him fit enough to become a recipient, Keith was put on a transplant waiting list.

It could be anywhere from six months to five years before he finds a match, Keith said his surgeon told him.

“You get up every morning, and you know it’s out there,” Keith said. “You know the kidney is on the shelf somewhere. … It’s just when are you going to get that call?”

The medical bills are also piling up. Keith said he doesn’t know exactly how much all of the consultations and the transplant procedure itself will end up costing, but even a brief doctor’s visit is setting him back thousands. He estimated his health insurance will cover 65% of the tab.

The hope for Keith and his family is that Sunday’s fundraiser will help take care of the rest. Every dollar made will be put in a fund for Keith formed in partnership with Help Hope Live, a non-profit organization dedicated to raising money for medical bills.

According to the organization’s official website, Keith’s transplant campaign has a goal of $95,000. As of Sunday, more than $73,000 had been raised.

“I’m calling it Team Henry because we’re going to be a team no matter what,” Nicole said. “The way I metaphorically put it because football is our world, a season is a season no matter what season it is. This is our season.”

While Keith and his family anxiously await that call, they also see the situation as an opportunity to bring awareness to the disease. Nicole has already lost a brother-in-law to kidney failure in large part because she said he lived most of his life unaware of his condition.

“If I want to give anybody advice, get your blood checked and know your blood type because if I had never hit this thing head on, I wouldn’t have known where we’re at today,” Keith said.

Now that Keith knows the extent of what he’s dealing with, he couldn’t help but look around a few more times at a room filling up for him, thankful for the support he’s receiving from a couple of different families. 

“The Clemson family has been freaking great,” Keith said. “I can’t express how much those guys have embedded in me and embedded my son. We love those guys to death.”

Lead photo courtesy of Twitter/K.J. Henry

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‘Time for something new’: Clemson’s defensive line adopts different superhero identity

Four years later, Clemson’s defensive line is taking on different identities to fight offenses. In sticking with the superhero theme, K.J. Henry preferred to call it something else. “They showed us the ropes, so we know how to fight off crime,” …

Four years later, Clemson’s defensive line is taking on different identities to fight offenses. In sticking with the superhero theme, K.J. Henry preferred to call it something else.

“They showed us the ropes, so we know how to fight off crime,” Clemson’s veteran defensive end said. “We know how to do it the right way.”

They, of course, was a reference to the Power Rangers, the collective name adopted by college football’s most formidable defensive front. That group, which spearheaded the nation’s No. 1 scoring defense in helping Clemson capture its most recent national title in 2018, was headlined by future first-round draft picks Clelin Ferrell, Dexter Lawrence and Christian Wilkins.

This year’s line, which again could be college football’s best in 2022, is calling itself The Avengers, a nod to Marvel Comics’ popular fictional team of superheroes. Henry admitted the idea came about after the group kept getting asked if it was going to take on an identity of its own.

“We felt like we had great excitement for the guys coming back,” Henry said. “A lot of hoorah for what we could do this year. Obviously we had a great example in the Power Rangers, but it’s time for something new. So that’s kind of what we came up with.”

The belief that this year’s defensive front could be just as formidable as what Clemson had a few years back is rooted in the fact that the Tigers are returning their entire two-deep up front on a defense that yielded the second-fewest points in the country. The Tigers also ranked in the top 15 nationally in sacks and tackles for loss.

And the group has its share of star power, too. 

Clemson could have multiple defensive linemen taken early in the 2023 NFL Draft with end Myles Murphy and tackle Bryan Bresee the strongest first-round candidates. Murphy, a former five-star signee, led the Tigers in sacks and tackles for loss last season while Bresee, the No. 1 overall recruit in the 2020 recruiting cycle, was a freshman All-American before a torn ACL cut his sophomore season short after four games.

Henry and fellow end Xavier Thomas, former blue-chip recruits themselves, also have next-level aspirations as does Bresee’s running mate on the interior, Tyler Davis, a three-year starter heading into his senior season. And while senior end Justin Mascoll doesn’t get as much fanfare, the 6-foot-4, 260-pounder, who’s started 11 games in his career, could also hear his name called during next year’s draft.

“We’ve got four guys at (defensive) end that, this time next year, are going to be getting ready to head off to the NFL,” Clemson coach Dabo Swinney said. “To know we’ve got all four of those guys back for one more year is a blessing. We’ve got a chance to be really, really special in that defensive line when we get everybody back together.”

Bresee will be limited this spring as he continues to work his way back from two injuries – the 6-5, 300-pounder also had offseason shoulder surgery – as will backup tackle Tre Williams (shoulder), leaving most of the reps on the interior to Davis, Ruke Orhorhoro, Etinosa Reubuen, Payton Page and DeMonte Capehart for now. With Bresee injured, Orhorhoro started the final nine games this past season and finished with 42 tackles and eight tackles for loss. 

Clemson has nine defensive linemen back from last year’s team that have started at least one game, seven of those with multiple starts. The Tigers ranked seventh nationally against the run (96.3 yards allowed per game), ninth in sacks (3.23) and 15th in tackles for loss (7.1).

As for the specific Avengers identities each lineman will be adopting, Henry said he’s Captain America. He said he’d leave it to his teammates to reveal their characters, which seemed to happen via social media Wednesday night in response to Henry’s tweet asking the group to assemble.

Most of the linemen’s responses can be seen in the Twitter thread below:

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Clemson players organize event to help Henry family

Clemson players are stepping up in support of Tiger defensive end KJ Henry’s father, Keith. Some of Henry’s teammates have put together a fundraiser to raise money for his father’s kidney transplant. The autograph signing fundraiser will be held …

Clemson players are stepping up in support of Tiger defensive end KJ Henry’s father, Keith.

Some of Henry’s teammates have put together a fundraiser to raise money for his father’s kidney transplant.

The autograph signing fundraiser will be held Sunday, March 6 from 12:30 p.m. to 3 p.m. at the Clemson University Madren Center. All proceeds will go to the Keith Henry Fund, and multiple Clemson football players will be in attendance.

The event will be limited to 350 tickets, which you can purchase here.

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Send up some prayers for this Tiger and his family

Clemson defensive end K.J. Henry and his family need your help and prayers. Henry took to social media Wednesday with the difficult revelation that his father, Keith, needs a kidney transplant. “My father is not in any pain for real, but this is …

Clemson defensive end K.J. Henry and his family need your help and prayers.

Henry took to social media Wednesday with the difficult revelation that his father, Keith, needs a kidney transplant.

“My father is not in any pain for real, but this is something that’s kind of hit myself and hit the family,” Henry said in a video he posted on Twitter.

Henry said he wanted to share the news for three reasons: to spread awareness and seek donations for help with medical bills, to see if anyone would be willing to step up and donate a kidney (his father is in need of two), and to ask for prayers.

Henry also shared ways to help in the following post:

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Goodwin still has high expectations for Clemson’s defense despite changes

Wesley Goodwin was pleased with the operation of his first time running Clemson’s defense, and why wouldn’t he be? The Tigers are less than a month removed from their 11th straight 10-win season, one capped by a performance Clemson has grown …

Wesley Goodwin was pleased with the operation of his first time running Clemson’s defense, and why wouldn’t he be?

The Tigers are less than a month removed from their 11th straight 10-win season, one capped by a performance Clemson has grown accustomed to on the defensive side of the ball. Clemson allowed just 13 points and 270 yards against one of the Big 12’s best offenses in its Cheez-It Bowl win over Iowa State. The defense also scored the decisive touchdown on Mario Goodrich’s pick-six in the second half and didn’t have any procedural penalties in Goodwin’s inaugural game as Clemson’s defensive coordinator.

“Just the whole operation was above my expectations,” Goodwin said. “No 12 men or 10 men on the field. Always worry about that type of stuff in first-time roles, but, overall, I thought our game operation was unbelievable.”

Still, not everything was perfect in Goodwin’s eyes.

“We gave up 13 points,” Goodwin said. “We were hoping for a shutout or whatever.”

It’s clear the expectations are still high for a unit that’s morphed into one of the nation’s best despite some not-so-insignificant turnover. It started with the architect of it all, Brent Venables, who split for his first head coaching job at Oklahoma before Clemson’s bowl game after a decade as Dabo Swinney’s defensive coordinator.

Despite getting a promotion to assistant head coach along with a raise at Clemson, fellow assistant Todd Bates eventually joined Venables at OU, where Clemson’s former defensive tackles coach and recruiting coordinator will be a co-coordinator. Venables also took Miguel Chavis, an off-field staffer at Clemson, with him to be his defensive ends coach.

There are also some key holes to fill at different levels of a defense that finished this season in the top 10 nationally in yards and points allowed. Veteran linebackers James Skalski and Baylon Spector are on the way out after finishing the season as the Tigers’ top two tacklers. Clemson is losing three starters in the secondary, including the ACC’s best corner tandem in Andrew Booth Jr. and Mario Goodrich.

Goodwin was promoted to replace Venables after spending a couple of different stints as one of Clemson’s top off-field defensive assistants. While Goodwin will add his own wrinkles here and there, the bowl game showed the Tigers aren’t going to deviate much from a defensive system that’s been highly successful in recent years.

As for Bates’ replacement,  Swinney brought back one of Clemson’s own in Nick Eason, a longtime player and coach in the NFL who had gotten back in the college game last season at Auburn. There’s also enough personnel returning on the field that it’s not inconceivable for Goodwin’s expectations to be met going forward.

Andrew Mukuba is in line to return at safety following a freshman All-America season, and Trenton Simpson may be the most versatile linebacker in the ACC after recording 78 tackles (third on the team), 12 tackles for loss, six sacks and three pass breakups as a sophomore. Of course, much of the optimism that Clemson can remain among the nation’s elite defensively lies up front.

Barring any transfers, the Tigers are set to return their entire two-deep along what was still one of the nation’s top defensive lines despite not having Bryan Bresee around for most of it. Clemson’s star defensive tackle was limited to four games after tearing his ACL, but he’ll be back for his junior season.

So will defensive end Myles Murphy, who led Clemson with seven sacks and 14 tackles for loss. Defensive tackle Tyler Davis is returning for his senior season, and K.J. Henry gave the unit a boost when he decided to return, too. Clemson found out its entire starting defensive line would remain intact, though, when Xavier Thomas recently announced he would use his COVID-19 year and run it back for a fifth season, which elicited a response from Goodwin on social media.

“Fired up to have you back!” Goodwin tweeted at Thomas. “Huge piece of the best DL in the country! Can’t wait for next season!”

Whether or not the Tigers can remain the same suffocating unit it turned into under Venables remains to be seen, but that is Goodwin’s expectation.