Surging COVID-19 cases nationwide a cautious reminder for Clemson hoops

Clemson’s men’s basketball team got a nudge last week reminding it that the Tigers nor any other college basketball program trying to get games in isn’t out of the woods when it comes to COVID-19. The numbers serve as a stark reminder for the rest …

Clemson’s men’s basketball team got a nudge last week reminding it that the Tigers nor any other college basketball program trying to get games in isn’t out of the woods when it comes to COVID-19.

The numbers serve as a stark reminder for the rest of America, too.

“Very scared about it,” Clemson coach Brad Brownell said.

While Brownell didn’t give a specific number, he said “almost all” of his players and coaches are vaccinated against the novel coronavirus. So with a roster of largely healthy 18-to-22-year-olds, most of Brownell’s concern lies with how Clemson’s schedule might again be impacted by a potential breakout within his own roster, that of a future opponent or both.

Clemson, which is slated to resume ACC play Wednesday at Virginia, has yet to have any games altered because of coronavirus-related issues this season, but the Tigers got a scare over the weekend when a COVID-19 outbreak hit South Carolina. Carolina coach Frank Martin said midweek that multiple players would miss the Clemson game because of injuries and COVID-related issues, and that was before the Gamecocks underwent one more round of testing Friday morning before leaving Columbia for Saturday night’s game.

Had Carolina had any more positive tests then, the game likely would’ve been postponed or called off. But the Gamecocks, without half of their top six scorers, ultimately made the trip to Clemson, where the Tigers beat Carolina, 70-56, in a game they led by as many as 25 points.

PJ Hall, Clemson’s sophomore big, said the Tigers wanted to play. Fellow forward Hunter Tyson said he trusted the medical staffs to allow both sides to do so safely.

“They said we were good to play, so I said, ‘All right, let’s do it,'” Tyson said.

Brownell admitted there was “a little bit” of concern on his part, but, like Tyson, he ultimately trusted the feedback from the medical personnel in the hours leading up to tipoff.

“The doctors are like, ‘Hey, two or three days with nothing,’ so you feel like we’re probably OK to play,” Brownell said. “It’s a hard call either way because you want to play and the kids want to play, but we thought we did the precautions that we needed. And, knock on wood, we’ll be fine.”

Other programs around the country haven’t been as fortunate.

College basketball programs both in and around the Palmetto State have been impacted by the surge in cases, which has resulted in a flurry of games being postponed and canceled recently nationwide. Boston College and Wake Forest were added to the tally Tuesday when the ACC canceled their game against each other scheduled for Wednesday because of COVID-related issues within Boston College’s program.

Even if Clemson is playing right now, Brownell’s team can relate. The Tigers had a handful of games postponed or canceled last season because of COVID-19 protocols, including back-to-back contests against North Carolina and Syracuse in early January. Clemson temporarily paused all team activities at the time after having a positive test and subsequent contact tracing. The Tigers had to pause again in February.

Clemson was 9-1 before pausing the first time. The Tigers lost their next three games by an average of 24 points and went 7-4 after that with a first-round exit in the NCAA Tournament.

“People that followed our team last year, we were playing dynamite, and then we went on a pause for a week,” Brownell said. “That week, we were miserable. And we were bad for the next 10 days. We lost three games badly. When we had our second pause, we probably coached better and figured out how to do it better, but you’re asking a lot of your players to stop and start mentally and physically. Your rhythm. Your timing. It’s hard.”

Which is why Clemson is trying to do everything in its power to prevent that from happening again. With a majority of the team vaccinated, Clemson has eased up on the social distancing when coaches and players are around each other at the team facilities, though they’re still wearing masks. But Brownell said he and his coaching staff have already started talking about whether the team should stop piling together in the film room and start meeting in larger spaces out of an abundance of caution.

“You’ve got to be careful,” said Brownell, who added he’s encouraging his coaches and players to get booster shots.

When the players aren’t on campus, “it’s on our mind not to do anything dumb,” Hall said.

“We’re committed to a certain journey and trying to drive our team, so that’s on our forefront,” Hall continued. “We’re not trying to do anything dumb and spread anything around our program. Our coaches know that. Our players know that. Our managers and staff. So day in and day out, we’re precautions. We still have some of our coaches getting tested. We take things very seriously.”

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Clemson suffocates Carolina for runaway rivalry win

Clemson hadn’t beaten its in-state rival on the hardwood in nearly three years, but the Tigers’ defense made sure that drought didn’t last any longer Saturday. In what more closely resembled a rock fight for the first 20 minutes and change, Clemson …

Clemson hadn’t beaten its in-state rival on the hardwood in nearly three years, but the Tigers’ defense made sure that drought didn’t last any longer Saturday.

In what more closely resembled a rock fight for the first 20 minutes and change, Clemson used a suffocating stretch late in the first half and well into the second to pull away from South Carolina for a 70-56 win at Littlejohn Coliseum. Hunter Tyson had 18 points and 13 rebounds for his first double-double of the season while PJ Hall added 16 points and eight boards for the Tigers (8-4), who notched their third straight win.

It was Clemson’s first over Carolina (8-3) since Dec. 22, 2018. The matchup with the rivals’ first since Carolina’s win at Littlejohn during the 2019-20 season with last year’s matchup being canceled amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Saturday’s game was in limbo as recently as Friday with COVID-19 issues again popping up in Carolina’s program. But the Gamecocks tested again Friday morning and still made the trip to Clemson late that afternoon without half of their top six scorers because of COVID-related issues and injuries. Carolina inserted three new players into the starting five, but both teams struggled to hit shots early.

They combined for just eight made baskets through the first 13 minutes, 40 seconds of game time before Clemson made six of its last 11 shots of the first half. Hall’s putback gave Clemson a brief 21-19 lead, and after a Carolina basket, the Tigers ripped off a 9-0 run for their largest lead of the half, taking a 30-24 advantage into the break after Chico Carter’s 3 at the buzzer for Carolina.

But the Tigers were just getting started.

Clemson opened the second half on a 22-3 spurt, which was part of a 31-6 run beginning at the 2:57 mark of the first. The Gamecocks missed their first 11 shots coming out of the locker room, going more than 8 minutes without a basket until J’Von Benson’s putback dunk ended Carolina’s drought with 11:54 left in the game.

By that point, Clemson led by 23, and the Gamecocks never got closer than 11 the rest of the way. The Tigers shot just 33.3% from the floor but raised that clip to 38% in the second half. Clemson also gave itself plenty of second and third looks with 19 offensive boards, part of a plus-16 rebounding advantage (51-35) for the Tigers.

It proved to be enough given Carolina’s struggles to score. The short-handed Gamecocks shot just 32.7% from the field, including a 25% clip from 3-point range. Their leading scorer coming in, Jermaine Couisnard, finished with just five points on 1 of 3 shooting – seven points fewer than his season average.

With non-conference play in the books, Clemson will try to keep its winning streak going when it jumps back into ACC play Wednesday at Virginia.

This story will be updated.

Clemson ends skid with overtime win over Drake

ATLANTA – Clemson’s men’s basketball team found itself in an all-too-familiar position Saturday afternoon. They needed a little longer than they would’ve liked, but this one eventually turned out better than the other ones for the Tigers. After …

ATLANTA – Clemson’s men’s basketball team found itself in an all-too-familiar position Saturday afternoon.

They needed a little longer than they would’ve liked, but this one eventually turned out better than the other ones for the Tigers.

After watching one sizable lead after another slip away during their recent skid, Clemson used four double-digit scorers to hold off Drake in overtime for its best win of the non-conference schedule so far. Clemson’s 90-80 victory at the Holiday Hoopsgiving event inside State Farm Arena was just its second since Nov. 18 and ended a two-game skid.

Clemson (6-4) led by as many as 11 in the final 20 minutes Saturday but went the final 6 minutes, 34 seconds of regulation without a basket. Drake (6-4) eventually caught up to force overtime, but the Tigers scored the first five points in the extra frame and later got back-to-back 3-pointers from Al-Amir Dawes and Nick Honor for a three-possession lead that all but iced the win, one that was too close for comfort but one the Tigers will take considering how things have gone lately.

PJ Hall paced Clemson with 22 points and a career-high 13 rebounds for his first double-double of the season. Dawes finished with 19 points while David Collins, Alex Hemenway and Honor added 19, 12 and 12, respectively.

Clemson came in losers of four of its last five games, letting some pretty significant cushions slip away in all of them. Three of those losses came after the Tigers held double-digit leads in the second half.

It happened again Saturday with Clemson taking multiple double-digit cushions late against Drake, the last coming after Hall’s old-fashioned three-point play at the end of the putback put the Tigers up 69-58 with 6:35 left.

But the Bulldogs kept coming.

Clemson went without a basket for the rest of regulation, and Drake used a 13-3 run to get within one with less than a minute left. Honor drew a foul on Drake’s Garrett Sturtz as the shot clock wound down on the Tigers’ next possession and sank both free throws to make it a three-point game before Tremell Murphy buried a tying 3 from the top of the key to tie it with 13 seconds left.

Clemson took a timeout with 8.9 seconds left to draw up one final play for Hall, who got the entry pass from Honor just feet from the basket. But his turnaround jumper fell short, sending the game to overtime.

Dawes had 13 points in the first half, including a 3 to cap a 7-0 run for Clemson going to the locker room. The Tigers also got a lift off the bench from Hemenway to take a 39-32 lead at the break.

Hemenway sank a trio of 3s in the opening 20 minutes to help spark the Tigers after a slow start. Clemson missed on six of its first eight shots before Hall, Hemenway and Dawes scored on three straight trips to give the Tigers their first lead. Hemenway knocked down another trey two possessions later, and by the time he did so again with 7:39 left in the first half, he already had a season-high in points, surpassing the six he scored against Charleston Southern and Temple.

Clemson took its biggest lead of the half at 32-24 on Collins’ layup with 5:20 remaining, but Drake stayed close by knocking down six 3s of its own in the opening 20 minutes. D.J. Wilkins and Murphy sank back-to-back 3-balls to start an 8-0 run that drew the Bulldogs even before Clemson answered with its own spurt in the final 1:47 to take momentum back at the half.

This story will be updated.

Another quality opportunity awaits Clemson hoops in ACC opener

Give Brad Brownell this much. At least he was honest. “No, not really,” Brownell said when asked if he likes where Clemson’s men’s basketball team is heading into ACC play. The Tigers’ 12th-year coach then explained why following his team’s latest …

Give Brad Brownell this much. At least he was honest.

“No, not really,” Brownell said when asked if he likes where Clemson’s men’s basketball team is heading into ACC play.

The Tigers’ 12th-year coach then explained why following his team’s latest loss. 

“I thought we were going to play well,” he said. “I thought the signs were there.

“I just thought we were on our heels most of the night, and I didn’t see that coming. I thought we practiced really well and played well in our last game.”

That didn’t translate over for Clemson (5-3), which lost for the third time in four games Tuesday against Rutgers as part of the ACC-Big Ten Challenge. It was the latest struggle against a comparable level of competition for the Tigers, who’ve lost all three games they’ve played against top-100 KenPom teams heading into Saturday’s noon game at Miami.

The most recent one didn’t have the same feel to it.

A 32-point rout of two-win Charleston Southern the day after Thanksgiving is the only win the Tigers have in the last two weeks. Before that, Clemson started the Charleston Classic with a convincing victory over Temple. But the Tigers finished the tournament 1-2 after coughing up double-digit leads against then-No. 16 St. Bonaventure (which went on to win the tournament) and Bob Huggins’ West Virginia squad. 

Rutgers gave Clemson another chance to notch a quality non-conference win away from home, but the Tigers were the ones having to play catch-up for most of the time Tuesday. Clemson’s last lead came with 4 minutes, 39 seconds left in the first half, and Rutgers extended its advantage to as many as 11 points in the second before notching a 10-point win.

Clemson, with the help of David Collins’ 18 points and 10 rebounds, got within one with a little more than 12 minutes left, but the Tigers, one of the top 3-point shooting teams in the country coming in, went just 4 of 18 from deep and didn’t have the services of sophomore big PJ Hall down the stretch. Clemson’s leading scorer played just 19 minutes because of foul trouble and went out permanently with 4:07 left, finishing with 10 points — matching his second-lowest point total of the season — and four boards.

“He’s played really well most of the year for us. Just wasn’t his night,” Brownell said. “Obviously we’re a different team when he’s not out there. He could be our best player, and he’s probably our most valuable player. He’s a guy that we need out there because of his size and what he brings to the table offensively scoring around the basket.”

Miami (5-3) presents Clemson with yet another opportunity to grab a resume-building win, though the early going has been just as mixed of a bag for the Hurricanes. Miami, ranked 99th in KenPom for the time being, has already lost to Central Florida at home and was blown out by Dayton and Alabama. The Hurricanes, led by senior guard Kameron McGusty (16.8 points per game), redeemed themselves with a road win at Penn State their last time out Wednesday.

After Saturday’s game, Clemson will play its last three non-conference games before resuming league play at Virginia on Dec. 22. Brownell knows his team has to start taking advantage of its quality opportunities.

“The ones we’ve lost are already gone,” Brownell said. “We need to learn from it.”

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Clemson shoots past Bryant in rout

Clemson’s men’s basketball team didn’t have much trouble staying perfect Monday. The Tigers carved up Bryant’s zone defense and eventually tightened things up on the defensive end to beat the Bulldogs, 93-70, at Littlejohn Coliseum. Hunter Tyson led …

Clemson’s men’s basketball team didn’t have much trouble staying perfect Monday.

The Tigers carved up Bryant’s zone defense and eventually tightened things up on the defensive end to beat the Bulldogs, 93-70, at Littlejohn Coliseum. Hunter Tyson led five double-figure scorers for Clemson (3-0) with 20 points while Nick Honor added 16 points and seven assists for the Tigers, who, for the first time this season, didn’t have to overcome a second-half deficit.

PJ Hall added 14 points in 24 minutes while added Al-Amir Dawes and David Collins chipped in 11 and 10, respectively, for Clemson, which added to a 12-point halftime lead by shooting a season-high 56% from the field. The Tigers went inside and out against the Bulldogs’ 2-3 zone, scoring 40 points in the paint and knocking down a season-high 10 3-pointers. Hall, fresh off a 21-point outing against Wofford on Friday, finished 7 of 13 from the field while Tyson, Honor and Dawes had the hot hands from distance, combining to shoot 8 of 13 from beyond the arc.

Peter Kiss led Bryant (1-2) with 24 points while Chris Childs chipped in 15, but Clemson led by as many as 26 thanks to its defense eventually catching up to the offense. The Tigers held Bryant to just two 3-pointers in the final 20 minutes, a stark contrast to a first half that saw the Bulldogs make more than 53% of their shots.

Clemson finished with 20 assists on 35 made baskets. Collins also had nine rebounds for the Tigers, who finished plus-12 (39-27) on the boards.

Clemson came out humming against Bryant’s defense, getting almost any look it wanted with crisp ball movement. The Tigers made a point to work it inside to Hall, who had 10 points on 5 of 7 shooting to go along with five rebounds in the first 20 minutes. 

Tyson complemented that with 11 points as the Tigers shot better than 63% from the floor in the first half. But Bryant got hot from deep to stay close early.

The Bulldogs, behind Kiss’ 17 first-half points, made seven of eight shots at one point with four of those baskets coming from 3-point range. Bryant sank seven 3s in the opening 20 minutes and ripped off a quick 16-7 run to take a 30-28 lead on Kiss’ layup with 6 minutes, 53 seconds left in the half.

But Tyson answered with a corner 3 on Clemson’s next possession, which ignited another surge for the Tigers. Clemson sank a trio of 3s in the final 2:29, including Dawes’ buzzer-beater, and ended the half on a 24-10 run for a 52-40 advantage at the break.

The Tigers held Bryant to one bucket over the first 6 minutes and change coming out of the locker room, and back-to-back 3s from Honor capped a 17-8 spurt that gave Clemson a 21-point lead with 13:15 left. The Tigers cruised from there.

Clemson will now take its show on the road for the first time this season. The Tigers will face Temple on Thursday in the first round of the Charleston Classic.

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Brownell’s primary takeaway from Clemson’s first two games

Brad Brownell has a sample size, though it’s a tiny one. Clemson’s men’s basketball season is officially 40 minutes old. The Tigers rallied from a couple of double-digit deficits to knock off Presbyterian in their season opener Tuesday, but it was …

Brad Brownell has a sample size, though it’s a tiny one.

Clemson’s men’s basketball season is officially 40 minutes old. The Tigers rallied from a couple of double-digit deficits to knock off Presbyterian in their season opener Tuesday, but it was the second extended look Clemson’s 12th-year coach got at his current team in game action. Clemson made easier work of Georgia Southwestern State, a Division II school, last week in an exhibition rout.

Through two games, what has Brownell learned about his team?

“I think we’ve got to continue to be better in our offensive execution,” Brownell said.

Clemson’s defense is ahead of the offense in the early going, and the possibility of it remaining that way can’t be ruled out. More often than not, Brownell’s teams have been known for their defense, and the Tigers returned seven players from a team that finished last season in the top 4 in the ACC in points allowed and field-goal percentage defense.

The offense has had its moments. Clemson (1-0) didn’t come across much resistance in its 26-point exhibition win, but much of that was because a physically inferior Georgia Southwestern State team had no answer down low for sophomore big PJ Hall, who had 23 points. Only one other player, freshman Ian Scheiffelin, reached double figures.

Once the games started for real — and the competition got a little tougher — it was difficult for anyone to get going. Clemson made just two of its first nine shots from the field Tuesday and went to the half trailing 32-24 because of 35% shooting from the field, 46% shooting from the free-throw line and seven turnovers.

“(Got to figure it out) playing against different defenses and that type of thing,” Brownell said. “Some of it is coaching. We’ve got to figure out a way to better utilize guys. Some of it our guys have got to make better decisions.”

The Tigers have two new starters — Hall and South Florida transfer guard David Collins — they’re trying to get integrated, but some of the decision-making also falls on players who’ve been in Brownell’s system for a while. Brownell used junior guard Al-Amir Dawes as an example.

Dawes eventually became the offensive spark for Clemson in its opening win, scoring 16 of his 21 points in the second half. He finished 7 of 16 shooting from the floor, including 4 of 9 from 3-point range, but there were times Dawes played outside the flow of the offense with ill-advised shots. Brownell said it’s a balancing act with players like that who can get streaky.

“Al’s kind of a wild-card player sometimes,” Brownell said. “You’ve got to kind of give him some rope and let him go because he’s going to make some shots, but then every once in a while, it’s, ‘What are you doing man? We can’t have that one. We don’t need that one right now.’ So it’s kind of, we’re all still kind of adjusting as you’ve got a guy where you’re trying to get him some baskets and some freedom.”

The Tigers also didn’t work the ball inside nearly as much to Hall, who had six points on just four shots after putting up 14 shots in the exhibition. Brownell said some of that had to do with the way Presbyterian was defending Hall, but there were also times when the 6-10, 240-pounder was open on the block only to never get an entry pass from the Tigers’ guards. Clemson had just 12 assists on 21 made baskets.

“Our guards have got to do a better job of post feeding, but their pressure bothered us at times,” Brownell said. “Sometimes it’s hard with a small big guy guarding you who’s moving around and you’re trying to feel him and find him. It’s the first game of the year and you’re a little antsy. He just didn’t have a good rhythm, and I think a lot of it was (Presbyterian). I thought they did a lot of really good things.”

It’s early, but there’s a ways for the Tigers to go offensively. Their next chance to work on it will come Friday when Clemson hosts Wofford at 7 p.m.

“We’ve got to figure that out as a coaching staff, how to utilize our offensive package a little bit better,” Brownell said.

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Clemson rallies past Presbyterian for opening win

Clemson was coming off another trip to the Big Dance. Presbyterian? Not so much. For a while Tuesday, it was hard to tell. Presbyterian won just seven games a season ago competing in the Big South Conference. Yet it was the Blue Hose, with five …

Clemson was coming off another trip to the Big Dance. Presbyterian? Not so much.

For a while Tuesday, it was hard to tell.

Presbyterian won just seven games a season ago competing in the Big South Conference. Yet it was the Blue Hose, with five starters back, that looked more like the Power Five program coming off its most recent NCAA Tournament appearance, leading by double digits at various times inside Littlejohn Coliseum.

But the Tigers eventually got it going to avoid a disastrous start to the new season.

Clemson (1-0) used a second-half surge to overcome a frigid start for a 65-53 win in both teams’ season opener. Al-Amir Dawes scored a game-high 21 points while Hunter Tyson and David Collins added 14 apiece for the Tigers, who shot 47% from the field after making just seven baskets in the opening 20 minutes.

Rayshon Harrison and Brandon Younger each scored 12 points for Presbyterian (0-1), which led by as many as 11 and held a 38-28 advantage early in the second half before Clemson made its move. The Tigers went on a 13-1 run to take the lead on Dawes’ old fashioned three-point play. After Owen McCormack’s layup drew Presbyterian even at 41, PJ Hall responded with a putback slam that ignited a 12-3 spurt to give Clemson a nine-point lead with 7 minutes, 45 seconds left that it never came close to relinquishing.

The Tigers extended their lead to as many as 16 thanks in large part to Dawes, who caught fire in the final 20 minutes. The junior guard poured in 16 of his points in the second half, finishing just a point shy of tying the career-high 22 points he scored against Boston College in February of 2020. He finished 7 of 16 shooting from the field and 4 of 9 from 3-point range with all but one of those makes from distance coming after halftime.

Clemson shot 52% from the field in the second half while holding Presbyterian to 29.5% shooting after the break, a stark contrast to how things started.

Clemson had just two made baskets after the first eight minutes and change, and it didn’t get much better offensively from anywhere on the court for the Tigers. Clemson shot just 35% from the field in the first half.

The lack of touch extended to the free-throw line, where the Tigers made just seven of their first 15 shots. Meanwhile, Presbyterian shot nearly 41% in the opening 20 minutes and went on a 7-0 run with 5:58 left in the half to take a 21-13 lead. The Blue Hose went up by as many as 11 a few minutes later when Brandon Younger got free in the lane for an uncontested layup.

Presbyterian’s six offensive boards helped the Blue Hose score eight second-chance points in the first half, and they turned the Tigers over seven times. Yet Clemson stayed close thanks to Tyson, the Tigers’ lone offensive threat in the early going. The senior forward scored nearly half of Clemson’s first-half points (11), including the last five. His jumper at the buzzer cut Presbyterian’s lead to 32-24 going to the locker room.

It didn’t take long after that for the Tigers to roar back and take control.

Brownell practicing some patience as Clemson embarks on new season

Roster turnover is commonplace in college basketball, but Clemson’s primary departures this offseason weren’t exactly insignificant. The Tigers are still getting used to life with Aamir Simms and Clyde Trapp, a pair of key contributors on Clemson’s …

Roster turnover is commonplace in college basketball, but Clemson’s primary departures this offseason weren’t exactly insignificant.

The Tigers are still getting used to life with Aamir Simms and Clyde Trapp, a pair of key contributors on Clemson’s latest NCAA Tournament team. Simms, a three-year starter in the frontcourt, finished his college career with 1,122 points before moving on to the professional ranks after last season. Meanwhile, Trapp, a veteran guard, started 50 games during his time with the Tigers, including all 24 last season, before transferring to Charlotte.

Clemson coach Brad Brownell knows those voids won’t be easy to fill, though there are no shortage of options. The Tigers have seven players back from a team that won 16 games amid a pandemic-shortened season, but with the same number of newcomers joining the fold, Brownell isn’t interested in rushing to find all the answers as the Tigers embark on a new campaign. That will officially start Tuesday when Presbyterian makes the trip to Littlejohn Coliseum for both teams’ opener.

“When you lose that kind of experience, you’ve got to have a little patience in terms of trying to figure it out,” Brownell said. “Your players are trying to figure it out as well. Some of them are trying to figure out their own games and what they can do consistently well.”

Clemson’s mix of old and new faces got a test run last week in the Tigers’ exhibition win over Georgia Southwestern State, which showed just how much work there is left for Brownell to do to tighten up his rotation. Fourteen players logged minutes with all but three playing at least 11 minutes.

Sophomore big PJ Hall, who is being counted on to replace some of Simm’s production, was the standout, finishing with 23 points on 11 of 14 shooting in just 19 minutes. Freshmen Ian Schieffelin (13 points) and Ben Middlebrooks could also help in the frontcourt along with Youngstate State transfer Naz Bohannon and senior forward Hunter Tyson, one of three returning starters.

Guards Nick Honor and Al-Amir Dawes, the Tigers’ top returning scorer at nine points per game last season, are the other two. They will likely be joined in the starting lineup Tuesday by another transfer, former South Florida guard David Collins, who had a solid Clemson debut playing off the ball with nine points, four rebounds and three assists in the exhibition.

Freshman Josh Beadle and sophomores Alex Hemenway and Chase Hunter are among the other options in the backcourt. Each played more than 10 minutes in the exhibition, though Beadle and Dawes each had four turnovers.

Even if he doesn’t reach quite as far as he did in the exhibition, Brownell said he still plans to go deep in his bench against Presbyterian and perhaps beyond. The substitutions may not always be based on performance.

“We’ve got 10 guys or 11 guys we’re trying to play, so sometimes it’s just giving other guys an opportunity,” Brownell said. “You’re not always coming out because of something you did. It might be that somebody else brings something different, a different set of skills that we want to see. Maybe it’s a different grouping of guys we want to see play together. It’s not always you get taken out for a mistake. It could be strategy. Maybe we’re downsizing. Maybe we’re upsizing. Whatever it may be.”

Ultimately, though, there’s only so much experimenting that Brownell is going to do now that the real games are here.

“You’ve got to understand that these games count now, so you can’t be so patient that guys don’t understand there’s a sense of urgency,” he said. “There’s a tremendous amount of urgency now that games count, and we’ve got to do a good job as a staff of trying to put our guys in a position to be successful.”

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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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Hall an ‘important guy’ as Clemson hoops begin life without Simms

For the last couple of seasons, Clemson’s frontcourt has relied heavily on one of the more consistent bigs in the ACC. Aamir Simms broke out during his junior season, averaging 13 points and 7.2 rebounds. It was good enough for him to declare for …

For the last couple of seasons, Clemson’s frontcourt has relied heavily on one of the more consistent bigs in the ACC.

Aamir Simms broke out during his junior season, averaging 13 points and 7.2 rebounds. It was good enough for him to declare for the NBA Draft following the 2019-20 season, but the 6-foot-8, 240-pounder ultimately opted to withdraw his name from the draft and return to Clemson for a senior season. He averaged 13.4 points and 6.4 rebounds last season.

By the time it ended, Simms had eclipsed 1,000 points for his career. He was a key cog in the Tigers making two of the last three NCAA Tournaments, but now Clemson coach Brad Brownell is tasked with replacing the production left behind by Simms, who’s now with the New York Knicks.

For Brownell, that starts with PJ Hall.

“Really think it’s his time to take a big step,” Brownell said. “Excited to watch him have the opportunity. He’s worked really hard. His body looks much better. Physically, I think he’s in a better place than he was a year ago. Mentally, he’s excited about the opportunity.”

The Tigers have other frontcourt options. Senior forward Hunter Tyson averaged 7.5 points and 4.2 rebounds in 19 games (12 starts) a season ago. Youngstown State transfer Naz Bohannon was a 1,200-point scorer at his previous school and should step in as an immediate contributor, and Ben Middlebrooks could get some minutes as a 6-10, 232-pound freshman.

But none of them came to Clemson with as much hype as Hall, the state’s top-ranked recruit coming out of Spartanburg’s Dorman High School last year. A consensus top-60 recruit nationally, Hall bided his time as a true freshman, appearing in 21 games off the bench. He averaged 3.5 points and 2.0 rebounds in almost 10 minutes per game.

But Brownell said he’s been pleased with the progress Hall has made after a season in which Clemson went 16-8 overall and 10-6 in ACC play before falling to Rutgers in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. If the Tigers are going to repeat that success or perhaps improve on it, Hall will have to do his part in what’s shaping up to be his biggest role yet in a Clemson uniform.

“He has to be productive. He’s got to take a big step forward, and I’m optimistic that he’ll do that,” Brownell said. “There’s no question the loss of Aamir hurts. We did a lot of things through him. We won’t do quite as many things through PJ right now, but he’s going to get a lot of touches and he’s going to have to make some plays for us. He’ll be excited about that, so he’s certainly an important guy.”

Hall and the rest of the Tigers will take the court for the first time this season Monday in an exhibition against Georgia Southwestern State. Clemson will begin the regular season Nov. 9 against Presbyterian at Littlejohn Coliseum.

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