Clemson cornerback to undergo surgery

Clemson DB will get a season-ending surgery

Dabo Swinney and the Tigers will likely lose a major contributor for the rest of the 2022 season. 

According to Swinney, Greene is dealing with a groin injury that will require him to get surgery. Greene has made nine appearances for the Tigers this season with two starts. The junior nickel cornerback had nine tackles this season. 

The Tigers will end their 2022 regular season with three straight home games as the team looks to secure a spot in the College Football Playoff. Clemson will miss Greene when they take on Miami Saturday, November 19th, in Death Valley at 3:30 p.m. though the team remains the heavy favorite.

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Clemson DB to undergo surgery

Clemson will be without one of its primary defensive contibutors for the rest of the season. The Tigers will continue their three-game homestand Saturday against Miami, but they won’t have Malcolm Greene’s services when they do. Clemson coach Dabo …

Clemson will be without one of its primary defensive contibutors for the rest of the season.

The Tigers will continue their three-game homestand Saturday against Miami, but they won’t have Malcolm Greene’s services when they do. Clemson coach Dabo Swinney said Greene is dealing with a groin injury that will require surgery.

Greene, a junior nickel corner, has played in seven games with two starts. He has nine tackles on the season.

Greene on CFP rankings: ‘I know what we’re trying to do at the end of the day’

Taking one game at a time is the name of the game for Clemson coach Dabo Swinney. With the College Football Playoff committee releasing the initial CFP rankings, a lot of speculation surrounded where Clemson would fall, given some teams may have a …

Taking one game at a time is the name of the game for Clemson coach Dabo Swinney.

With the College Football Playoff committee releasing the initial CFP rankings, a lot of speculation surrounded where Clemson would fall, given some teams may have a stronger strength of schedule at this point in the season.

Clemson (8-0, 6-0 ACC) came in at No. 4 in the first CFP rankings, but at this point in the season, this is not something that the players say is on many of their minds.

Junior cornerback Malcolm Greene spoke to the media on Monday ahead of the release of the CFP rankings, but he didn’t express much concern or interest in where the Tigers stack up against some fierce opposition.

The Virginia native reiterated much of what we heard from Swinney this week. Both Swinney and Greene emphasized focusing on the final goal of what the Tigers are trying to do as a team, and that happens one game at a time.

“No, I really don’t too much pay attention to the media and social media, but my teammates sometimes do and they sometimes talk about it, but I’m not too much on my phone,” he said. “My schedule is really busy and I don’t have too much time really to fit in too much of anything, but I sometimes see stuff on the TV. Like if I’m in the living room in the house and I get home, I get in there and I see that we’re No. 5 or something and I’m like that’s cool, but I know what we’re trying to do at the end of the day.”

It may be that the 5-foot-10, 195-pound cornerback has tunnel vision on what he needs to do each week, but it could also be his desire to focus on controlling what the Tigers can control, and that’s their approach to each game.

Even with an 8-0 record, the Tigers still have some tough competition for the remainder of the season and that starts this Saturday when Clemson faces off against Notre Dame.

Swinney gives update on status of junior DB

During his weekly Tuesday press conference, Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney gave an update on the status of this defensive back who has missed some time this season. Corner Malcolm Greene has dealt with an undisclosed injury and hasn’t played in the …

During his weekly Tuesday press conference, Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney gave an update on the status of this defensive back who has missed some time this season.

Corner Malcolm Greene has dealt with an undisclosed injury and hasn’t played in the Tigers’ last three games, though he made the trip to Boston College for last week’s game.

The junior didn’t see any action against the Eagles, but Swinney said he was available to play if needed.

“Malcolm was back last week.” Swinney said. “I know he didn’t get in there, but he was ready if needed.”

Greene entered the 2022 season credited with 31 tackles (3.5 for loss), four pass breakups, 1.5 sacks and an interception in 378 snaps over 22 games (three starts).

In this year’s season opener against Georgia Tech, Greene contributed a tackle for loss before recording four tackles and his first career forced fumble vs. Furman. The Richmond, Va., native posted two tackles and his first interception of the season vs. Louisiana Tech.

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Swinney updates statuses of injured DBs

Following fifth-ranked Clemson’s 30-20 win over No. 10 NC State on Saturday night at Death Valley, Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney provided updates on the statuses of a few injured defensive backs. The Tigers lost junior safety R.J. Mickens with an …

Following fifth-ranked Clemson’s 30-20 win over No. 10 NC State on Saturday night at Death Valley, Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney provided updates on the statuses of a few injured defensive backs.

The Tigers lost junior safety R.J. Mickens with an injury during Saturday’s game.

“Mickens is fine,” Swinney said. “We’ll see where he is (Sunday). I thought it was his shoulder but it wasn’t. So, that was good.”

Senior cornerback Sheridan Jones (stinger) and junior cornerback Malcolm Greene (undisclosed) were among the defensive players who were out for Saturday’s game.

“Sheridan couldn’t go,” Swinney said. “We actually thought he was going to be able to play as of yesterday. But he just wasn’t quite there. Malcolm, same thing.”

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Here’s who is unavailable for Clemson against NC State

Clemson has announced which players won’t be available for tonight’s game against NC State. Bryan Bresee and Malcolm Greene were listed on Clemson’s depth chart at the beginning of the week but won’t play against the Wolfpack. Bresee is out with a …

Clemson has announced which players won’t be available for tonight’s game against NC State.

Bryan Bresee and Malcolm Greene were listed on Clemson’s depth chart at the beginning of the week but won’t play against the Wolfpack. Bresee is out with a non-football medical issue while Greene (undisclosed) will miss his second straight game with an injury.

Some notable names not among the unavailable players are defensive backs Andrew Mukuba (elbow) and Sheridan Jones (stinger), who missed last week’s game against Wake Forest. Their returns would be a boost to the nation’s 104th-ranked pass defense.

Swinney gives the latest on injured DBs

During his radio call-in show Monday night, Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney was asked about the Tigers’ defensive back situation heading into this weekend’s game against NC State. Safety Andrew Mukuba and cornerbacks Sheridan Jones and Malcolm …

During his radio call-in show Monday night, Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney was asked about the Tigers’ defensive back situation heading into this weekend’s game against NC State.

Safety Andrew Mukuba and cornerbacks Sheridan Jones and Malcolm Greene all did not play in last Saturday’s game at Wake Forest, but Swinney hopes to have them back for this Saturday’s game against the Wolfpack at Death Valley.

“Hopefully we’ll get some of those guys out – Mukuba and Sheridan and Malcolm – three older guys that were out,” Swinney said. “We definitely had a little bit of a baptism on some guys.”

Mukuba, a freshman All-American safety last season, missed his second straight game after recently dislocating his elbow in practice. Jones sustained a stinger early in the Louisiana Tech game and didn’t return. Greene (undisclosed) also did not make the trip to Winston-Salem.

Swinney touched on some different things the Tigers need to polish up in the secondary against NC State.

“Just playing our technique, playing the call that’s called, understanding the fundamentals – not peeking in the backfield, eyes on the right things,” Swinney said. “I mean, there’s just a lot of things that we just did really poorly in the third quarter. So, definitely got a lot of work to do this week to get ready for another really, really good team – the best team we’ve seen to this point coming in here.”

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Swinney updates injury status of team after Wake Forest game

During his Zoom conference call with the media Sunday evening, Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney gave an update on the injury status of his team following the Tigers’ 51-45 double-overtime win over Wake Forest on Saturday. “Everybody’s back in there …

During his Zoom conference call with the media Sunday evening, Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney gave an update on the injury status of his team following the Tigers’ 51-45 double-overtime win over Wake Forest on Saturday.

“Everybody’s back in there today, and we’ve got a long week,” Swinney said. “So, hopefully we’ll get a lot of guys back this week and some of these guys that were out. But again, it’s just a day-to-day thing.”

Among the players who did not make the trip to Winston-Salem for Saturday’s game was junior cornerback Malcolm Greene.

“He got banged up in the (Louisiana Tech) game and he pushed through practice, but just wasn’t able to go,” Swinney said.

Clemson will return to action Saturday against NC State at Death Valley (7:30 p.m., ABC).

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A mixed bag for Clemson’s offense in latest win

Charles Dickens would have appreciated Clemson’s offensive effort Saturday night. The acclaimed novelist started A Tale of Two Cities with that famous line, “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times.” It might be cliche, but it accurately …

Charles Dickens would have appreciated Clemson’s offensive effort Saturday night.

The acclaimed novelist started A Tale of Two Cities with that famous line, “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times.” It might be cliche, but it accurately describes the Tigers’ ebbing and flowing in their 48-20 win over Louisiana Tech.

Clemson finished with a season-high 521 yards of offense with a rather balanced 241 yards through the air and 280 on the ground, the latter led by Will Shipley’s 11.5 yards-per-carry average. But unlike a week earlier against Furman when Clemson reached the end zone on five of its first six possessions, it took a while for the Tigers to get going.

At times, Uiagalelei and his supporting cast showed flashes of the new-and-improved unit they had been in the previous six quarters leading up to their final hurdle before that marquee ACC opener at Wake Forest next weekend. And other times, it looked 2021-ish.

“Lots of ups and downs, but overall I thought we had a really good game,” quarterback D.J. Uiagalelei said.

Both of Tech’s Power Five opponents have now gashed the Bulldogs’ defense, but Missouri, a team that was taken behind the woodshed by Kansas State a week later, opened the season by putting 52 points on Tech. Despite piling up nearly 240 yards in the first two quarters, Clemson had just 13 points at the half Saturday.

Part of the problem early was red-zone inefficiency. The Tigers made trips inside Tech’s 20-yard line on three of their first four possessions but had to end two of them with B.T. Potter field goals. Clemson also punted on half of its first-half possessions, mustering just 26 yards over 14 plays on the drives that didn’t end in points.

“Turn a couple of those field goals into touchdowns,” Clemson coach Dabo Swinney said. “There were a couple of more missed plays where we were just off that, for us to get to really get where we need to be, we’ll have to make a couple of more.”

Uiagalelei wasn’t as sharp early on as he was the previous week when he turned in his most efficient performance as a Clemson quarterback. There was the occasional drop that didn’t help, but Uiagalelei also wasn’t as crisp with his accuracy, including one ill-advised throw that would’ve been an interception had it not been dropped by a Tech defensive back.

Uiagalelei completed just 12 of his first 22 passes, and Clemson rarely called Shipley’s number in the first half despite him averaging 7 yards a pop in the first two quarters. He got just five carries in the first half, and Clemson held just a 10-point lead at the break.

“I know I was kind of pissed with the way we came out in the first half and just me missing a couple of throws,” Uiagalelei said.

That’s when things changed with the help of Clemson’s defense.

Despite yielding more than 300 yards passing, the Tigers forced four turnovers, including consecutive takeaways on Tech’s first two possessions of the third quarter. The first set Clemson up at Tech’s 32-yard line, and Shipley weaved his way through the Bulldogs’ defense for a house call on the next play.

“I felt like I went away from the run game a little bit too fast in the first half,” said offensive coordinator Brandon Streeter, who dialed up 25 run plays in the final two quarters that went for 193 yards. “We got back to that in the second half, and those guys rescinded up front. It was awesome to see.”

It was the start of three straight touchdown drives for the offense, which put together its longest of the night after Malcolm Greene intercepted Tech quarterback Parker McNeil in the red zone midway with 12 minutes, 8 seconds left in the third quarter. Shipley kept the drive alive near midfield with a 9-yard spurt on fourth-and-short, Uiagalelei found freshman Adam Randall for 11 yards on third-and-9 for another set of downs at the Bulldogs’ 21, and he later connected with tight end Davis Allen to convert another third down inside the 10.

Phil Mafah capped the 14-play, 90-play march with a 4-yard touchdown plunge as part of a 21-point third quarter for the Tigers. And after the defense set Uiagalelei and company up with another short field by getting a turnovers on downs, Uiagalelei put the proverbial nail in the Bulldogs’ coffin with a 32-yard scoring strike to Beaux Collins on the next play to give the Tigers a three-touchdown lead late in the third quarter.

“It was 13-3 (at halftime), but we knew that if we put some plays together that we’re going to bust it wide open,” Uiagalelei said. “And that’s exactly what we did.”

Clemson found the end zone on four of its final six possessions. The lone punts came at the end of drives led by freshman Cade Klubnik, who made his first appearance late in the third quarter. Uiagalelei completed five of his final seven passes to finish 17 of 29 for 221 yards and two touchdowns, and Shipley added 139 yards and two scores on just 12 carries.

“I thought we got better tonight even though we probably left another 100 yards out there on just a few plays that we missed. But good balance and made some good adjustments,” Swinney said. “They’ve had the opportunity to be successful. Last year, we had to manufacture a lot. This year, it’s there. We’ve just got to do it, but it’s there. Last year, it wasn’t always there.”

The Tigers ended the night averaging 7 yards per play and had its first turnover-free game of the season while getting in 74 plays. After the way things started, it’s some much-needed momentum for the unit with the schedule set to go up a notch in difficulty next week.

But there’s still work to do.

“We can be a really good group,” Swinney said. “We’re very much a work in progress, but we’re getting better. And I thought we closed the gap a little bit tonight.”

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Clemson’s defense sees ‘a lot of fixable stuff’ following subpar performance

The bad news for Clemson’s defense coming off last week’s performance against Furman is that the lone FCS opponent on the Tigers’ schedule made moving the ball look rather easy against what is widely considered the team’s strength. The good news? …

The bad news for Clemson’s defense coming off last week’s performance against Furman is that the lone FCS opponent on the Tigers’ schedule made moving the ball look rather easy against what is widely considered the team’s strength.

The good news? Defensive coordinator Wesley Goodwin and his players believe all of the missteps are easily correctable.

“It’s just a lot of fixable stuff,” defensive tackle Ruke Orhorhoro said.

Clemson beat Furman 35-12 over the weekend, though it’s a game that could’ve been tighter had the Tigers’ offense not been as efficient early with touchdowns on five of its first six possessions. Furman outgained the Tigers x-x in total yards, averaged more than 5 yards per play and dominated time of possession (x to x) by converting 10 of its 18 third-down opportunities.

But Goodwin echoed Orhorhoro’s sentiment that the Tigers’ defensive miscues aren’t shortcomings that can’t be shored up rather quickly.

“Just clean up technique issues here and there,” Goodwin said.

Goodwin was primarily referencing Clemson’s pass defense, which was the crux of the issue. The Tigers yielded just 3.7 yards per rush, an area in which Orhorhoro said he felt like the defense performed well. But Furman averaged nearly 9 yards per completion as quarterback Tyler Huff completed better than 77% of his passes (31 of 40).

Furman had plenty of long gainers of the catch-and-run variety, particularly screen passes the Paladins hit with receivers and running backs against an overly aggressive defensive front, a blitz or a combination of the two.

“A couple of times, we didn’t hug the back in man coverage,” Goodwin said. “We have a pressure called, and you’re coming free for a reason. Slam on the brakes and react. Had a wrap blitz one time, and we’ve got to fill it as the wrapper. So those are the big things.”

After the defense got burned on those plays multiple times, Orhorhoro said he didn’t need Monday’s postgame film session to know what went wrong. He added the defensive line as a whole has to be better at recognizing when they’re getting an open lane to the quarterback, usually a telltale sign that a screen pass is coming.

“When you come too free, you just need to be like, ‘All right, something’s wrong,’” Orhorhoro said. “The quarterback’s retreating, and I came too free. I’ve got to put my foot in the ground, turn around, try to find the running back and find the ball.”

Said Goodwin, “Obviously when you’re an aggressive front, people are going to screen you to death. So we’ve just got to clean up our techniques and continue to apply them in all situations.”

As for the struggle getting Furman’s off the field on third down, Goodwin said it didn’t help that the Paladins were able to stay ahead of the chains more often than not and set themselves up with manageable second and third downs. But players and coaches also lamented some loose coverage that Clemson’s secondary played with on the back end.

“I saw on a lot of those screen plays that they ran, it was just (the pass-catcher) was wide open by himself,” cornerback Malcolm Greene said. “And with the coverages that we’ve got, all of our guys in the back seven have some responsibility. Everybody. So to see a guy wide open in a zone where you know somebody should be on him, it was really rough.”

Clemson is preparing for another heavy dose of the passing game Saturday from Louisiana Tech, which has implemented its share of air-raid principles under first-year coach Sonny Cumbie, a member of the Mike Leach coaching tree. It gives Clemson’s defense a chance to immediately redeem itself.

“We just want to come out there and make sure we have a great focus for this week,” Greene said. “And that we understand this is the next game, and that’s our biggest game.”

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!