Injury update on Phommachanh

Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney gave an injury update on redshirt sophomore quarterback Taisun Phommachanh at halftime of Saturday’s game against UConn at Memorial Stadium. Swinney said during his halftime interview on the ACC Network that …

Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney gave an injury update on redshirt sophomore quarterback Taisun Phommachanh at halftime of Saturday’s game against UConn at Memorial Stadium.

Swinney said during his halftime interview on the ACC Network that Phommachanh banged up his shoulder and can’t throw.

“Taisun couldn’t go back in,” Swinney said. “He banged up his shoulder and said he couldn’t throw. So, we couldn’t put him in there.”

Phommachanh played one series and completed his only pass attempt for 33 yards, while rushing three times for 16 yards and a touchdown.

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Phommachanh provides spark for Clemson offense, extends lead

Clemson backup quarterback Taisun Phommachanh entered Saturday’s game against UConn on the Tigers’ third possession and provided a spark for the offense. Phommachanh scored on a 3-yard touchdown run at the 14:31 mark of the second quarter, extending …

Clemson backup quarterback Taisun Phommachanh entered Saturday’s game against UConn on the Tigers’ third possession and provided a spark for the offense.

Phommachanh scored on a 3-yard touchdown run at the 14:31 mark of the second quarter, extending Clemson’s lead to 17-7.

The touchdown run capped a six-play, 66-yard drive that took just 1:51. Phommachanh set up his own score on the previous play with a 33-yard completion to Dacari Collins to the UConn 3-yard line.

It was the lone pass attempt on the drive for Phommachanh, who carried three times for 16 yards and the score.

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Taylor’s Take: Family reunion for the Phommachanh brothers as Clemson takes on UConn

Clemson quarterback Taisun Phommachanh will be all smiles on Saturday as he’s been looking forward to this weekend’s game all season. UConn’s visit to Memorial Stadium on Saturday will double as a reunion for Phommachanh, whose brother, Tyler, is a …

Clemson quarterback Taisun Phommachanh will be all smiles on Saturday as he’s been looking forward to this weekend’s game all season.

UConn’s visit to Memorial Stadium on Saturday will double as a reunion for Phommachanh, whose brother, Tyler, is a quarterback for the Huskies.

In her “Taylor’s Take” feature, The Clemson Insider’s Taylor Farmer previews what will be a family reunion for the Phommachanh brothers on Saturday:

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Phommachanh shares more than blood with UConn’s quarterback

Taisun Phommachanh is looking for some extra tickets for Clemson’s game this week. Anywhere from 20 to 30, to be exact. “I’m reaching out to a couple of guys,” Phommachanh said. “They’re trying to get me some tickets.” Why is Clemson’s backup …

Taisun Phommachanh is looking for some extra tickets for Clemson’s game this week. Anywhere from 20 to 30, to be exact.

“I’m reaching out to a couple of guys,” Phommachanh said. “They’re trying to get me some tickets.”

Why is Clemson’s backup quarterback doing that, particularly with the Tigers (6-3, 5-2 ACC) stepping out of ACC play for their least sexiest game of the season against a 1-8 Connecticut team? Family, of course.

UConn’s visit to Memorial Stadium on Saturday will double as a reunion for Phommachanh, whose brother, Tyler, is a quarterback for the Huskies. Taisun, who’s played in two of Clemson’s last three games, likely would’ve gotten the chance to play against his younger brother under normal circumstances with D.J. Uiagalelei dealing with a sprained knee he sustained last week against Louisville. But Tyler, a freshman at UConn, recently had season-ending knee surgery after accounting for 458 yards of offense in three games.

But Taisun said his brother is still planning to make the trip to Clemson, and so are those 20 to 30 family members. Tyler’s injury isn’t about to dampen the family’s excitement. Not after everything it’s been through lately.

“Seeing all my family in the stands and all my brothers, my sisters and my cousins, it’s going to be a good time,” Taisun said. “It’s going to feel like high school. I played with him in high school, so it’s going to bring me back to those days with everybody in the stands and just playing ball. So it’s going to be fun.”

Tyler’s injury is just the latest setback for the Phommachanhs.

Taisun went through a similar situation in the spring when he tore his Achilles tendon, which Clemson coach Dabo Swinney initially feared might cost him the season. But Taisun was back in action on a limited basis by the start of fall camp, received full medical clearance just days before the Tigers’ opener against Georgia and has appeared in five games. He’s 10 of 18 passing with a touchdown and an interception and has rushed eight times for 53 yards.

The brothers spoke to each other Monday. Some of it was about this weekend’s game, the first time they will share the same field since they were high school teammates at Avon Old Farms near their hometown of Stratford, Connecticut.

“Going back and forth, talking a little smack,” Tyler said, according to the Hartford Courant.

But a lot of the conversation was just “regular talk,” Taisun said. More than anything, he’s empathized with Tyler’s situation.

“I’m just trying to be there mentally for him just so that he understands there’s a physical part of getting injured. But then again, there’s a mental side of it,” Taisun said. You’ve just got to stay up and stay focused. See through that smoke and see through that adversity. I just try to keep his head up and keep him level-headed.”

But that pales in comparison to what happened to the Phommachanhs nearly a year ago. Their family home burned down last December, the same month Tyler and Taisun’s grandmother died. Their grandfather lives in Haiti, where an earthquake in August claimed more than 2,000 lives, though he wasn’t among the casualties.

Taisun said his family has only grown closer through its circumstances.

“It can make you or break you,” Taisun said. “We’re already a closer family, but it’s going through stuff like that with those people, man. It just brings us closer and makes you appreciate everybody more.”

Taisun said he hasn’t seen his brother or many of his other family members since the fire. That will change Saturday.

“He’s excited, their team is excited, and we’re excited,” Taisun said. “So it’s going to be fun.”

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What is Clemson’s QB plan against UConn after Uiagalelei’s injury?

Gutting out a sprained knee, D.J. Uiagalelei led a fourth-quarter comeback in Clemson’s win over Louisville on Saturday. Now, for the first time in two months, the Tigers are stepping out of ACC play with a game against a 1-8 UConn team looming this …

Gutting out a sprained knee, D.J. Uiagalelei led a fourth-quarter comeback in Clemson’s win over Louisville on Saturday. Now, for the first time in two months, the Tigers are stepping out of ACC play with a game against a 1-8 UConn team looming this weekend.

But don’t expect Clemson to take it easy with its starting quarterback Saturday at Memorial Stadium.

“If we lose this game, there will be a new head coach here,” Clemson coach Dabo Swinney quipped Sunday.

Swinney said there are no plans to rest Uiagalelei when the Huskies come to town. The Tigers still want to have their packages for backup Taisun Phommachanh, Swinney said, but they’re planning to start Uiagalelei like usual.

“D.J. is good to go. It is what it is,” Swinney said. “Hopefully, for sure, we want to continue to use Taisun and complement the offense, and we’ll do that. But we don’t have intentions at all of going into a game and saying we’re not going to play guys or anything like that.

“We’re going in with a best-of-one mindset and let’s go play our best game. That’s just the way we look at it. And if you don’t look at it that way, you send the wrong message to your team.”

Uiagalelei pieced together perhaps his best all-around performance of the season with a season-high 220 passing yards on 18 completions and two touchdown passes against Louisville. He accounted for three total touchdowns despite showing some visible discomfort at times during the second half.

Uiagalalei went into the medical tent on the Tigers’ sideline once he sprained his non-plant knee after carrying out a handoff midway through the second quarter, but he didn’t even miss a full series before returning. Sporting a brace on his right knee, Uiagalelei finished the game and scored the go-ahead touchdown on an 8-yard run, which capped a nine-play, 57-yard drive with 4 minutes, 12 seconds remaining. 

While Uiagalelei was out, Phommachanh had a 26-yard run to help set up one of B.T. Potter’s three field goals. Clemson also brought Phommachanh into the game again early during its go-ahead drive in the fourth quarter to throw a shot pass to Justyn Ross down the sideline. It fell incomplete, but Louisville was flagged for pass interference on the play.

Phommachanh only attempted one other pass in the game, which was also incomplete. He’s 10 of 18 passing for 98 yards in his limited playing time this season.

“He did a good job for us, but that was just something that, I mean, he can throw the ball,” Swinney said. “We wanted to make sure we use him in that way and make them have to play honest defense there so that we can keep what we need in the run game in that personnel.”

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The good, the bad and the ugly from Clemson’s win over Florida State

Clemson finally cracked the 20-point mark in regulation against an FBS opponent Saturday against Florida State, staying above .500 on the season in the process. Here’s the good, the bad and the ugly from the Tigers’ 30-20 win. The good Following …

Clemson finally cracked the 20-point mark in regulation against an FBS opponent Saturday against Florida State, staying above .500 on the season in the process. Here’s the good, the bad and the ugly from the Tigers’ 30-20 win.

The good

Following Jermaine Johnson’s strip, scoop and score that put FSU up 20-17 midway through the fourth quarter, it was easy to assume the worst for Clemson given the way the offense has performed for most of this season.

But instead of defense or special teams bailing the Tigers out, it was the offense that answered the ball when it had to. Clemson got some assistance with pass interference and a personal foul on Florida State on its next-to-last possession, but the Tigers still marched 58 yards in just three plays and took the lead on a 21-yard run by Will Shipley that’s got to be at the beginning of his collegiate highlight reel.

Clemson moved the ball pretty consistently (377 total yards; eight drives ending in FSU territory) thanks in large part to a running game that’s starting to find its groove. Shipley’s touchdown run was part of of a 128-yard day for him, a season-high. Fellow freshman Phil Mafah ripped off Clemson’s longest play from scrimmage all season (63-yard run). And the Tigers finished with 188 rushing yards despite not having their leading rusher, Kobe Pace, who’s in COVID-19 protocols.

Meanwhile, Clemson never let the nation’s 13th-best rushing attack coming in get going. FSU began the day averaging more than 230 yards on the ground, and its 6.91 yards per rush in October were tops in the country. FSU finished with just 65 yards on 34 carries.

Maybe most impressive of all for the Tigers was containing a fast, slippery quarterback like Jordan Travis, who had minus-4 yards on 16 carries. Most of those stats were a result of six sacks, a season-high for Clemson. Myles Murphy was particularly active for the defense up front, tallying two of those sacks and also blocking an extra-point attempt after FSU’s first touchdown.

Joseph Ngata and E.J. Williams returned at receiver, but Justyn Ross was D.J. Uiagalelei’s go-to receiver Saturday. Ross, who’s had an up-and-down season in his first season back from spinal fusion surgery, appeared to be as engaged as he’s been all season, making some contested catches en route to six receptions for 85 yards, both game-highs. Punter Will Spiers was also a weapon on special teams with a 51.5-yard average, which included a 56-yarder in the final 30 seconds that pinned the Seminoles at their own 9-yard line with no timeouts.

The bad

Dabo Swinney’s decision to briefly bench D.J. Uiagalelei during the second half against Pitt a week earlier led to a competition between Uiagalelei and backup Taisun Phommachanh during practice last week. Swinney said he decided to stick with Uiagalelei as the starter based on what he’d seen from the sophomore during those practices.

While Uiagalelei didn’t play bad, per se — he finished 19 of 31 for 189 yards with a well-placed ball to Davis Allen on a fade for an 11-yard score in the first half — the decision-making is still suspect at times. Like when Clemson was facing third-and-13 from its own 13 while clinging to a 17-13 lead midway through the third quarter. Uiagalelei looked for Joseph Ngata on the outside but forced the pass into double coverage. It was also underthrown and easily intercepted, giving the Seminoles a prime chance to take the lead that was thwarted by the defense.

Clemson led by the same margin early in the fourth quarter while facing second-and-8 from FSU’s 39. The Tigers dialed up a screen that the Seminoles had sniffed out, forcing Uiagalelei to hold on to the ball. Instead of eating it, Uiagalalei threw late to Williams, who was hit as he caught the ball and fumbled.

“It was kind of a screwed-up deal,” Swinney said. “Maybe we just throw that in the ground and let’s live for second-and-10. but he’s trying to make a play. And E.J.’s just got to hang on to it.”

Clemson also had trouble extending its lead at times because of an uncharacteristically off day from senior kicker B.T. Potter, who missed three of his four field goals after entering the game having missed just one kick all season.

It also wasn’t the most clean game on defense in the penalty department. Clemson was only flagged six times, but four of those were offsides penalties in the first half, including a couple during FSU’s first touchdown drive late in the first quarter.

“It’s embarrassing. A total lack of discipline in those moments,” defenisve coordinator Brent Venables said. “At times this year, that’s who we’ve been where we’re charged up and we’re excited, but you’ve got to have more than that. You’ve got to be poised and disciplined.”

The ugly

Clemson’s three turnovers tied a season-high. And for the second straight week, one of them led directly to points for the opposition. That can’t keep happening if the Tigers hope to keep the wins coming in November.

“We’ve got to get a rabbit’s foot or something because we’ve got to turn those tides,” offensive coordinator Tony Elliott said. “We’ve scored too many points this season or the other team. We don’t want to give it bigger life than what it is, but we’ve just got to focus in on the fundamentals.”

Meanwhile, injuries continue to pile up, particularly up front. Mason Trotter was the latest offensive lineman to get banged up as the sophomore wasn’t able to finish the third straight game he started at center. Guard Will Putnam, who dealt with a foot injury earlier in the season that forced him to miss a game, had to leave at one point, but he did return.

Mafah was limited to just nine carries after watching the fourth quarter from the sideline, where he was spotted limping.

Swinney didn’t have an update any those players’ statuses after the game, though he said he’s hopeful Mafah’s injury isn’t too serious. It would certainly help Clemson’s cause if none of them fell in that category at positions where depth is already becoming dire.

 

Elliott on Clemson’s QB situation: D.J. ‘earned the right’ to run out there first

After being benched during Clemson’s 27-17 loss at Pitt last Saturday, D.J. Uiagalelei’s stronghold on the quarterback position certainly lost its grip. With Taisun Phommachanh seeing a couple of series and handling himself quite well, it appeared …

After being benched during Clemson’s 27-17 loss at Pitt last Saturday, D.J. Uiagalelei’s stronghold on the quarterback position certainly lost its grip.

With Taisun Phommachanh seeing a couple of series and handling himself quite well, it appeared that Clemson’s competition under center would be a bit more opened up.

Coming into Saturday’s game, Uiagalelei was expected to start, but the parameters surrounding Clemson’s game plan were obviously unknown.

Following Clemson’s 30-20 victory over Florida State on Saturday night at Memorial Stadium, Tony Elliott was asked about his team’s quarterback dynamic and what the thinking was coming into the game.

“The game plan was that D.J. had earned the right to run out their first and I thought, especially in the first half, we did a good job,” Clemson’s offensive coordinator said postgame. “Obviously, there were a couple of situations where Florida State had the good call and we had to throw the ball away. Second half, we were in a dog fight. D.J. was doing a good job of leading us, trying to manage the game as best as he can.”

“In the heat of the battle, D.J. is the most battle-tested and that’s who we decided to go with,” he added.

Elliott was asked to assess Uiagalelei’s play, which was inconsistent at best, but he made the necessary plays to lead Clemson to its 32nd straight win in The Valley.

“I think it was good at times,” Elliot said. “Obviously, a couple of things we’d like to clean up, ball placement a little bit. But, he just continues to lead. What I did like is several times during the TV timeouts as the offense was in the huddle getting ready to go out, I could hear him through the headset, through one of the other mics of the coaches. He was challenging guys from a leadership standpoint. As long as we continue to have that from him, he’s gonna continue to critique himself and work on the fundamentals and get better. He gave us a chance to win the football game by managing and making enough plays and that’s what you ask your quarterback to do.”

Uiagalelei finished Saturday’s contest completing 19 of 31 passes with 189 passing yards, an 11-yard touchdown pass to Davis Allen, and an interception.

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Clemson, Florida State square off in what’s still a ‘huge game’ despite records

Clemson and Florida State are set to renew their rivalry under unusual circumstances. For the first time in a long time, there’s no national ranking attached to either team. Neither one, at least as of now, is in serious contention in the ACC’s …

Clemson and Florida State are set to renew their rivalry under unusual circumstances.

For the first time in a long time, there’s no national ranking attached to either team. Neither one, at least as of now, is in serious contention in the ACC’s Atlantic Division. The teams enter the weekend with a combined record of .500.

But don’t tell Clemson coach Dabo Swinney this year’s matchup feels different.

“It’s Clemson-Florida State,” Swinney said. “It’s a huge game. Has been forever and will be forever. There’s no doubt about that.”

The teams will square off Saturday at Memorial Stadium for their first matchup since 2019 after a contentious pause in the series last season amid the coronavirus pandemic. It will also be Clemson’s first home game since squeaking out a win over Boston College on Oct. 2, which extended the Tigers’ 31-game home winning streak that will be put on the line in a game that figures to be more competitive than most would’ve expected at the beginning of the season.

“We need to really have the Valley at its best, and we need to be at our best as a team,” Swinney said.

With an offense that continues to struggle mightily, Clemson (4-3, 3-2 ACC) has already lost three games for the first time since 2014 after falling at Pitt last week. D.J. Uiagalelei threw a pair of interceptions, including a pick-six, which got him briefly benched for the first time this season and opened the door to a quarterback competition during practice this week between he and backup Taisun Phommachanh, who played two series in the second half — one of those resulting in points — before Uiagalelei re-entered the game in the fourth quarter.

Uiagalelei was still listed as QB1 on Clemson’s updated depth chart earlier this week, but that was based more on the pecking order at the end of last week’s game. Swinney said everything would be evaluated between the two throughout the week before a starter is ultimately determined.

The Tigers still rank 115th nationally or worse in points, yards and passing yards despite the ground game finding some consistency recently. Clemson, which averaged 5.5 yards a carry against Pitt, is averaging more than 170 rushing yards over its last three games, though the Tigers won’t have leading rusher Kobe Pace (COVID-19 protocols) this week.

“I know everyone is going to focus on the quarterback, but we’re just evaluating everything,” offensive coordinator Tony Elliott said. “We are where we are, and we understand some of the challenges. But we’ve got to evaluate everything to see what we need to do to give our guys the best opportunity to be successful and see can we get this thing fllpped and turned, hit that switch and start clicking on all cylinders.”

Meanwhile, Florida State (3-4, 2-2) is playing some of its best football with three straight wins after an 0-4 start to the second season of the Mike Norvell era. The Seminoles have done it primarily with a rushing attack that’s taken off with Jordan Travis permanently at the controls of the offense.

FSU’s primary backs, Jashaun Corbin (683 rushing yards) and Treshaun Ward (419, are both averaging more than 7 yards per carry. Travis also poses a threat with his legs as a dual-threat quarterback.

“Their two running backs and quarterback are probably as explosive as anybody with the ball in their hands,” safety Nolan Turner said.

Stopping FSU’s run game starts with corralling Travis, who’s changed the dynamic of FSU’s offense with his legs since being inserted into the starting lineup permanently Oct. 2 against Syracuse. In the three games since, Travis has accounted for 711 total yards and eight touchdowns with just one interception.

He’s averaging 104 rushing yards during FSU’s winning streak. Clemson has already seen one true dual threat in Syracuse’s Garrett Shrader, whom the Tigers held to a season-low 6 net rushing yards. But Travis is a different kind of elusive than the tall, long-strided Shrader, Swinney said.

“He can flat out beat you by himself,” Swinney said. “They’re doing a great job schematically and really taking advantage of his gifts. He can throw the ball down the field, but man he can just move. Out of the pocket. Designed runs. He can scramble. He’s created a lot of explosives.

“He’s dangerous. He’s hard to corral even when you blitz him. He makes people miss. And when you’re playing man coverage and somebody misses, it’s a huge play.”

Clemson will counter with a defense that’s largely hemmed up every running game it’s seen this season. The Tigers rank 29th nationally against the run (120 yards per game) and, with defensive tackle Tyler Davis back in the fold, will try to take away the Seminoles’ strength and make Travis try to beat them with his arm. 

Clemson would like to think it could force some turnovers if it does that, which has been another key to FSU’s 180-degree turn. After committing 10 turnovers through their first four games, the Seminoles have turned it over just three times during their winning streak.

“We know that’s going to beat you every time,” defensive coordinator Brent Venables said. “Turnovers is the key to winning and losing. … They’re doing a great job developing their team.”

It’s one facet that will go a long way toward deciding a game that still matters around these parts despite the records and standings.

“It’s important to a lot of people,” Swinney said.

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3 keys to a Clemson win over Florida State

For the first time in almost a month, Clemson will be back at Memorial Stadium this weekend. The Tigers will renew their rivalry with Florida State on Saturday after the teams hit the pause button on their series amid the coronavirus pandemic last …

For the first time in almost a month, Clemson will be back at Memorial Stadium this weekend. The Tigers will renew their rivalry with Florida State on Saturday after the teams hit the pause button on their series amid the coronavirus pandemic last year. 

Clemson (4-3, 3-2 ACC) will be trying to stay above .500 on the season against the Seminoles (3-4, 2-2), who will bring a three-game winning streak into Death Valley. What will the Tigers have to do to get the win? Here are three keys:

Run the ball

As much as Clemson has tried this season, the passing game just isn’t working consistently. Whether it be D.J. Uiagalelei’s continued struggles in the accuracy department, drops when his passes are on target or blocking on the perimeter in the screen game (or a combination of all of it), the Tigers have yet to get the passing game out of neutral. Perhaps getting leading receiver Joseph Ngata (COVID-19 protocols) and/or E.J. Williams (knee) back this week would help, but the Tigers rank 111th nationally in passing yards (176.1 per game) and 117th in completion percentage (54.7).

Meanwhile, Clemson has finally found some consistency in the running game. The Tigers ran for 164 yards last week against Pitt and are averaging 170.3 yards on the ground over their last three games. Clemson averaged nearly 6 yards a pop in the first half against the Panthers and finished at 5.5 per carry, the most it’s averaged against an ACC opponent all season.

Clemson will be without running back Kobe Pace, the latest Tiger to go into COVID-19 protocols. That leaves true freshmen Will Shipley and Phil Mafah as the primary backs Saturday, but that’s where D.J. Uiagalelei or Taisun Phommachanh could help. The quarterback competition seems to be open ahead of this game, but Uiagalelei (236 rushing yards) has been a significant part of the running game at times this season while Phommachanh is the better pure runner of the two. He netted 15 yards on his only two carries during his two series against Pitt.

Regardless of who’s carrying the ball, Clemson needs the production to continue from the part of its offense that’s easily been the most consistent of late. Ideally, the Tigers would like to reach 200 yards on the ground. They’re 70-1 during Swinney’s tenure when doing so.

Corral Jordan Travis

Speaking of running games, FSU has one that’s been better than anybody in college football this month. The Seminoles have averaged a whopping 6.91 yards per carry during its three-game winning streak, most in the FBS during that span. Running backs Jashuan Corbin (7.9 yards per carry) and Treshaun Ward (7.4) are certainly part of that equation, but Clemson can’t forget about quarterback Jordan Travis either.

Now healthy, Travis grabbed hold of the starting job at the beginning of the Seminoles’ winning streak and has been a true dual threat at the position. He’s completing nearly 63% of his passes, but he’s also been FSU’s second-most utilized runner with 66 carries. Whether it’s a designed run or making something happen outside of the pocket, the speedy Travis has often burned defenses with his legs (5.2 yards per carry). His four rushing touchdowns are second on the team.

Clemson already faced one mobile quarterback in Syracuse’s Garrett Shrader — the ACC’s leading rusher among quarterbacks — and shut him down to the tune of 6 net yards on seven carries, using a variety of looks and packages to take his legs out of the equation. Swinney said Travis presents a different kind of challenge than Shrader.

“He’s just way more shifty and elusive than the quarterback from Syracuse,” Swinney said. “(Shrader) was a lot bigger. You could kind of get on him a little bit better, but he was strong enough to break tackles, and he ran away from you. This kid, he’s just hard to get your hands on. He’s a magician. And they do a great job because they don’t leave him in the pocket.”

Clemson might have to drop an extra defender into the box to account for Travis’ legs. That would put more pressure on the back end to hold up in what would likely be mostly man coverage in that scenario, but the priority for Brent Venables’ group has to be minimizing Travis’ impact on the ground.

Win the turnover margin

It sounds like a broken record at this point, but it doesn’t make this any less true for Clemson, particularly given how things are going offensively.

The Tigers aren’t scoring many points — 15.1 against FBS opponents on average, to be exact — so increasing the opponents’ chances of doing so by coughing up the ball isn’t good. And turnovers that lead directly to points like Pitt’s pick-six last week are going to be almost impossible for Clemson to overcome.

Conversely, because the offense is struggling so mightily to muster points, it could use all the extra possessions it can get. Clemson has won the turnover battle three times this season and only lost one of those games (10-3 to Georgia). The Tigers are 80-6 under Swinney when finishing in the green when it comes to the turnover margin. 

Do that against FSU, a team that’s turned it over 13 times already, and that record has a good chance of improving.

 

Swinney has a message for those inside – and outside – Clemson’s fan base

As Clemson goes through a season that’s fallen well short of expectations for various reasons, Dabo Swinney’s program has been on the receiving end of plenty of consternation and criticism from the Tigers’ fan base and beyond. Swinney has taken a …

As Clemson goes through a season that’s fallen well short of expectations for various reasons, Dabo Swinney’s program has been on the receiving end of plenty of consternation and criticism from the Tigers’ fan base and beyond.

Swinney has taken a couple of opportunities to address fans’ concerns this week before Clemson (4-3, 3-2 ACC) tries to stay above .500 against Florida State on Saturday at Memorial Stadium. After discussing the state of the program and emphatically stating his belief that Clemson “ain’t going nowhere” during a local radio interview, Swinney further expanded on his message to fans through the media Wednesday amid a season where the negatives have far outweighed the positives.

The struggles of an offense that’s on pace to be worst statistically in Swinney’s 13 years at the helm have gotten to the point that Swinney has alluded to an open quarterback competition between D.J. Uiagalelei and his backup, Taisun Phommachanh, though Uiagalelei was still listed at the top of Clemson’s updated depth chart released earlier in the week. Meanwhile, attrition continues to pile up.

Offensive lineman Matt Bockhorst (torn ACL against Pitt) is the latest contributor lost to a season-ending injury. Clemson has lost 14 scholarship players since the start of the season to injuries or transfers.

There’s also been starters being unavailable because of COVID-19 protocols on an almost weekly basis. Swinney said he’s hopeful offensive lineman Hunter Rayburn and leading receiver Joseph Ngata will be able to return against the Seminoles, but the backfield was dealt another blow this week with Kobe Pace out, leaving true freshmen Will Shipley (who just returned from a leg injury last week) and Phil Mafah as the top two running backs for now.

It all has a program that’s made six straight College Football Playoff appearances out of the playoff discussion before November. And playing for a seventh straight ACC championship won’t happen either unless the Tigers win out and get some help along the way.

“I know everybody’s disappointed. We’re supposed to go to the playoff every year, win this league every year and have a 10-plus win season every year, but it’s hard to win,” Swinney said. “Hopefully we can all reset and have a deep appreciation of how hard it is. We can’t just show up and win. It’s a reset with this team, but there are a lot of things that go into winning and the margin for error is very small all the time, especially with where we are this year and a lot of the challenges that we’ve had.

“The message is we’ve got a great group of young men, a great staff, and it’s been an incredible journey for 13 years. This is one season in the midst of an unbelievable journey. When this chapter is over, if they let me leave on my terms or they send me to the pasture, whenever that is, we’ll look back on this year and it’ll be a blessing.”

Swinney kept going.

“The biggest thing is keep the faith. Get behind these coaches and get behind this team. They’re working their butts off. Everybody is. Everybody wants to be undefeated. We’ve got to quit worrying about what we can’t do, and we need to get excited about what we still can do. That’s what winners do. We’ve got to keep fighting, we’ve got to keep moving forward, and we’ve got to stay together.”

As for the criticism coming from outside the fan base, Swinney said he’s not concerned about it even though it continues to come in waves. Radio personality Paul Finebaum called the Tigers’ result against Pitt over the weekend a “seismic loss” and has opined Clemson’s dynasty under Swinney is over. Former NFL quarterback Trent Dilfer this week publicly scolded Clemson’s coaching staff for its development of Uiagalelei, calling it “probably the most egregious thing I’ve ever seen.”

Swinney said he doesn’t listen to those sorts of specific criticisms of his program from people on the outside, but he had a general message for them, too.

“Go ahead. Get it in while you can,” he said. “That’s all I can say.”

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