Running game shows signs of life in runaway victory

One snap is all Clemson needed to reveal its intentions for the ground game. Lyn-J Dixon took the handoff on the Tigers’ first snap and rumbled 16 yards through the middle of South Carolina State’s defense, surpassing Clemson’s rushing output from a …

One snap is all Clemson needed to reveal its intentions for the ground game.

Lyn-J Dixon took the handoff on the Tigers’ first snap and rumbled 16 yards through the middle of South Carolina State’s defense, surpassing Clemson’s rushing output from a week ago. The senior running back got another carry on the next play. Kobe Pace got a carry two plays later. Then another.

Will Shipley took his turn next. The true freshman had back-to-back runs of 4 and 8 yards before the Tigers used quarterback D.J. Uiagalelei’s legs to cap their first scoring drive with a 4-yard scamper, one in which Clemson ran seven out of nine times and covered 56 of 72 yards on the ground.

It set the tone for a much more concerted effort to get the running game going Saturday night inside Memorial Stadium — and one that was far more productive than what Clemson did in that department seven days earlier.

Granted, the Tigers took a step down in competition against the in-state Football Championship Subdivision opponent, but Clemson’s run game showed its first real signs of life early in the new season as part of the Tigers’ 49-3 rout of South Carolina State. By the time it was over, Clemson tallied 242 rushing yards, ripping off 6.7 yards per carry.

After Clemson coach Dabo Swinney and offensive coordinator Tony Elliott spent much of the week voicing regret about abandoning the running game too early in the Tigers’ 10-3 loss to Georgia last week — Clemson’s backs combined for just nine carries on a night the Tigers netted just 2 rushing yards — Clemson reversed course Saturday.

Shipley led the way with 80 yards and a pair of touchdowns on just eight carries while Pace followed with 68 on seven, but the Tigers got numerous players carries early and often.

Clemson dialed up 10 more runs on its next three possessions (out of 16 total plays), all of which ended in touchdowns. Uiagalelei got his number called in mostly short-yardage situations with two of his five totes going for scores.

Freshman quarterback Will Taylor, who’s doubling as the Tigers’ primary punt returner, even got in on the action, carrying three times for 15 yards as part of a red-zone package. It would’ve been more had his 19-yard touchdown run on Clemson’s second possession counted, but an illegal block by receiver Joseph Ngata negated the score.

Clemson ran the ball 36 times with 21 of those attempts coming in the first two quarters when most of the Tigers’ primary backs were still getting reps and helping the Tigers build a 35-3 halftime lead. By the time Shipley dashed into the end zone from 13 yards out for Clemson’s first score of the third quarter, Clemson had already racked up 190 rushing yards. The Tigers were averaging well over 7 yards a tote until later in the game.

Clemson did it behind different combinations up front as the Tigers began starting rotating offensive linemen early, and it helped the Tigers turn in a more balanced effort offensively. They finished with 504 yards, and all but two of their touchdowns were of the rushing variety.
How Saturday’s showing carries over to next week’s ACC opener against Georgia Tech remains to be seen, but it was a bounceback performance that figures to double as a boost of confidence for a running game that needed it.

Football season has finally arrived. Time to represent your Tigers and show your stripes!

Clemson takes care of business in home opener

Clemson walloped FCS-foe South Carolina State 49-3 at Memorial Stadium in its first home game in front of a full-capacity crowd since November 2019. The sixth-ranked Tigers’ win secured a program record 18 th straight win in a home opener which …

Clemson walloped FCS-foe South Carolina State 49-3 at Memorial Stadium in its first home game in front of a full-capacity crowd since November 2019.

The sixth-ranked Tigers’ win secured a program record 18th straight win in a home opener which bested a 17-year streak from 1944-60 under late head coach Frank Howard.

They also improved to a perfect 36-0 record against FCS opponents since the division’s inception in 1978.

Clemson relied on a steady rushing attack in the lopsided victory with 242 yards rushing on 37 carries with five touchdowns on the ground. The Tigers finished the game with 504 yards of total offense.

Will Shipley led the way on the ground with eight carries for 80 yards and his first two touchdowns in a Clemson uniform. The freshman scored on a seven-yard carry in the first quarter and added a 13-yard touchdown run in the third quarter.

Kobe Pace added seven carries for 68 yards and a touchdown.

The Tigers (1-1) opened the game with four touchdowns in the first quarter to jump out to an early 28-0 lead. It marked the first time in head coach Dabo Swinney’s tenure a Clemson team scored three touchdowns on the ground in a frame.

Clemson added another touchdown in the second quarter on a five-yard run by D.J. Uiagalelei to extend its lead to 35-0 with 6:43 to play in the first half.

South Carolina State eliminated the possibility for a shutout after recovering a fumble by Mikey Dukes at the Clemson 36 yard-line gave it a short field in the second quarter.

The Bulldogs (0-2) capped off a six play 26-yard drive with a 27-yard field goal by Dyson Roberts to cut the score to 35-3 with 0:19 remaining in the second quarter.

Uiagalelei showed improvement from a rough start in the season opener against Georgia. He completed 14-of-24 passes for 181 yards a touchdown and an interception.

The lone passing touchdown by the sophomore was an 11-yard toss Justyn Ross that put the Tigers up 28-0 with 2:21 to play in the first quarter.

Uiagalelei added five carries for 23 yards and a pair of touchdowns on the ground from four and five yards out respectively.

Defensively Clemson built onto its already stellar reputation as it held the Bulldogs to 235 total yards in the contest.

The Tigers also kept S.C. State out of the end zone and have not surrendered a touchdown through the first two games this season.

Clemson returns to action next Saturday as it hosts Georgia Tech (1-1) at Memorial Stadium.

Football season has finally arrived. Time to represent your Tigers and show your stripes!

Shipley shows out in Death Valley debut

Will Shipley showed out in his first game at Death Valley. Playing in front of home fans for the first time, the true freshman running back rushed for 80 yards on eight carries and scored two touchdowns on the ground during Clemson’s 49-3 victory …

Will Shipley showed out in his first game at Death Valley.

Playing in front of home fans for the first time, the true freshman running back rushed for 80 yards on eight carries and scored two touchdowns on the ground during Clemson’s 49-3 victory over South Carolina State at Memorial Stadium on Saturday.

A former five-star recruit ranked as the nation’s No. 1 all-purpose back in the 2021 class, Shipley displayed the talent that made him so highly touted when he enrolled at Clemson in January.

The Weddington, N.C., native and former Weddington High School standout found paydirt midway through the opening quarter when he reached the end zone on a 7-yard rushing touchdown with 7:20 left in the first frame to give the Tigers a 14-0 lead.

Shipley later extended Clemson’s lead to 42-3 with a 13-yard rushing score less than six minutes into the third quarter at the 9:39 mark.

The former Gatorade Player of the Year in North Carolina, Shipley rushed for 4,173 yards on 503 carries (8.3 yards per rush) and racked up 1,411 receiving yards on 84 catches (16.8-yard average) during his career at Weddington High.

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The 411 on Clemson’s runaway win over South Carolina State

Clemson bounced back from its Week 1 loss to Georgia with an emphatic 49-3 win over South Carolina State on Saturday at Memorial Stadium. Here are four sequences that went a long way toward deciding the game, a turning point and a telling stat from …

Clemson bounced back from its Week 1 loss to Georgia with an emphatic 49-3 win over South Carolina State on Saturday at Memorial Stadium. Here are four sequences that went a long way toward deciding the game, a turning point and a telling stat from the Tigers’ win.

  • Clemson didn’t waste any time scoring its first touchdown of the season. The Tigers took the opening kickoff and marched 72 yards on nine plays with most of those coming on the ground. The Tigers ran the ball on four of their first five plays and covered 56 yards on the drive with the running game. Quarterback D.J. Uiagalalei scored on a 4-yard keeper to cap the scoring drive, setting the tone for the rest of the night. 
  • After a quick three-and-out forced by Clemson’s defense on South Carolina State’s first possession, the Tigers used some different options to quickly find the end zone again with a seven-play, 67-yard drive. Justyn Ross made a long catch early in the possession and found himself all alone in the end zone, but Uiagalelei overthrew him. But the Tigers brought in freshman Will Taylor at quarterback in the red zone to give the Bulldogs’ defense a different look and eventually reached paydirt on Will Shipley’s 7-yard scamper to push their lead to 14-0.
  • Another three-and-out for South Carolina State late in the first quarter forced the Bulldogs to punt yet again. Dyson Roberts sent a 40-yard kick to Will Taylor at Clemson’s 33, but the freshman flipped the field with a nifty 51-yard return along the sideline. The Tigers took over at South Carolina’s State 11 following a penalty on the Bulldogs at the end of the play, and Uiagalelei extended Clemson’s lead to 28-0 on the next play with an 11-yard scoring toss to Ross, his first touchdown grab of the season.
  • After the teams traded turnovers midway through the second quarter, Clemson maintained possession on its seventh drive and pieced together its longest scoring march at the time after starting at its own 16. The Tigers needed just nine plays to cover the 84 yards thanks in large part to a 38-yard catch and run by Joseph Ngata that moved Clemson into the red zone. Four plays later, Uiagalelei capped Clemson’s fifth scoring drive of the half with a 5-yard keeper to put Clemson well in control, 35-0, with 6 minutes, 43 seconds left before halftime.

Turning point

It’s hard to pick a momentum-shifting moment in this one given Clemson never really relinquished it against an inferior opponent, but the Tigers kept their collective foot on South Carolina State’s neck with a fast second-half start. After Ngata recovered his own fumble on the Tigers’ first offensive play of the third quarter, the Tigers found the end zone yet again seven plays later on Shipley’s 13-yard touchdown run to make it 42-3, a score that officially ended the day for Uiagalelei and some of Clemson’s other first-teamers.

Telling stat: 242

That’s how many rushing yards Clemson racked up, a stark contrast from what happened a week earlier. Yes, the level of competition wasn’t great, but the Tigers ran it 21 times in the first half alone — 12 more than their backs combined for all game against Georgia — while four different backs got touches before halftime, an indication of just how committed Dabo Swinney and offensive coordinator Tony Elliott were to working on the ground game. Clemson didn’t really have to be balanced to beat a team it was simply superior to physically, but after that 2-yard showing against Georgia, it’s a morale booster for the running game, something the Tigers will need in order to stay multi-dimensional against ACC foes starting next week with Georgia Tech.

Football season has finally arrived. Time to represent your Tigers and show your stripes!

Bart Boatwright’s Halftime Photo Gallery: Clemson’s return to normal

Clemson returned to a full-capacity crowd at Memorial Stadium in Clemson on Saturday and responded by throttling South Carolina State 35-3 through one half of play. The Tigers scored four touchdowns in the first quarter, including three rushing …

Clemson returned to a full-capacity crowd at Memorial Stadium in Clemson on Saturday and responded by throttling South Carolina State 35-3 through one half of play.

The Tigers scored four touchdowns in the first quarter, including three rushing touchdowns in the frame for the first time in head coach Dabo Swinney’s tenure.

Bart Boatwright also returned to the sideline for his photo gallery from Clemson’s home opener in Death Valley.

Check out his first half photo gallery for The Clemson Insider here: LINK.

Football season has finally arrived. Time to represent your Tigers and show your stripes!

Clemson jumps out to big halftime lead

Clemson jumped out to a 35-3 halftime lead over South Carolina State in its return to a full-capacity Memorial Stadium in Clemson. The sixth-ranked Tigers responded with plenty of offense with 315 total yards including 177 yards on the ground after …

Clemson jumped out to a 35-3 halftime lead over South Carolina State in its return to a full-capacity Memorial Stadium in Clemson.

The sixth-ranked Tigers responded with plenty of offense with 315 total yards including 177 yards on the ground after a defensive slugfest in the season opener against Georgia last week.

On the first play from scrimmage, Lyn-J Dixon was able to surpass Clemson’s two-yard rushing total from the week prior with a 16-yard carry.

Dixon returned to action after head coach Dabo Swinney held him out for the first half of Clemson’s season opener for a violation of team rules.

The elder statesman of the Tigers’ running backs got the start out of the backfield on Saturday but split time with Kobe Pace, Will Shipley, Darien Rencher and Michel Dukes in the first half.

The Tigers got back to the basics in the first half. In the first quarter alone, Clemson rushed for 121 yards on 15 carries with three rushing touchdowns. At halftime, Clemson averaged 8.4 yards per carry.

As far as the defense was concerned, Clemson’s unit rose to the occasion for the second week in a row.

Clemson held S.C. State to 123 yards of offense. The Bulldogs were no match for Clemson’s starting defense, which played the bulk of the first half. 

After jumping out to a 28-0 lead, things started to slow down for the Tigers.

D.J. Uiagalelei made an errant throw that was nearly intercepted with the team backed up in its own territory.

On the ensuing drive, reserve sophomore linebacker R.J. Mickens intercepted SC State quarterback Corey Fields. Clemson had a short field with the end zone in sight, only for Uiaglelei to be intercepted on an overthrown screen pass, intended for Rencher, the super senior running back. 

Uiagalelei looked shaky at times, made some errant throws, including missing Justyn Ross multiple times in the end zone for should-be touchdowns.

He did make up for it by converting with Ross for an 11-yard touchdown.

All in all, Uiagalelei completed 11 of 21 passes for 138 yards with a touchdown and interception. He also had 16 rushing yards on three carries and two scores, both of them coming when he called his own number in the red zone.

Uiagalelei wasn’t the only quarterback to receive some carries. As a wildcat quarterback, true freshman Will Taylor had 14 yards on two carries. Though, the Dutch Fork product’s most explosive play came on special teams on a 51-yard punt return.

It wasn’t perfect. There were two miscues — Uiagalelei’s interception and Dukes’ fumble — still, the Tigers showed what they needed to and headed into the locker room with a 32-point lead.

B.T. Potter was just short of a 58-yard field goal as time expired on the first half.

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Uiagalelei does it again

D.J. Uiagalelei continued the onslaught of South Carolina State with a five yard touchdown run to give sixth-ranked Clemson a 35-0 lead with 6:43 to play in the first half. The scoring drive covered 84 yards in six plays and 2:22. The drive started …

D.J. Uiagalelei continued the onslaught of South Carolina State with a five yard touchdown run to give sixth-ranked Clemson a 35-0 lead with 6:43 to play in the first half. The scoring drive covered 84 yards in six plays and 2:22.

The drive started with back-to-back explosive plays including a 30-yard run by Will Shipley on the opening play and a 38 yard completion from Uiagalelei to Joseph Ngata that gave the Tigers the ball at the Bulldogs’ 16 yard line.

Three plays later Uiagalelei capped off the drive with his second rushing touchdown of the afternoon.

The scoring drive covered 72 yards in nine plays and 3:22 before Uiagalelei powered in for the score. The Tigers ran the ball six times on the series with four different rushers in Lyn-J Dixon, Kobe Pace, Will Shipley and Uiagalelei.

Football season has finally arrived. Time to represent your Tigers and show your stripes!

Freshman scores his first touchdown for Tigers

Will Shipley ran seven yards for his first touchdown in a Clemson uniform and put his team up 14-0 over South Carolina State with 7:20 to play in the first quarter. The drive covered 67 yards in six plays and 2:49. D.J. Uiagalelei flipped the field …

Will Shipley ran seven yards for his first touchdown in a Clemson uniform and put his team up 14-0 over South Carolina State with 7:20 to play in the first quarter. The drive covered 67 yards in six plays and 2:49.

D.J. Uiagalelei flipped the field on 2nd-and-2 with a 36 yard completion to Justyn Ross that put the Tigers at the S.C. State 24. Will Taylor entered the game in a wild-cat formation and ran into the end zone from 19 yards out but a block in the back negated the score.

Three plays later Shipley ran in for a seven yard touchdown to put Clemson up 14-0.

Tigers get into the end zone

Clemson scored its first touchdown of the 2021 season on a four yard run by D.J. Uiagalelei to give it a 7-0 lead over South Carolina State with 11:38 to play in the first quarter. The scoring drive covered 72 yards in nine plays and 3:22 before …

Clemson scored its first touchdown of the 2021 season on a four yard run by D.J. Uiagalelei to give it a 7-0 lead over South Carolina State with 11:38 to play in the first quarter.

The scoring drive covered 72 yards in nine plays and 3:22 before Uiagalelei powered in for the score. The Tigers ran the ball six times on the series with four different rushers in Lyn-J Dixon, Kobe Pace, Will Shipley and Uiagalelei.

Football season has finally arrived. Time to represent your Tigers and show your stripes!

Clemson has more work to do to evaluate this position

The competition among Lyn-J Dixon, Kobe Pace and Will Shipley leading up to last week’s season opener against Georgia was so tight that Clemson coach Dabo Swinney was adamant all three running backs would play this season. Swinney’s confidence in …

The competition among Lyn-J Dixon, Kobe Pace and Will Shipley leading up to last week’s season opener against Georgia was so tight that Clemson coach Dabo Swinney was adamant all three running backs would play this season.

Swinney’s confidence in the trio made him go as far as to say at one point that he didn’t care which one took the field first with the rest of the Tigers’ offense. Turns out that was Pace, but true to his word, all three logged snaps in Clemson’s 10-3 loss.

So what did Swinney think of their performances? Well…

“We just didn’t ever really give them a chance,” Swinney said. “Those guys are going to be outstanding, but it’s kind of hard to evaluate them.”

Life after Travis Etienne got off to a rough — and mostly absent — start for Clemson’s primary backs, who combined for just 24 rushing yards against the nation’s top run defense two years running. Some missed blocking assignments along the offensive line cost the Tigers opportunities for a big gainer here and there on the ground, but the real issue in evaluating the backs came with a lack of touches.

Dixon wasn’t available for the first half because of what Swinney called “team rules.” But even with Pace and Shipley around the whole time, the combined carries for the backs were in the single digits. Pace went for 2 yards on Clemson’s first offensive snap but got just three carries the rest of the way. Shipley touched the ball just four times while Dixon’s lone went for 10 yards once he made an appearance in the second half.

Even against a defense as stout as Georgia’s has proven to be, Swinney and offensive coordinator Tony Elliott voiced regret this week about abandoning the run as quickly as the Tigers did. Rarely even giving the Bulldogs a look in the running game put more of the pressure on D.J. Uiagalelei and the offensive line to hold up against Georgia’s relentless pass rush, which didn’t go well. 

Uiagalelei was sacked seven times, and the Tigers finished with just 180 total yards in their first game without a touchdown in nearly four years.

“I think there’s nobody that evaluates themselves more than the coaches themselves, that’s for sure,” Swinney said. “We made some mistakes, too. You look back, and there are a couple of things we should’ve hung in there on the run game a little bit more and didn’t do it. That’s definitely something we can improve on.”

Shipley also had an 11-yard catch and run to convert a third down in the first half after lining up out wide while Pace caught one pass for 6 yards. But Swinney said some mental breakdowns between the two prevented them from potentially being a bigger part of the passing game out of the backfield.

Swinney said the youngsters held up well in pass protection, but there were also times when they should’ve been out in more route concepts based on certain looks the offense was getting from Georgia’s defense.

“Sometimes we have protections where they’re kind of the Secret Service agent,” Swinney said. “They’re there for backup. And we’ve got free-release protections where they get out, but when we’ve got some check-release things, they overcomplicated things. They should’ve been out in the structure, especially against all the cover-2 (zone defense) and two-man stuff.

“The ball needs to find the back, but they’re in the backfield blocking nobody when they need to be in the route concept. So that’s where they’ve got to improve, and they will.”

The Tigers plan to get a bigger sample size out of their backs when Clemson returns to action Saturday in its home opener against South Carolina State. Kickoff from Memorial Stadium is set for 5 p.m.

Football season has finally arrived. Time to represent your Tigers and show your stripes!