Dabo Swinney confirms two Clemson offensive lineman are healthy for NC State

Clemson is returning some key players.

During his weekly press conference on Tuesday, Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney shared positive news for the Tigers’ offense. Offensive linemen Marcus Tate and Trent Howard are set to return for Clemson’s ACC opener against NC State on Saturday at noon (ABC).

Tate was available for the Appalachian State game, but the team opted not to play him. Howard, on the other hand, will see his first action of the season after missing the initial two games due to injury. Swinney highlighted Howard’s return, stating, “He is one of those guys where the off week was huge for him. So, that is a shot in the arm for us. We get a veteran guy back that can snap and play guard for us.”

This news comes as a boost for the Tigers, especially after losing reserve guard Dietrick Pennington for the season due to a partial ACL tear sustained against App State on Sept. 7.

Starting center battle heating up, Swinney names current front runner for the position

There is a favorite to land Clemson’s starting center job.

Dabo Swinney and the Clemson football program are looking for someone to step up and start under center. Swinney himself has named a front-runner to land the starting job.

With the Tigers’ spring game approaching, Swinney met with the media Wednesday to discuss the team and what to expect for the game. Ryan Linthicum, Trent Howard, and Harris Sewell are currently battling for the starting center position, with Swinney noting that Linthicum will “be running out first” in the spring game.

“I want to see transformation in some areas of his commitment, if you will. I want his body to be in the best possible place…if he puts the work in, I think we’ll all like the work. He’s certainly capable,” Swinney said.

This position battle is one of the most important the Tigers have as center while not a glamorous position, is an essential one. We’ll see how each player fares on Saturday as the Tigers look to improve and show fans what they have going for next season.

Clemson Homecoming Game Captains Announced

Captains have been announced for Clemson’s homecoming matchup with Wake Forest.

The Clemson Football program has their Homecoming game today against Wake Forest and we are excited to see the Tigers back in Death Valley for another Homecoming.

With the big day, Clemson has announced their Homecoming captains against the Demon Deacons. Redshirt junior offensive lineman Trent Howard, junior linebacker Jeremiah Trotter Jr., redshirt senior wide receiver Hamp Greene and fifth-year senior safety Jalyn Phillips have been honored as the Tigers’ captains today.

The Tigers are heavy favorites in this matchup and we are expecting a great Homecoming performance.

Clemson and Wake Forest’s ACC matchup kicks off today at 3:30 p.m. and will available for fans on ACC Network.

Swinney and Austin discuss Clemson’s left tackle competition

Clemson will have a new starting left tackle this season after Jordan McFadden departed for the NFL.

Clemson’s coaches aren’t committing to a starter at left tackle heading into fall camp.

Speaking to the media on Tuesday, head coach Dabo Swinney gave no firm timeline on when the team will announce a starting left tackle.

“I hope we have a long time before we decide because I hope it’s that competitive; I think it’s going to be,” Swinney said.

While Swinney didn’t assure any one specific player will start, he expressed his confidence in a redshirt sophomore to block Cade Klubnik’s blindside.

“If you told me Tristan Leigh was going to start for us at left tackle right now, I’m sleeping just fine. I got no problem with that,” Swinney said. “That guy, he’s a winner, and he cares. It’s amazing the transformation that has happened in him.”

As a true freshman in 2021, Leigh played 20 snaps while redshirting. Standing at 6-foot-6 and 315 pounds, he played 50 snaps last season as a reserve.

Clemson offensive line coach Thomas Austin was also non-committal and said the team could play multiple players early on in the year. But Austin did say that Leigh “pulled away a little bit” since the end of last season and has a slight advantage over redshirt freshman Collin Sadler.

“Nothin Collin didn’t do well; it’s just Tristan had a really good spring,” Austin said. “Those guys both have different skill sets and bring different things to the table.”

Jordan McFadden was the Tigers’ starting left tackle for the past two seasons before he left for the NFL.

Now, Clemson needs to find his replacement. And, ultimately, it will come down to who the best five is, Swinney said, even if that means shifting some of last year’s starters around to different spots.

“There are so many scenarios that could play out,” Swinney added. “But I will say this, regardless of how it all shakes as far as who will run out there Labor Day night, as far as the first five, I think this will be a year so different from years past. I think you’ll see us play probably 10 guys a game, minimum.”

If Clemson stays the course from last season, Marcus Tate will start at left guard, Will Putnam will start at center, Walker Parks will start at right guard and Blake Miller will start at right tackle.

At that point, the Tigers would just need to determine who runs out with the first team at the left tackle position.

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Will latest OL attrition force Clemson to go portaling?

With Clemson set to lose at least part of its depth along the offensive line next season, will that force the Tigers to look for help there again in the transfer portal? That was a question posed to head coach Dabo Swinney following the news he …

With Clemson set to lose at least part of its depth along the offensive line next season, will that force the Tigers to look for help there again in the transfer portal?

That was a question posed to head coach Dabo Swinney following the news he delivered Wednesday night regarding Mason Trotter. Swinney said the Tigers were hoping to get back the junior interior lineman, who hasn’t played since last season, but Trotter recently underwent career-ending back surgery.

That leaves Will Putnam, sophomore Trent Howard and redshirt freshman Ryan Linthicum as the options next season at center, where Trotter started five games a season ago. Swinney said he still feels good about that depth currently on the roster.

“As I say every year, for us, the portal is about responding strategically if you have gaps,” Swinney said. “But we’ve only got one (departing) senior in J-Mac (Jordan McFadden). Everybody else is back, and Linthicum and Trent have really progressed for us.”

Swinney didn’t completely rule out the possibility of seeking outside help if needed. It’s what he briefly felt like the Tigers should do in the spring when the attrition was heavy at the position.

When Swinney revealed then that Trotter would likely miss most of this season for an unrelated reason that was never revealed, it came on the heels of Hunter Rayburn’s medical disqualification. Rayburn, who also started a handful of games at center last season, was forced to retire from football because of stinger issues shortly after last season.

Clemson went after a select few interior portal linemen but didn’t land any of them. Ultimately, Swinney decided to move Putnam, who had started the previous two seasons at guard, to center after the senior performed well in the spring. 

Putnam has been a bright spot for the Tigers up front at his new position, starting every game there so far this season. He’s already decided to use his COVID year to return to the team again next season. Clemson also has three offensive line commits that are expected to sign with the Tigers in the coming months.

So the plan is to sit tight for now. But with the first window for players to enter the portal set to open Dec. 5, Swinney acknowledged it’s a tentative one.

“We’ve got a really good group of linemen that we’re going to bring in here, but who knows?” Swinney said. “We may sign our class, and you may have some guys leave that you don’t know about.”

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One position up front that Swinney is ‘really proud of’ heading into the season

Clemson’s offensive line is looking for a bounceback performance this fall with some new faces in some new places. There’s one position up front in particular that has caught the eye of head coach Dabo Swinney. The Tigers return four starters along …

Clemson’s offensive line is looking for a bounceback performance this fall with some new faces in some new places.

There’s one position up front in particular that has caught the eye of head coach Dabo Swinney.

The Tigers return four starters along the offensive line from last season, though not all of them are manning the same spots. Walker Parks is set to move inside to guard with freshman Blake Miller’s emergence at right tackle, and Will Putnam is moving from guard to center after the Tigers lost their top three centers from last season.

Center is arguably the most important position up front given the position can be responsible for everything from setting protections to making checks to getting each play started with a good snap, the latter of which Swinney said Putnam has done most of the time since the spring.

Asked recently if there still have been no bad snaps from Putnam during camp, Swinney was trying to find some wood to knock on.

“He’s been excellent. Don’t jinx him,” Swinney said. “He’s been really, really good.”

In fact, Swinney said he’s been pleased with all of the Tigers’ centers leading up to Monday’s season opener against Georgia Tech in Atlanta. Sophomore Trent Howard and redshirt freshman Ryan Linthicum are next up at the position and are both listed on the two-deep of Clemson’s first depth chart of the season.

“All three of our centers have done a nice job,” Swinney said. “This is rare. Usually you get into some of these dog days, you get tired and somebody is hot and sweaty, they’ll roll a ball back every now and then on an A-gap blitz or something. But I think it’s just a sign of how hard they’ve worked this summer because that’s the type of stuff that you get done in the summer. That’s summer skills and drills. That’s putting the work in when nobody’s watching.”

Swinney said the group has been steady throughout the preseason.

“I’m really proud of our centers, and I’m super proud of Putnam because he’s solid as they come,” Swinney said.

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Looking ahead to Clemson’s first camp scrimmage

Clemson’s first seven practices were heavy on installation and situational work. As the Tigers enter the second week of preseason camp, the proverbial bullets are about to start flying. Head coach Dabo Swinney will get his first real look at this …

Clemson’s first seven practices were heavy on installation and situational work. As the Tigers enter the second week of preseason camp, the proverbial bullets are about to start flying.

Head coach Dabo Swinney will get his first real look at this year’s version of the Tigers on Saturday when Clemson returns to Memorial Stadium for its first scrimmage of camp. With the NCAA scaling back on the number of scrimmages teams are allowed (from three and a half to two), the first one will be even more important than usual from an evaluation standpoint for everybody involved.

It will come on the Tigers’ third day of full pads after making the move from shells (helmets and shoulder pads) Thursday.

“It’s really that first live day, and you’re trying to take everything you’re working on for (seven) practices and (say), ‘OK let’s see what all has stuck,’” Swinney said. “And see what else we’ve got to go back over.

“Also challenging the coaches. It’s a scrimmage. When we get out there on Saturday, it’s not scripted. So you have to respond and react to the situation. I will create some things, and that’s a way to kind of challenge the staff from a preparation standpoint.”

Plenty of eyes will be on the quarterbacks. D.J. Uiagalelei is preparing for his second season as the starter looking for a bounceback year after a less-than-stellar sophomore campaign. The addition of five-star signee Cade Klubnik, whom Swinney has said will have an opportunity to play, makes the situation more interesting.

Uiagalalelei said he’s worked to improve some of the mechanical issues, including a strong base from which to throw, that led to some of his inaccuracies last season. He’s also dropped roughly 30 pounds since last season, which he said has him feeling more mobile and agile in the pocket.

Exactly who all he will have to throw to is unclear with the receiver position already being bit by the injury bug. Beaux Collins (undisclosed) was in street clothes for the second straight day Friday while fellow receiver E.J. Williams wore a yellow no-contact jersey as he deals with an undisclosed injury. Troy Stellato, who was limited early in camp with a strained hamstring, was carted off the field at the end of practice.

But there’s one specific aspect to his performance that Uiagalelei wants to achieve in the scrimmage in order to walk away feeling good about it.

“Just be consistent,” Uiagalelei said. “Work on the down and distance. And then not making the mistakes. Making the easy plays. Making the layups. I think that’s the big thing. You come out there in a scrimmage, and you don’t have to do too much. I think the main thing as an offense is if we get all 11 guys to do their job, then we’ll just roll down the field and be 100% perfect.”

Swinney said he’s eager to see how the Tigers hold up in the trenches, where there have been some not-so-expected developments early in camp.

The depth and talent of Clemson’s defensive line has been well-documented, but perhaps the biggest news of the first week is the push Blake Miller is making along the offensive line. The 6-foot-6, 317-pound true freshman has been getting some first-team reps at right tackle, where Walker Parks started all 13 games inside. Parks recently began cross-training more heavily at guard and tackle.

Marcus Tate, Bryn Tucker, Trent Howard and Mitchell Mayes are also competing for playing time at the guard spots. John Williams, another interior lineman, missed most of Friday’s practice with an ice pack on his left knee.

“Where are we physically on both sides up front? I’m anxious to see that,” Swinney said. “Hopefully it’s going to be a battle.”

Swinney will also be keeping a close eye on the punters, who have caused him to run the gamut of emotions as Clemson continues to look for Will Spiers’ successor. And then there are the freshmen, most of whom Swinney is getting to see in action at Clemson for the first time.

Eleven of the Tigers’ 20 freshman signees didn’t arrive on campus until the summer, and decisions have to start being made as to which ones are far enough along to contribute this fall. Receivers Antonio Williams and Cole Turner have been among the newcomers Clemson has tried at punt returner while Jack Smith is involved in the punting competition. Meanwhile, one freshman, injured cornerback Myles Oliver, is already looking at a redshirt.

“Just kind of see where some of these guys are,” Swinney said. “By then, it’s the (eighth) practice and there’s a lot that’s gone in. So where are some of these younger guys mentally?”

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Nothing has changed with this plan along Clemson’s offensive line

What was strongly trending in a particular direction for Clemson’s offensive line coming out of the spring is now official. Clemson will have a new starting center to begin the 2022 season, though it won’t be an addition from the transfer portal. …

What was strongly trending in a particular direction for Clemson’s offensive line coming out of the spring is now official.

Clemson will have a new starting center to begin the 2022 season, though it won’t be an addition from the transfer portal. Instead, Clemson coach Dabo Swinney confirmed senior Will Putnam is “definitely our starter” heading into fall camp, which will begin for the Tigers on Aug. 5.

“There’s no question about that,” Swinney said. “He had a great spring and did a heck of a job.”

It doesn’t come as much of a surprise after Putnam, who’s started 22 games at guard for the Tigers, made the move at the beginning of the spring. Putnam spent most of the spring as the No. 1 option at a position that’s been fluid since the beginning of last season.

Veteran Matt Bockhorst also made the move from guard to center last season but had his season cut short because of injury and has moved on from football. Hunter Rayburn stepped in to start a handful of games there but was dealt a medical disqualification earlier this offseason after dealing with head and neck injuries. And Swinney reiterated he didn’t know how many games Mason Trotter, who’s practicing but not playing for undisclosed reasons, would miss this fall.

With his top three centers from last season no longer available, Swinney said during the spring the position was one he would look to bolster through the portal with a newcomer who was capable of stepping in immediately as a starter, and the Tigers swung and missed on at least a couple of transfer targets there. But Swinney changed his tune coming out of the spring after watching Putnam in action at his new position, noting not only Putnam’s command of the offense but also his ability to keep the errant snaps to a minimum.

“I’m in a whole different state of mind right now than I was going into spring ball,” Swinney said of the position in the weeks following the conclusion of spring practices.

Swinney said he also feels as good as he can about the depth behind Putnam. Redshirt freshman Ryan Linthicum, a former blue-chip recruit, is in a “totally different place” in his development after missing his senior year of high school because of the coronavirus pandemic, Swinney said. Swinney added Trent Howard is entering his third year in the program as a more functional option on the interior of the line after the sophomore dealt with various illnesses last season.

“Linthicum, Trent and Putnam, all of those guys can play center and guard,” Swinney said. “So we like that group right there, and we’ll see if we can add somebody in there. But there’s no question on who the starter is. It was certainly good confirmation in the spring of what we thought we’d see out of (Putnam).”

Swinney makes strong statement about development of offensive line

The offensive line wasn’t the most stable position for Clemson a season ago, and there are still some lingering uncertainty about the group coming out of the spring. But after watching the unit as a whole over the Tigers’ 15 spring practices, …

The offensive line wasn’t the most stable position for Clemson a season ago, and there are still some lingering uncertainty about the group coming out of the spring.

But after watching the unit as a whole over the Tigers’ 15 spring practices, Clemson coach Dabo Swinney said recently that he feels good about the development of the line. To the point that he has reached a different level of conviction about the short-term and long-term futures of the position with the personnel in place.

“We love the kids that we have,” Swinney said. “All 14 of the guys that we have on scholarship have the ability to be a starter for us or very significant contributors. I haven’t always been able to say that, but I’m very, very encouraged about the personnel that we have there.”

Clemson is set on the edges with veteran left tackle Jordan McFadden and rising junior Walker Parks on the right side, but the interior is where things are still in some limbo along a line that had eight different starting combinations a season ago. The Tigers have had more attrition than they expected at center, so Will Putnam moved over to rep there this spring and, as of now, would likely be the starter if Clemson had to play a game this week.

Clemson is also in the market for a transfer interior lineman if the fit is right, though Swinney has cooled on just how much of a necessity he initially thought that would be for his team given what transpired this spring. With Putnam specifically, grabbing a plug-and-play center would allow him to move back to right guard, where he’s started the last two seasons. But Swinney said he feels better about keeping Putnam at center if necessary after watching the rising senior make a largely smooth transition.

“It was rare that we had a bad snap,” Swinney said. “It was about one a day, and you’re talking about a guy that’s never snapped. It’s not like he snapped in high school. He’s never snapped.”

McFadden will exhaust his eligibility after next season. Putnam and Parks (draft-eligible next year) could also move on, potentially leaving more questions for the unit in 2023. But Swinney said he was equally as impressed with what he saw from the Tigers’ younger linemen this spring, particularly the third-year players – Mitchell Mayes, Trent Howard, Bryn Tucker and John Williams – that “all made a move,” he said.

That group competed at right guard in case Putnam remains at center while true sophomore Marcus Tate remains at the top of the depth chart at left guard for now, though he could move to tackle, where he’s been cross-training, in the future. Swinney is also high on true freshmen Blake Miller and Collin Sadler as well as redshirt freshmen Ryan Linthicum, Tristan Leigh and Dietrick Pennington, whom Swinney said might have started as a first-year player last season if not for an injury that sidelined the Memphis native.

Linthicum and Leigh, the top-ranked signee in Clemson’s 2021 recruiting class who could be McFadden’s successor next year, were among the players that showed the most improvement this spring, Swinney said. It’s all given Swinney a different level of confidence in the linemen already on the roster.

“If I felt like the kids we had, we missed on some of them, it would be different. But we haven’t missed on any of those guys,” Swinney said. “Every single guy that we’ve signed — all 14 guys that we have on scholarship — they’re all at different stages. But unless they get hurt, they’re going to be starters for us or really significant contributors. And that is a really good spot to be in in that offensive line.”

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Swinney in ‘whole different state of mind’ on potential addition of transfer linemen

Dabo Swinney put the word out before the spring that Clemson would be actively looking to add offensive line reinforcements from outside the program before next season. Now? “I’m in a whole different state of mind right now than I was going into …

Dabo Swinney put the word out before the spring that Clemson would be actively looking to add offensive line reinforcements from outside the program before next season.

Now?

“I’m in a whole different state of mind right now than I was going into spring ball,” Swinney told The Clemson Insider this week.

Specifically, Swinney has been monitoring the transfer portal for interior linemen following Hunter Rayburn’s abrupt medical disqualification and Mason Trotter’s unavailability for at least part of next season. With Matt Bockhorst having exhausted his eligibility last season, that left Clemson without its top three centers from a season ago heading into the spring.

So far, Swinney said Clemson has only extended scholarship offers to two portal linemen, both of whom ended up elsewhere. NCAA rules prevent coaches from publicly discussing specific recruits that haven’t signed with their programs, but the Tigers were heavily involved with former Virginia standout Olusegun Oluwatimi before the All-American center transferred to Michigan in late December. Former all-Sun Belt guard O’Cyrus Torrence, a three-year starter for Louisiana, announced an offer from Clemson in January before choosing Florida.

But Swinney said he feels much more comfortable about the center position after what he saw from rising senior Will Putnam and the rest of the players at that position this spring. The attrition there before the spring forced Clemson to move Putnam over from right guard, where he’s been the starter the last two seasons.

“He’s so knowledgeable, first of all,” Swinney said of Putnam. “He’s got complete ownership of the offense. He can make all the calls, and he’s got great command of the protections. He’s just played a lot of football, but the biggest thing we saw was the ability to make the snaps consistently. It was rare that we had a bad snap. It was about one a day, and you’re talking about a guy that’s never snapped. It’s not like he snapped in high school. He’s never snapped.

“He’s an unbelievably committed guy, and you just know whatever Will Putnam does, he’s going to go above and beyond. And so what we saw out of him, what we saw out of (redshirt freshman Ryan) Linthicum, what we saw out of Trent (Howard), those three guys have the ability to do it.”

That doesn’t mean adding a lineman from the portal is no longer a possibility for the Tigers, who only have 14 offensive linemen on scholarship — one fewer than Swinney would like for the ideal depth at the position. And while Clemson would prefer to get a center if it does end up bringing in someone from the outside, Swinney said the Tigers are open to potentially taking a lineman that can play anywhere on the interior.

But it’s not just the center position that has Swinney feeling better about the unit if the right portal fit doesn’t come along. Should the Tigers have to keep Putnam there, Swinney said he’s seen the kinds of strides he needed to see from some of his younger, less experienced interior linemen to feel good about moving forward with the current personnel.

“The biggest comfort we have is what we saw out of those five sophomores and five freshmen,” Swinney said. “Marcus Tate and the experience he got (last season), and then that group of redshirt sophomores all made a move. This time last year, I really didn’t see that going into their redshirt freshman year. But now Mitchell Mayes, Trent Howard, Bryn Tucker and big John Williams, those guys all made a move. And then the five freshmen, we hit on all of those guys. Tristan Leigh, Linthicum, Dietrick Pennington, Blake Miller and Collin Sadler, all of those guys can play. Coming out of spring, I can say that now.”

Swinney also has certain criteria that any potential targets that enter the portal in the future must meet to get serious consideration for a scholarship offer.

“We’re looking for a guy that’s a senior that’s exactly like what we offered, that’s the right fit, that’s got starter experience and those types of things that fit our program and fit our locker room. Then we’d consider that,” Swinney said. “But that’s not out there right now for us outside of the two we offered and didn’t get. You never know what’s going to happen between now and May, but, again, we’re not just going to take a kid to take a kid.

“We know specifically what we’re looking for, and if that’s not available, then we’re going to roll with what we’ve got.”

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