Wake Forest becomes second ACC football team in North Carolina to undergo coaching change

A second in-state Duke football rival will hire a new coach after Wake Forest’s Dave Clawson made the decision to step down.

Wake Forest football coach Dave Clawson will step away from his position at the helm of the Demon Deacons, according to a Monday report from ESPN’s Pete Thamel.

Clawson finished the 2024 season with a second straight 4-8 record, and Wake Forest has won three conference games over the past two seasons. He led the Demon Deacons to seven straight bowl appearances from 2016-22, including an 11-win season in 2021, but the program failed to find its footing since the transfer of longtime quarterback Sam Hartman.

“Clawson is expected to remain with the university in an advisory role,” Thamel wrote, “and the decision to step down was his.”

Clawson will end his 11-year tenure with a 67-69 record, the third-most wins in program history, and no other Wake Forest coach can match his five bowl victories.

The timing of this decision means his final game as head coach will be the Week 14 loss to Duke when [autotag]Maalik Murphy[/autotag] threw a 39-yard touchdown pass to [autotag]Jordan Moore[/autotag] on the final play of the game, the final touch on a 14-point comeback.

Wake Forest becomes the second ACC school within the state to need a new head football coach. The North Carolina Tar Heels fired Mack Brown, the winningest coach in school history, after a 6-6 season, but UNC already found legendary NFL coach Bill Belichick to replace him.

Omarion Hampton’s big night, second-half defense helps UNC beat Wake Forest and extend bowl streak

Omarion Hampton enjoyed the game of his life Saturday. UNC’s defense held off Wake Forest late, helping the Tar Heels to a huge win that extend their bowl streak.

If the North Carolina Tar Heels didn’t have Omarion Hampton on Saturday night against Wake Forest, I think tonight’s outcome would look a lot different.

If UNC’s defense didn’t step up in the fourth quarter – albeit an almost collapse – I think we could be saying the same thing.

Thanks to Big O and a resurgent defensive unit, North Carolina beat Wake Forest, 31-17, for its third-consecutive victory and to make a bowl game for the sixth-straight year.

Hampton set multiple career highs – and rewrote the Tar Heel record books – in the best game of his collegiate career Saturday night.

Hampton carried the football a career-high 33 times and set a new career-high with 244 rushing yards, in addition to scoring a fourth-quarter touchdown that extended UNC’s lead to two possessions. He’s now fifth in career rushing yards (3,327), passing Don McCauley and Kelvin Bryant on the night. Hampton’s 35 rushing touchdowns also tie him with former North Carolina quarterback Marquise Williams for third all-time.

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While Hampton stole the headlines, North Carolina’s defense also played a big role.

The Tar Heels allowed a Wake Forest touchdown with under two minutes remaining in the final quarter, but kept Wake scoreless for nearly 20 minutes – after allowing 14 third-quarter points. UNC’s lockdown defense spanned five drives, in which Wake only gained 27 yards on 15 plays.

North Carolina looked lost at one point this season, losing four-straight games and reverting to its old defensive tendencies.

Now, thanks to the best running back in the country and a resurgent defense. the Tar Heels are bowl eligible for a sixth-straight year and one of the ACC’s hottest teams.

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UNC has chance to steal in-state 2025 wide receiver recruit with Saturday visit

Can UNC land a needed commitment from in-state wide receiver Jamien Little on Saturday?

The North Carolina Tar Heels are in great shape with their 2025 football recruiting class, already securing 12 commitments.

That UNC class is headlined by 4-star quarterback Bryce Baker, another in-state standout who plays at East Forsyth in Kernersville. North Carolina has another pair of 4-star commits in that same 2025 class: offensive tackle Alex Payne and defensive end Austin Alexander.

There’s one position the Tar Heels lack in their next recruiting class: wide receiver, with 3-star Evan Haynes the only one locked down.

UNC has a golden chance to add another wide receiver this coming weekend – a potential 13th commitment – as 3-star in-state wideout Jamien Little announced he’ll be attending the UNC-Wake Forest football game.

If you look at Little’s X and Instagram accounts, each listed below, he recently de-committed from Wake Forest. How sweet would it be if the Tar Heels stole Little from an in-state rival?

Little, arguably the focal point of Hickory High School’s offense, helped lead Hickory to its second State Championship in 2023. Little caught 70 passes for a whopping 1,372 yards and 20 touchdown, averaging 19.6 yards per catch and 85.8 yards per game.

Through 10 games in 2024, as the Tornadoes prepare for another 3A State Championship, Little already has 808 receiving yards and 12 touchdowns. Those churn out to 20.7 yards per catch and 80.8 yards per game.

 

North Carolina will be Little’s first scheduled visit since breaking away from the Demon Deacons, a good sign that Chapel Hill is high on Little’s list. Duke is also in strong consideration for Little, though according to his 247Sports recruiting profile, 12 other schools – including NC State – are in the mix.

With J.J. Jones and Nate McCollum currently in their final seasons as Tar Heels, a commitment from Little would go a long way to rounding out a young receiving corps.

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Start time announced for UNC’s second-to-last home game of 2024 football season

Wondering when UNC’s next football game is? North Carolina recently released the start time for its upcoming matchup with Wake Forest.

After two blowout victories, the North Carolina Tar Heels quickly turned from ACC laughingstock to the fringe of bowl game contention.

UNC (5-4, 2-3) marched into Charlottesville and obliterated Virginia, 41-14, two weeks ago in a game highlighted by 10 sacks from its suddenly-resurgent defense.

This past weekend, North Carolina hit the road again for a battle with Florida State, the reigning ACC Champion which is amongst 2024’s biggest disappointments. The Tar Heels dominated the Seminoles (1-8, 1-7 ACC), 35-11, thanks to another defensive shutdown and 5-touchdown day from Omarion Hampton.

UNC now heads into its bye week, then hosts Wake Forest for another in-state battle on Saturday, Nov. 15.

You can now starting planning your Saturday night around UNC-Wake, as kickoff time for that matchup was recently announced for 8 p.m.

North Carolina’s next game will be its second nighttime kickoff of the year – and first in Kenan Stadium. The Tar Heels previously played Minnesota, in their season-opener, during a game in which start time was postponed to 9 p.m.

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The Demon Deacons (4-4, 2-2 ACC) are seeing a trajectory similar to UNC’s, winning their first game before consecutive losses. Wake recovered from those defeats, as it now has back-to-back victories entering Friday’s home matchup with conference newcomer California.

If you love watching football in cold weather, Nov. 16 is the perfect game for you to attend.

Not only will North Carolina be trying for its third straight victory, but it looks to reach bowl eligibility for the sixth-consecutive season. This would be the Tar Heels’ longest streak in program history.

If you weren’t on the hype train before, now’s the perfect time to hop on. UNC fans are finally excited about watching their football team again.

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Instant analysis: Clemson finishes off drives, has four-quarter effort in win at Wake Forest

Breaking down Clemson’s 49-14 win over Wake Forest to get to 5-1.

A week after struggling to finish off drives in the red zone and being held to seven straight field-goal attempts in their 29-13 road win at Florida State, the 10th-ranked Clemson Tigers had no trouble finding the end-zone in Saturday’s 49-14 victory over Wake Forest at Allegacy Federal Credit Union Stadium in Winston-Salem.

Clemson Thrives in Red Zone Opportunities

Clemson (5-1 overall, 4-0 ACC) put together four scoring drives in the second quarter against Wake Forest (2-4, 1-2) to take a 28-7 lead into halftime. On one of those drives, Tigers coach Dabo Swinney elected to go for it on 4th and goal from the 2-yard line.

With defensive tackles DeMonte Capehart and Peter Woods checked in as part of the Tigers’ jumbo package, Phil Mafah took a handoff and rushed in for a Clemson touchdown to put the Tigers ahead 21-7 to that point.

The offense got the ball to start the second half and picked up right where they left off. Cade Klubnik capped a 75-yard drive in 10 plays with his third touchdown pass of the afternoon, a nine-yard drop-off to Adam Randall in the flats that put the Tigers up 35-14 at the 9:52 mark. Klubnik completed all seven passes for 75 yards on the drive.

On its next series, offensive coordinator Garrett Riley dialed up a little trickery. With a first down at the Wake Forest 28-yard line, Klubnik threw out wide to Antonio Williams, who then found an open Jake Briningstool for a 28-yard touchdown to make the score 42-14 with 7:03 still to play in the third quarter.

Briningstool had seven catches for 104 yards to lead the Tigers’ receiving corps. Four different receivers caught touchdown passes in Clemson’s win.

In the fourth quarter, sophomore running back Keith Adams scored his first touchdown of the year on a four-yard rush to cap the scoring at 49-14 with 8:55 to play. Adams’ run finished a 17-play drive that went 87 yards and took eight-plus minutes off the clock.

Defense Steps Up

Wed Goodwin’s unit forced two first-half turnovers off interceptions from safeties Kylon Griffin and Khalil Barnes that the offense converted into touchdowns.

After allowing two touchdowns from Wake Forest quarterback Hank Bachmeier in the first half, the Tigers’ defense stepped up even more in the second half. The Demon Deacons managed only one first down after halftime up until their final possession of the game with the score well out of reach,

The Tigers’ defense forced three punts and a turnover on downs on Wake Forest’s four second-half offensive series. Clemson held Wake to just 38 net yards in the half.

Klubnik Continues to Limit Mistakes

Turnovers were an issue for Klubnik in his first full year as starting quarterback in 2023. Through six games this season, Klubnik has thrown just two interceptions and hasn’t lost a fumble after suffering 10 fumbles (four lost) a year ago.

Klubnik seems more poised and confident in the pocket. A big part of that is the Tigers’ offensive line yielding just five sacks to this point (two of those came in the season-opening loss to Georgia).

Clemson Doesn’t Play Down to Opponent

This is not insignificant for a number of reasons. While more road trips await Clemson later this year with back-to-back games at Virginia Tech and Pitt in November, the Tigers managed to avoid the pitfalls that higher-ranked schools like Alabama, Tennessee, and others didn’t just a week earlier.

Swinney highlighted his team’s ability to win games on the road this week and about playing to a standard instead of focusing on outside distractions. The Tigers did that on Saturday against a Wake Forest team that was already coming off an upset win at NC State.

Up Next

Clemson returns home next Saturday to face the Virginia Cavaliers in Death Valley. Kickoff is set for noon ET. The game will be televised on ACC Network.

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Clemson offense continues to soar, Tigers take down Wake Forest

Clemson dominates Wake Forest for another strong win.

No. 10 Clemson football powered past Wake Forest 49-14 on Saturday at Allegacy Stadium, notching a fifth consecutive win and extending their series streak to 16 victories over the Demon Deacons.

Wake Forest struck first with a 31-yard touchdown pass from Hank Bachmeier to Horatio Fields, marking the first time Clemson has allowed a first-quarter score this season. But the Tigers soon took control, piling on 42 combined points in the second and third quarters to secure the win.

Quarterback Cade Klubnik was key, throwing for 309 yards and three touchdowns on 31 of 41 passing, while Phil Mafah added two rushing scores and 108 yards on the ground. The Tigers’ 566-yard offensive showcase included a memorable third-quarter trick play: a double-pass from Klubnik to Antonio Williams, who found tight end Jake Briningstool for a 28-yard touchdown. Briningstool finished with seven catches for 104 yards.

Clemson, now 5-1 overall and undefeated in ACC play, returns home next Saturday for a noon kickoff against Virginia. The game will mark a reunion with Cavaliers head coach Tony Elliott, a former Clemson player and coach.

How Clemson built its two-score halftime lead over Wake Forest

Clemson leads Wake Forest at halftime in Winston-Salem, 28-14.

It’s halftime in Winston-Salem and the 10th-ranked Clemson Tigers lead the Wake Forest Demon Deacons, 28-14. Here’s how the Tigers have built their two-touchdown lead at intermission.

After falling behind 7-0 and allowing points in the first quarter for the first time all year, Clemson’s offense dominated the second quarter by scoring 28 points as Cade Klubnik led the Tigers on four scoring drives — two of which were assisted by key Wake Forest turnovers.

Early in the quarter, Klubnik came up money on 3rd and 7 from just across midfield when he hit Troy Stellato for 19 yards and a first down to the Demon Deacons’ 27-yard line. On another third down, Klubnik stood in the pocket and had time before firing a 22-yard touchdown pass to Antonio Williams. That tied the game at 7-7 after Nolan Hauser’s extra point.

It was Klubnik’s 15th touchdown pass of the season, and it capped an eight-play, 75-yard scoring drive that took 2:53 off the clock.

On Wake Forest’s next drive, quarterback Hank Bachmeier was picked off by safety Kylon Griffin when he tried to force a pass. Griffin tripped on the return but ran it back to the Deacs’ 23 yard line.

From there, Klubnik hit Jake Briningstool for 22 yards to set up first and goal from the 1-yard line. Mafah finished off the drive with a touchdown from a yard out to make it 14-7. That gave Clemson 14 points in a span of one minute, five seconds of game clock.

The Tigers’ defense stepped up again on third down on the Demon Deacons’ next drive when Khalil Barnes caught a tipped pass that fell into his lap for an interception at the 42 yard line.

Later, on 4th and goal at the 2-yard line, Dabo Swinney made the decision to go for it . DeMonte Capehart and Peter Woods checked in as Clemson brought out the jumbo package, and Mafah finished off the drive with a walk-in touchdown for a 21-7 lead. The Tigers had 21 points in 6:53 to that point.

Wake Forest answered on its next drive, picking up two third-down conversions before Bachmeier hit Deuce Alexander for 38 yards to set up first and goal at the Clemson 9-yard line. Bachmeier soon found Michael Frogge for a touchdown with 3:18 to play in the half. Matthew Dennis’ extra point cut the lead to 21-14.

On Clemson’s next possession, Mafah ran for 22 yards and lowered the boom on safety Nick Anderson for a big run out to the 49-yard line. The senior tailback got the ball again on the next snap and went for 15 more before a personal foul was tacked on. That gave Clemson the ball at the Wake Forest 21 with two minutes left in the half.

Two plays later, Klubnik threw a dart to Stellato for the Tigers’ fourth score of the quarter — an eight-yard touchdown that made it 28-14 with 1:31 to play.

At halftime, Clemson has 18 first downs and 293 yards to Wake Forest’s 12 first downs and 195 yards. Klubnik is 17-of-24 for 191 yards and two touchdowns, and Mafah has 91 yards and two scores on 14 carries.

Clemson leads Wake Forest 28-14 at halftime in a closer game than expected

Clemson is in a closer game than expected.

Dabo Swinney and the Tigers lead Wake Forest 28-14, heading into the locker room for halftime.

It was a slow start for the Tigers, who looked like a team that was taking Lake Forest slightly to start the game. Going down 7-0 early in the game, Clemson’s offense didn’t score points in the first quarter for the first time since week one. The Tigers needed to recover, and that’s exactly what they did.

It started with a 22 yard touchdown pass from starting quarterback Cade Klubnik to star wide receiver Antonio Williams. A couple of bad Wake Forest interceptions lead to two rushing touchdowns, with Clemson leading the Demon Deacons 21-14 with a few minutes left in the second quarter.

Avoiding heading into the half on their heels, Nick put together an awesome final driver of the half. Connecting with Troy Stellato on an 8-yard touchdown pass, Clemson heads into the locked room up 28 to 14. The Tigers’ offense continues to look strong, but there are some serious worries on my end about this Clemson defense.

USA TODAY Sports experts offer predictions on Clemson vs Wake Forest

Here’s who USA TODAY Sports experts think will win Saturday’s game between Clemson and Wake Forest.

The Clemson Tigers head to Winston-Salem this Saturday to take on longtime rival Wake Forest in ACC play.

The Tigers (4-1) rose five spots to No. 10 in this week’s AP Top 25 Poll (No. 11 in the Coaches Poll) after their fourth straight win came against the Florida State Seminoles in Tallahassee, 29-13.

Wake Forest (2-3) is unranked but coming off a 34-30 upset win at Carter-Finley Stadium in Raleigh against NC State.

To no surprise, Clemson is a heavy favorite heading into its Week 7 contest against the Demon Deacons.

To that end, the six-member panel of Dan Wolken, Paul Myerberg, Eddie Timanus, Scooby Axson, Jordan Mendoza and Erick Smith all predicted the Tigers to win Saturday’s game against Wake Forest in their weekly Top 25 college football predictions released Thursday.

RELATED: ‘Back to looking like Clemson’: Wake Forest coach Dave Clawson impressed with Tigers

Earlier this week, Clemson coach Dabo Swinney said that college football did his team a favor following a Saturday filled with upsets. Two top-5 teams fell on the road: the previously No. 1-ranked Alabama Crimson Tide lost 40-35 at Vanderbilt, and the Tennessee Volunteers (then No. 4) lost 19-14 at Arkansas.

In the ACC, the Miami Hurricanes needed a 25-point second-half comeback to rally past Cal, and Louisville lost to SMU in a game the Cardinals had been favored to win at home.

“This is a week where if you pay attention to what people say on the outside, then they are saying we are supposed to win,” Swinney said at his weekly Tuesday press conference. “This is not a game of ‘supposed to.’ This is a game of what you do. This is a game of performance.”

Kickoff for Saturday’s game between Clemson and Wake Forest is set for noon ET. The game can be seen on ESPN.

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‘Back to looking like Clemson’: Wake Forest coach Dave Clawson impressed with Tigers

Dave Clawson was not short on praise for the Clemson Tigers ahead of Saturday’s Week 7 matchup.

Count Wake Forest football coach Dave Clawson as being impressed by what he’s seen so far from the Clemson Tigers.

The Demon Deacons’ coach, now in his 11th season in Winston-Salem, offered no shortage of high praise for Dabo Swinney and his team at his weekly press conference on Tuesday.

Clawson called the Tigers a “complete football team” and “the most dominant program in the ACC over the last decade.”

“What Dabo has built at Clemson, to me the consistency of it, the championship level program that he built and has been able to maintain, is one of the most impressive coaching jobs in the whole country,” Clawson said.

Clawson pointed to quarterback Cade Klubnik and marveled at his improvement from last season. Through five games, Klubnik has thrown for 1,219 yards and 14 touchdowns to two interceptions. He’s also ran for 168 yards on 28 carries, including two long touchdown runs against NC State in Week 4 and a week later against Stanford.

“I don’t know what they did to him in the offseason down there, but he looks bigger, stronger and faster. He’s a good pocket passer, but what really scares you is some of the plays he makes with his feet,” Clawson said, highlighting Klubnik’s touchdown run against NC State on the first possession in the Tigers’ 59-35 rout of the Wolfpack.

Clawson also singled out tailback Phil Mafah, who had a season-high 154 rushing yards in last week’s 29-13 Clemson win at Florida State. “You try to arm-tackle him and it’s not going to turn out too well,” he said.

The Tigers’ wide receiver corps drew particular praise from Clawson.

“To me, they’re back to looking like Clemson,” he said while pointing out Antonio Williams, Bryant Wesco and T.J. Moore. “When I first got here, this was Wide Receiver U., and I think it kind of fell off a bit and now it looks like they’re coming back to where they were.”

On the biggest difference in what he’s seen from the Tigers so far this year, Clawson pointed to the offensive line.

“They’ve got 113 career starts. It’s a veteran group, and coaching matters,” he said. “It’s a veteran offensive line coach they hired in Matt Luke who has done a phenomenal job with them. These guys are playing physically, assertively and with confidence. The way they take the ball and point things out, the physicality that they’re playing with, and what that allows them to do is be balanced.

“This is now a football team that can run and throw the football and they can beat you either way. Those are the teams you hate playing against. So, whatever tweaking they did in the offseason with (Garrett Riley) and (Matt Luke), I think they’ve found their sweet spot.

“I’d enjoy watching it if we didn’t have to play against it,” Clawson said jokingly.

On defense, Clawson said that Clemson was “still Clemson.” He mentioned the play of defensive end T.J. Parker and called linebacker Barrett Carter “one of the best linebackers in the country.”

“It’s always one of the top units in the country,” Clawson said of the Tigers’ defense. “It starts up front for them; it always has. Every defensive lineman that starts for them is over 300 pounds and where they’re most impressive is the depth. They have nine guys that are averaging over 25 plays per game.”

Clemson and Wake Forest will kick off at noon ET Saturday in Winston-Salem. The game can be seen on ESPN. The Tigers are ranked No. 10 in this week’s AP Top 25 poll and No. 11 in the Coaches Poll.

The Tigers have won 15 straight in the series with Wake Forest dating back to 2009. Two years ago, Clemson outlasted the Deacs in a 51-45 double-overtime victory in a game that saw both teams ranked in the Top 25; the Tigers were ranked No. 5, Wake Forest No. 21.

“Always a tough matchup, but always a great challenge,” Clawson said of playing Clemson. “The last two years, it’s been a very competitive football game. We need people to show up and wear black. We had a home field advantage in this stadium two years ago and it helped, and it would be great if we had it again.