Hall exits early with injury in Clemson’s sixth straight loss

Clemson’s longest losing streak in five years on the hardwood continued Saturday, but that wasn’t the biggest story to develop for the Tigers inside the KFC Yum! Center. Sophomore big PJ Hall exited the game with a left foot injury less than two …

Clemson’s longest losing streak in five years on the hardwood continued Saturday, but that wasn’t the biggest story to develop for the Tigers inside the KFC Yum! Center.

Sophomore big PJ Hall exited the game with a left foot injury less than two minutes into Clemson’s game at Louisville. The Tigers used a game-high 18 points from Al-Amir Dawes to stay close, but without their leading scorer and second-leading rebounder, they couldn’t avoid their sixth straight loss in a 70-61 setback.

Hall was averaging 16 points and six boards going into Saturday’s game despite dealing with inflammation in that left foot for much of the season. The 6-foot-10, 240-pounder’s practice time has been limited during the latter part of the season in an effort to get him feeling as good as possible heading into game days.

But Hall played just 1 minutes, 7 seconds Saturday before appearing to aggravate the injury. Naz Bohannon subbed in for him, and Hall went to the locker room for evaluation. He never returned.

Still, Clemson (12-15, 4-12 ACC) rallied from a nine-point deficit early in the second half to tie the game at 45 on a basket from Bohannon with 10:35 left. The Tigers took a 53-52 lead a few minutes later on a 3-pointer from Dawes, who paced Clemson’s 43% shooting performance by going 6 of 11 from 3-point range. His fifth trey cut Louisville’s lead to one a couple of minutes later, but the Cardinals scored the next five points to spark a 13-5 run to end the game.

Bohannon scored 11 points in a season-high 34 minutes to help Clemson offset Louisville’s advantage on interior without Hall. The Tigers only finished minus-3 in rebounding (33-36) and minus-2 in points in the paint (32-34), but Chase Hunter (10 points) was the only other Clemson player to score in double figures.

Pressed into more playing time, freshman center Ben Middlebrooks had four points and two rebounds in only 14 minutes after getting into foul trouble. Noah Locke had a team-high 15 points for Louisville (12-14, 6-10), which shot nearly 46% from the field to snap its seven-game losing streak.

As for Clemson, it’s going through its most prolonged skid since also losing six straight conference games during the 2016-17 season. The Tigers will again try to end it Wednesday at home against Wake Forest.

This story will be updated.

Brownell explains defensive decision at end of Clemson’s latest loss

Clemson’s leading scorer came through with the tying bucket in the final 30 seconds against North Carolina on Tuesday night. Averaging more than a block per game, PJ Hall is also the Tigers’ best rim protector. But Clemson’s sophomore big wasn’t on …

Clemson’s leading scorer came through with the tying bucket in the final 30 seconds against North Carolina on Tuesday night. Averaging more than a block per game, PJ Hall is also the Tigers’ best rim protector.

But Clemson’s sophomore big wasn’t on the floor for the Tar Heels’ final possession, which ended with UNC handing the Tigers their latest gut punch.

Hall finished with 24 points on 9 of 18 shooting, including a basket that tied the game at 77 with 21.3 seconds left. But when UNC coach Hubert Davis took a timeout to draw up a play for the Tar Heels’ final possession, Clemson coach Brad Brownell made a couple of substitutions, including Naz Bohannon for Hall, who also had four blocks up to that point but also four fouls.

Brownell said he figured UNC would try to set a ball screen for point guard Caleb Love against Clemson’s man defense, which hadn’t gone so well for Hall when the Tar Heels ran the same action earlier in the game.

“We felt like they were going to go up and ball screen with PJ’s man, then just attack him, take it to him and get to the rim,” Brownell said. “It happened a little bit early on a play or two when he kind of got beat off the dribble and they take it right into him for a foul. We were going to switch anything and keep guys in the front.”

Sure enough, UNC brought up its big, Brady Manek, to act like he was going to set a screen, but Manek popped out at the last second. That left guard Chase Hunter on Love, who got past Hunter and took off down the lane toward the basket.

As Clemson’s defense collapsed on him, Love dished to the cutting Manek, whom Hall likely would’ve been guarding, for the go-ahead layup with just 3.1 seconds left. David Collins’ 3-point shot at the buzzer came up short.

Brownell didn’t second-guess his strategy afterward, but he ultimately took responsibility for the easy look UNC got at the basket that sent Clemson to its sixth loss in eight games. Four of those losses have come by a combined 11 points.

“I think we were fine if one of our guys just plugged the hole and stayed (in the paint) instead of kind of worrying about his man too much. That was the mistake,” Brownell said. “I told the guys, ‘Hey, no layups. If they make a jump shot to beat us, they beat us with a jump shot.’ We didn’t get that done. So that’s on me.”

Things don’t get any easier for Clemson on Thursday when No. 7 Duke visits Littlejohn Coliseum for a rematch of the Blue Devils’ 71-69 win at Cameron Indoor Stadium two weeks ago.

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An opportunity gone awry for Clemson hoops

Brad Brownell didn’t want to talk about it much after Clemson’s most recent win. Not because the Tigers’ men’s basketball coach wasn’t aware of what was looming. But because it wasn’t the next order of business for his team. “We’ve got to be ready …

Brad Brownell didn’t want to talk about it much after Clemson’s most recent win.

Not because the Tigers’ men’s basketball coach wasn’t aware of what was looming. But because it wasn’t the next order of business for his team.

“We’ve got to be ready for Georgia Tech next,” Brownell said following Clemson’s win over Florida State on Wednesday. “They’re a feisty group.”

The victory over the Seminoles was not only a Quadrant 2 victory for Clemson – its fourth such win this season – but it was also the Tigers’ second victory in a three-game stretch that had seen their play improve, particularly on the defensive end. It started with a 27-point thrashing of Pittsburgh three Saturdays ago before Clemson traveled to Cameron Indoor Stadium and gave No. 9 Duke all it wanted in a two-point loss.

It seemingly gave Clemson (12-10, 4-7 ACC) some much-needed momentum at a critical time. Wednesday’s win began a stretch of four of five games at home for the Tigers, who have a rematch with Duke (Thursday) as well as matchups with North Carolina (Tuesday) and Notre Dame (Saturday) awaiting them at Littlejohn Coliseum next week. If Clemson had a chance to make a late push to get back in the bubble conversation for the NCAA Tournament, this was it.

That is, as long as the Tigers took care of business on the road Saturday against a Georgia Tech team that began the day looking up at everybody else in the ACC standings. But that didn’t happen.

In their first game without veteran forward Hunter Tyson, who’s out indefinitely after breaking his clavicle against FSU, the Tigers dropped a five-point decision in what was just Tech’s third conference win of the season. Fellow forward Naz Bohannon (nine points on 4 of 6 shooting, eight rebounds) helped pick up the slack in Tyson’s absence in his first start of the season. PJ Hall and Al-Amir Dawes chipped in 18 points apiece, but a sluggish start against the Yellow Jackets’ zone defense – Clemson shot just 36% in the first 20 minutes en route to a 33-20 deficit at the half – ultimately proved too much to overcome.

Brownell said Hall got even less practice time than usual leading into Saturday’s game. Clemson’s leading scorer, who scored all but two of his points after halftime, has been dealing with foot inflammation throughout the season.

“Lot of poor decisions and passing,” Brownell said. “I thought PJ Hall looked a little slow. He didn’t practice leading into the game, which isn’t good. We usually try to get him 30 minutes before a game, but the trainer said we couldn’t do that, so I didn’t think he was as good early.

“We played much better in the second half in terms of answering the zone, but their kids made enough plays to win. They were just better than us.”

Clemson made a run to get within a possession or two late, but the Tigers’ last poor decisions came from Dawes, who deflected a pass leading to a steal in a four-point game with 35 seconds left before giving it right back to the Yellow Jackets a few seconds later. Tech made three free throws in the final 25 seconds to salt away the win.

“An open-court, bad play that should’ve been a basket,” Brownell said. “We had an advantage. Again, we just didn’t make enough good basketball decisions today, and it cost us.”

Not only back-to-back wins, but likely any real chance to put together a resume strong enough to get to the NCAA Tournament.

Getting back in the at-large conversation was going to be difficult anyway in a watered-down ACC, particularly without Tyson. With just five weeks left until Selection Sunday, Clemson still doesn’t have a single Quad 1 win while the loss to Tech is another ugly blemish. Only the Tigers’ Quad 4 loss to Boston College has been worse from a NET perspective this season.

Only one of next week’s games (Duke) is a Quad 1 opportunity, but all three of them are against teams in the first two quadrants. Had Clemson won Saturday and avoided another bad loss in the process, it was shaping up to be a week where the Tigers could have at least made things interesting with a couple more wins on their home floor if not more.

Now, with more Quad 3 and Quad 4 losses (four combined) than Quad 1 and Quad 2 wins (three), Clemson is likely relegated to playing for pride and upsets rather than resume builders.

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What Tyson’s extended absence means for Clemson hoops

Just when it seemed like Clemson’s men’s basketball team was building some momentum heading into the back half of its ACC slate, the Tigers were dealt a major blow with news that Hunter Tyson will be sidelined for an extended period of time. Clemson …

Just when it seemed like Clemson’s men’s basketball team was building some momentum heading into the back half of its ACC slate, the Tigers were dealt a major blow with news that Hunter Tyson will be sidelined for an extended period of time.

Clemson notched its fourth Quadrant 2 victory of the season Wednesday with a home win over Florida State, but it came at a price. Tyson played just nine minutes before leaving the game during the latter stages of the first half after taking a blow to the upper body. He never returned, and an X-ray confirmed the Tigers’ senior forward sustained a broken clavicle.

In a statement released Thursday, Clemson said there’s not yet a timetable for Tyson’s return. So for the foreseeable future, the Tigers will be without not only their fourth-leading scorer (10.4 points) and third-leading rebounder (5.6) but also a veteran leader in the locker room.

“One of our smartest guys because he’s been in the program for four years,” Clemson coach Brad Brownell said of Tyson. “He’s your voice. So you need some of your older guys to provide voice.”

Clemson (12-9, 4-6 ACC) has won two of its last three games by a combined 33 points. The Tigers came up three points short of upsetting No. 9 Duke on the road last week. Otherwise, they would be carrying a three-game winning streak into Saturday’s game at Georgia Tech (8-12, 2-8).

After that, Clemson will return to Littlejohn Coliseum for a key three-game homestand next week against North Carolina, Duke and Notre Dame, all of which sit in the top 70 of the NET rankings.

If the Tigers want to keep their momentum going in Tyson’s absence, they’re going to need others to help pick up the slack at his power forward spot, though Tyson was essentially a big guard on the floor with his ability to also step away from the basket on the offensive end. It sounds like Clemson may try to do that by committee.

“You’re going to need Naz (Bohannon) and Ian Schieffelin,” Brownell said. “My freshmen big guys are going to play more and are going to have to produce.”

Bohannon, the likeliest candidate to move into the starting lineup, performed well when pressed into his most extended action of the season Wednesday. The graduate transfer from Youngstown State stepped in for Tyson and played a season-high 30 minutes, finishing with 11 points on 5 of 7 shooting. Generously listed on Clemson’s roster at 6-foot-6, Bohannon is a couple of inches shorter than Tyson, but he also pulled down five boards in Wednesday’s win.

Those numbers far surpassed Bohannon’s season averages of 4.9 points and 3.9 rebounds in 18.9 minutes, but Wednesday’s performance was more on par with what Bohannon did at his previous stop. A 1,200-point scorer in four seasons at Youngstown State, Bohannon also led the Penguins in rebounding (8.2) a season ago. 

“Rebounding is a want-to skill,” Bohannon said. “At that point, at 6-5 or whatever it is I am, I feel like my heart makes me bigger than a lot of guys out there.”

Schieffelin, a freshman, had played in 17 of Clemson’s first 20 games but had seen his minutes decrease of late. He didn’t play against Duke and logged just five minutes in the Tigers’ rout of Pittsburgh the game before.

But with Tyson out, the 6-7, 225-pounder played 10 minutes against FSU. It was just his third time playing double-digit minutes in Clemson’s previous 14 games, but Scheiffelin made the most of it, pulling down five boards to help the Tigers finish plus-13 on the glass.

Fellow big Ben Middlebrooks got just three minutes against the Seminoles, which is right at his season average (3.6). But his playing time figures to increase, too. The 6-10 freshman has spent most of his first season at Clemson as PJ Hall’s primary backup at center, but there’s a chance Brownell could play Hall and Middlebrooks together in Tyson’s absence depending on matchups and the team’s foul situation on any given night.

The facet of Tyson’s game that may be the most difficult for Clemson to replace is perimeter shooting. Tyson has helped the Tigers stretch defenses by shooting 38% from 3-point range on 64 attempts from beyond the arc. Schieffelin is just 3 of 6 from deep this season while the 3-ball is an even smaller part of the repertoire for Bohannon or Middlebrooks, who’ve combined to shoot one 3 all season.

The injury is the latest bout of tough luck for Tyson, who had played through two sprained ankles for most of the season before Wednesday. As a true senior, Tyson still has a COVID year he could use to return to the team next season if that’s something he wants to do even if he’s able to return to the court at some point this season.

For now, though, Brownell said the Tigers will need everyone to elevate their games in the absence of one of their better players.

“He’s basically healthy and ready to go, and then this happens,” Brownell said. “I feel awful for him, but the next man up’s got to go.”

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Duke – with its potential No. 1 pick – provides biggest test yet for Clemson

In helping build one of the top five winningest programs in the history of men’s college basketball, Mike Krzykewski has had no shortage of talented teams at Duke in his four decades as the Blue Devils’ head coach. This one, though, has a distinct …

In helping build one of the top five winningest programs in the history of men’s college basketball, Mike Krzykewski has had no shortage of talented teams at Duke in his four decades as the Blue Devils’ head coach.

This one, though, has a distinct characteristic to it, Clemson coach Brad Brownell said.

“I think they’re big, they’re long and extremely physical,” Brownell said. “Aggressive. They’re very athletic.”

In other words, Clemson (11-8, 3-5 ACC) will face another tall task tonight at 7 when No. 9 Duke hosts the Tigers at Cameron Indoor Stadium for the first of two meetings between the teams this season. Quite literally, it may be the tallest the Tigers have gotten from the Blue Devils (15-3, 5-2) in recent memory.

And one of Duke’s prized freshmen may be the biggest matchup problem of them all.

One of the nation’s top recruits in the 2021 recruiting cycle, Paolo Banchero was immediately inserted into the Blue Devils’ starting five and hasn’t disappointed during what will almost certainly be his only season of college ball. The only question at this point seems to be whether or not Banchero will be the No. 1 overall pick in this summer’s NBA Draft.

His stiffest competition for that distinction will likely be fellow freshmen phenoms Chet Holmgren (Gonzaga) and Jabari Smith Jr. (Auburn), but Banchero is firmly in the mix given how he’s performed so far this season. Yahoo Sports draft analyst Krysten Peek has the Orlando Magic taking Banchero first overall in her latest mock draft.

At 6-foot-10 and 250 pounds, Banchero leads Duke and ranks fifth in the ACC in scoring (17.9 points per game), though that’s far from the only elite facet of his game. He’s also averaging 7.9 rebounds and 2.7 assists while being versatile enough at his size to play virtually any position on the floor.

Banchero often brings the ball up and serves as the Blue Devils’ de-facto point guard. He’s just as comfortable finding teammates for open shots as he is creating his own, averaging four assists per game in January. He finished three assists shy of a triple-double in the Blue Devils’ overtime loss at Florida State earlier this month.

But Banchero is far from the only big body Duke can throw at the opposition, which has Brownell just as concerned about how his team is going to score over the Blue Devils’ trees. Sophomore center Mark Williams is the tallest of them all at 7-1 and 245 pounds whilo Theo John, a Marquette transfer, gives Duke a 6-9, 242-pound big off the bench.

Duke has another 7-footer if needed in freshman Stanley Borden, though he’s only played in one game so far.

“I do think it makes it more challenging to plan to go inside against them in some ways,” Brownll said. “You’re not going to have as much success as you would against other teams in some ways, and then other times I think your kids make plays within the game, and then all of a sudden you’re in front of Mark Williams and you’re not used to shooting over a guy like that.

“Guys are going into the basket, you get bumped, you don’t make a shot, you fall down and now Duke’s on a 5 on 4 and you’re in trouble. So I just think they’re are a lot of things that happen within the course of the game where their size, physicality and shot blocking cause problems and, a lot of times, can lead to good offense.”

It makes for the stiffest test yet for Clemson as a whole but particularly on the interior, where forwards PJ Hall, Hunter Tyson and Naz Bohannon like to operate. Hall, at 6-10 and 242 pounds, is Clemson’s best bet to match up with Duke on the inside while Tyson goes 6-8 and 215 pounds.

Hall, the Tigers’ leading scorer (14.8 points per game), has reached double figures in all but one game this season. Tyson had six points and two rebounds in the Tigers’ rout of Pittsburgh over the weekend, though he’s still feeling the effects of a recent ankle injury and not operating at full strength. Meanwhile, Hall continues to deal with a foot injury that’s going to limit his practice time for the rest of the season, Brownell said.

“We’ve got to be careful with him, but I’m optimistic he’ll be fine tomorrow and ready to go,” Brownell said of Hall.

Duke leads the ACC in blocked shots and ranks second in field-goal percentage defense thanks in large part to its ability to protect the rim. That’s going to make Clemson’s ability to knock down perimeter shots all the more important if it has any realistic shot of pulling its first Quadrant 1 win of the season out of Cameron Indoor, a place the Tigers have won just four times ever.

But Brownell said he may try to better match Duke’s size with more of his own. Freshman center Ben Middlebrooks played nine minutes against Pittsburgh – the second-most he’s logged all season – something Brownell said could become more frequent for the 6-10, 232-pounder going forward.

“Just in terms of sheer size and physicality, we’re going to need that, especially (Tuesday) night against Mark Williams and Banchero. They’re big, strong, physical dudes, and we’re going to need some guys that can match that strength.”

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‘Starting to figure our team out’ has Clemson streaking back into ACC play

Clemson’s up-and-down season to this point may be starting to level out. There have been blowout wins and victories over fellow high-major programs. Clemson has also lost out on opportunities for others with repetitive double-digit leads that have …

Clemson’s up-and-down season to this point may be starting to level out.

There have been blowout wins and victories over fellow high-major programs. Clemson has also lost out on opportunities for others with repetitive double-digit leads that have slipped away. Lately, though, the Tigers have experienced more of the former.

With its rout of South Carolina over the weekend, Clemson (8-4, 0-1 ACC) kept its momentum going into the second and most important half of its season. The Tigers’ three-game winning streak heading into tonight’s game at Virginia (7-4, 1-0) is their second-longest of the season, trailing only their 5-0 start to the season.

“I think it’s good for us,” forward Hunter Tyson said. “I think the guys are playing with a lot of confidence right now, and I think we’ve just got to keep doing that.”

Clemson’s current win streak includes its best two of the season – Drake and Carolina, who rank 103rd and 111th in the latest NET rankings, respectively – after the Tigers, coughing up sizable second-half leads in each, missed out on wins over St. Bonaventure, Miami and West Virginia, which sits at No. 42 in the NET. The games against St. Bonaventure and West Virginia were played before Thanksgiving while the five-point loss at Miami was three weeks ago.

One of the biggest differences between then and now, players say, is more cohesion among a group that wasn’t all that familiar with one another at the start of the season.

“It takes time,” Tyson said.

Clemson lost two starters off last season’s NCAA Tournament team, including all-ACC forward Aamir Simms. But that was just the beginning of the attrition.

With six lettermen no longer around, the Tigers turned over half of their roster. Clemson replaced them with seven newcomers, including a pair of transfers in guard David Collins and forward Naz Bohannon. Collins, who spent the previous four seasons at South Florida, was immediately inserted into the starting lineup and has been there ever since.

And with Simms gone, sophomore PJ Hall, a former top-75 national recruit out of nearby Spartanburg, stepped in as a first-time starter in the frontcourt after averaging just 9.9 minutes per game a season ago.

“It’s not easy to just come straight in with multiple guys who are coming in where they are the best player on their team coming into another program,” Hall said. “Everyone has to buy into their own role. So it’s not you just go onto the court and gel. It takes a little time, but we’re getting there for sure.”

After scoring just 10 points apiece in losses to West Virginia and Rutgers, Hall has averaged 17.2 points over the last four games and leads five Tigers averaging double figures on the season. Clemson also ranks fifth out of 350 Division I teams in 3-point field-goal percentage (41.4), sixth in the ACC in scoring (75.9 points per game) and, after pulling down a season-high 51 boards the last time out against Carolina, in the top half of the ACC in rebounding (37 per game).

The Tigers aren’t perfect. Long scoring droughts are still an issue at times. Clemson had to go to overtime to finish off the win against Drake after going the final 6 minutes, 34 seconds of regulation without a bucket. And Carolina nearly cut a 25-point deficit in the second half to single digits, getting within 11 points late before Clemson extended its lead again.

The Tigers, who began the week ranked 67th in the NET, will have to start maximizing their in-conference opportunities if they plan on building a legitimate postseason resume. Wednesday’s game, which has been moved up to a 7 p.m. start, starts a string of 19 straight ACC games to end the regular season, and Virginia is one of eight top-100 NET teams in the conference. Duke (twice), North Carolina, Wake Forest and Virginia Tech are also still on the schedule, which are shaping up to be chances at Quad-1 wins.

But Clemson likes where it is a lot more now than where it used to be.

“Just little things that we’re kind of getting used to,” Clemson coach Brad Brownell said. “We’ve been pressed a lot of times now. We’ve had to do a lot of things. You kind of just get used to your team as you get into 10 or 12 games. I think we’re starting to figure our team out pretty well.”

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Hall’s strong start and other observations from Clemson hoops’ exhibition win

Clemson’s men’s basketball team made easy work of Georgia Southwestern State in an 77-51 exhibition win Monday at Littlejohn Coliseum. Here are some observations from the Tigers’ tuneup for their season opener against Presbyterian on Nov. 9. Hall …

Clemson’s men’s basketball team made easy work of Georgia Southwestern State in an 77-51 exhibition win Monday at Littlejohn Coliseum. Here are some observations from the Tigers’ tuneup for their season opener against Presbyterian on Nov. 9.

Hall dominates

With Aamir Simms opting not to return for another season, Clemson coach Brad Brownell has singled out sophomore big PJ Hall as a player the Tigers need to take a sizable step with his development in the frontcourt if they’re going to have any chance of getting back to the NCAA Tournament this season.

It was an exhibition against a Division II school, but the former four-star signee teased coaches and fans with a dominant performance.

Hall started the scoring for the Tigers with a dropstep hook over his right shoulder and continued to pour in the points. He made 11 of his first 12 shots and had 21 points before the first half was over, but it wasn’t just in the paint where the 6-foot-10, 240-pounder got buckets. He stepped out and sank a pick-and-pop 3-pointer in the first half, too. He finished with 23 points on 11 of 14 shooting.

He also had two blocks and affected more of GSWSU’s shots at the rim with his length. He had just four rebounds in 19 minutes, so his physicality and footwork still need some work on the defensive end. But Monday was a good indication of what the Spartanburg native is capable of — and what the Tigers will need once the games start counting.

“There’s no question he’s on the uptick,” Brownell said. “He just needs to show it consistently.”

Freshman impresses

Ian Schieffelin was the standout in his first game in a Clemson uniform.

Schieffelin was just as efficient as Hall, shooting 6 of 7 from the field for 13 points in just 12 minutes. He also grabbed three rebounds. Yet Hall said the newcomer didn’t even get much of a chance to show off the best facet of his game.

“Ian’s probably the best passer on our team,” Hall said. “He’s ridiculous.”

As for the Tigers’ other two freshmen, guard Josh Beadle had two points, three rebounds and four turnovers in 11 minutes. Center Ben Middlebrooks didn’t score in 11 minutes. He had four rebounds and three fouls.

Transfers have mixed results

Clemson added a pair of transfers this offseason in former South Florida guard David Collins and forward Naz Bohannon, a 1,200-point scorer at Youngstown State.

Collins got the start off the ball and finished with nine points, four rebounds and three assists in 19 minutes. He showed off touch from the outside, sinking two of his three 3-pointers.

It wasn’t quite as fast of a start for Bohannon, who got off just one shot  (which he made) in 20 minutes off the bench. The 6-foot-6, 232-pounder finished with six points and four rebounds.

Defense picks up where it left off

Last season was another strong one on the defensive end for Clemson, which finished in the top 4 in the ACC in points allowed and field-goal percentage.

The Tigers were stingy once again to start the new campaign.

Clemson held GSWSU to 29.5% shooting from the field, including a 33% clip from 3-point range. The Tigers racked up 10 steals and forced 20 turnovers, scoring 28 points off those takeaways.

Clemson also cleaned up on the defensive glass. They outrebounded GSWSU 46-34 with 36 of those boards coming on the defensive end. Hunter Tyson led the way with seven rebounds.

Brownell gets a look at everybody

Exhibitions are used in part to get some feedback about who’s ready to contribute and who’s not. So while Clemson won’t be using a 14-man rotation once the regular season begins, Brownell emptied his bench to get a look at everybody.

Point guard Nick Honor, who had four points and a game-high seven assists in 27 minutes, led 11 Clemson players who played double-digit minutes. Al-Amir Dawes also logged 22 minutes at the point. All but three players played at least 11 minutes.

Brownell went as low as eight and as high as 11 when describing what he’s looking for in terms of the size of his rotation, though it may take some time to whittle it down.

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Choosing Clemson was a ‘no-brainer’ for standout grad transfer

Naz Bohannon entered the transfer portal earlier this year after graduating from Youngstown State University and will be a new powerful asset to the Clemson basketball team. Bohannon put up impressive numbers while at Youngstown with 1,200 points, …

Naz Bohannon entered the transfer portal earlier this year after graduating from Youngstown State University and will be a new powerful asset to the Clemson basketball team.

Bohannon put up impressive numbers while at Youngstown with 1,200 points, 975 rebounds and 275 assists during his four-year tenure. 412 of those points were collected in his senior year alone, and he led the Penguins in both scoring and rebounding last season.

Head coach Brad Brownell touched on how he’s developed the program over the past decade, which has helped attract guys from the transfer portal.

“When you bring in guys like Naz or David Collins on a visit and they get to see what Clemson has to offer, I think it’s impressive,” he said. “They’ve seen success on the court, Sweet 16 and NCAA Tournament teams. They see guys graduating, they see a good place to go to school and get a graduate degree like Naz is going to get.”

Bohannon is fully committed to contributing wherever he’s needed, whether that be passing, resounding or scoring.

“My expectations as a Tiger are to come in and obviously fit in, play my role, and do everything that I can do to help win,” he said. “If Coach tells me this game we need you to focus on rebounds, then I’m going to focus on rebounding that game. If it’s passing this game, or the next game he might want me to score a little bit more points, just fitting that agenda and doing what Coach wants me to do to help the Tigers win.”

On why he chose Clemson, Bohannon experienced an immediate family feel from Brownell and the entire squad.

“For me I would just say respecting everything that Coach did with the program and going into the portal,” he said. “And researching what it was that I was looking for in a school, I could respect the culture that he had put in place and the staples that the program stood for. Once I got on the phone with Coach Brownell and talked to the assistants like Coach (Antonio Reynolds) Dean and even meeting some of the guys, it was a no-brainer for me.”

Brownell believes that there isn’t one guy who can fill the shoes of Aamir Simms, who was drafted by the New York Knicks earlier this year.

It will take a collective effort by multiple guys to play a more important role and make bigger plays in games.

“Again, we had a really good year last year. We went to the tournament, and a lot of it was because of Aamir Simms and Clyde (Trapp) and Jonathan Baehre, our three seniors,” he said. “Those three guys are going to be missed, but that opens up opportunities for other guys, and we’re hopeful that those guys are ready to take a big step.”

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2021 ACC Basketball Tipoff: Clemson Press Conference

CHARLOTTE – Clemson head basketball coach Brad Brownell and forwards Naz Bohannon and Hunter Tyson held court Tuesday at the 2021 ACC Basketball Tipoff at the Charlotte Marriott City Center in Charlotte, North Carolina. Watch the Clemson press …

CHARLOTTE — Clemson head basketball coach Brad Brownell and forwards Naz Bohannon and Hunter Tyson held court Tuesday at the 2021 ACC Basketball Tipoff at the Charlotte Marriott City Center in Charlotte, North Carolina.

Watch the Clemson press conference at the ACC Tipoff below:

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Despite roster turnover, Brownell confident in his current group

CHARLOTTE – It’s a simple question, but it requires more than a simple answer. How does Clemson make its return to playing well into March, even with an abundance of roster turnover, including its leading scorer from the season before? Head coach …

CHARLOTTE — It’s a simple question, but it requires more than a simple answer.

How does Clemson make its return to playing well into March, even with an abundance of roster turnover, including its leading scorer from the season before?

Head coach Brad Brownell held court with reporters during Tuesday’s ACC Tipoff in Charlotte, N.C. 

“Simply right now, it’s just one good day after another,” Brownell said Tuesday in response to the question posed above. “Just kind of building our team, building our styles as coaches, we gotta learn how we want to play this year. You have thoughts every offseason…and then you start practicing and some of it looks really good. Some guys, one or two guys may surprise you a little bit. Then there are some things you thought might work, that aren’t quite working as well, so you have to re-evaluate.

“I like our team. I like our group. I think they’re competing really well in practice against one another. I think that was one of the things that helped last year’s team was we had depth in practice. We had healthy bodies and we had 10 or 11 good players that every day when they’re competing, you got better. I feel we’re kind of that way this year. I feel we got 10 or 11 guys that can really go at it. We need to stay healthy. We don’t have quite as many bodies, but the practice against competitive players leads to improvement and competition is good. I’m hopeful that’s gonna be a big key to us.”

First off, replacing Aamir Simms doesn’t happen overnight, nor is his level production going to come from just any player.

“Yeah, Aamir was a significant loss,” Brownell said. “Terrific player who had an unbelievable career at Clemson. As much as the points and rebounds, it was his personality. It was the way he approached practice every day, his work ethic, his smile, his personality. It just rubbed off on everyone.

“We’re going to miss a lot about him. Obviously, there’s not one player that you’re going to go recruit or sign that’s going to be like him. But I do think we have brought in some guys like Naz [Boannon] here and David Collins that are experienced and older players, and we’ve got a player like Hunter Tyson who’s been in our program for four years and understands our culture and what’s important to Clemson to win and be successful, and these guys have been very open, and they really get along well.”

Bohannon wasn’t brought in from Youngstown State to put on Simms’ shoes, but rather help alleviate the loss. He adds a level of physicality and toughness, mixed in with his ability to score at a high clip. The 6-6, 228-pound forward led Youngstown State in scoring last season with 16.5 points per game and 8.2 rebounds per game. He also logged 32.9 minutes per contest and a team-best 52.6 percent shooting clip.

The Tigers will need to replace Simms by committee and that happens with depth.

Speaking of that, Clemson signed three players as a part of its 2021 recruiting class — Josh Beadle, Ben Middlebrooks and Ian Schieffelin — helping mitigate the significant roster overhaul that the team underwent this offseason.

“All in different ways,” Brownell said when asked if any of the freshmen have stood out thus far. “They’ve done some really good things. Ben Middlebrooks has put on eight or 10 pounds, he’s up to 230-232, 6-10. He’s a big, physical kid, who is trying to learn how to play in different ways kind of all over the court because that’s how we utilize our centers, so there’s some challenges there. But, really impressed by his work ethic and his physicality is really good.”

While Middlebrooks received almost immediate praise from Brownell, it sounded like Schieffelin may be further along than the other two freshmen. Though Beadle is showing flashes of his potential, he’s a raw talent and the Cardinal Newman School (Columbia, S.C.) product may need some time to develop.

“Ian Schieffelin, on the other hand, lost 20 pounds,” Brownell added. “He came in a little out of shape and has done an unbelievable job of changing his diet, staying committed to it and kind of retooling his body. He brings a real stable influence to us. He plays with great poise. Probably of the three freshmen, he has the best feel for passing and playing with other people and just making decisions.”

“And then Josh Beadle is a hard-working young guy, we think is talented. He’s put on eight pounds. He’s gotten physically stronger. Just needs the experience of handling the ball against high-level guards and decision-making in pick-and-rolls that are challenging, but man, he’s shown some flashes of really good play. I think they’re all talented in their way. They’ve all shown some really good things, but they’re young.”

Speaking of additions, Clemson was diligent in dipping into the transfer portal when it needed to, finding a mix of experience and talent in Bohannon and South Florida transfer David Collins.

The transfer portal works both ways and Clemson lost two former four-star recruits from the team’s 2020 recruiting class — Lynn Kidd and Olivier Maxence Prosper. Still, the Tigers were able to identify what they were looking for and came out with players, who they feel can immediately contribute.

Clemson identified a similar playstyle from Collins, as it did Trapp, who provided a steady presence in the backcourt over the past four seasons.

Collins is a dominant scorer, who is known for his ability to draw contact. The 6-4, 220-pound guard led USF in scoring last season (2020-21) with 12.5 points per game and averaged over 30 minutes per contest. He added 3.5 rebounds and a team-leading 3.4 assists per contest. He shot 42.0 percent from the field, including 37.3 percent from beyond the arc.

He finished his career with the Bulls, recording 1,516 career points, which is the seventh-most in the history of the program. 

“He’s a big, strong driver,” Brownell said. “Clyde had some of those characteristics. Pretty good decision-maker. A guy who can make a shot. He’s an experienced guy, who’s done it at a good level. He drew a lot of fouls, so he’s in an attack mode, which I think our team needs that. I think we need another guy who’s a wing that can put his head down and can go get in the lane late in the shot clock or be the closeout and get fouled and get to the free-throw line or create something for somebody else. I feel like that’s where the physicality and the size is gonna help us. Whereas a younger, smaller guard, maybe the Alex Hemingways and the Nick Honors are a little smaller. Not as easy for those guys to do that.

Brownell believes that Collins’ maturity level, confidence and physicality make him the perfect player to make a “reasonably simple”  jump from the American Athletic Conference to the ACC.

There’s hope that with some added experience and a general expectation of players like Honor, P.J. Hall, Al-Amir Dawes stepping up, that Clemson cand find itself back in postseason play. But as Brownell said, right now, it’s just one day at a time.

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