Goodwin on Miami QB: ‘Huge challenge’ for Tigers’ defense

Clemson first-year defensive coordinator Wesley Goodwin sat down with the media Monday ahead of facing the Miami Hurricanes on Saturday in Death Valley. The Miami offense and team have not had the season they were wanting, and losing their starting …

Clemson first-year defensive coordinator Wesley Goodwin sat down with the media Monday ahead of facing the Miami Hurricanes on Saturday in Death Valley. 

The Miami offense and team have not had the season they were wanting, and losing their starting quarterback, Tyler Van Dyke, who went down with a shoulder injury on Oct. 22 against Duke, did not help.

However, the Hurricanes may have found a new spark in their offense to help finish the rest of the season and ultimately become bowl-eligible with just one more win. That spark being true freshman quarterback Jacurri Brown. 

Brown, who got his first career start against Georgia Tech last week, completed 14 of 19 passes for 136 yards, which resulted in three touchdowns. Brown also made good use of his feet, rushing for 87 yards on 19 carries with his longest run being 24 yards. 

Miami will have a lot of momentum heading into Death Valley coming off of a much-needed win a week ago. The Tigers’ defense has focused a lot in practice on how to contain Brown in both the air and on the ground. 

“He is a tremendous athlete,” Goodwin said. “Huge challenge from a quarterback run-game standpoint and containing him in the pocket. Just have to continue to eliminate explosive plays both run and pass, and that’ll be the challenge this week.”

A big asset for the Tigers last week was defensive tackle Bryan Bresee. Goodwin and others believed that Bresee played his best game of the season last week against Louisville and hopes that will continue Saturday. 

“I think he continues to put it together as well, and you saw it throughout the week of practice,” Goodwin said. “He had a really good week out here and was really confident, and getting the knee brace off helped as well with his confidence. Hopefully he can continue to string together good weeks as we continue to go.”

‘Just incredibly sad’: Virginia tragedy resonates for Clemson

A tragedy heard around the college football world today hit close to home at Clemson. A few hundred miles away in Charlottesville, Virginia, three University of Virginia football players were fatally shot Sunday night while returning from an …

A tragedy heard around the college football world today hit close to home at Clemson.

A few hundred miles away in Charlottesville, Virginia, three University of Virginia football players were fatally shot Sunday night while returning from an off-campus field trip. The university went into lockdown mode at the time as law enforcement searched for the gunman.

That hunt ended this morning when UVA police announced that a suspect, Chris Jones Jr., had been taken into custody. Jones is a former UVA football player.

“Our thoughts and prayers are with all who are involved with that,” Clemson defensive coordinator Wesley Goodwin said this morning. “Just incredibly sad.”

UVA’s football program is in its first season under the direction of Tony Elliott, who’s in his first head coaching job after spending the previous 11 seasons on Dabo Swinney’s staff at Clemson. Elliott spent the last seven as the Tigers’ offensive play caller and was co-offensive coordinator for Clemson’s 2016 and 2018 national championship teams.

Elliott’s successor in that role, Brandon Streeter, worked alongside Elliott for those last seven seasons. Streeter, who initially joined Clemson’s staff in 2015 as a quarterbacks coach before being promoted to offensive coordinator in December following Elliott’s departure, said he exchanged some text messages with Elliott after learning of Sunday’s shooting.

“Just said we’re praying for him, his program and obviously the families that were affected,” Streeter said. “Just a really, really tough situation.”

Having worked with him extensively, Streeter said he believes Elliott’s ability to connect with people is exactly what the Cavaliers’ football program needs to heal amid a time of immense pain.

“I know Tony is there for a reason,” Streeter said. “God put him there for a reason, and he has done an unbelievable job wherever he’s been just dealing with people. He’s a people guy, and he knows the right thing to say and how to move forward. But our thoughts and prayers are up for those families that are affected and obviously the program and Coach Elliott.”

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Goodwin: Defense needs to take ‘next step’ following improved performance

Its most recent performance was a start for Clemson’s defense. Now first-year coordinator Wesely Goodwin wants to see his unit take it up a notch come Saturday. “We need to take the next step as a defense and play consistent this weekend,” Goodwin …

Its most recent performance was a start for Clemson’s defense. Now first-year coordinator Wesely Goodwin wants to see his unit take it up a notch come Saturday.

“We need to take the next step as a defense and play consistent this weekend,” Goodwin said.

The Tigers head into their matchup against Miami fresh off a bounceback showing against Louisville, which amassed 400 yards but wasn’t nearly as effective on the ground as usual and reached the end zone just twice in Clemson’s 31-16 win over the weekend.

It’s been an up-and-down season for the defense, which began the season struggling against the pass (No. 71 pass defense nationally) but has had more issues stopping the run of late. Clemson still owns the nation’s 19th-best run defense statistically but had allowed more than 200 yards on the ground in two of its previous three games before last week, including a season-worst 263 in its loss at Notre Dame.

Louisville came into last week’s matchup with the nation’s No. 25 rushing offense. It helped that Malik Cunningham, the Cardinals’ leading rusher as one of the nation’s top dual-threat quarterbacks, didn’t play the second half with injuries, but Clemson held Louisville to 150 rushing yards – 46 less than its season average.

“We handled the adversity last week (after the Notre Dame loss),” Goodwin said. “Let’s handle the success this week and continue to build our momentum going into the weekend.”

Still, the Cardinals ripped off their share of chunk plays with seven plays of 19 yards or more. Those included a 44-yard run on a third-and-long in the first half and a 54-yard completion that set up Louisville’s first points of the second half.

Miami quarterback Tyler Van Dyke has been dealing with a shoulder injury that sidelined him last week. The Hurricanes turned to true freshman Jacurri Brown, another dual threat that helped Miami score five touchdowns in a three-score win at Georgia Tech, a week after the Hurricanes failed to reach the end zone in a blowout loss to Florida State.

Regardless of the opponent, Goodwin said there are “little things” Clemson’s defense can shore up in order to achieve that consistency this week.

“Some of the explosive plays, it’s just one guy that failed to do his job and getting all 11 guys on the same page whether it’s a gap issue and losing the B-gap on an inside zone (run) or, on an outside zone, somebody getting outside of their gap or missing a tackle on the perimeter,” Goodwin said. “Just little things here and there – technique, fundamentals, stuff that we’ve just to continue to grow and mature in some keys areas.”

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Clemson still looking for ‘alpha’ on defense

With Clemson’s defense trying to rebound from one of its worst performances of the season, Dabo Swinney was asked about the vocal leadership of that group and whether or not any of his players have made a point to take on that role this week. The …

With Clemson’s defense trying to rebound from one of its worst performances of the season, Dabo Swinney was asked about the vocal leadership of that group and whether or not any of his players have made a point to take on that role this week.

The answer from the Tigers’ coach was terse.

“They’re all trying to, but somebody needs to be that alpha,” Swinney said. “We’re going to find out.”

Clemson came up small against Notre Dame last week in its first loss of the season, which came in blowout fashion. Part of the reason for the 35-14 setback was the Tigers’ normally resistant run defense had no answers for a Notre Dame rushing attack that churned out more than 5 yards a pop en route to 263 rushing yards, easily the most the Tigers have allowed all season.

It further contributed to a head-scratching year for a Clemson defense that came into the season with plenty of hype but has left much to be desired.

The Tigers still rank 14th nationally in run defense, but a front seven filled with next-level talent has rarely been the dominant group that many expected going into the season. Clemson returned every member of its two-deep along the defensive line from last season, including stars Bryan Bresee and Myles Murphy. It’s helped the Tigers lead the ACC in tackles for loss, but Clemson is in the middle of the conference pack in sacks and is allowing a touchdown more per game than it did last season when it ranked second nationally in scoring defense.

With three new starters in the secondary, the back end has had its ups and downs in coverage for the nation’s 65th-ranked pass defense. But the run defense has shown more and more cracks of late, allowing more than 200 rushing yards to Florida State and nearly 10 yards a carry to Syracuse’s running backs in the previous two games before Notre Dame gashed Clemson.

According to Clemson’s coaches, the vocal leadership hasn’t been a strong suit among the defense with some of that group’s most boisterous players no longer around. Veteran linebackers and team captains James Skalski and Baylon Spector finished up their eligibility last year as did sixth-year safety Nolan Turner, a multi-year starter for Clemson on the back end.

First-year coordinator Wesley Goodwin said that doesn’t mean this year’s defense is completely void of it. He opined that fifth-year defensive end K.J. Henry is the most vocal of the group in that regard, but it’s largely a different kind of leadership on that side of the ball this season.

“I think we have guys that have great leadership qualities,” Goodwin said. “Probably missing a little bit of the vocal leadership from those guys. We lost a ton of experience that guys looked up to from Skalski, Spector, Nolan Turner and those guys. We have great leaders on our team. Not necessarily big vocal leaders. They’re more lead by example.”

Goodwin said he’s confident that his unit will respond appropriately Saturday against Louisville, though the Cardinals will test Clemson’s discipline with dual-threat quarterback Malik Cunningham bringing the nation’s 25th-ranked rushing offense into Memorial Stadium. He added it’s on the players and coaches to starting turning things around.

“We can pull it out of them as well,” Goodwin said. “Everybody’s on board with the process, and we’ll get their best this week.”

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Cunningham presents latest ‘problem’ for Clemson’s defense

Clemson’s defense doesn’t have much time to dwell on what happened last week. Not if the Tigers hope to perform better on their next test. Notre Dame ran around and through what was the nation’s No. 7-ranked rush defense going into last week’s game …

Clemson’s defense doesn’t have much time to dwell on what happened last week. Not if the Tigers hope to perform better on their next test.

Notre Dame ran around and through what was the nation’s No. 7-ranked rush defense going into last week’s game at Notre Dame Stadium. The end result was 263 yards on the ground for the Fighting Irish, easily the most Clemson has allowed this season.

The Tigers know as well as any team that things don’t get any easier this week against Louisville.

That’s because the Cardinals will bring the nation’s 25th-ranked rushing offense into Memorial Stadium on Saturday. Louisville has some capable running backs in Tiyon Smith (6.7 yards per carry), Trevion Cooley (4.7) and Jawhar Jordan (4.5), but containing the Cardinals’ rushing attack starts with trying to bottle up one of the most dynamic dual-threat quarterbacks around in Malik Cunningham.

“He’s a problem,” Swinney said.

Louisville’s fifth-year signal caller rushed for 1,000 yards a season ago, and it’s not out of the question that he repeats that feat this season. Cunningham is once again the Cardinals’ leading rusher with 541 yards and has 11 rushing touchdowns through Louisville’s first eight games. He’s eclipsed the 100-yard rushing mark in three of them.

Cunningham gets a lot of those yards in the zone-read game, and Louisville gives the 6-foot-1, 190-pound speedster the freedom to improvise at times. Even when he is supposed to be reading how the defensive end or outside linebacker is playing the run on the end of the line of scrimmage before deciding whether to hand the ball off to the running back or pull it, Clemson defensive coordinator Wesley Goodwin said there are times, including instances in last year’s meeting between the teams, where that isn’t the case.

“You can call it zone read, but he wasn’t reading anything,” Goodwin said. “He was pulling it no matter what the read was.”

Said linebacker Barrett Carter, “You definitely have to be on your toes every single play and know where he is. Make sure if it’s an option play that he for sure gives the ball because if he pulls the ball, he can definitely make a play with his feet.”

Clemson was reminded of that last season when Cunningham shredded the Tigers with his feet. He ran 22 times for 134 yards and two scores, including a 51-yarder that saw him break outside on a keeper and race past multiple defenders on his way to the end zone.

“If he gets on that sideline, he’s gone,” Swinney said.

Clemson will also have to be prepared for those times when Cunningham drops back to pass but isn’t able to find any open receivers. He won’t hesitate to pull the ball down and take off, which makes playing a disciplined brand of defensive football a must for the first and second levels of the Tigers’ defense. It’s something Goodwin didn’t think the group did well enough last year against Cunningham.

“We’ve got to change our rush mindset no doubt and also being able to come get him out of the second level (with our linebackers) once he pulls the ball down,” Goodwin said.

Cunningham can throw it a little bit, too. He is completing 61% of his passes with twice as many touchdown passes (8) as interceptions (4), though he’s attempted more than 28 passes in a game just twice so far this season.

Clemson’s objective is to make the Cardinals have to put the ball in the air more than they would like to, though that’s easier said than done with Cunningham running the show.

“He can beat you in every way possible,” Swinney said. “And just when you think you’ve got him, he’s gone. It really stresses how you rush the quarterback and how you play the quarterback.”

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Goodwin discusses the state of the defense: ‘We’re probably missing some vocal leadership’

The loss to Notre Dame last Saturday highlighted some glaring issues that defensive coordinator Wesley Goodwin will have to correct before Clemson is back in action this Saturday. When speaking to the media on Monday, Goodwin indicated that …

The loss to Notre Dame last Saturday highlighted some glaring issues that defensive coordinator Wesley Goodwin will have to correct before Clemson is back in action this Saturday.

When speaking to the media on Monday, Goodwin indicated that sometimes this season the defense misses some of that vocal leadership that was present in previous seasons. Whether it was James Skalski or Nolan Turner, you knew there were some veteran guys who, in the face of adversity, would demand that the rest of the team step up.

Goodwin discussed the difference between this season and some previous ones. From what was shared by Goodwin, it seems that a defense with so much individual potential lacks a dominant voice pulling the team back in the game.

“I think we have guys who have great leadership qualities, we’re probably missing some vocal leadership from those guys,” he said. “We lost a ton of experience that guys looked up to, from Skalski, (Baylon) Spector, Nolan Turner and those guys. We have great leaders on our team, not necessarily big vocal leaders — they’re more lead by example, and K.J. (Henry) is kind of the vocal leader, I would say, of the group, and some other guys. I think those guys will challenge the guys and get them right this week no doubt.”

Goodwin indicated there may have been external factors that impacted his defense, but it all comes back to the mindset the Tigers played with.

“I think when you’re dealing with young men, sometimes we let outside forces dictate our mindset for whatever reason,” he said, “but I don’t question anyone’s physicality or toughness at all on our defense.”

Goodwin shared that when it comes to leadership moving forward, it needs to be about both the players and the coaches working in tangent to pull the best performance out of one another. It is up to everyone to be on the same path, with the same vision, working towards the same goal, and that is what it’s going to take to get this defense where it needs to be for the remainder of the season.

“I think that and the combination of coaches as well,” he said. “We can pull it out of them as well. Everybody is on board with the process and we’ll get their best this week.”

 

Clemson’s defense wilts against Notre Dame’s physicality

There was no secret to what was coming. Wesley Goodwin said as much. In fact, Clemson’s defensive coordinator spent a good chunk of time earlier in the week talking to reporters about how his unit knew what it had to do against Notre Dame’s offense. …

There was no secret to what was coming. Wesley Goodwin said as much.

In fact, Clemson’s defensive coordinator spent a good chunk of time earlier in the week talking to reporters about how his unit knew what it had to do against Notre Dame’s offense. It was almost as if Goodwin and head coach Dabo Swinney, who made a reference to his team needing to bring its “big-boy pants” to South Bend, wanted to send a message to their players publicly about needing to match the physicality of the Fighting Irish’s running game.

“You have to stop their run game,” Goodwin said of Notre Dame’s top-40 rushing offense.

The Tigers left those pants back in Clemson.

Notre Dame walloped the fourth-ranked Tigers late Saturday night at Notre Dame Stadium, improving to 6-0 this season when rushing for at least 150 yards in the process. Using that metric, the Tigers didn’t come close to giving themselves a chance. Instead, Clemson’s star-studded front seven bullied by an offense that’s largely been one-dimensional this season.

“Super surprised,” Swinney said afterward. “Nobody’s fault but mine. Didn’t play anywhere near like we have played and can play. (Saturday), that’s what you saw. They were clearly the more physical team and executed better. It will be a painful tape to watch for everyone.”

The Irish did it against the nation’s No. 7 run defense, though Clemson had shown some cracks of late. There were those 206 yards Florida State rushed for in the Tigers’ six-point win on Oct. 15. And Syracuse did the Tigers a favor two weeks earlier by only getting five carries for its all-ACC back, Sean Tucker, who averaged more than 10 yards on those touches.

On Saturday, the Tigers broke.

It didn’t matter that Notre Dame had the 106th-ranked passing offense in the country with a backup quarterback because the Irish did just about anything they wanted on the ground. They gashed Clemson through the A and B gaps and bounced runs outside when Clemson lost contain on the edges. Even that backup, Drew Pyne, who isn’t much of a runner, benefited from all the attention Clemson had to give to Notre Dame’s stable of backs by keeping on some read plays, including a 5-yard touchdown scamper late in the second quarter.

Even when the Tigers had things fitted correctly and players in position to make tackles, there was no guarantee it was happening. Logan Diggs and Audric Estime, Notre Dame’s primary battering rams, often turned shorter runs into longer gains by plowing through the arms of Clemson defenders, continuing the Tigers’ recent trend of having issues getting ball carriers to the ground.

“It was just a combination of misfits, missed tackles and guys getting knocked out of their gaps,” Goodwin said. “It was a bit of everything here and there. Got to get back to work on Monday, fix the issues that showed up and get better with where we got exposed.

“Obviously we were not the most physical team, and that’s 100 percent on me and getting them prepared the right way to execute.”

Veteran defensive end K.J. Henry wasn’t willing to give himself and his teammates a pass. Clemson’s fifth-year senior said the players were also part of the problem on a night when play calls weren’t solely to blame for Notre Dame’s bludgeoning.

The Irish, who ripped off nearly 6 yards per carry, had 122 rushing yards in the first half – 35 more than what Clemson had been allowing per game – and finished with 263. Of their 24 first downs, 17 were on the ground with five of them coming on one of their touchdown drives.

“Coach Wes put us in the right spots and made a lot of the right calls,” Henry said. “I know technique has to be cleaned up on the defensive side of the ball. We can’t be complacent with just being in the right spot.”

As for why the Tigers were no match for Notre Dame’s physicality up front, Henry struggled to come up with an answer.

“I’d have to go back and see the film, but being a fifth-year guy, I can’t sit here and act like the game plan wasn’t set up for us to win the game,” he said.

Diggs (114) and Estime (104) each eclipsed the 100-yard mark on the ground, the first time a team has had multiple 100-yard rushers in the same game against Clemson since 2012. Clemson has now surrendered at least 200 rushing yards in two of its last three games.

“They just physically kicked our butt,” Swinney said. “Period. The end.”

‘A great week’ for two Clemson defenders still working their way back

Members of Clemson’s coaching staff said going into last week that the open date was coming at a good time for the Tigers. One of the primary reasons for that belief was the extra rest it would allow some of the players still working their way back …

Members of Clemson’s coaching staff said going into last week that the open date was coming at a good time for the Tigers. One of the primary reasons for that belief was the extra rest it would allow some of the players still working their way back from injuries.

Two of them, Bryan Bresee and Xavier Thomas, are key pieces along Clemson’s defensive front. Defensive coordinator Wesley Goodwin said the bye week was a productive one for both linemen.

“I think it was a great week,” Goodwin said. “They got a lot of reps last week and were able to get back going in practice.”

Both players have been part of the game rotation the last couple of weeks but are still working to round back into top form. Bresee, the Tigers’ star defensive tackle, has been in and out of the lineup this season while dealing with the sudden death of his younger sister, Ella. He later missed his fourth game of the season against Boston College with a kidney infection that required him to be hospitalized.

As for Thomas, it’s been a gradual progression back to full strength for the senior rush specialist. He missed the first five games of the season recovering from surgery on his broken foot during the preseason before debuting with two sacks in just six snaps against the Eagles three games ago.

Thomas then played a season-high 32 snaps against Florida State before his snap count dipped to 14 against Syracuse in Clemson’s most recent game Oct. 22. He didn’t record any stats against the Orange. Bresee returned to the lineup with 22 snaps against FSU and logged 33 against Syracuse. He had one tackle and one sack in those two games.

As has been the case for the last few weeks, Goodwin says both players continue to be on a practice progression plan leading up to Saturday’s game against Notre Dame. Goodwin didn’t provide a specific answer when asked how soon he expects both to be back at peak physical performance, but the Tigers’ first-year coordinator said he’s encouraged by what he’s seen from Bresee and Thomas on the practice field.

“Just really good to see them get back going, gain more confidence in their technique, playing with pad level and all the basic fundamentals that we coach,” Goodwin said. “Hopefully we can continue to gain consistency up front with those guys back in the lineup.”

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Goodwin: Defense ‘better have a physical mindset’ against Notre Dame

Clemson’s defense is going to see an offense unlike any it’s seen this season Saturday. The Tigers’ preparation for it, defensive coordinator Wesley Goodwin, starts with their mental approach. “You better have a physical mindset on Saturday night,” …

Clemson’s defense is going to see an offense unlike any it’s seen this season Saturday.

The Tigers’ preparation for it, defensive coordinator Wesley Goodwin, starts with their mental approach.

“You better have a physical mindset on Saturday night,” Goodwin said.

That’s when the Tigers will return to action against a Notre Dame offense that’s run the ball more than any of their first eight opponents. In fact, only 21 FBS teams have attempted more rushes than the Fighting Irish, who enter Saturday’s game with the nation’s 36th-ranked rush offense (186.6 yards per game).

Notre Dame does it with three different backs and out of a variety of formations. Some of them include multiple tight ends and occasionally even some jumbo 14 personnel (one back, four tight ends). Audric Estime enters this week’s game with 99 carries as the Fighting Irish’s primary back (558 rushing yards, eight rushing TDs), but Logan Diggs (95 carries) and Chris Tyree (78) aren’t far behind.

The trio has rotated throughout the season, helping keep each fresh for a Notre Dame offense scoring just north of 28 points per game. More than half of the Fighting Irish’s offensive touchdowns have come on the ground (14 of 27).

“It’s old-school football, no question,” Goodwin said. “But they also do a great job of attacking you formationally and use a lot of motions as well. At times, they line up in just basic formations and you know what you’re getting with straight downhill runs. But there are also times where they shift and motion and get you into some issues there. So we’ve got to do a great job with adjustments, communication out back and make sure everyone is one the same page and aligned properly pre-snap.”

With Notre Dame struggling to balance out its rushing attack with the nation’s 106th-ranked pass offense, slowing down the ground game has been one of the primary keys to victory against the Fighting Irish this season. Notre Dame has rushed for 150 yards or fewer in each of its three losses. The Fighting Irish didn’t score more than 21 points in any of those games either.

Still, even with Clemson countering with the nation’s seventh-best rush defense (87.9 yards allowed per game), Goodwin knows that will be easier said than done.

“That’s the No. 1 thing is our guys have to show up with the right mindset,” Goodwin said. “It’s championship football. It’s big-boy football. A bring-your-pads-and-let’s-go-to-work mentality.”

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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