Clemson safety R.J. Mickens talks EA Sports College Football 25 experience

Clemson’s R.J. Mickens shared his thoughts on the first college football video game released in over a decade.

Before July 19, the last time a new college football video game hit the shelves would have been when some players were as young as 7 years old.

That was in the summer of 2013, and it turned out to be the last of the ‘NCAA Football’ franchise (as the game was then known), thanks to a wave of lawsuits primarily over players’ likeness.

Those issues are all settled now, and gamers and sports fans alike have spent the past two-plus weeks playing EA Sports College Football 25, the new game’s official name.

That includes college football players across the country. One team (Georgia Tech) even had a party to celebrate the game’s release and to encourage team bonding and participation.

RELATED: Clemson’s highest rated players in EA Sports College Football 25

Clemson’s R.J. Mickens was one of a handful of players that spoke to The Athletic ($) this past week to share their thoughts on College Football 25 and what they liked most about the game.

“I play people straight up. Just straight up online games, against friends and stuff,” Mickens told The Athletic. “It’s funny, because my teammates and I always argue over who gets to use Clemson, but then we just end up doing random teams so it’s fair. But playing some of my buddies at other schools, I love playing as Clemson and beating up on them with us. That’s fun.”

Asked what teams he likes to play with aside from the Tigers, Mickens pointed to his ties to the Dallas area. The Tigers’ safety came to Clemson by way of Carroll High School in Southlake, Texas, where he played on the same team as Texas quarterback Quinn Ewers — one of three players featured on the video game’s cover.

“There’s a lot of great teams in the game,” Mickens said. “I’ve got a lot of buddies — one of my best friends in high school, Quinn Ewers, is the quarterback at Texas, so they’re really fun to play with. SMU has a lot of good players I know; I’m from Dallas. So I know a lot of people on that team as well.”

Follow us @Clemson_Wire on X and on Facebook for ongoing coverage of Clemson Tigers news, notes and commentary. 

Clemson defender coming back for 5th season

A veteran Clemson defensive back announced his 2024 plans on Thursday night.

A veteran defensive back is coming back to Clemson for another season.

Clemson safety R.J. Mickens took to X on Thursday to announce he is returning to Clemson for a fifth and final season.

“Clemson, you hold a unique and cherished place in my heart,” Mickens said. “To the best fans in the nation, your unwavering support has made these years some of the best of my life. Your passion and spirit fuel my determination every day.

“After much thought and prayer, I have decided that I will be returning to Clemson for my final year. The university means the world to me, and we’ve got unfinished business.”

Appearing in 46 games over four seasons, Mickens will be one of the most experienced defenders on the Tigers’ roster next season. This year, the Texas native has 41 total tackles, one fumble recovery and three passes defended.

With the departure of safety Andrew Mukuba, who transferred to Texas, and Jalyn Phillips out of eligibility, Mickens’ return will alleviate some of the departures in the Tigers’ secondary.

[lawrence-auto-related count=1]

Clemson statistical leaders through eight games

Who scares you most on the Tigers?

This hasn’t been the season Clemson or any outsiders envisioned. While not everyone was anticipating another national championship, it’s doubtful anyone expected that by this point, the Tigers wouldn’t even been receiving votes in polls. A bowl isn’t out of the realm of possibility, but if November is a very bad month for the Tigers, it’s probable they’ll be watching bowl season at home. Talk about dropping off.

All of that said, there still is some talent on this Tigers team, especially on defense. If anything, these players are remnants of a time in the recent past when the Tigers were feared. Many might have picked Notre Dame to lose Saturday’s game at the start of the season, but that no longer is a certainty. This is why you play the games though: You never know what can happen.

Here are the Tigers most likely to have an impact when they face the Irish:

Clemson starting safety R.J. Mickens will miss N.C. State game, possibly more

Clemson’s R.J. Mickens to miss the NC State game and possibly more.

Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney shared important injury updates during his weekly Tuesday press conference, updating the status of starting safety R.J. Mickens. 

According to Swinney, Mickens had his appendix taken out on Monday and will miss Saturday’s game at NC State and possibly more time.

“Mickens is going to be out… They had to take his appendix out yesterday,” Swinney said. “Stomach ache and hurting. He had appendicitis. So, he’ll be fine, but you’ve got to heal up from getting that taken out… It’s a tough break for us there for sure.”

Mickens has started all seven of Clemson’s games, performing at a high level. Through seven games, he has totaled 37 total tackles, 2.5 tackles for loss, three pass breakups, two quarterback pressures, and a fumble recovery.

Grading Clemson’s defense at the bye week

How has Clemson’s s defense performed this season? Here’s a grade for the unit at the Tigers’ bye week.

The 2022 college football season has been far more friendly towards Clemson, with the Tigers defense performing at a high level like fans have become accustomed to.

Dabo Swinney and the Tigers currently rank as the No.5 team in the country with an undefeated record 8-0 (6-0 ACC) and will get some much needed rest this weekend during their bye week. While the Tigers have played some great football this season, the bye week is coming at a great time as the team struggled in their 27-21 win over Syracuse.

As we wait for more Clemson football past the bye week, now felt like a time to break down and asses how the Tigers have been performing this season. 

Here is a look at our grades for Clemson’s defensive performance so far this season. 

Mickens on game-sealing interception

Clemson’s latest 27-21 win over Syracuse came down to the wire, with the deciding drive coming in just the final two minutes of play in Saturday’s matchup at Death Valley. With less than a minute to go and the Syracuse offense moving swiftly …

Clemson’s latest 27-21 win over Syracuse came down to the wire, with the deciding drive coming in just the final two minutes of play in Saturday’s matchup at Death Valley.

With less than a minute to go and the Syracuse offense moving swiftly downfield, the Tigers’ defense was in need of a big play in order to keep the Orange out of the end zone and secure the win.

R.J. Mickens delivered just that with a huge interception on first-and-10 at Clemson’s 30-yard line to seal the deal for the Tigers’ eighth win of the season over a previously undefeated Syracuse team.

“We were in a cover two and I was the hook player,” Mickens said. “I just knew that they were hitting us on the seams, so I knew to pack it in, and the quarterback [Garrett Shrader] scrambled out, so I played off his eyes and made a play.”

The moment his hands came around the football in those final few minutes is a moment Mickens will never forget and something the safety credits to finally being in the “right place at the right time.”

“I prayed about it, I dreamt about it, and I just knew I was going to get a pick (Saturday),” Mickens said. “All glory to God, I was just in the right place at the right time. Thanks to the coaches, made a great call and then the pass rush got there, and he made a bad decision.”

For Mickens, Saturday’s interception was a full-circle moment. Just four games prior at Wake Forest, he lined up for the same cover two play in the fourth quarter against a talented Demon Deacons offense where an interception was thrown in his vicinity, but fellow defender Nate Wiggins came up with the grab to end the game.

“It was actually the same coverage — you know, a cover two,” the Texas native said. “The quarterback tried to force it in there at the end, and Nate did a great job sinking and broke up the ball and I was right there on top.”

Moving forward, Mickens is hopeful to continue being a key component of the Tigers’ defense. The junior defender has already been a huge difference maker for defensive coordinator Wes Goodwin’s defensive scheme, and his rise in confidence both on and off the field is what Mickens credits to his success thus far through seven game appearances and three starts.

“For me personally, just growing in my confidence,” Mickens said. “Last season, I only started two games and I was kind of a package situation guy last season, so I wasn’t really too confident, but I knew I could do it. This year, just having to play a lot more than I played last year, and just growing and knowing that I can do it and making those plays just builds confidence in myself. I’m definitely a way more confident football player right now than I was last year.”

Defense ‘responded to the challenge’ in helping Clemson stay perfect

Whether it was on the ground or through the air, Syracuse came out gashing Clemson’s defense. Syracuse averaged nearly 7 yards per play against the Tigers in the first half of Saturday’s tilt of ranked unbeatens in the ACC. Dual-threat quarterback …

Whether it was on the ground or through the air, Syracuse came out gashing Clemson’s defense.

Syracuse averaged nearly 7 yards per play against the Tigers in the first half of Saturday’s tilt of ranked unbeatens in the ACC. Dual-threat quarterback Garrett Shrader was the Tigers’ biggest issue. Shrader, one of the more improved passers in the conference coming into the game, connected on nine of his first 11 passes against Clemson defense that often chose to sit back and rush just four.

Shrader got Syracuse on the board with a touchdown pass to running back Sean Tucker, who beat defensive end KJ Henry on a wheel route to the end zone. With much of Clemson’s focus on corralling Tucker, the ACC’s second-leading rusher coming in, Shrader also ran for 73 yards in the first two quarters, sometimes on designed runs and other times when breaking Clemson’s contain to make something out of nothing with his legs.

“You don’t realize how fast Shrader is,” Clemson coach Dabo Swinney said. “You take a bad angle on him, and he’s a problem.”

So when the 6-foot-4, 225-pounder got out of the pocket against another four-man rush late in the second quarter and also outraced the rest of Clemson’s defense to the pylon for a 7-yard score that gave Syracuse its largest lead at 21-7, defensive coordinator Wesley Goodwin knew something had to change.

“We had to change our mindset,” defensive tackle Tyler Davis said. “We had to tighten up some little things, come out with a whole different mindset and go attack.”

That touchdown run was the last bit of scoring the Orange would do. And with Clemson ramping up the pressure in the final two quarters, yards were hard to come by, too.

Swinney and Goodwin said the plan coming in was to limit Tucker’s touches on the ground, though even Goodwin said he was even surprised the Orange’s All-American tailback got just five carries. That helped Clemson contain Tucker, who averaged 10.8 yards a pop on the few chances he got, as much as anything.

Goodwin said the Tigers adjusted some of their edge pressures to try to better hem up Shrader on the ground in the second half. Some of that was simply putting more defenders at the line of scrimmage and playing man coverage on the back end, an approach that’s also burned Clemson’s new-look back seven at times this season.

But the strategy paid off Saturday with the Tigers’ defense giving the offense every chance to make its comeback. Shrader threw for just 77 yards after halftime and had minus-2 rushing yards as Clemson racked up four of its five sacks in the final two quarters.

Syracuse netted just 35 yards on its first six possessions of the second half, all of which ended in punts. During that time, the Tigers, who committed a season-high four turnovers through the first two and a half quarters, held onto the ball long enough to score two touchdowns to take the lead.

“Guys gained more confidence as we got in the game and realized they match up with them,” Goodwin said. “Just tighten down on our alignments, play tight man coverage, and the guys responded to the challenge.” 

After B.T. Potter extended the lead on a 44-yard field goal with 1 minutes, 33 seconds left, Syracuse had one last chance to drive for at least a tying touchdown and perhaps the win. This time, it was Clemson’s turn to come up with a takeaway. With Syracuse marching in Clemson territory, safety R.J. Mickens capped the defense’s dominant second half with one last bit of aggression, jumping a route in zone coverage to intercept Shrader in the waning seconds.

“I just knew they were hitting us on the seams, so I was going to pack it in,” Mickens said. “The quarterback scrambled out, so I just played off his eyes and made the play.”

With the defense’s help, the Tigers are the last unbeaten in the ACC and still have hopes of returning to the College Football Playoff heading into the final third of the regular season.

“We adjusted within our game plan, but our guys responded and obviously rose to the occasion without giving up any points in the second half,” Goodwin said. “They did what we needed to do to win the game.”

Dear Old Clemson is excited to announce a limited edition football and poster signed by Clemson’s Avengers.

Now there is a new way you can support Clemson student-athletes. Purchase collectibles from Dear Old Clemson and the proceeds with go to support Clemson student-athletes. Visit Dear Old Clemson to find out how you can help!

Will Shipley leads Clemson to a comeback win over Syracuse

Freshman quarterback Cade Klubnik took over as Clemson made a comeback win over Syracuse.

It was a wild one in Death Valley Saturday as No.5 Clemson, behind a strong effort by Will Shipley, made a 27-21 comeback win over Dino Babers No.14 Syracuse.

The Tigers came out the gates strong, with DJ Uiagalelei finding Davis Allen for a 41-yard connection down the middle on their first offensive play of the game, helping set up a Will Shipley touchdown. After this, things slowed down mightily for the Tigers’ offense, leading to Cade Klubnik stepping in for Uiagalelei late in the third quarter as Swinney looked to turn things around.

Down 11 points heading into the fourth quarter, Clemson starting running back Will Shipley put the team on his back. Shipley took a carry 50-yards for a game-winning touchdown that put the Tigers up 24-21. The stud running back took 27 carries for 172 yards and two touchdowns on the day.

On the defensive side of the ball, the Tigers had their struggles in the first half, though they didn’t give up. The defense showed up massively in the second half, shutting out Garrett Shrader and the Syracuse offense. Holding Syracuse scoreless in the second half was crucial to the Tigers avoiding an upset.

R.J. Mickens had an interception on the Orange’s final drive to secure a Clemson win.

It was a massive comeback win for Swinney and the Tigers as they head into their bye week with their college football playoff hopes alive.

[mm-video type=video id=01gg02k11b049csn47ds playlist_id=01fvdd1xkgcx6zr5s5 player_id=01eqbvp13nn1gy6hd4 image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01gg02k11b049csn47ds/01gg02k11b049csn47ds-3b29851392309eddcb5d4a1bf43f03c0.jpg]

[listicle id=7588]

Swinney ‘super pumped’ to have entire defense available

Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney is ready to see his defense have “all hands on deck” against Florida State on Saturday.

Clemson’s defense could return all 11 starters against Florida State on Saturday, and head coach Dabo Swinney is more than ready for the unit to be at full strength.

Although defensive end Xavier Thomas returned last week against Boston College, several other starters were out that game — a reoccurring theme for the Tigers since Week 1.

Now, the coaching staff is optimistic that defensive tackle Bryan Bresee, cornerback Sheridan Jones and safeties R.J. Mickens and Tyler Venables will all be available against the Seminoles.

After the team’s Wednesday practice, Swinney expressed his excitement to see the defense have all its players at its disposal.

“I’m super pumped to have all hands on deck,” Swinney said. “They’ve all been there at one point or another, but having everybody available at one time, we really haven’t had that just yet. Hopefully, we’ll be able to really play at a high level and play sharp, play smart, keep guys fresh.”

Bresee has missed the last two games due to a kidney infection, Jones has been out three games for a stinger, while Mickens and Venables only missed last week.

Even if the entire group returns to the field this week, the defense will have their hands full against a balanced and productive Florida State offense.

[mm-video type=video id=01gf92897abaa7bxc9re playlist_id=01fvdd1xkgcx6zr5s5 player_id=01eqbvp13nn1gy6hd4 image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01gf92897abaa7bxc9re/01gf92897abaa7bxc9re-45692f01e296b230b92be1e481b72054.jpg][listicle id=7316]

The latest on the status of Clemson’s injured defensive backs

Clemson coach Dabo Swinney updated the status of three injured defensive backs who missed the Tigers’ latest game, including a pair of starters. Cornerback Sheridan Jones (stinger) and safety R.J. Mickens (undisclosed) were held out the Tigers’ win …

Clemson coach Dabo Swinney updated the status of three injured defensive backs who missed the Tigers’ latest game, including a pair of starters.

Cornerback Sheridan Jones (stinger) and safety R.J. Mickens (undisclosed) were held out the Tigers’ win at Boston College over the weekend. So was fellow safety Tyler Venables, who didn’t travel after sustaining minor injuries in a moped accident.

But Swinney said Mickens and Venables will be back for Clemson’s game at Florida State on Saturday. As for Jones, Swinney said he’s still day to day and that Tuesday and Wednesday will be important days of practice for the senior before determining his status for this weekend’s game.