Syracuse vs Louisville Prediction, Game Preview

Syracuse vs Louisville prediction, game preview, how to watch, lines, and why each team might – or might not – win this Saturday.

Syracuse vs Louisville prediction, game preview, how to watch: Saturday, November 13


Syracuse vs Louisville How To Watch

Date: Saturday, November 13
Game Time: 12:00 ET
Venue: Cardinal Stadium, Louisville, KY
How To Watch: ESPN3
Record: Syracuse (5-4), Louisville (4-5)
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Syracuse vs Louisville Game Preview


Why Syracuse Will Win

Can Louisville handle the rushing attack that’s about to blast away for a full four quarters? It’s questionable.

This isn’t the Louisville defense of the last few years. It started out with a rough run having to deal with Ole Miss, Wake Forest, and a healthy UCF, but the run defense has been terrific over the last month against a slew of brand name teams.

However, Virginia, Boston College, NC State, and Clemson don’t run like Syracuse does.

Yeah, Michigan State’s Kenneth Walker has been all but handed the Doak Walker as the nation’s best running back, but Sean Tucker is right there, QB Garrett Shrader has transformed the team with his power style, and the Orange are now third in the nation in rushing. They’re good for 200 yards on the ground in this no matter what, but …

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Why Louisville Will Win

Again, the Cardinals are playing well and the defense has stepped it up in a big way. They’re not winning, but they’re holding up against the run.

Syracuse might be running and rumbling, but it’s not converting on third downs and it’s having a rough time converting all of the production into points. The Orange haven’t hit 30 points in the last three games, and it might have to if the Cardinal. O gets going.

Can the passing game take over? It’s possible to thrown the Orange defense, but it hasn’t faced a whole lot of teams that can do it – Wake Forest and Liberty were able to get going through the air.

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What’s Going To Happen

It’s one of those Moment of Truth games for both teams.

Syracuse has five wins, but it closes out at NC State and against Pitt – getting that sixth to go bowling isn’t going to be easy.

Louisville has four wins. It should be able to win at Duke, but closing out at Kentucky is a lot to ask for if a bowl game is on the line.

Both teams are playing relatively well, but Louisville is having a hard time coming up with the big drive at the right time to pull games out. Syracuse is taking over with that ground attack.

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Syracuse vs Louisville Prediction, Lines

Syracuse 26, Louisville 24
Line: Louisville -3, o/u: 55.5
ATS Confidence out of 5:

Must See Rating: DDDDD

5: House of Gucci
1: Yellowstone

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Boston College vs Syracuse Prediction, Game Preview

Boston College vs Syracuse prediction, game preview, how to watch, lines, and why each team might – or might not – win this Saturday.

Boston College vs Syracuse prediction, game preview, how to watch: Saturday, October 30


Boston College vs Syracuse How To Watch

Date: Saturday, October 30
Game Time: 3:30 ET
Venue: Carrier Dome, Syracuse, NY
How To Watch: ESPN3
Record: Boston College (4-3), Syracuse (4-4)
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Why Boston College Will Win

The Eagles have to take back control of their season by taking back control of their third down chances.

The offense was just fine over September when it was able to come up with a whole lot of third down conversions and – at least for the first three games – third down stops. Over the last three games – all losses – the O hasn’t been able to keep the chains moving, converting just 13-of-45 tries, 29%.

Overall, Syracuse’s defense hans’t been too bad on third downs, but it’s allowed teams to convert 40% or more in four of the last five games.

This might seem like a nitpicky thing, but when it comes to dealing with Syracuse,  controlling the clock and the tempo matters because …

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Why Syracuse Will Win

Syracuse is killing it on the ground.

Even against Clemson – when it ran for 165 yards – it averaged 5.5 yards per carry and was effective. It ripped through Wake Forest for 354 yards, pointed on Virginia Tech for 314, and it’s getting massive seasons out of RB Sean Tucker and QB Garrett Shrader.

So how is Boston College doing against the run?

It was amazing to start the season, but it couldn’t stop Clemson. Right now, you and the people in the Starbucks drive-through line could hold the Tiger ground game to 104 yards, and Boston College allowed close to six yards per carry and 231 yards.

Last week, Louisville ran for 331 yards in its 28-14 win over BC.

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What’s Going To Happen

Can Syracuse do what it does well, or can Boston College get its groove back and kickstart an offense that hit a brick wall?

A little of both, but Syracuse is playing like a team with the arrow pointing up – it’s playing well even in the losses – and Boston College is having too hard a time scoring.

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Boston College vs Syracuse Prediction, Lines

Syracuse 26, Boston College 20
Line: Syracuse -6.5, o/u: 50
ATS Confidence out of 5: 2

Must See Rating: 3

5: The French Dispatch
1: Finch

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Syracuse vs Virginia Tech Prediction, Game Preview

College Football News Syracuse Orange vs Virginia Tech Hokies game preview, prediction, how to watch, and the lines for this Saturday.

Syracuse vs Virginia Tech prediction, game preview, how to watch: Saturday, October 23


Syracuse vs Virginia Tech How To Watch

Date: Saturday, October 23
Game Time: 12:30 ET
Venue: Lane Stadium, Blacksburg, VA
How To Watch: ESPN3
Record: Syracuse (3-4), Virginia Tech (3-3)
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Syracuse vs Virginia Tech Game Preview


Why Syracuse Will Win

Can the Syracuse running game get going on the Hokies?

Virginia Tech’s defense hasn’t been all that bad, and it’s been great against the run up until allowing a season-high 208 yards in the loss to Pitt last week.

The Orange were kept in check by Clemson in last week’s loss, and they struggled against Rutgers, but they rolled on the ground against everyone else behind the 1-2 punch of RB Sean Tucker and – lately – QB Garrett Shrader.

Combine the ACC’s best rushing attack with a solid pass defense got hit hard by Wake Forest but held firm against everyone else – helped by a terrific pass rush – and Syracuse has a good combination to pull this off. However …

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Why Virginia Tech Will Win

The Syracuse passing game against Clemson was just plain sad.

Shrader isn’t awful at throwing the ball, but he’s more of a runner and he’s not consistent. Moving the chains isn’t easy for this bunch, and third down conversions appear to be a chore.

Virginia Tech’s defense is terrific on third downs and it can crank up a little bit of a pass rush, too.

This isn’t a team built to get into high-powered shootouts. It’ll be more than content to keep this in the 20s and take its chances at home in a grinding game …

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What’s Going To Happen

And that’s exactly what the Hokies are going to do.

Don’t expect a whole lot of big pass plays. Both teams will rely on their run defense, field position, and trying to take advantage of the opportunities to capitalize when there’s a chance.

It won’t be anything scintillating, but it’ll be a tight, entertaining game that stays close late.

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Syracuse vs Virginia Tech Prediction, Line

Virginia Tech 24, Syracuse 20
Line: Virginia Tech -3.5, o/u: 45.5
ATS Confidence out of 5: 3

Must See Rating: 3

5: Succession
1: Dancing with the Stars: Grease Night

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Clemson survives Syracuse

Clemson escaped heart break with a 17-14 win over Syracuse at the Carrier Dome on Friday night. The Tigers stood strong defensively on Cuse’s final drive and forced a long field goal attempt. Then Andre Szmyt pushed the 49 yard attempt wide right …

Clemson escaped heart break with a 17-14 win over Syracuse at the Carrier Dome on Friday night.

The Tigers stood strong defensively on Cuse’s final drive and forced a long field goal attempt. Then Andre Szmyt pushed the 49 yard attempt wide right with 38 seconds left to play as Clemson held on.

It marked the first win away from home for Clemson so far this season and its fourth straight over Syracuse.

Clemson struck first after Tyler Venables set up a scoring drive and stopped the Orange in the red zone with 1:03 to play in the first quarter with an interception at Clemson’s own seven yard-line.

On the ensuing drive Clemson moved the ball 87 yards in 13 plays and chewed 6:57 off the clock and took a 7-0 lead on a 19 yard touchdown pass on third-and-13 from D.J. Uiagalelei to Joseph Ngata with 9:06 to play in the first quarter.

Syracuse evened things up on a two yard touchdown run by Garrett Shrader on the next drive to answer Tigers with 5:33 remaining in the second quarter.

After stalling offensively its next possession Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney made a gutsy call when faced with fourth-and-5 on the Syracuse 41 with 1:05 left in the half.

Punter Will Spiers executed a fake punt pass for a 17 yard completion to Davis Allen.

The decision paid off when Kobe Pace punched it in for a two yard touchdown run with 0:09 left in the half to give Clemson a 14-7 lead.

Orange running back Sean Tucker finished the first half with 12 carries for 132 yards and a score. But the Tigers shut him down in the second as he gained just 25 more yards and finished 22 carries 157 yards.

The third quarter proved a stalemate as neither team drove the ball down the field.

But Clemson added to its lead on a 40-yard field goal by B.T. Potter with 9:22 left in the fourth quarter to give the Tigers a 17-7 lead.

But Syracuse answered on the following series with a 62-yard touchdown pass on a prayer from Shrader as he was hit to Trebor Pena to cut Clemson’s lead to 17-14 with 7:18 to play in the contest.

Then the Orange picked up another stop and took over 4:40 remaining at their own seven yard line with an opportunity to take their first lead.

But the drive ended with Szmyt’s missed field goal from 40 yards out with 38 seconds left in the game.

Clemson returns to action next Saturday at Pittsburgh, kickoff is set for 3:30 p.m. at Heinz Field.

Late score gives Tigers halftime lead

Clemson entered the halftime break with a 14-7 lead over Syracuse at the Carrier Dome. The Tigers jumped in front at the end of the half on a two yard touchdown run by Kobe Pace with 0:09 to play in the second quarter. Clemson struck first after …

Clemson entered the halftime break with a 14-7 lead over Syracuse at the Carrier Dome.

The Tigers jumped in front at the end of the half on a two yard touchdown run by Kobe Pace with 0:09 to play in the second quarter.

Clemson struck first after Tyler Venables set up a scoring drive and stopped the Orange in the red zone with 1:03 to play in the first quarter with an interception at Clemson’s own seven yard-line.

On the ensuing drive Clemson moved the ball 87 yards in 13 plays and chewed 6:57 off the clock.

The Tigers capped off the drive with a 19 yard touchdown pass on third-and-13 from D.J. Uiagalelei to Joseph Ngata to take a 7-0 lead with 9:06 to play in the half.

Syracuse evened things up on a two yard touchdown run by Garrett Shrader on the next drive to answer Tigers with 5:33 remaining in the second quarter. Sean Tucker set up the score with a 39 yard run to the Clemson two.

The Orange drive covered 91 yards in 10 plays and 3:28.

Tucker finished the first half with 12 carries for 132 yards and a score, it marked his sixth consecutive 100 yard rushing game as he became the country’s leading rusher in the FBS.

After stalling offensively its next possession Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney made a gutsy call when faced with fourth-and-5 on the Syracuse 41 with 1:05 left in the half. Will Spiers executed a fake punt pass for a 17 yard completion to Davis Allen.

The decision paid off when Kobe Pace punched it in for a two yard touchdown run with 0:09 left in the half to give Clemson a 14-7 lead.

The Tigers get the ball to start the second half.

‘Not much different than us’: Clemson, Syracuse set for clash of similar fortunes

SYRACUSE, N.Y. – Clemson’s record could be worse this season. It’s also oh so close to being better. And Clemson coach Dabo Swinney couldn’t help but notice the same thing about the Tigers’ upcoming opponent. That’s because, much like No. 25 …

SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Clemson’s record could be worse this season. It’s also oh so close to being better.

And Clemson coach Dabo Swinney couldn’t help but notice the same thing about the Tigers’ upcoming opponent.

That’s because, much like No. 25 Clemson, Syracuse has been in its share of nail-biters through the first half of the season. While the Tigers’ two losses have come by a combined 13 points, including one in overtime, Syracuse’s three losses have been even tighter. One came on a field goal as time expired against Florida State while the Orange pushed unbeaten Wake Forest to the brink last week before losing by a field goal in overtime.

“They’re not much different than us,” Swinney said. “They’re two plays away from being 5-1.”

The teams are guaranteed to further impact their respective records differently Friday when the Atlantic Division foes renew their series with a 7 p.m. kick at the Carrier Dome. Clemson (3-2, 2-1 ACC) has won the last three meetings by an average of 26 points, but if the first half of the season has been any indication, the teams could be in for another white-knuckler this time around.

The Tigers’ offense continues to sputter, at least when it comes to scoring points. Clemson is averaging less than 15 points against FBS competition this season and has yet to score more than 19 in regulation in those games, though how the Tigers performed their last time out against Boston College has Clemson further believing it’s close to breaking out in that facet.

Clemson racked up 438 yards, including 231 on the ground. Both were the second-highest totals of the season. The Tigers are also coming off an open date that helped them get closer to full health. That includes right guard Will Putnam, who’s expected to return to the starting lineup after missing the Boston College game with a toe injury.

“We think we’re just right there,” quarterback D.J. Uiagalelei said. “The more we keep practicing and the more we keep playing, I think we’re just getting closer, closer and closer each and every time.”

The unit’s challenge this week is executing against one of the more disruptive defenses in the country. Syracuse (3-3, 0-2) leads the ACC in tackles for loss and sacks on a per-game basis out of a 3-3-5 base defense that often utilizes pre-snap movement among its front six to try to confuse opposing offenses as to where the pressure is coming from.

“They rarely ever sit still,” Swinney said. “You’ve got to really do a good job of collecting movement, picking up the twists, passing things off and all of those things.”

Defensively, Clemson will have to contend with a run-heavy attack from Syracuse, which gets multiple players involved in a ground game averaging more than 240 yards. Running back Sean Tucker is the ACC’s leading rusher, but quarterback Garrett Shrader is a factor, too. The Mississippi State transfer, who’s put together back-to-back 100-yard games on the ground, is averaging more than 5 yards per carry and is second on the team only to Tucker in rushing touchdowns (8). 

Shrader is completing just 57% of his passes, but Syracuse hasn’t needed that part of his game as much. The Orange are still averaging more than 31 points per game.

“We’re always going to try to throw the ball,” Syracuse coach Dino Babers said. “We need to be balanced on offense, and we’ll always work toward that. But until you get there, you need to do some things that are working.”

How well the Orange’s ground game works against Clemson remains to be seen. The Tigers have the ACC’s third-best rush defense, holding teams to 102 yards per game on the ground. There’s little doubt the Tigers will try to take away what Syracuse does best and make Shrader beat them with his arm. 

“They’re really running the football,” Swinney said. “That’s what they’re doing.”

It’s a game within the game that could help make the difference, even if it’s not much of one.

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Clemson vs Syracuse Prediction, Game Preview

Clemson vs Syracuse prediction, game preview, how to watch: Saturday, October 16

Clemson vs Syracuse prediction, game preview, how to watch: Saturday, October 16


Clemson vs Syracuse How To Watch

Date: Friday, October 15
Game Time: 7:00 ET
Venue: ESPN
How To Watch: Carrier Dome, Syracuse, NY
Record: Clemson (3-2), Syracuse (3-3)
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Clemson vs Syracuse Game Preview


Why Clemson Will Win

Has the time off helped a Clemson team that played like it needed to take a deep breath?

The injuries have been a problem, and it’s been way too much of a struggle offensively for a team with so much talent, but this is still the most talented group in the ACC.

Against Syracuse, it’s all about stopping the run. The Orange rumbled for 228 yards or more against everyone but Rutgers, and they’ve been even more productive with dangerous-running QB Garrett Shrader becoming a force. Focus on him, stop star RB Sean Tucker, stop Syracuse.

That’s easier said than done – especially with the injuries on the Clemson defensive front – but the run D continues to be fantastic. No one has hit the 150-yard mark on the ground – Syracuse has to get that and a whole lot more to pull this off.

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Why Syracuse Will Win

This Clemson offense just can’t get going – sort of.

The running game has been the biggest culprit, but it was able to rumble for 231 yards against Boston College and it was still a struggle to put the game away.

Syracuse doesn’t have the firepower to hang punch-for-punch if this gets into any sort of a shootout, but it has the potential to grind this game down to a nub.

Clemson isn’t moving the chains well enough with the worst offense in the ACC in total yards, and it’s not controlling the clock. Dead-last in the conference in time of possession, Clemson might have the ball for close to ten minutes less than Syracuse.

The Orange have to stay alive, get this into midway through the fourth quarter, and hope to come up with the one big moment late to pull this out.

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What’s Going To Happen

Clemson’s D will once again pull out the O.

Syracuse is playing a whole lot better than it did over the last few years, but it’s been on the wrong side of two close, tight games against Florida State and Wake Forest. The same thing will happen again this week.

The Orange will be around early, and they’ll even be up for a stretch. The secondary, though, will give up a few big plays on a couple of Clemson scoring drives to take over the game early in the second half, and the run defense will take care of the rest.

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Clemson vs Syracuse Prediction, Line

Clemson 26, Syracuse 16
Line: Clemson -13.5, o/u: 44.5
ATS Confidence out of 5: 2

Must See Rating: 3

5: Caramel apple anything
1: Pumpkin spice anything

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The lowdown on Syracuse from an Orange beat writer

TCI recently spoke with Chris Carlson to get some insight on Syracuse ahead of Clemson’s game against the Orange. Carlson covers Syracuse football as a beat writer for The Post-Standard and Syracuse.com. Carlson hit on a number of topics during the …

TCI recently spoke with Chris Carlson to get some insight on Syracuse ahead of Clemson’s game against the Orange. Carlson covers Syracuse football as a beat writer for The Post-Standard and Syracuse.com.

Carlson hit on a number of topics during the following question-and-answer session, including the switch Syracuse has made at quarterback, the Orange’s running game, some of the alterations at the Carrier Dome and more heading into Friday’s game.

Note: This interview was edited and condensed for clarity

Syracuse is .500 on the season, but the Orange are a handful of plays against Florida State and Wake Forest from being 5-1. What’s made them so much more competitive this season?

I think the big thing is just their offensive line is actually healthy. They started the year last year with zero depth because of some injuries and had shift their fullback to offensive guard, so that’s just a horrible place to start offensively. So they have an offensive line, and they have a running game this year. And they’ve really shown improvement the last three games as they benched their previous starter, Tommy DeVito, and gone with Garrett Shrader at quarterback. He’s much more of a running quarterback than a throwing quarterback. Their receives aren’t great playmakers, so that didn’t jive well with the previous quarterback. And now they’ve shifted into a team that has two running threats and then tries to pass just enough to get by.

Speaking of running threats, running back Sean Tucker is the ACC’s leading rusher to this point. Is that a product of having adequate blocking in front of him? Or is it more his skill set?

It’s a combination of both. He’s very good and very good at making the first guy miss. He’s very good at falling forward and picking up that extra 1 or 2 yards on every run that makes a 2-yard run a 3-yard run or a 3-yard run a 4-yard run. It usually takes multiple guys to corral him, but the fact that he has some room to get started and he’s not swarmed by three guys right off the bat is a product of having a competent offensive line this year.

You mentioned Garrett Shrader, who began his career at Mississippi State. What has his journey been like to taking over as Syracuse’s starting quarterback?

He was recruited to Mississippi State under (former MSU coach) Joe Moorhead initially as a quarterback. And when (current MSU coach Mike) Leach got there, they run the air raid. And the fact that he is a running quarterback doesn’t do a whole lot in Leach’s system, and that’s what he does best. So they tried him at wide receiver. He’s a good athlete, but he fancies himself as a quarterback. So he transferred to Syracuse. Tommy DeVito had not really established himself as an ACC quality starter, so Shrader saw the opportunity here to compete for playing time right off the bat. And the offense really sputtered under Tommy DeVito early. They tried to let him win the job as a veteran, and the offense just couldn’t get going to the point that they had to give Shrader opportunities. And the offense has just looked and functioned better with him in there. He’s still not a great thrower, so you can see why Leach didn’t want him as his quarterback at Mississippi State. I don’t think he’s completed a deep ball yet that we’ve seen, but he’s a good runner. And he’s thrown some of the short stuff good enough. It’s a better fit for Syracuse right now.

Do most of Shrader’s rushing yards come on designed runs? Or is it more a case of him using his athleticism to scramble on passing plays?

It’s split. I think every game he’s gotten a lot of playing time, he’s run the ball at least 16 times. That’s a product of the (run-pass option) game with him and Tucker. And Tucker gets a lot of attention, so he’s pulling it a lot and running it. That said, he carried 29 times against Wake Forest, which is the most a Syracuse quarterback has run the ball in more than two decades. That was a product of how Wake defended. They played a lot of two-deep (coverage) and took away the pass, and if he doesn’t have to pass, he’s more than happy to run it. So they’re going to run a lot of designed runs for him, but if he gets up to that 20-plus number, it’s probably because of how Clemson has chosen to defend Syracuse.

In terms of stats and talent, Clemson is the best run defense Syracuse has seen to this point. Do you think Shrader might have to make a few more plays with his arm to realistically give the Orange a chance?

I think so. They’ve had big games (running the ball), but Liberty isn’t a great team defending the run. Wake’s weakness is probably its run defense. I know Clemson is missing some guys up front, but it’s Clemson. They have the athletes that might shut down Syracuse’s running game, and I have to think that they can. He’s going to have make them pay for putting the attention on the running game. We have’t seen him do that this year. But yeah, to me, that’s Syracuse’s chance. As Clemson tries to shut down the running game, because that’s what they should do, Syracuse has to get some big plays (in the passing game).

Switching to the other side of the ball, what is Syracuse’s defensive scheme? And do you anticipate them changing anything considering how much Clemson has struggled offensively?

They run a 3-3-5 (base) with a ton of movement trying to create a lot of uncertainty. One of those linebackers will usually end up on the defensive line at the start of the play, but you usually don’t know which one it’s going to be. The quickness from the extra players kind of allows them to do stunts and delayed blitzes. They can’t outmuscle and they can’t just outpersonnel you, so they’re trying to create confusion in the offense. That said, they do have pretty good personnel. Their defensive line is a bunch of older guys that hold up pretty well. The strength of their team is probably the linebackers. Mikel Jones, the middle linebacker, is very good and goes kind of side to side. Marlowe Wax is a really good outside linebacker, so they have a pretty good linebacker group. And then their cornerbacks are young but very talented. Garrett Williams, on one side, was talked about as a potential first-round draft pick by some of those mock draft sites before the season, so he’s clearly a talented guy. And Duce Chestnut, on the other side, is their best freshman.

Who could be an X-factor for Syracuse in this game?

They’re so reliant on Tucker and Shrader that it’s hard (to choose), but Courtney Jackson, to me, is a wide receiver that’s smart. And with Shrader running around a lot, he’s shown an ability to kind of find openings in the defense with the extra time. And I think he and Shrader sort of have the best connection from quarterback to wide receiver. That’s sort of damning with faint praise there because none of the connections are very good, but Courtney Jackson is the guy that has really kind of benefited from Shrader taking over. He’s been the closest to kind of making some plays in the passing game.

For people that may not know or aren’t all that familiar with Syracuse’s home stadium, what’s the setting and environment like inside the Carrier Dome?

The crowds have not been great this year. They’ve struggled and fan support has dwindled, and they have the strictest COVID protocols in the country. But they’ve redone the roof, which seems to have only made the place louder. The student section has been very good this year by Syracuse’s standards. (Liberty coach) Hugh Freeze, after the Liberty game, complained about how disruptive the fans were. They’ve got some new lights in there, so some of the lights can kind of be tricky for guys in there for the first time. So there’s a chance the environment kind of messes with Clemson a little bit. It’s not easy despite how it might look on TV.

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Uiagalelei’s midnight corrections a by-product of his leadership

At 12:30 in the morning on October 2 after Clemson’s narrow win over Boston College the few media members left in the press box beheld a rare sight. When the stands were empty and the teams showered and went their separate ways, D.J. Uiagalelei …

At 12:30 in the morning on October 2 after Clemson’s narrow win over Boston College the few media members left in the press box beheld a rare sight.

When the stands were empty and the teams showered and went their separate ways, D.J. Uiagalelei stepped back onto the field. He wanted to correct some missed throws while the memories remained fresh on his mind.

“I just wanted to get it out of my system,” Uiagalelei said on Tuesday. “I knew there were throws that I missed, and I wanted to correct it and didn’t want to wait until the next day. I just wanted to fix it then and there while it was fresh on my mind.”

The quarterback completed 13-of-28 passes for 207 yards against the Eagles. But Uiagalelei felt he missed at least six throws in the game that he wanted to correct as soon as possible before the sun rose on a new day.

The sophomore likened his corrections to what happens after a quarterback misses a throw in practice.

“If you miss a throw in practice, you do it right after practice,” Uiagalelei said. It’s the same thing with a game, I had throws that I missed and wanted to really work on so after the game it was super fresh, and I could do it then and there.”

The moment revealed something about Uiagalelei’s character and leadership qualities.

When everybody else focused on recovery, and rightfully so, the Clemson quarterback turned his focus to correction. Despite his struggles in the first half of the season Uiagalelei has not slacked off in his preparation or work ethic.

And that Saturday night was not the first time Uiagalelei practiced corrections right after a game.

“I’ve done it in high school and done it here before,” Uiagalelei said. “I think it’s just the first-time people have seen it.”

After an open date, Clemson turned its focus towards Syracuse. The Tigers travel to the Carier Dome on Friday night for a 7:00 p.m. kickoff.

Time to get the latest Clemson apparel to show your Tiger pride. Order your officially licensed Clemson gear right here!

Syracuse’s Dino Babers explains personal foul call in loss to Rutgers football

Syracuse football head coach Dino Babers explains his confusion over his personal foul penalty in a loss to Rutgers football.

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One play after Syracuse head coach Dino Babers had a personal foul called against him along the sidelines, Rutgers football running back Kyle Monangai ran for an 11-yard touchdown and a 7-0 lead for the Scarlet Knights. That moment in the third quarter was perhaps the tipping point for Rutgers, who beat Syracuse 17-7.

The penalty call on Babers turned a looming third-and-long from just outside the red zone into a first down on Syracuse’s 11-yard line. Monangai’s touchdown run on the very next play was a dagger for Syracuse after a strong defensive effort up until the midpoint of the third quarter.

“I’m 60-years old and it was my first personal foul penalty,” Babers told reporters after his team’s loss.

“And I’ll say the exact same thing that I always say: none of us are worth 15 yards in a game.”

Babers did not lash out at the referees following the game, even as he explained the leading up to the play that caused the personal foul call. Had it not been for that moment and the fresh set of downs following Babers’ penalty, Rutgers might have had to settle for a field goal.

Deserved or not, the whole game changed when Babers was whistled for his conduct on the sidelines.

“I’m not quite sure what happened. I thought I saw a play – and I’m trying not to get fined,” Babers said.

“I thought I saw a play where we tackled a guy and he got pushed back. I’m sitting there waiting, I saw a personal foul called. I didn’t see a targeting. I’m trying to figure out how the personal foul got called.

“When they came over and told me, they told me the back was picked up and body-slammed. I didn’t see it…I’m like “I didn’t see anybody body slam anybody.’ I got a personal foul penalty called against me…As far as I know – I know I’ve never had a personal foul penalty called on me as a head coach. I know I’ve never had one called on me as an assistant coach. And I’m pretty doggone sure I’ve never had one called on me as a player and I’ve been playing since the 60s. So, I didn’t use any profanity but I guess my English was too strong.”