Pair of Clemson specialists heading to NFL camp

Tack on two more Tigers to the list of potential players to make an NFL roster next season.

Two more Tigers are headed to the NFL after former Clemson punter Will Spiers and long snapper Jack Maddox received invitations to rookie minicamp.

According to Aaron Wilson of Pro Football Network, Spiers received an invitation from the Green Bay Packers, while Maddox received an invitation from the New York Giants. Both Green Bay and New York’s camps will take place from May 14 to 15.

Starting in 69 games for the Tigers, Spiers played at Clemson for six seasons. Meanwhile, Maddox played for five seasons and, like Spiers, was a walk-on that eventually earned a scholarship.

Spiers and Maddox’s invitations come hours after undrafted free agent and former Clemson wide receiver Justyn Ross signed with the Kansas City Chiefs. The two specialists also join safety Nolan Turner, linebacker James Skalski, Braden Galloway and cornerback Mario Goodrich as undrafted Tigers to receive an opportunity in the NFL.

[mm-video type=video id=01g1vwgzwvw2p2dbemxp playlist_id=01fvdd1xkgcx6zr5s5 player_id=01eqbvp13nn1gy6hd4 image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01g1vwgzwvw2p2dbemxp/01g1vwgzwvw2p2dbemxp-297473a96b7980d2fca566d20edf4433.jpg][listicle id=1195]

Turner signs UDFA deal

Nolan Turner turned his strong pre-draft showing into a shot at the next level. Clemson’s former safety has signed with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers as an undrafted free agent, a source told The Clemson Insider. Turner had about ten teams that were …

Nolan Turner turned his strong pre-draft showing into a shot at the next level.

Clemson’s former safety has signed with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers as an undrafted free agent, a source told The Clemson Insider.  Turner had about ten teams that were interested.

Turner’s the second former Clemson defensive back to pick his destination after not being selected in this year’s NFL Draft, joining cornerback Mario Goodrich (Philadelphia Eagles).

Turner played in 65 games – fourth-most in program history – with 25 starts during his six-year career at Clemson. He finished fourth on the team this past season with 69 tackles with three pass breakups and an interception despite dealing with hamstring and toe injuries. Turner earned All-American honors in 2020 when he had 66 tackles and a team-high three picks. 

He finished his career with 259 tackles, 20 pass breakups and seven interceptions.

Yet Turner wasn’t invited to the NFL scouting combine in February. He got a chance to show face in front of NFL personnel a month earlier at the East-West Shrine Game, but Turner seemed to answer any lingering questions about his athleticism during Clemson’s pro day, where the 6-foot-1, 200-pounder stole the show with some head-turning numbers.

Turner blazed times of 4.46 and 4.47 seconds in the 40-yard dash, a full second faster than any other participant. He also had the highest vertical jump (37 ½ inches) while his broad jump (10 feet, 2 inches) was tied for the longest.

Clemson Variety & Frame is doing their part to help bring you some classic new barware and help one of the local businesses that helps make Clemson special.

Order your Nick’s barware and do your part to help.  #SaveNicks

Analyst believes a former Tiger is one of ACC’s biggest sleepers in NFL Draft

On ACC Network this week, a few ACCN analysts weighed in on who they think are the biggest sleepers from the ACC in the 2022 NFL Draft. Former Clemson and All-ACC offensive lineman Eric Mac Lain sees former Tiger safety Nolan Turner as a big …

On ACC Network this week, a few ACCN analysts weighed in on who they think are the biggest sleepers from the ACC in the 2022 NFL Draft.

Former Clemson and All-ACC offensive lineman Eric Mac Lain sees former Tiger safety Nolan Turner as a big sleeper.

Mac Lain was part of ACCN’s coverage of Clemson’s Pro Day on March 17, when Turner stole the show with the highest vertical jump among the participants at 37 ½ inches and a broad jump of 10 feet, 2 inches that tied for the longest of the day. Additionally, he wowed while running his first 40-yard dash in 4.47 seconds before besting that a few minutes later with a 4.46 on his second attempt.

“When you look at Nolan Turner from Clemson… We were there, we saw him up close and personal, the things that he was able to do at Pro Day,” Mac Lain said. “A lot of scouts had him at a 4.3, some in the 4.4s. Jumping out of the gym on vertical and the broad jump. And then his tape — this guy was an All-American his junior year, and the things that he was able to do from the safety position… Obviously a very smart player, a locker-room guy, is a sure tackler. Had a ton of interceptions his sophomore and junior year.”

Turner was named third-team all-ACC by Phil Steele last season, when he finished fourth on the team with 69 tackles despite battling hamstring and toe injuries. He also recorded three pass breakups, two tackles for loss, two sacks, an interception and a forced fumble in 10 games (all starts).

The Vestavia Hills, Ala., native finished his six-year Clemson career (2016-21) credited with 259 tackles (13.5 for loss), 20 passes broken up, seven interceptions returned 78 yards, 3.0 sacks and two forced fumbles over 65 career games (25 starts). He was an AFCA second-team All-American and also earned a second-team nod from USA Today in 2020 after tallying 66 tackles (6.0 for loss), a team-high three interceptions and three pass breakups over 12 games (11 starts).

“I think that he is truly one of those sleepers, one of those diamonds in the rough that at the next level, he’s going to find a great fit and a great home,” Mac Lain said.

Former Georgia and Miami head coach and current ACCN analyst Mark Richt believes Turner could be a great value pick for an NFL team as well.

“The safety position at all levels of ball has to be a great communicator back there on the back end,” he said. “But when you get into the NFL and you get all the shifts and motions and all the checks that they expect you to take care of, you’ve got to have somebody back there that really can understand it and communicate it, and I know Nolan’s that kind of guy. So, he’s going to have great value not only from his skill set, but because of his ability to process information and communicate.”

Clemson Variety & Frame is doing their part to help bring you some classic new barware and help one of the local businesses that helps make Clemson special.

Order your Nick’s barware and do your part to help.  #SaveNicks

Where are former Tigers in ESPN’s latest 7-round mock draft, final draft rankings?

With the 2022 NFL Draft set to get underway with the first round on Thursday in Las Vegas, ESPN NFL Draft analysts have released their latest mock draft and final draft rankings. ESPN’s Matt Miller published a seven-round mock draft (subscription …

With the 2022 NFL Draft set to get underway with the first round on Thursday in Las Vegas, ESPN NFL Draft analysts have released their latest mock draft and final draft rankings.

ESPN’s Matt Miller published a seven-round mock draft (subscription required) on Tuesday and has Clemson cornerback Andrew Booth Jr. going to the New England Patriots with the 21st overall pick in the first round.

“Booth could be the replacement for J.C. Jackson, and he could be the steal of the cornerback class here,” Miller wrote. “Booth’s Clemson tape shows a tough technician who is quick, fluid and agile. He has also shown versatility in a diverse defensive scheme.

“The Patriots have needs at wide receiver and linebacker, but Booth’s value and the importance of the position make him an easy pick.”

Miller’s mock draft sees Clemson wide receiver Justyn Ross teaming up with fellow former Tiger wideout Mike Williams with the Los Angeles Chargers, as he projects Ross to go to the Chargers in Round 5 (No. 160 overall pick).

Miller, meanwhile, projects Clemson cornerback Mario Goodrich to come off the board in the sixth round to the Houston Texans with the 205th overall selection.

ESPN NFL Draft analysts Todd McShay and Mel Kiper released their final Big Boards for the 2022 draft class this week.

McShay has Booth ranked as the No. 27 overall prospect, while Kiper has him ranked lower at No. 39.

McShay’s final draft rankings (subscription required) slot Ross as the 150th-best prospect, while he has Goodrich ranked No. 225 and linebackers James Skalski and Baylon Spector at No. 318 and No. 355, respectively.

As for Kiper’s final draft rankings (subscription required), he has Ross ranked at No. 136 overall and Goodrich at No. 155 overall, while he pegs Skalski as the No. 25 inside linebacker, Spector as the No. 19 outside linebacker and Nolan Turner as the 28th-best safety.

Clemson Variety & Frame is doing their part to help bring you some classic new barware and help one of the local businesses that helps make Clemson special.

Order your Nick’s barware and do your part to help.  #SaveNicks

This NFL team will reportedly host two former Tigers for visits

This NFL team is reportedly set to host a couple of former Clemson standout defenders for pre-draft visits this week. The Pittsburgh Steelers will have linebacker James Skalski in for a visit on Thursday, while safety Nolan Turner will visit with …

This NFL team is reportedly set to host a couple of former Clemson standout defenders for pre-draft visits this week.

The Pittsburgh Steelers will have linebacker James Skalski in for a visit on Thursday, while safety Nolan Turner will visit with the Steelers on Friday, according to NFL Network reporter Aditi Kinkhabwala.

A two-year team captain and 2021 first-team All-ACC selection, Skalski completed his decorated six-year career spanning 2016-21 credited with 310 career tackles (20.5 tackles for loss), 10.0 sacks, 12 pass breakups, two fumble recoveries (including one he returned 17 yards for a touchdown) and a forced fumble over 69 games (38 starts). His 69 career games played tied for the school and modern FBS record, and he is the only player ever to play in (and win) five ACC Championship Games.

Turner, a two-year team captain as well, was a 2020 All-American and finished his six-year Clemson career spanning 2016-21 credited with 259 tackles (13.5 for loss), 20 passes broken up, seven interceptions returned 78 yards, 3.0 sacks and two forced fumbles in 2,145 snaps over 65 career games (25 starts). His 65 career games ranked fourth in Clemson history as of the conclusion of the 2021 season.

While Turner was not invited to the 2022 NFL Scouting Combine, he stole the show at Clemson’s Pro Day on March 17. He had the highest vertical jump among the participants at 37 ½ inches. His broad jump of 10 feet, 2 inches tied linebacker Baylon Spector and tight end Braden Galloway for the longest of the day, and he wowed while running his first 40-yard dash in 4.47 seconds before besting that a few minutes later with a 4.46 on his second attempt.

Skalski was not invited to the NFL Combine, either, but recorded a 4.70 40-yard dash, 34-inch vertical and 9-6 broad jump at Clemson’s Pro Day.

Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin, general manager Kevin Colbert and senior defensive assistant Brian Flores all attended the Tigers’ Pro Day.

Clemson Variety & Frame is doing their part to help bring you some classic new barware and help one of the local businesses that helps make Clemson special.

Order your Nick’s barware and do your part to help.  #SaveNicks

After biding his time, Phillips set for starting role on back end of Clemson’s defense

Jalyn Phillips has practiced his share of patience at Clemson. Phillips is beginning his fourth year in the program after signing with the Tigers in 2019 out of Archer (Georgia) High, where he was teammates with a more high-profile Clemson signee …

Jalyn Phillips has practiced his share of patience at Clemson.

Phillips is beginning his fourth year in the program after signing with the Tigers in 2019 out of Archer (Georgia) High, where he was teammates with a more high-profile Clemson signee that year, Andrew Booth. Unlike Booth, a two-year starter who’s widely projected to be a first-round pick in this year’s NFL Draft, Phillips has yet to carve out a consistent starting role on the back end of the Tigers’ defense.

In fact, Phillips has started just seven games for the Tigers to this point while competing amid a crowded room of talented safeties the last handful of seasons. He sat behind Tanner Muse, Nolan Turner and K’Von Wallace, a fourth-round draft pick in 2020, as a freshman. He then bided his time the last two seasons at free safety behind Turner, an All-American in 2020 who’s hoping to hear his name called in this year’s draft after playing in 65 career games over six seasons at Clemson.

Not everyone was willing to wait it out. Joseph Charleston, another safety who was also part of Clemson’s 2019 recruiting class, entered the transfer portal midway through last season, but Phillips said that thought never crossed his mind.

“Trust the process,” Phillips said.

That process appears to be paying off.

Phillips is now the favorite to be Turner’s successor at free safety entering his senior season. The 6-foot-1, 205-pounder has repped there almost exclusively with the first-team defense this spring, though Phillips said he’s doing some cross-training at strong safety, too, something his position coach, Mickey Conn, is having most of the safeties do in order to create and maximize versatility at the position.

While Phillips wasn’t exactly content with being a backup the last few years – “(starting) should be everyone’s goal when they come in,” he said – he was confident he’d eventually rise to the top of the depth chart at what he admitted was one of his dream schools. Having grown up approximately 90 miles down the road, it’s also a more convenient trip for his family to make to watch him play at Clemson, which is one of the primary reasons he said he stuck it out.

“And playing under a guy like (defensive coordinator) Wes (Goodwin) and a guy like Coach Conn,” Phillips said. “Genuine men. Guys that love you on and off the field. Coach (Dabo) Swinney, another guy that loves you on and off the field no matter what it is. Playing under them and playing for my family is really the big reason why I go so hard.”

Phillips saw the most extensive playing time of his career last season. He played in 12 games and started six of those filling in for an injured Turner, using a skill set that he believes is different from those that came before him at the position to finish the season with 47 tackles and three pass breakups.

“I’m more like a mixture of all of them,” Phillips said of his playing style. “A guy that can come in the box and fit. A hard hitter. Go in the slot and cover and has got range over the top. Just being able to do it all.”

But in an ironic twist, Phillips believes it’s what he learned from his successor that has him in position to play his largest role yet on Clemson’s defense. Phillips credited Turner for helping him grow his mental capacity for the game in the film room, where Phillips said it was a daily “routine” for the two to watch tape together.

“I appreciate him the most,” Phillips said. “Some people, they hate on the guy that’s in front of them, but I never in my life will hate on another man. I just really learned the game from him. He really slowed things down for me player-wise. That’s the reason he’s one of my close friends to this day.”

Phillips said it’s helped him take his game to another level, and he’s not the only one who holds that opinion. Conn said he’s seen a different level of confidence from Phillips this spring and has watched him emerge as the leader in the safety room, a role Phillips said is still taking some getting used to for him in some aspects.

“Coming in, I always did what was right, did what coach needed me to do and did a little extra, so I feel like I’ve always been a leader about what I’ve been doing,” he said. “But this year, taking on that role, I’m trying to be more vocal and get some of the young guys in and watch some film because I know how it was for me when I first came here. Everything was fast and everything is fast on the field. You might know it on the paper, but as soon as you get out here (on the field), your mind goes crazy.”

Said Swinney, “He’s been around here. He’s been a good player and he’s started some games for us, but he’s just really kind of come into his own as a fourth-year guy.”

Clemson Variety & Frame is doing their part to help bring you some classic new barware and help one of the local businesses that helps make Clemson special.

Order your Nick’s barware and do your part to help.  #SaveNicks

Conn thinks an NFL team would be ‘shocked’ by Turner

Mickey Conn believes Nolan Turner simply just needs an NFL team to give him an opportunity. And if he gets it, Conn thinks they’ll be very surprised by his abilities, particularly his athleticism. Clemson’s safeties coach/co-defensive coordinator …

Mickey Conn believes Nolan Turner simply just needs an NFL team to give him an opportunity. And if he gets it, Conn thinks they’ll be very surprised by his abilities, particularly his athleticism.

Clemson’s safeties coach/co-defensive coordinator spoke about the former Tiger standout safety on Wednesday when asked what he believes Turner can bring to the table for an NFL team.

“I think they’re going to be shocked,” Conn said. “I think they’re going to be shocked at how good he is. The guy’s a baller, and he has been since the day he stepped on the field here. He’s more athletic than anybody gives him credit for.”

Turner showcased that athleticism during Clemson’s Pro Day, stealing the show with scouts and coaches representing all 32 NFL teams packed inside Clemson’s indoor practice facility.

The 2020 All-American and two-year team captain for the Tigers had the highest vertical jump among the participants at 37 ½ inches. His broad jump of 10 feet, 2 inches tied linebacker Baylon Spector and tight end Braden Galloway for the longest of the day, and he wowed while running his first 40-yard dash in 4.47 seconds before besting that a few minutes later with a 4.46 on his second attempt.

None of the other participants, which included another defensive back (Mario Goodrich), a receiver (Justyn Ross) and a running back (Darien Rencher), ran faster than 4.60.

“I mean, 37-and-a-half-inch vertical jump is unbelievable, and then you go turn in a (4.46) 40,” Conn said of Turner’s impressive Pro Day showing.

“But they’re (an NFL team) going to get a smart player, which is probably what they think they’re getting,” Conn continued. “They’re getting a smart player, but they’re going to get the athleticism that they don’t expect. The guy has incredible hips, and the way he can swing his hips and the way he moves – he just kind of glides across the field. He’s got great instincts. He’s going to spend the time in the film room. He’s going to understand offenses, he’s going to understand routes, he’s going to understand reads, and somebody’s going to get a really good player out of him.”

Turner was named third-team all-ACC by Phil Steele last season, when he finished fourth on the team with 69 tackles despite battling hamstring and toe injuries. He also recorded three pass breakups, two tackles for loss, two sacks, an interception and a forced fumble in 10 games (all starts).

The Vestavia Hills, Ala., native finished his six-year Clemson career (2016-21) credited with 259 tackles (13.5 for loss), 20 passes broken up, seven interceptions returned 78 yards, 3.0 sacks and two forced fumbles over 65 career games (25 starts).

Conn was asked if he thinks Turner will hear his name called in the 2022 NFL Draft, which will take place in Las Vegas from April 28-30.

“I think definitely he can get drafted. He just needs to get a chance,” Conn said. “We’ve had guys from Clemson that have not been drafted that’s gotten opportunities and are making millions of dollars right now as free agents. So, if somebody doesn’t draft him, then he just needs a chance. But if I’m an NFL team, I’d draft that dude all day. He’s a baller.”

Clemson Variety & Frame is doing their part to help bring you some classic new barware and help one of the local businesses that helps make Clemson special.

Order your Nick’s barware and do your part to help.  #SaveNicks

Former Tiger ‘excited’ about the new reign of Clemson’s defense

A former Clemson standout safety is stoked about the new reign of the Tigers’ defense. Of course, now that he is Oklahoma’s head coach, Brent Venables won’t be easy to replace after successfully leading Clemson’s defense as its coordinator over the …

A former Clemson standout safety is stoked about the new reign of the Tigers’ defense.

Of course, now that he is Oklahoma’s head coach, Brent Venables won’t be easy to replace after successfully leading Clemson’s defense as its coordinator over the last decade.

But Nolan Turner looks forward to seeing what Clemson’s D looks like and how it does this season under new co-defensive coordinators Wes Goodwin and Mickey Conn.

“I’m excited. I’m real excited to watch them and how they structure this defense and ultimately how they perform next season,” Turner said recently on The Players Club Podcast, hosted by former Clemson running back Darien Rencher. “I’ve gotten up to spring ball a few times, gotten to see them coach and play in practice and stuff, and being with them throughout the whole bowl prep last year … Obviously him and Coach V are very different, different dudes, Wes and Coach V. Going to be different play-callers, going to be different coaches on the field, different personalities.”

Goodwin, who first arrived at Clemson in 2009, served as a graduate assistant from 2009-11 before joining the staff on a full-time basis in 2012 and overseeing the team’s secondary for its 2012 Chick-fil-A Bowl win against LSU.

He served in a critical off-field role for Venables as a defensive analyst from 2012-14 and as senior defensive assistant from 2018-21, overseeing defensive breakdowns and opponent scouting, assisting with on-campus recruiting and also serving as one of the program’s primary liaisons to NFL scouting personnel and coaches.

“Those are two of the best guys and two of the smartest guys at what they do, and there’s a reason Coach V kept Wes so close all the time,” Turner said. “They were feeding off each other, ideas and schemes, and what’s going to work for this and what’s a good call for that, how do we stop this. Wes is the man. He’s a players’ coach.”

To that point, Turner believes Clemson’s defenders will enjoy playing for Goodwin, who is entering his first full season in an on-field role at Clemson but 11th season overall across two tenures with the Tigers.

“All the guys are going to love Wes, going to speak highly of Wes. He’s just who he is,” Turner said. “The fact that he’s become the D-coordinator at Clemson isn’t gonna change who he is, and that’s what I think is really cool about him. He’s still going to be the same old Wes. It’s just who he is. Funny humor, kind of quiet, but will get after you every once in a while. You start to see a different side of him on the football field a little bit than you would up in the meeting room. So, that’s what I like to see come out of him. In the bowl prep, seeing him get after some guys a little bit was fun.”

Turner is also happy that his former safeties coach Conn was promoted to co-defensive coordinator. The former longtime head coach at Grayson (Ga.) High School started his career at Clemson in 2016, when Turner was a true freshman, and then became the Tigers’ full-time assistant coach for safeties in January 2017.

“I’ve been around Coach Conn for six years now, that’s my guy,” Turner said. “Came into Clemson when I came into Clemson, so we kind of went through that ride together of learning, learning the defense, getting adjusted to college football and everything. So, I’ve spent a lot of good moments with Coach Conn and really enjoyed his mentorship and his coaching ability. He’s really important to me, him and his family, so I’ve always been really appreciative of them. … But just super excited for both of those guys.”

Clemson Variety & Frame is doing their part to help bring you some classic new barware and help one of the local businesses that helps make Clemson special.

Order your Nick’s barware and do your part to help.  #SaveNicks

Former Clemson safety reflects on the moment ‘I felt like I belonged’

Nolan Turner’s six-year career at Clemson, spanning 2016-21, was a process during which he incrementally improved on a yearly basis and ultimately blossomed into an All-American and two-year team captain. But the point in time when the standout …

Nolan Turner’s six-year career at Clemson, spanning 2016-21, was a process during which he incrementally improved on a yearly basis and ultimately blossomed into an All-American and two-year team captain.

But the point in time when the standout safety felt like he belonged at a place like Clemson, playing against the best of the best, came on Dec. 29, 2018, in the Lone Star State.

That’s when and where Turner recorded his first career interception in the Cotton Bowl vs. No. 3 Notre Dame, helping the Tigers to a 30-3 win over the Irish in the College Football Playoff semifinal matchup at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.

Turner went on to tally four tackles in Clemson’s 44-16 victory over Alabama, his father’s alma mater, in the National Championship Game on Jan 7, 2019. But looking back on it, that initial pick he secured against Notre Dame in the Cotton Bowl represents the moment when Turner realized he belonged playing big-time college football.

“It’s interesting, because my journey, it was like I kind of got like a little bit better every year, kind of got a little more of a taste of it every year,” Turner said recently on The Players Club Podcast, hosted by former Clemson running back Darien Rencher. “2016, redshirt year. 2017, I played a lot of special teams, didn’t play any on defense. 2018, I started playing on defense a little bit kind of gradually throughout the season.

“But I think that moment when I felt like I belonged was, I’ll take it back to the 2018 Cotton Bowl, when we were playing out in Dallas. I think that interception I got out there was kind of my first big play on a big stage, and that was a super cool feeling – a nationally televised game, making a big play in a big game. It was a lot of fun, obviously, and a big win for us, and that was kind of that moment I was like, OK, I belong playing on this level with this kind of talent. That’s kind of when it hit me, probably 2018.”

Turner finished his career as a Tiger credited with 259 tackles (13.5 for loss), 20 passes broken up, seven interceptions returned 78 yards, 3.0 sacks and two forced fumbles in 2,145 snaps over 65 career games (25 starts). His 65 career games ranked fourth in Clemson history as of the conclusion of the 2021 season, trailing only three of his six-year “super senior” teammates.

You can watch Turner’s full interview with Rencher on The Players Club Podcast below:

Clemson Variety & Frame is doing their part to help bring you some classic new barware and help one of the local businesses that helps make Clemson special.

Order your Nick’s barware and do your part to help.  #SaveNicks

Turner reflects on the best players he played against during his Clemson career

Former Clemson safety Nolan Turner was a guest this week on The Players Club Podcast, hosted by former Tiger running back Darien Rencher. Turned was asked to name some of the best players, in his opinion, that he played against during his Clemson …

Former Clemson safety Nolan Turner was a guest this week on The Players Club Podcast, hosted by former Tiger running back Darien Rencher.

Turned was asked to name some of the best players, in his opinion, that he played against during his Clemson career (2016-21).

The 2020 All-American and two-year team captain singled out a few different groups of players, including quarterback Joe Burrow and wide receivers Ja’Marr Chase and Justin Jefferson from the LSU team that beat Clemson in the 2019 national title game; wide receivers Jerry Jeudy, Jaylen Waddle, DeVonta Smith and Henry Ruggs from the Alabama team that Clemson beat in the 2018 national title game; and quarterback Justin Fields and wide receivers Garrett Wilson and Chris Olave from the Ohio State teams that Clemson played in 2019 and 2020.

“The first three that come to mind – well, some of them are a group, you know; I might put them in groups – number one was Ja’Marr, Justin and Joe, them three as a unit. I’ll use that as one,” Turner said. “And then you run it back to 2018, and they (Alabama) got Jeudy, Waddle, DeVonta and Ruggs. That’s the other group. You see speed and you see talented guys, and then you turn on this tape and it’s a little bit different. Guys stand out a little bit more, look a little bit faster, and you know you’re in for it. So, those two are definitely the biggest that stand out. But some of those Ohio State teams that we played … Justin Fields, a heck of a quarterback, heck of a football player, and especially those receivers they had, too, with Garrett Wilson, Olave. Man, they’re some ballers.”

You can watch Rencher’s full interview with Turner on the latest episode of The Players Club Podcast below:

Clemson Variety & Frame is doing their part to help bring you some classic new barware and help one of the local businesses that helps make Clemson special.

Order your Nick’s barware and do your part to help.  #SaveNicks