Tigers already starting Heisman campaigns for each other

Shortly after Alabama quarterback Bryce Young was named the winner of the 2021 Heisman Trophy on Saturday night, Clemson freshman running back Will Shipley didn’t waste any time campaigning for his quarterback to take home the award next season. …

Shortly after Alabama quarterback Bryce Young was named the winner of the 2021 Heisman Trophy on Saturday night, Clemson freshman running back Will Shipley didn’t waste any time campaigning for his quarterback to take home the award next season.

Shipley took to Twitter and posted the following tweet about Tigers sophomore quarterback D.J. Uiagalelei:

Meanwhile, Clemson freshman offensive lineman Marcus Tate was already campaigning for Shipley as a Heisman candidate next year, posting the following Tweet shortly after the 2021 Heisman Trophy ceremony Saturday night:

In his first year with the Tigers, Shipley leads the team with 678 rushing yards and 10 rushing touchdowns on 131 carries across nine games, averaging 5.2 yards per attempt.

As for Uiagalelei, he entered the 2021 season as a Heisman candidate but of course hasn’t had the type of season many expected, completing 54.7 percent of his passes for 2,059 yards and nine touchdowns with nine interceptions, while also rushing for 304 yards and four scores.

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5 surprises from Clemson’s regular season

Clemson reeled off five straight wins to finish the regular season strong. But for the first time since 2014, the Tigers won’t be part of the College Football Playoff. They’re not even playing for an ACC championship this weekend. In other words, …

Clemson reeled off five straight wins to finish the regular season strong. But for the first time since 2014, the Tigers wonā€™t be part of the College Football Playoff. Theyā€™re not even playing for an ACC championship this weekend.

In other words, not everything went as expected for Clemson, even amid a season that came with its share of transition on offense in the post-Trevor Lawrence era.Ā 

As Clemson waits to see which bowl game it will end up in to officially put a bow on the 2021 season, hereā€™s a look at five surprises — good and bad — that played out for the Tigers this fall.

D.J. Uiagaleleiā€™s performance

Itā€™s not all that surprising that Clemsonā€™s offense took a step back with Lawrence and Travis Etienne — you know, the programā€™s all-time leading rusher — no longer around. But given the way Uiagalelei played when he got his shot last season, it was hard to envision this coming from Lawrenceā€™s successor.

A former blue-chip recruit himself, Uiagalelei made a grand introduction to the college football world in two spot starts for Lawrence last season, throwing for 781 yards and four touchdowns with no interceptions in a comeback win over Boston College and a double-overtime loss on the road against a top-5 Notre Dame team. Uiagalelei has the kind of pure arm talent that many NFL quarterbacks would envy, but he was precise with that strength, too (69.4% completion rate).

That created Heisman Trophy buzz and NIL deals at the both the local and national levels leading up to the season, but whether it was the pressure of taking over full-time for a No. 1 overall draft pick, youth, mechanics or a combination of it all, Uiagalelei wasnā€™t nearly the same quarterback this season. He completed less than half of his passes five times and owns the second-lowest completion rate (54.7%) among ACC starting quarterbacks. Heā€™s thrown as many interceptions as touchdowns (9).

Uiagalelei has had moments where heā€™s teased back to shades of his small sample size last season. He’s led fourth-quarter comebacks against Florida State and Louisville and ripped off touchdown tosses of 46 and 58 yards against the Cardinals and Wake Forest, respectively.

Heā€™s also played with a sprained knee and a dinged index finger on his throwing hand the last four games, so Clemson first has to get its quarterback healthy before working with him on his game this offseason.

Yetā€¦

Clemsonā€™s offense finally broke out

There usually comes a time over the course of a 12-game season where the realization sets in that you are what you are. And despite coaches and players trying to talk a breakout performance into existence for the longest, it looked like that point had been reached by the Tigersā€™ offense in late October when Clemson had yet another anemic showing in a 27-17 loss at Pittsburgh, one in which the Tigers’ second and final touchdown didn’t come until faced with their biggest deficit midway through the fourth quarter.

With two-thirds of their season in the books at that point, there was genuine curiosity as to whether or not Clemson would ever crack the 20-point mark in regulation against an FBS opponent. That question was answered when Clemsonā€™s offense scored 24 points in a comeback win over Florida State the next week, but you would be forgiven if you subscribed to that theory about a blind squirrel and an acorn given the way the unit had been consistently performing.

But it took all of one week for the Tigers to show that wasnā€™t a one-time thing. They put up 30 on Louisville the following week and then 44 against Connecticut.Ā 

The next week? 48 — all from the offense — against then-No. 10 Wake Forest. Then Clemson dropped 30 on South Carolina at Williams-Brice Stadium, where the Gamecocks hadnā€™t allowed more than 17 to any opponent all season. It averaged out to 36 points over the Tigersā€™ final four games — or 16 more than their season average.

A resurgent running game spearheaded the turnaround. With an offensive line that finally began to get some continuity to it and Will Shipley and Kobe Pace healthy again, Clemson averaged 208 rushing yards over the last five games. The Tigers saved their best two for last, rushing for a season-high 333 yards and four touchdowns in the 21-point win over Wake Forest before going for 265 yards on the ground against Carolina.

An elite cornerback tandem emerges

Andrew Booth has always been capable of performing at a high level. The only issue for the former five-star recruit, as Clemson coach Dabo Swinney pointed out repeatedly in the preseason, has been staying on the field long enough to have his impact felt consistently in Clemsonā€™s secondary.

But the expectation was that, as long as he could stay healthy, he would be lining up opposite Derion Kendrick, who ended last season as one of the ACCā€™s top cover corners. But Kendrick was booted from the team during the offseason, leaving a major question as to who the Tigersā€™ No. 2 corner would be.

Sheridan Jones and Fred Davis were among the other competitors vying for that starting spot opposite Booth, but Mario Goodrich won the job during fall camp and never looked back. As first-team all-ACC performers, he and Booth have morphed into the top cornerback tandem in the ACC.

And not just when it comes to locking down opposing receivers on the outside.

Sure, both have been good in coverage. Goodrich, whoā€™s been thrown at more, is second on the team with seven pass breakups to go with one interception, and Booth has taken advantage of most of the opportunities heā€™s gotten. South Carolina, for example, had to throw the ball more than it wanted against Clemson with its running game grounded and tried to pick on him. Booth responded with the first multi-interception game of his career.

But both are physical players who donā€™t mind mixing it up in run support. Goodrich (47 tackles) started the season with 12 tackles against Georgia. Booth has 37, including three for loss. Both are among the teamā€™s top 10 tacklers this season.

Theyā€™ve increased their draft stocks to the point that Clemson is going to have to find two new starting corners next season, which was hard to predict before the season started. Booth, whoā€™s played in all but one game as a junior, is widely projected to be taken in the first round of next yearā€™s NFL Draft while Goodrich has accepted an invite to the Senior Bowl.

Several freshmen make major contributions

Clemson brought in plenty of new talent as part of a top-5 recruiting class. But the Tigers have been recruiting at a high level for a while under Swinney, so it was far from a guarantee for many freshmen when it came to trying to crack the two-deep.

But whether it was sheer ability, unforeseen opportunities or a combination of the two, Clemson threw plenty of its newcomers into the fire this season. Some even found themselves in starting roles at key positions.

The most significant impacts were made by Will Shipley and Andrew Mukuba. The fleet-footed Shipley, a former five-star signee, always seemed destined to see the field early even in a crowded backfield that included Etienneā€™s longtime backup, Lyn-J Dixon.

Shipley began getting some first-team reps early in fall camp, and once Dixon transferred after three games, the writing was on the wall. Shipley and sophomore Kobe Pace quickly separated themselves as the top two backs, but Shipley has more carries than anyone (131) despite missing three games with various injuries. He still leads the Tigers in rushing yards (678) and touchdowns (10).

Mukuba, meanwhile, impressed enough to grab a starting spot at safety in his first college game against Georgia and has rarely relinquished it. Heā€™s fifth on the team with 52 tackles in nine starts and leads the Tigers with nine pass breakups. Receiver Beaux Collins joined one of the deeper positions on Clemsonā€™s roster and didnā€™t figure to have nearly as big a role as Shipley or Mukuba, but that changed over the course of the season as the Tigers gradually lost three of their top receivers (Frank Ladson Jr., Justyn Ross. Joseph Ngata) to injuries. Now Collins, whoā€™s provided some big plays through the air (13.8 yards per catch), is second on the team in receptions (28) and receiving yards (387).

Perhaps the biggest surprise among the newcomers was the immediate insertion of Marcus Tate along the offensive line. Once Clemson decided to move Matt Bockhorst over to center at the start of the season, the Tigers needed another starting left guard. Tate has been in and out of the starting lineup since (seven starts), but he has gotten more snaps (555) than any of Clemsonā€™s newcomers.

And itā€™s easy to forget about Will Taylor, who wouldā€™ve been the Tigersā€™ primary punt returner all season had it not been cut short. A shifty receiver who will also play baseball at Clemson, Taylor showed his speed and athleticism when he returned a punt 51 yards for a touchdown against South Carolina State in the third game of the season before sustaining a season-ending knee injury.

Clemson can still get to 10 wins

This may be the most surprising development of them all given the circumstances surrounding this season.

Clemson still has the nationā€™s No. 2 scoring defense and an offense thatā€™s come around despite the attrition. Because the loss of a few backup linemen in the preseason and its punt returner six games in was just the start.

Whether it be injuries, transfers or brief absences related to COVID-19, Clemson has also played part if not most of the season without its most experienced running back (Dixon), both starting interior defensive linemen (Bryan Bresee and Tyler Davis), a trio of defensive ends (Xavier Thomas, Justin Foster and Justin Mascoll) and a veteran starter on the offensive line (Bockhorst). The attrition has played a part in Clemson having to go with seven different starting combinations along that offensive front.

And for the last handful of games, Clemson has been without its top four receivers (Ladson, Ngata, Ross and E.J. Williams). Yet the Tigers still won six of their last seven to put themselves in position for an 11th straight double-digit win season, which Swinney has said would be as good as any that have come before it if Clemson can finish the job.

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Clemson’s freshmen flash potential, provide glimpse into future

Clemson won seven of its last eight games and five straight at the end of the regular season after a 2-2 start, a turnaround spearheaded by a defense that now ranks second nationally in points allowed and an offense that finally found some cohesion …

Clemson won seven of its last eight games and five straight at the end of the regular season after a 2-2 start, a turnaround spearheaded by a defense that now ranks second nationally in points allowed and an offense that finally found some cohesion in the second half of the season (36 points on average in the last five games).

Built into that success is the help the Tigers got from their freshmen.

Clemson signed the nationā€™s fifth-best recruiting class this year, according to 247Sportsā€™ composite rankings, and got a glimpse into the future by getting many of their first-year players on the field quickly. Some got more reps than others while some got more than expected.

The headliner, at least in terms of production, has been running back Will Shipley, whoā€™s shown why he was a five-star recruit coming out of the North Carolina prep ranks. Equipped with some of the best speed and quickness on Clemsonā€™s roster, Shipley started getting some first-team reps in fall camp. Once veteran Lyn-J Dixon left the program after the first three games, they became more frequent.

Shipley got his first career start the next week against North Carolina State and has started three more since. Despite missing three games with injuries, Shipley is still Clemsonā€™s leading rusher with 678 yards and has a team-high 10 rushing touchdowns. The 5-foot-11, 205-pounder has turned it on late in the season with three 100-yard rushing games in his last four. His 128 yards in Clemsonā€™s win over South Carolina last week, which included a 29-yard touchdown, tied his season-high.

Heā€™s been joined in the backfield by fellow newcomer Phil Mafah, a different kind of back at 6-1 and 225 pounds. Mafah didnā€™t play in the first four games with Clemson initially planning on redshirting him, but when Michel Dukesā€™ midseason transfer thinned out the depth at the position even more, those plans changed.

Mafah provides a change of pace to Shipley and sophomore Kobe Pace, who has split first-team reps with Shipley for most of the season. Mafah debuted with 58 yards on just eight carries against Boston College on Oct. 2 and had a season-high 69 yards on nine carries against Florida State. He scored Clemsonā€™s final touchdown against Carolina to give him three rushing touchdowns on the season.

But the backfield isnā€™t the only place thatā€™s seen a bit of a youth movement this season.

Receiver was one of the deepest positions on the roster entering the season, but injuries have cut into the numbers, forcing Beaux Collins and Dacari Collins into more significant roles down the stretch. Without Frank Ladson Jr. (groin) for most of the season and Justyn Ross (foot), Joseph Ngata (foot) and E.J. Williams (leg) for the last couple of games at least, Beaux and Dacari have become first-year starters.

A versatile receiver capable of playing inside or out, Beaux has become one of D.J. Uiagaleleiā€™s favorite targets since entering the starting lineup permanently four games ago. He caught a season-high six passes against Louisville in early November and came back two weeks later with a season-high 137 receiving yards against Wake Forest. Heā€™s worked his way up to second on the team in receptions (28) and receiving yards (387).

At 6-4 and 215 pounds, Dacari is one of the bigger targets on the roster whoā€™s used that size to his advantage on the outside. Heā€™s caught just 10 passes this season but is averaging more than 16 yards on those receptions. Dacari produced Clemsonā€™s most explosive play through the air against South Carolina last week when he hauled in a 37-yard pass on a double move.

Another big target, Jake Briningstool, has shown flashes of what made him one of the nationā€™s top tight end prospects coming out of high school this past year.

Junior Davis Allen has been the Tigersā€™ primary tight end for most of the season, but with a shoulder injury derailing Braden Gallowayā€™s season earlier than expected, Briningstool has seen his playing time increase, particularly of late. The 6-6, 230-pounder had two catches for 56 yards against Connecticut last month, including an acrobatic 25-yard touchdown, and was often the second tight end when Clemson went with multiple tight-end sets against Carolina last week.

But none of Clemsonā€™s newcomers have been utilized more heavily this season than Marcus Tate and Andrew Mukuba.

Mukuba enrolled early as a four-star signee and impressed enough to earn a start in his first career game against Georgia while veteran safety Nolan Turner was still nursing an injury. Mukuba hasnā€™t come out of the starting lineup much since then, logging 523 snaps in nine starts so far. Heā€™s fifth on the team with 52 tackles and leads a defense that includes all-ACC caliber corners Andrew Booth and Mario Goodrich with nine pass breakups.

Meanwhile, Tate has logged 555 snaps this season, more than any true freshman. He’s done it along the offensive line, a position notorious for being difficult to manage for first-year players.Ā 

It hasnā€™t exactly been smooth sailing for Tate, who won the starting job at left guard to start the season once Matt Bockhorst moved to center but has been in and out of the starting lineup since. With the Tigersā€™ offensive line getting healthier late in the season, Hunter Rayburn has started over Tate in each of the last two games, but thereā€™s no substitute for experience. And Tate has gotten plenty of it this season.

Others have, too. Linebacker Barrett Carter (one start), defensive tackle Payton Page and cornerback Nate Wiggins are among those whoā€™ve gotten their feet wet in preparation for what could be more expanded roles next season. Others have had to practice more patience. Offensive tackle Tristan Leigh was the highest-ranked recruit in the Tigersā€™ 2021 class, but senior Jordan McFadden and sophomore Walker Parkers have been some of the teamā€™s most consistent performers at that position. Leigh has played in just two games as a result and is in line to redshirt.

But this season has given Clemson coach Dabo Swinney and his staff a good look at the group’s overall potential.

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Tate vows to continue to get better: ‘You’ll see the difference’

Marcus Tate is honest. He’s open. He’s accountable. Sure, he’s starting for one of the premier programs in the country, but you have to remember that he’s just a true freshman. He’s still learning at a position that doesn’t come naturally to him. …

Marcus Tate is honest. He’s open. He’s accountable.

Sure, he’s starting for one of the premier programs in the country, but you have to remember that he’s just a true freshman. He’s still learning at a position that doesn’t come naturally to him.

You could argue that he was thrown into the deep end a bit too early, but baptism by fire has molded him into the player he is now and the one he’s becoming.

He took a step back and he learned from his struggles and mistakes.

ā€œFor me, I thought it was necessary,ā€ he said Tuesday. ā€œEspecially with the Georgia Tech game, I was not prepared for the defense that they put out and thatā€™s something the defense that Iā€™ve been struggling with all season in practice as well. I thought it was necessary for me mentally, because I thought, ā€˜Damn, I really gotta get my stuff together.ā€™ I just try to make a positive impact out of it and since then, I think my practice habits have been better. Iā€™ve been practicing way harder. And, my attention to detail has been increased because I donā€™t want to lose my spot and I donā€™t want them to question taking me out like that ever again.ā€

Tate was essentially benched for Clemsonā€™s 27-21 double-overtime loss at N.C. State. After struggling mightily against the different looks that Georgia Tech showed Clemson defensively, the Tigers opted to start Paul Tchio against the Wolfpack.Ā 

While Clemson spent the week leading up N.C. State, defending the true freshman, he was quietly benched. Tate did appear in the game and hasnā€™t been benched since. As for Tchio, Dabo Swinney announced that he would be entering the transfer portal Tuesday.

Tate was by no means happy about the decision that knocked him out of the starting lineup, but he understood it and felt he needed to be able to take a step back and learn from some of the mistakes he made.

ā€œI just try to take it as positive as it could be and just try to use it as motivation for me, more than just like this is the end of the world,ā€ he said.

Tate was asked about his confidence against 3-4 man fronts and how he would analyze his play thus far.

ā€œI still have a ways to go, for sure,ā€ Tate said. ā€œI wouldnā€™t say I got it down at all. But, I mean from Georgia Tech to Louisville and even Syracuse, I think thereā€™s been an improvement in the way Iā€™ve played 3-4 front. Iā€™m getting better, but just playing in that space against the run is whatā€™s bothering me.ā€

He attributed that to more or less his pad level being too high.

ā€œIā€™m not nearly as comfortable as I should be or I want to be, but Iā€™m working on it and Iā€™m trying to practice every day, just getting better at it,ā€ he added.

Tate is still getting comfortable at the guard position. He didnā€™t think the transition from tackle to guard would be as difficult as it has been for him, but heā€™s taking it all in stride.

ā€œIā€™m not making any excuses,ā€ Tate indicated. ā€œThere could be a million excuses for me to make for the transition at guard, but that wonā€™t get me anywhere. So, Iā€™m just trying to take all the challenges that Iā€™ve had to face and attack them head-on.ā€

With that being said, whatā€™s the biggest challenge Tate has faced during that positional transition?

ā€œFor me, itā€™s really the mental part,ā€ he said. ā€œConfidence has really been my issue since high school…I had finally got the confidence, especially when I had got here in the first spring, I really felt like I could do this thing at tackle. So, then I feel like I started all over at guard. I think thatā€™s been my biggest struggle, which is confidence. Once I feel like I have the confidence, Iā€™ll for sure be set.ā€

Swinney mentioned during Tuesdayā€™s media availability that Tate has been cross-training at left tackle. Clemsonā€™s offensive line depth is certainly dire, so the Tigers require players that can play multiple positions across the line, especially with Tchio leaving the team this week.

ā€œI like it because I want to play tackle, of course,ā€ Tate said. ā€œBeing able to cross-train in practice and getting reps, so I wonā€™t get out of those habits of playing tackle and I donā€™t lose my comfortability, thatā€™s why I like it. But, I think for me, I would like to focus more on guard because thatā€™s what Iā€™m playing in the game, but I do think Iā€™m getting a lot out of it because we get new plays all the time and now I know both spots. I feel like Iā€™m more valuable to the team if I know both positions. Hopefully, I get to show how good I am at left tackle because thatā€™s where Iā€™m really good at. I really feel like once I get these two positions down, youā€™re going to see how valuable of an offensive lineman I am.ā€

Speaking of valuable, Tate has been able to benefit from learning important lessons under the guidance of both Matt Bockhorst and Jordan McFadden.

ā€œThe biggest thing is mentality,ā€ Tate said when asked what heā€™s been able to pick up from Bockhorst. ā€œMattā€™s obviously very aggressive and heā€™s been trying to instill that in me because thatā€™s something that I needed since I made the transition and just playing football at this level, period. You know you need some type of aggression and dog level and heā€™s been putting that in me every day and just giving me the confidence to know that I can punish dudes. I have the ability to. You just gotta believe it. And, heā€™s been helping me believe that.ā€

Tate realizes that heā€™s still an immature player, but heā€™s benefitted from the likes of Bockhorst and McFadden constantly being in his ear. Even after Bockhorst tore his ACL, heā€™s constantly in Tateā€™s corner, coaching him up and giving him advice, which Tate couldnā€™t be more appreciative of, he said.

This has been a humbling experience for him, to say the least.

ā€œIā€™m learning so much more on this level than I donā€™t think I could ever learn and itā€™s really just through all this adversity that Iā€™m facing,ā€ Tate added. ā€œI didnā€™t know I was going to struggle this bad and I think this is the first time where football has been something like where, ā€˜Damn, this is hard.ā€™ This is the real deal and I gotta pick it up. I gotta play better. Iā€™m learning so much from it and on the mental side, thatā€™s something I need to get better at is mentally being prepared and being confident…Iā€™m learning so much from all the struggles Iā€™m going through right now and next year, I can promise you. Youā€™ll see the difference.ā€

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Clemson’s depth along the offensive line is becoming dire

As the hits to Clemson’s offensive line continue to mount, the depth at that position is becoming dire. Clemson coach Dabo Swinney said Tuesday that backup lineman Paul Tchio has decided to enter the transfer portal, making for the latest defection …

As the hits to Clemsonā€™s offensive line continue to mount, the depth at that position is becoming dire.

Clemson coach Dabo Swinney said Tuesday that backup lineman Paul Tchio has decided to enter the transfer portal, making for the latest defection among a position group thatā€™s been decimated by attrition up and down the depth chart. Swinney then uttered the harsh reality facing the unit.

ā€œWeā€™ve got what weā€™ve got,ā€ he said. ā€œCanā€™t ship anybody in here right now.ā€

Tchio started at guard against North Carolina State on Sept. 25 but had logged just seven snaps since after not playing against Louisville last week. With Tchio gone, thatā€™s now five offensive linemen that were either significant contributors or in line to be this season that have been lost to season-ending injuries or a transfer.

It started in the preseason when Tayquon Johnson (pectoral injury) and John Williams (knee) had season-ending surgeries. Freshman Dietrick Pennington, whom Swinney pegged as a potential ā€œdifference makerā€ for the Tigers up front, then tore his ACL in September. Fifth-year senior Matt Bockhorst did the same against Pitt last month.

That in part has forced Clemson to start six different combinations along the line through its first nine games, and it appears Will Putnam will miss a second straight game Saturday when UConn visits Memorial Stadium because of an ankle injury. Putnam, who also didnā€™t play against Boston College on Oct. 2 because of an unrelated foot injury, is ā€œa lot better and improving,ā€ Swinney said, but coaches would like to hold him out if possible to give him more time to heal up.

But there arenā€™t a ton of available bodies left up front.

Mason Trotter, who had started the previous three games at center, moved over to fill in at right guard against Louisville in Putnamā€™s absence. That put Hunter Rayburn back in the starting lineup along with Jordan McFadden, Walker Parks and freshman Marcus Tate, who was reinserted as the starting left guard two games ago following Bockhorstā€™s injury.

The Tigersā€™ options are limited to the point that true freshmen Tristan Leigh and Ryan Linthicum, whom Clemson planned on redshirting this season, have been elevated from the scout team. Leigh and Linthicum made up the second-team offensive line during Mondayā€™s practice along with redshirt freshmen Bryn Tucker and Trent Howard and sophomore Mitchell Mayes, Swinney said. Those five have combined to play just 102 offensive snaps this season.

ā€œWeā€™ve moved those guys up, and weā€™ll just keep rolling with what weā€™ve got,ā€ Swinney said. ā€œWeā€™ve developed a lot of versatility in that offensive line. Thatā€™s for sure. Weā€™ve got a lot of guys that can play multiple positions.ā€

Leigh, a former five-star signee, and Linthicum have only played in one game apiece so far, so with the NCAAā€™s four-game redshirt rule, they would still be able to play in three more games this season and maintain a year of eligibility. With Clemson having at least four games left (three regular-season games and a bowl game as well as an outside shot at the ACC title game), Swinney hinted at them only being used in an emergency situation.

At this point, though, Swinney isnā€™t ruling anything out the rest of the way.

ā€œIā€™ve never had a year like this,ā€ Swinney said.

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Clemson’s ‘heart of a champion’ resonated in win over Louisville

Clemson’s offensive line has been banged up throughout this season, and last Saturday at Louisville, the Tigers started their sixth different O-line group in nine games. From left to right, Jordan McFadden, Marcus Tate, Hunter Rayburn, Mason Trotter …

Clemsonā€™s offensive line has been banged up throughout this season, and last Saturday at Louisville, the Tigers started their sixth different O-line group in nine games.

From left to right, Jordan McFadden, Marcus Tate, Hunter Rayburn, Mason Trotter and Walker Parks comprised the first-team OL in Saturdayā€™s game. And with Matt Bockhorst (torn ACL) out for the season and Will Putnam missing the game due to an injury, each of the starting offensive linemen played virtually every offensive snap in the 30-24 victory over the Cardinals.

Offensive coordinator Tony Elliott said during his media availability Monday that the O-line showed the ā€œheart of a champion,ā€ and it had a carryover effect on the rest of the team.

ā€œThey played just about every play. ā€¦ Just heart of a champion,ā€ Elliott said. ā€œWe talk about ā€˜the eye of a Tiger, heart of a champion.ā€™ Coach (Swinney) says it all the time ā€“ you know it when you see it, you know it when you donā€™t. So, what youā€™re seeing out of those guys is a heart of a champion. Theyā€™re going to do whatever it takes because they love each other, they love the team, they love the program and theyā€™re willing to put it on the line.

ā€œI think that Bockhorst had established that over his career and what heā€™s played through, and then youā€™ve got Putnam who was battling. Obviously he was out last game, but the game before that (vs. Florida State), heā€™s battling on a swollen ankle. So, I think itā€™s just a mindset that whatever it takes, for 60 minutes, play Clemson football. No excuses, no explanations, just do your job. And when you have that, especially in the trenches, it resonates to everybody.ā€

Elliott added that he believes the fact that junior wide receiver Joseph Ngata, freshman running back Will Shipley and sophomore quarterback D.J. Uiagalelei all battled through injuries during the Louisville game is an example of what the Clemson football program is all about.

ā€œJoeā€™s out there playing on a foot. Heā€™s out there,ā€ Elliott said. ā€œShipley goes in the locker room, he comes back, heā€™s playing on a foot. D.J. puts a daggone knee brace on and says letā€™s go. And when we needed it, big call right there, quarterback run (for the 8-yard, go-ahead TD in the fourth quarter), and no flinch.

ā€œSo, I think thatā€™s just the essence of what the programā€™s all about that you can see. A lot of times that get missed just because the focus is on sometimes stats and points and all those pretty things. But for us as coaches, thatā€™s when you know what kind of football team you have when you see things like that.ā€

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More bad news for Clemson’s offensive line

PITTSBURGH – Clemson’s offensive line sustained another blow early in today’s game against Pittsburgh at Heinz Field. Matt Bockhorst was helped off the field after suffering an injury late in the first quarter. The fifth-year guard appeared to have …

PITTSBURGH — Clemson’s offensive line sustained another blow early in today’s game against Pittsburgh at Heinz Field.

Matt Bockhorst was helped off the field after suffering an injury late in the first quarter. The fifth-year guard appeared to have his right leg rolled up after a run near the goal line on Clemson’s first scoring drive.

Bockhorst remained down on the field for a few minutes as trainers tended to him. He eventually limped off the field with some help. True freshman Marcus Tate was inserted in his place at left guard.

Clemson, which was already without Hunter Rayburn (COVID-19 protocols) up front, scored on the next play — a 1-yard touchdown run by Phil Mafah — for a 7-0 lead with 1 minute, 29 seconds left in the first quarter.

Two Clemson freshmen earn recognition from ESPN

A couple of Clemson freshmen earned recognition from ESPN at the halfway point of the 2021 college football season. Offensive lineman Marcus Tate and safety Andrew Mukuba have been named to ESPN’s midseason true freshman All-America team …

A couple of Clemson freshmen earned recognition from ESPN at the halfway point of the 2021 college football season.

Offensive lineman Marcus Tate and safety Andrew Mukuba have been named to ESPN’sĀ midseason true freshman All-America team (subscription required), which was released this week by Tom VanHaaren and Tom Luginbill.

Tate has seen action on offense in five of the Tigers’ six games this season, starting four of them, and totaling 270 snaps overall.

The Sunrise, Florida, native started and played 48 snaps vs. Georgia in his collegiate debut on Sept. 4, becoming only the third true freshman offensive lineman since 1973 to start a season opener for Clemson.

“Making the jump from high school to college comes with a learning curve,” Luginbill wrote in the ESPN+ article. “It hasn’t been a flawless transition for Tate, but the game seems to be slowing down for him, and he is showing real improvement for a Clemson team that hasn’t dominated in recent years.”

Mukuba, meanwhile, has started each of Clemson’s first six games and played 303 total snaps, tallying 28 total tackles — good for third on the team — to go with five pass breakups.

The Austin, Texas, native started in his collegiate debut vs. Georgia, contributing eight tackles and a pass breakup while becoming the first true freshman defensive back to start a season opener for Clemson in records back to 1973.

Mukuba recorded his first game with double-digit tackles at NC State on Sept. 25, posting 11 tackles (one for loss).

“To play safety in defensive coordinator Brent Venables’ defense, players must have a high understanding of football,” Luginbill wrote. “Inserting a freshman is uncommon, and it hasn’t happened in a season opener for the Tigers since 1973. The ultra-versatile Mukuba made his collegiate debut versus Georgia and posted eight tackles and a pass breakup.”

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Can Clemson’s running game build on breakout performance?

Clemson didn’t look like the same team running the ball against Boston College that it’s been for much of the season. That’s good news for the Tigers. After weeks of going virtually nowhere on the ground (not counting its meeting with a physically …

Clemson didnā€™t look like the same team running the ball against Boston College that itā€™s been for much of the season.

Thatā€™s good news for the Tigers.

After weeks of going virtually nowhere on the ground (not counting its meeting with a physically overmatched FCS opponent in South Carolina State), No. 25 Clemson (3-2, 2-1 ACC) finally found some consistency in the running game against the Eagles. The end result was the Tigersā€™ second 200-yard rushing game of the season.

After averaging 87.6 yards per game on the ground against its first three FBS opponents, the Tigers racked up 231 yards in their win over Boston College, which was allowing just 99.7 rushing yards coming in, a stat that ranked in the top 25 nationally. The S.C. State game (242) is the only one in which Clemson has rushed for more.

ā€œWe stopped the run and got the run game going,ā€ Clemson coach Dabo Swinney said. ā€œIt was definitely the difference in the game.ā€

Clemson has dealt with attrition at running back throughout the season. First, it was senior Lyn-J Dixon deciding to leave the program three games in. Then freshman Will Shipley sustained a lower leg injury late against North Carolina State that will keep him out multiple games, but it was hard to tell against Boston College.

Kobe Pace had a career-high 125 yards, including a 59-yard touchdown that doubled as Clemsonā€™s longest play from scrimmage this season. True freshman Phil Mafah got his first collegiate snaps because of that attrition and ripped off 58 yards on just eight carries. The Tigers averaged 5.8 yards per tote, easily the most against a team not named S.C. State.

Clemson will try to build on that performance its next time out Friday at Syracuse (3-3, 0-2). But to get a better idea of how the Tigers may try to go about doing that, itā€™s important to understand what led to the breakthrough against Boston College.

The first part of the equation isnā€™t complicated, Swinney said. The Tigersā€™ retooled offensive line tried a couple of different starting combinations through the first four weeks of the season and went with a third against the Eagles out of necessity. It was also the most effective one to date.

With right guard Will Putnam (toe) injured, the Tigers slid Matt Bockhorst over and inserted Hunter Rayburn into the starting lineup at center. Freshman Marcus Tate also got another start at left guard after being replaced by Paul Tchio there a week earlier.Ā 

Itā€™s a group thatā€™s struggled with sheer physicality as well as blocking assignments and communication at times with so many moving parts, but Swinney said none of that was an issue against the Eagles.

ā€œThe offensive line really played well,ā€ Swinney said. ā€œWe didnā€™t have the critical errors. We didnā€™t have miscommunication. We werenā€™t turning guys that were supposed to be blocked loose. We really communicated well, targeted well and were very physical.ā€

Mafah echoed his coachā€™s sentiment when asked why he felt like the running game was more effective than itā€™s been for much of the season.

ā€œAs a team, weā€™ve just been talking about just really imposing our will on our opponent,ā€ Mafah said. ā€œDabo is always talking about in practice that we need to bring that to the game field, and I just feel like the o-linemen and the offense, we just came with that intensity. I felt like the offensive line did a great job (last week), so I give a lot of props to them, (offensive line) coach (Robbie) Caldwell and our coaches for allowing us the opportunity to get that open.ā€

Clemson also made a point to get the backs out on the perimeter with stretch plays, pitches and options. Mafahā€™s longest run — a 26-yarder late in the first half — came on one of those stretch plays where he ran through an opening off tackle and wasnā€™t met by a Boston College defender until he was more than 5 yards past the line of scrimmage.

Mafah broke a couple of would-be tackles to help turn it into one of Clemsonā€™s longest runs of the night, but Swinney said attacking the Eagles on the edge wasnā€™t necessarily about how Boston College was defending the Tigers. The stretch has been a staple of Clemsonā€™s playbook this season, but Swinney again pointed to the group up front for the primary difference in its effectiveness this time around.

ā€œWe run the inside zone and the outside zone, but we just blocked it better the other night,ā€ Swinney said. ā€œWhen you block it well, good things happen. And we ran it well. Ran the right tracks. Again, we were able to get in rhythm and, all of a sudden, you start playing some complementary football as far as how you can complement plays and get in a rhythm as far as calling the plays.ā€

And, more heavily than heā€™s been all season, Clemson also got D.J. Uiagalelei involved in the running game again. The Tigersā€™ 6-foot-4, 247-pound quarterback had a season-high 12 carries for 50 yards, most of those coming on designed runs between the tackles. The Tigers also ran their share of zone reads, where Uiagalelei has the option to hand off or keep the ball based on how the defensive line plays it. Swinney said there were a couple of times where Uiagalelei couldā€™ve likely picked up even more yards on the ground had he pulled the ball, but he largely made the right decisions to hand off to Pace and Mafah in those situations, Swinney added.

The Tigersā€™ success on the ground forced Boston College to commit an extra defender or two to the box and play more man coverage than Clemson has seen this season. Uiagalelei didnā€™t connect on any of those throws deep down the field, something Swinney said has to start happening if Clemson is going to make defenses pay for playing that way, but itā€™s largely up to the running game to keep giving the Tigers one-on-one matchups on the outside.

ā€œWe had to prove we can run the ball, and when you can do that, then you open things up in the passing game,ā€ Swinney said.

As for which lineup the Tigers go with on the offensive line against Syracuse, thatā€™s something that continues to be evaluated, Swinney said. Part of that depends on if Putnam is able to give it a go against the Orange, another defense ranked in the top 35 nationally in rushing yards allowed (114 per game).Ā 

If so, Clemson could move Bockhorst back to left guard, where he played last season, and keep Rayburn at center. Another option would be to stick with the same lineup as last week if Putnam has to miss another game.Ā 

Ultimately, the Tigers need the running game to continue doing its part if the offense is going to maximize its potential over the final seven games and help keep Clemson in the ACC title race.

ā€œIf the defense wants to give us a box to run on all day, weā€™ve got to do our best to run against it,ā€ Rayburn said. ā€œIf they want to play a little light coverage and let us throw the ball, then letā€™s throw it. Weā€™ve got to be ready for whatever defense we play and just take what they give us.ā€

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Grading Clemson’s offense through the first half of the season

Clemson won’t officially hit the halfway point on its 12-game regular season until after its game at Syracuse next week, but it’s close enough. With an open date to take a step back and evaluate where the Tigers are as a team, TCI is handing out …

Clemson won’t officially hit the halfway point on its 12-game regular season until after its game at Syracuse next week, but it’s close enough. With an open date to take a step back and evaluate where the Tigers are as a team, TCI is handing out midterm grades for Clemson’s performance so far in all facets.

Let’s hand out some grades for each position on offense through five games:

Quarterback

D.J. Uiagalelei entered this season with plenty of hype taking over the offense after Trevor Lawrence, the No. 1 overall draft pick. It came not only from the fact Uiagalelei was a former five-star recruit himself but also because of his breakout performances against Boston College and Notre Dame in his spot starts last season. But the first half of this season has served as a jarring reminder that heā€™s still a young player figuring things out just seven starts into his college career.

In terms of pure arm talent, Uiagalelei may be the best Clemson has ever had during the Dabo Swinney era. Thereā€™s not a throw on the field the 6-foot-5, 247-pounder canā€™t make, but consistently finding the mark on those throws has been another story. That doesnā€™t mean he hasnā€™t been efficient at times (65% completion rate in wins over South Carolina and Georgia Tech), but Uiagalelei is last in the ACC — and 105th nationally — with a completion percentage of 54.3% largely because of a lack of accuracy and touch on the intermediate-to-deep throws. To be fair, the lack of a consistent running game has kept the pressure on Uiagalelei on the receivers to constantly produce, but Clemson ran the ball as well as it has all season last week against Boston College, resulting in more man coverage on the outside. But Uiagalelei misfired on every deep shot and left some points on the field.

Uiagalelei has gradually been used more in the running game and has provided a spark there (21 carries for 113 yards the last two games combined). But as Clemson coach Dabo Swinney said, Uiagalelei simply has to start connecting with his receivers down the field when those opportunities are there if the offense is going to do its part in keeping Clemson in the ACC title race going forward. Grade: C

Running back

Not only are the Tigers feeling the impact of Travis Etienneā€™s loss, but thereā€™s attrition thatā€™s affecting the backfield as well. Thereā€™s not a back on the roster with the same kind of skill set as Etienne, and the one that might be the closest, true freshman Will Shipley, is out for the time being. Meanwhile, Clemsonā€™s most experienced back, Lyn-J Dixon, isnā€™t around anymore either after choosing to leave the program three games into the season.

Thatā€™s left sophomore Kobe Pace and another true freshman, Phil Mafah, as the primary backs. Darien Rencher and Michel Dukes are also around, but they havenā€™t been used much outside of the South Carolina State game. The blocking in front of them has been iffy, but the youth has shown up with some missed holes and cutbacks. The pass protection has been solid for the most part, though, and Pace had a career game with 125 yards on 18 carries against Boston College. Mafah also had 58 yards on just eight carries in his collegiate debut, an encouraging sign for a running game that needs to get going. Grade: C+

Receivers and tight ends

Justyn Ross hasnā€™t made every play (there was that drop in overtime against North Carolina Stated before that strange last play), but Clemsonā€™s top wideout has been solid in his return from spinal fusion surgery. He leads the Tigers with 23 receptions, three of those going for scores. And a healthy Joseph Ngata has flashed all of that potential coaches have been talking about in the former five-star recruit. Ngata has been the Tigersā€™ most explosive pass-catcher at 19.6 yards per reception.

But nobody else still on the roster has caught a touchdown this season. Tight end Davis Allen is Clemsonā€™s third-leading receiver, and the Tigers havenā€™t utilized their tight ends a ton in the passing game. Braden Galloway, known more as Clemsonā€™s receiving tight end, has just four catches for 14 yards, and heā€™s now dealing with concussion. Receivers Frank Ladson (groin) and E.J. Williams (hand/knee) are also dealing with injuries. Blocking on the perimeter has been spotty, too.

Uiagaleleiā€™s inaccuracy at times has played a factor. So has the way defenses have played the Tigers. But Clemson has struggled to get other receivers involved, something that needs to change going forward. Grade: B-

Offensive line

Tackles Jordan McFadden and Walker Parks have been solid on the edges, but itā€™s been a rough go for Clemsonā€™s retooled group as a whole through five games. With two new starters joining three returning starters — two of which (McFadden and Matt Bockhorst) are transitioning to different positions than they played last season — Clemson has yet to settle on a five itā€™s comfortable with. The Tigers have already tried three different starting combinations up front, but missed assignments and a lack of push in the running game have plagued the unit.

Clemson ranks 117th nationally in total offense and 83rd in rushing at 146 yards per game, a number that was below 127 on average before last week. The line had perhaps its best performance against Boston College, paving the way for 231 rushing yards and 438 total yards. With Will Putnam injured, the Tigers found maybe their best interior combination with Bockhorst moving back to guard and Hunter Rayburn repping at center.

Bockhorst could go back to left guard (where he played last season) when Putnam returns to the starting lineup on the right side, something Swinney is hopeful will happen when the Tigers return to action at Syracuse. Thereā€™s some time to evaluate that with that game not being played until Oct. 15, but the line improved its grade with its latest performance. Grade: C-

Overall

With some new players at key positions, Clemson’s offense has looked borderline dysfunctional at times, performing far below the standard set by many of the Tigers’ offenses over the last decade. Was Boston College a turning-the-corner moment?Ā  The offensive line needs to settle on its best five, the running game needs more consistency and Uiagalelei and his receivers need to make plays when they’re there through the air. There’s loads of talent and potential. Now it’s a matter of putting it all together. Grade: C

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