Oct. 1, 2004
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Richardson in Starting Lineup
Clemson first-year freshman Barry Richardson will start at offensive tackle
against Virginia on Thursday, October 7 in Charlottesville. Head Coach Tommy
Bowden made the announcement on Tuesday, September 28. Bowden also said there
would be three other position changes on offense in his starting lineup. Curtis
Baham will be a starter as a wide receiver in the three receiver set over Kelvin
Grant, Duane Coleman will start at running back over Reggie Merriweather and
Nathan Bennett will start over Roman Fry at a guard position.
Richardson will become the first Clemson first-year freshman offensive lineman
to start a game since Stacy Long started at offensive tackle against Georgia
in 1986. Long, who was inducted into the Clemson Hall of Fame on September 4,
didn't last long in that game against the Bulldogs, as he played just
seven snaps in the entire game, but Clemson did gain the victory, 31-28.
Since freshman eligibility returned to college football for the 1972 season,
only three first-year freshman offensive linemen have started a game for the
Tigers. In addition to Long, James Farr started at center against Rice in the
opening game of 1980 and Joe Bostic started the last two games of the 1975 season
at offensive tackle (Maryland and South Carolina). Thus, Richardson will be
just the fourth to start since 1972.
Richardson's ascension to the starting lineup is not that big a surprise
because he has played 74 snaps over the last two games, 38 at Texas A&M
and 36 at Florida State. He played the entire second half in Tallahassee and
received high grades for his performance from line coach Brad Scott. Richardson
did not allow a sack against the Seminoles and had an 81 percent technique grade.
Richardson has played 93 snaps for the season.
Richardson, 6-7 and 350 pounds, came to Clemson from Wando High School in Mount
Pleasant, SC where he played for Coach Bob Hayes. The 18-year-old graduated
a year early from high school, the first scholarship player to leave high school
a year early to come to Clemson. His brother Nate Richardson, is 6-4 and 285
pounds and is a starting tackle at South Carolina State as a red-shirt freshman.
Believe it or not, both men lived in the same room while growing up.
Clemson On Thursday Night
This will be the sixth Clemson appearance on ESPN's Thursday Night College
Football package. The Tigers are 0-5 in their previous appearances, including
0-4 under Tommy Bowden. Clemson lost to Georgia Tech in the 1998 season under
Tommy West, then lost at Virginia Tech in a Thursday in Blacksburg Tommy Bowden's
first year (1999). Clemson lost a pair of Thursday night games in 2002, at Florida
State and at home against NC State. Clemson lost by just two against ACC MVP
Phillip Rivers and NC State in Raleigh, 17-15.
It should be pointed out that Clemson has been the underdog in all five Thursday
evening games and four of the five losses have been to teams that have been
ranked in the top 25 of the AP poll. The 1998 Georgia Tech team finished with
a 10-2 record and was ranked ninth in the final poll. The 1999 Virginia Tech
team finished 11-1 and was ranked second. Florida State was ranked 11th entering
the Thursday evening game in Tallahassee in 2002 and NC State was ranked ninth
that same year entering the game. That 2002 NC State team finished with a school
record 11 wins. Last year's NC State team was not ranked, but finished
8-5.
Playing on Thursday is not new for Clemson historically. Clemson and South
Carolina used to play on "Big Thursday" each year between 1909 and
1959. The game was played the Thursday of State Fair week in Columbia. Clemson
has not won a game played on a Thursday since 1963 when Clemson defeated South
Carolina on Thanksgiving Day. That game was moved from the previous Saturday
due to the death of President John Kennedy.
Clemson has played 121 games on Thursday in its history and the Tigers are 52-59-10
overall on that day. Clemson is 500-321-30 on Saturdays in history, a 60.6 percent
winning mark.
Tommy Bowden is 39-27 in his career at Clemson. That breaks down to 37-20 on
Saturdays (65 percent) and 2-7 on the other six days of the week (22 percent).
The two non-Saturday wins under Bowden were in bowl games, including last year's
Peach Bowl win over Tennessee, which was played on a Friday.
Clemson on ESPN Thursday Night
Games
| Year |
W |
L |
CU-Opp |
Opponent |
| 1998 |
|
L |
21-24 |
Georgia Tech (22) |
| 1999 |
|
L |
11-31 |
at Virginia Tech (19) |
| 2002 |
|
L |
31-48 |
at Florida State (11) |
| 2002 |
|
L |
6-38 |
NC State (9) |
| 2003 |
|
L |
15-17 |
at NC State |
| 2004 |
|
|
|
at Virginia (12) |
Clemson Record by Day
| Day |
Record |
pct |
| Sunday |
1-0 |
1.000 |
| Monday |
7-8 |
.467 |
| Tuesday |
1-2 |
.333 |
| Wednesday |
7-3 |
.700 |
| Thursday |
52-59-10 |
.471 |
| Friday |
27-18-5 |
.590 |
| Saturday |
500-321-30 |
.606 |
| Totals |
595-411-45 |
.588 |
Miller's Return Service
One of Clemson's most popular players on the 1978 Clemson team that finished
with an 11-1 record and number-six final national ranking was Willie Jordan.
He handled both punt and kickoff returns for the Tigers in addition to serving
as a starting cornerback. That year he printed up his own tee-shirts that read
"Willie's Return Service". He ranked fourth in the nation
in punt returns that year and averaged 21 yards per kickoff return.
Twenty-six years later Justin Miller is having an even bigger impact on the
Clemson return game. In fact, he is establishing standards that have not been
seen previously. Miller set an NCAA record for kickoff return yards in a single
game when he gained 282 yards in that category at Florida State on September
25. He shattered the previous mark (248 kickoff return yards on 10 returns by
Tyrone Watley of Iowa State vs. Nebraska in 1997) by 34 yards. Miller had the
record broken by his fourth return.
Miller's day included a record tying two kickoff returns for touchdown
to tie another NCAA record. His first quarter 97-yarder gave Clemson a 7-3 lead
at the end of the first quarter and his 86-yarder off a Florida State free kick
after a safety brought Clemson within 24-22 in the third period. Miller became
the first ACC player in history to have two kickoff returns for touchdown in
the same game and the 10th different player (11th occasions) to have two kick
returns for touchdown in the same game. Rocket Ismail of Notre Dame (1988-90)
is the only player to do it twice.
Miller already has three kick returns for touchdowns this year, the two kickoffs
against Florida State and a 69-yard punt return against Wake Forest in the season
opener. Entering the games of October 2, Miller stood third in the nation in
kickoff returns with a 36.4 yard average. He now has a career average of 31.3,
which is not only a Clemson record, but an ACC record.
Miller has five career kick returns for touchdowns, three kickoff and two punt
returns. The NCAA record for a career is eight, set by Cliff Branch of Colorado
in 1970 and 1971. Miller has a 12.7 average on punt returns to go with his 36.4
average on kickoff returns. He is attempting to become the first Clemson player
to rank in the top 25 in both categories in the same season since Antwuan Wyatt
did it in 1995.
Miller is just 207 yards short of Hamilton's career record of 1552 kickoff
return yards. He has a 3.2 yards per return lead over Dickie Harris for the
kickoff return average mark, a mark that was set in 1970
Clemson Career Leaders in Yards/Kickoff
Return
| Rk |
Player |
Years |
No |
Yds |
Avg |
| 1. |
Justin Miller |
2002-04 |
43 |
1346 |
31.3 |
| 2. |
Joe Henderson |
1987-89 |
30 |
802 |
27.6 |
| 3. |
Derrick Hamilton |
2001-03 |
58 |
1552 |
26.8 |
| 4. |
Tony Horne |
1994-97 |
30 |
795 |
26.5 |
| 5. |
Terrance Roulhac |
1983-86 |
42 |
1108 |
26.4 |
| 6. |
Doug Thomas |
1987-90 |
23 |
582 |
25.3 |
Clemson Career Leaders in Career
Kickoff Return Yards
| Rk |
Player |
Years |
No |
Avg. |
Yards |
| 1. |
Derrick Hamilton |
2001-03 |
58 |
26.8 |
1552 |
| 2. |
Andre Humphrey |
1992-95 |
68 |
21.9 |
1486 |
| 3. |
Ray Williams |
1983-86 |
66 |
20.5 |
1350 |
| 4. |
Justin Miller |
2002-04 |
43 |
31.3 |
1346 |
| 5. |
Terrence Roulhac |
1983-86 |
42 |
26.4 |
1108 |
ACC Career Leaders in Kickoff
Return Average
| Rk |
Player |
School |
Years |
Avg |
| 1. |
Justin Miller |
Clemson |
2002-04 |
31.3 |
| 2. |
Dickie Harris |
S. Carolina |
1969-70 |
28.1 |
| 3. |
Derrick Hamilton |
Clemson |
2001-03 |
26.7 |
| 4. |
Ralph Stringer |
NC State |
1973-77 |
25.5 |
| 5. |
John Stone |
Wake Forest |
1998-01 |
25.4 |
| 6. |
Dez White |
Georgia Tech |
1997-99 |
24.7 |
| 7. |
Leroy Gallman |
Duke |
1990-93 |
24.7 |
(Min of 40 attempts)
Clemson Kickoff Returns for touchdown
(Chronological Order)
| Player |
Opponent |
Year |
Yds |
| John Maxwell |
Cumberland |
1903 |
100 |
| Bobby Gage |
Duquesne |
1947 |
89 |
| Bill Mathis |
Georgia Tech |
1959 |
99 |
| Hal Davis |
Georgia Tech |
1962 |
98 |
| Joe Henderson |
Georgia Tech |
1987 |
95 |
| Doug Thomas |
Long Beach State |
1990 |
98 |
| Doug Thomas |
Maryland |
1990 |
98 |
| Derrick Hamilton |
Maryland |
2001 |
100 |
| Justin Miller |
NC State |
2002 |
80 |
| Derrick Hamilton |
North Carolina |
2003 |
100 |
| Justin Miller |
Florida State |
2004 |
97 |
| Justin Miller |
Florida State |
2004 |
86 |
Kickoff Returns for touchdown under
Tommy Bowden in orange
Miller's Kick Returns for
touchdown
| Year |
Site |
Opponent |
Kick or Punt |
Distance |
| 2002 |
H |
NC State |
Kickoff |
80 |
| 2003 |
H |
Duke |
Punt |
63 |
| 2004 |
H |
Wake Forest |
Punt |
69 |
| 2004 |
A |
Florida State |
Kickoff |
97 |
| 2004 |
A |
Florida State |
Kickoff |
86 |
Miller Leads ACC in All-Purpose Running
There are many statistical oddities about Justin Miller's season so far.
He is currently first in the ACC in all-purpose yardage with a 137-yard average.
That is an amazing stat considering he has not played a snap on offense yet
this year and obviously has not rushing or receiving yards. He is the only player
in the top 64 of the latest NCAA all-purpose running yards without a yard rushing
or receiving. No defensive player has ever led the ACC in all-purpose running.
Additionally, Miller actually leads the Clemson team in scoring with 18 points.
He also has the team lead in touchdowns, and it is safe to say he is the only
defensive player in the nation who leads his team in scoring.
The junior from Owensboro, KY has also been a leader on defense where he has
28 tackles to rank fifth on the team ad has five passes broken up to rank tied
for second. He is still looking for his first interception of the season. He
has 10 for his career, including eight during his freshman year when he was
fifth in the nation in interceptions per game. His diverse accomplishments are
also reflected in the ACC player of the week selections. He was named ACC Defensive
Back of the Week for his performance in the opener against Wake Forest, then
won special teams honors for his efforts against Florida State. He is the only
player to win in two categories so far this year.
Tigers Face Top 15 Teams Next Two Weeks
Clemson is in the process of facing top 12 teams on the road in consecutive
games. In the Associated Press poll of September 19, Florida State was ranked
8th prior to its game with Clemson, 11th by USA Today. In the September 26 poll,
Virginia was ranked 12th with a 4-0 record. The Cavs were also 12th by USA Today.
Clemson has not had to play consecutive games against top 12 opponents since
the 1983 season when the Tigers defeated a 10th ranked North Carolina team 16-3
and an 11th ranked Maryland team, 52-27, in November. This will be the first
time Clemson has played consecutive games against top 12 teams on the road since
1966 when the Tigers played at #9 Georgia Tech and at #4 Alabama in consecutive
non-conference games.
Clemson has had to play consecutive games against teams ranked in the top dozen
in the nation just four times in its history. In addition to the 1983 listing,
the other seasons were in 1966 (vs. #9 Georgia Tech and #4 Alabama), 1963 (vs.
#4 Oklahoma and #9 Georgia Tech), and 1955 (vs. #2 Maryland and #12 Auburn).
Clemson did not win any of those games.
Here are some other notes about Clemson's difficult schedule in 2004:
·The Virginia game is Clemson's third straight road game, the first
time Clemson has played three straight road games since 1994.
·Clemson will return home on October 16 to face Utah State for the first
time in history. It will be Clemson's first home game in 35 days. This
is the longest stretch without a home game during the regular season since 1984.
·The Tigers then will go back on the road to face first-year ACC school
Miami (FL) in the Orange Bowl on November 6. Clemson has not played Miami (FL)
since 1956, but the Tigers have played in their stadium. Clemson won the 1982
Orange Bowl, by a 22-15 score over Nebraska to win the 1981 National Championship
at the Orange Bowl. It will be Clemson's first game in that facility since
that triumph.
Clemson Special Teams Productive
Clemson has been solid in terms of special teams this year. Here are some facts
about Clemson's special teams performance so far in 2004:
·Clemson is sixth in the nation in kickoff returns with a 31.7 average.
The Tigers are second in the ACC, with Virginia, the next opponent, the only
ACC team with a higher ranking in that category.
·Clemson has blocked two punts this year, one by Chansi Stuckey against
Wake Forest and one by C.J. Gaddis against Florida State. Both blocked punts
resulted in safeties.
·Clemson special teams have scored 22 points so far this season on three
returns for touchdown (all by Justin Miller) and the four points off two safeties.
·Punter Cole Chason is fourth in the ACC in punting with a 41.2 average,
up from his 38.5 average of last year.
·The average start for Clemson opponents after a kickoff is the 22-yard
line. Jad Dean has had nine touchbacks in 16 kickoffs and 13 of the 16 the opposition
has started at its own 20 or worse. With Clemson's kickoff return prowess,
the Tigers have a 14-yard advantage in average starting field position after
kickoffs (22 vs. the 36), through the first four games.
Coleman Returns to Hometown
Clemson starting defensive tackle Eric Coleman is a native of Charlottesville,
VA and will be returning to his home city this week. Coleman attended Charlottesville
High School, where he played tight end and defensive end, then played one season
(2000) at Fork Union Prep, which is also located in Virginia. He had 15 sacks
and 113 tackles at Fork Union.
Coleman has 11 tackles, including two tackles for loss so far this season as
a starter in every game. He has played 219 snaps, more than any other Clemson
defensive lineman. He had his best game against Georgia Tech when he had four
tackles, including two tackles for loss. This is the first year Coleman has
been a starter, but he had played 677 plays over his first three years. In 2003
he had three tackles in 25 plays as a reserve in Clemson's overtime victory
against Virginia, and in 2002 had two tackles in 21 snaps in a five-point loss
to the Cavaliers.
Clemson 7-2 vs. Al Groh
Clemson has a 7-2 overall record against Al Groh coached teams. The Tigers were
6-0 against him when he coached at Wake Forest and are 1-2 since he took over
at Virginia, his alma mater, in 2001. All three of the Clemson vs. Virginia
games since he took over have been very close, as they have been decided by
five points or less each time. In fact, two of the games have been decided with
one second or less remaining.
The 2001 game at Clemson was won by Virginia 26-24 when Billy McMullen caught
a one-yard touchdown pass with one second left. Virginia won the 2002 contest
by a 22-17 score, then last year the Tigers won in overtime 30-27 on a touchdown
catch by Kevin Youngblood from Charlie Whitehurst on the last play of the first
overtime.
Moving the ball on offense has not been a problem for Clemson against the Cavaliers
since Groh has been at Virginia. For the three games Clemson has averaged 27
first downs, 188 yards per game rushing, 256 per game passing for 444 yards
of total offense. Clemson has averaged 5.4 yards per play and completed 68 percent
of its passes in those three games combined.
Clemson Offense vs. Virginia
under Al Groh
| Category |
2001 |
2002 |
2003 |
Avg |
| First Downs |
29 |
25 |
28 |
27.3 |
| Rushing |
51-182 |
40-189 |
446-194 |
46-188 |
| Passing |
25-34 |
23-33 |
28-45 |
25-37 |
| Comp. % |
.735 |
.697 |
.622 |
.679 |
| Passing Yards |
251 |
223 |
294 |
256 |
| Total Offense |
433 |
412 |
488 |
444 |
| Yards/Play |
5.1 |
5.6 |
5.4 |
5.4 |
Kelly Has Played Well vs. Virginia
Yusef Kelly needs just 27 yards to reach 1000 for his career and it would be
appropriate if he reached the milestone against Virginia . Kelly has had success
against Virginia in his Clemson career, gaining 160 yards in 42 carries in two
games against the Cavaliers.
As a sophomore in 2002 at Charlottesville, he was Clemson's top rusher
with 72 yards in 17 attempts for the 52 snaps he played. He also had a career
high tying 3 receptions for 26 yards. Last year, he was again Clemson's
top rusher with 88 yards in 25 carries in 45 total snaps. It was his only start
of the season. He also scored his only touchdown of the 2003 season in that
overtime victory.
Kelly was hampered by injury last year and he played just 77 snaps for the
season. As stated above 45 of the 77 carries came against the Cavaliers. Kelly
started the first two games, then was suspended for the Texas A&M game for
a violation of team rules. He traveled to Florida State, but did not play. For
his Clemson career, Kelly has 239 carries for 973 yards and 12 touchdowns. He
has more yards rushing and more rushing touchdowns than any active Tiger.
The native of Walterboro high school already has his undergraduate degree in
marketing.
Hill Among National Leaders Again
Clemson linebacker LeRoy Hill is picking up where he left off last season. During
2003, Hill ranked second in the nation in tackles for loss with 27 and he was
also among the top 30 in quarterback sacks with eight in 13 games. This season,
Hill already has 10 tackles for loss, including four quarterback sacks. He ranks
seventh in the nation in tackles for loss per game and is 10th in quarterback
sacks. Manny Lawson of NC State actually leads the nation in sacks and is fourth
in tackles for loss so that will be an interesting matchup of defensive players
when NC State comes to Clemson on October 30.
Hill was the ACC Defensive Lineman of the week in Clemson's loss to Georgia
Tech when he had a season high 14 tackles, including three tackles for loss.
He had 13 stops at Florida State, including three tackles for loss and a sack.
Tye Hill (no relation) is another Clemson defender in the national rankings
this week. The junior cornerback has seven passes defensed to rank 13th in the
nation in that area.
Turnovers a Telling Stat
From a statistical standpoint it is easy to answer the question, "Why
does Clemson have a 1-3 record?" Entering games of October 2, Clemson
had committed 14 turnovers on offense, while forcing just two on defense. That
is a --12 turnover margin in just four games, meaning Clemson ranks last
in the nation in turnover margin, 117 out of 117 teams. Clemson ranks 109th
in turnovers forced with just two (only Tulane and SMU are lower) and the Tigers
are tied for last in committing turnovers with the 14, the same figure at Penn
State, Miami (OH) and Oregon State.
In terms of points off turnover so far this year the Tigers are being outscored
28-0 in that area. Clemson has lost the turnover margin stat in every game this
year, including the 5-0 differential at Florida State on September 25.
When Tommy Bowden came to Clemson in 1999, his teams were noted for their excellence
in that statistics. For the 1997 and 1998 seasons when he was the head coach
at Tulane, Bowden's teams finished fifth in the nation in turnover margin.
Prior to this year, his five Clemson teams were 30-9 when at least breaking
even in terms of turnover margin and 8-15 when they lost the turnover margin
stat. In 2003, when Clemson won nine games, the Tigers were 6-0 when they won
the turnover margin statistic. His 2000 team that also won nine games, had a
6-1 record when winning that stat.
Running backs Averaging 5.5 Yards Per Carry
Tommy Bowden has been looking for a breakaway running back since he became the
Clemson coach in 1999. In his first three years, Travis Zachery was the leader
and had 1027 yards in 2000. Zachery went on to become Clemson's career
leader in all-purpose yardage, a record that was broken by Derrick Hamilton
in 2003. But Zachery's longest career run was just 52 yards.
Entering the Georgia Tech game , a Clemson running back had just three runs
of 50 yards or more under Tommy Bowden, two 52-yard runs by Zachery, and a 50-yard
run by Duane Coleman last year against North Carolina. Coleman suffered a broken
foot in the preseason (August 10) and has not played yet this year. In the first
game of this year, Clemson's longest run by a running back was just 12
yards.
But, that changed against Georgia Tech when running backs Reggie Merriweather
and Kyle Browning both had runs of 54 yards or more. Merriweather had a 62-yard
run with 8:19 left, then Browning had a 54-yard run with 3:18 remaining. So,
Bowden went over five years without a run of more than 52 yards by a running
back, then had two five minutes apart.
Merriweather's run was the longest by a Clemson running back since the
final game of the 1996 season when Raymond Priester had a 65-yard touchdown
run against South Carolina in Death Valley. Browning and Merriweather combined
for 170 yards in just 13 carries, a 13.1 average against Georgia Tech. They
had 15-79 at Texas A&M.
For the season, Clemson running backs are averaging 5.53 yards per carry, by
far the best in Bowden's six seasons at Clemson.
Clemson Running Backs yards/Carry
Averages Under Bowden
| Year |
Att |
Yds |
Yds/A |
| 1999 |
285 |
1197 |
4.20 |
| 2000 |
340 |
1581 |
4.65 |
| 2001 |
260 |
1194 |
4.59 |
| 2002 |
318 |
1341 |
4.22 |
| 2003 |
330 |
1475 |
4.47 |
| 2004 |
70 |
387 |
5.53 |
Clemson vs. Virginia Series Notes
·Clemson holds a commanding 35-7-1 lead in the series with Virginia, but
the Cavaliers hold 7-6-1 advantage since 1990, including victories in two of
the last three games.
·Clemson won the first 29 games of the series before Virginia cracked
the win column with a 20-7 victory in Charlottesville in 1990. Ironically, Clemson's
first win in the history of the series (in 1955) was also by a 20-7 score.
·Clemson's 29-game winning streak between 1955-90 is tied for the
fourth longest winning streak in NCAA history for one team over another. The
record is 40 in a row held by Notre Dame over Navy, a streak that is still active
heading into the meeting between the two schools this year on October 16.
·Virginia has gained its most success against Clemson when the game has
been in September, an example of the Cavaliers traditional good start to a season.
Virginia has celebrated five of its seven wins over the Tigers in the month
of September, including its trip to Death Valley in 2001, a game it won with
just one second left. Virginia is 5-1 against Clemson in the month of September
since 1990, but just 2-5-1 in October and November since that year.
·Overall, Clemson is 25-2-1 against Virginia in October and November all-time,
but just 10-5 against the Cavs in September. Clemson is 19-3-1 against Virginia
in Death Valley and 15-4 in Charlottesville. Clemson won in Richmond in 1971,
32-15, the only neutral site game in the history of the series.
·The only tie in the series took place in 1991, a 20-20 score at Clemson
that was also played on homecoming. The Tigers had 511 yards of total offense
in that game and did not win, the only game in Clemson history in which Clemson
picked up at least 500 yards, yet did not win the game.
·Clemson is 3-2 against Virginia under Tommy Bowden. Bowden picked up
his first win as a Clemson head coach in 1999 against George Welsh and the Cavaliers,
33-14 in a game at Clemson. Clemson led that game 33-0, 35 minutes into the
game. In 2000, Woody Dantzler led the Tigers to victory with a dazzling performance.
Dantzler rushed for 220 yards and passed for 154 leading Clemson to a 31-10
victory.
·The two teams have been ACC rivals since that first meeting in 1955,
but the two teams have not played every year since the league was formed in
1953. The two teams did not play in 1961, 1962, 1967, 1968, 1975, and 1976.
·Clemson has had two upset victories over top 15 Virginia teams in Charlottesville
in recent history. In 1992 Clemson defeated a 10th ranked Virginia team 29-28
when Clemson overcame a 28-point deficit to gain victory. That is the largest
deficit overcome to gain victory in Clemson history. Four years later Tommy
West's Tigers upset a 15th ranked Virginia team by a 24-16 score behind
the rushing of Kelton Dunnican and Raymond Priester, who both had at least 120
yards rushing in the contest.
Last Season vs. Virginia
Clemson 30, Virginia 27
Clemson won a 30-27 overtime thriller against #24 (USA Today) Virginia when
Kevin Youngblood snagged a four-yard fade pattern for the game-winning touchdown.
The play was eerily similar (same endzone) to the game-winner two years prior
in Death Valley, when Cavalier receiver Billy McMullen was the hero. The Tigers'
upset was the first against a ranked opponent since a 47-44 overtime win at
#9 Georgia Tech in 2001. The win also upped Clemson's overtime record to 3-0
all-time.
Clemson opened the scoring on its first offensive possession. The Tigers came
out with some trickery, as Derrick Hamilton took a reverse 52 yards to move
into Virginia territory. Aaron Hunt came on to connect on a 26-yard field goal
and give the Tigers the early lead. Clemson struck again in the second quarter,
as it put together a 13-play drive that ended with Whitehurst finding Hamilton
for a 19-yard touchdown. Defensively, Clemson had its way with Virginia in the
first half. Clemson outgained Virginia 272-89, yet only led 10-0 at the break.
The Tigers were unable to capitalize on two other red-zone chances.
Virginia came out with a head of steam in the second half, led by 2002 ACC
Player-of-the-Year Matt Schaub. He led the Cavaliers on a 12-play, 60-yard scoring
drive to cut the lead to 10-7. He completed 10 of the 12 passes on the drive.
The Cavaliers got the ball back moments later in great field position, thanks
to a 15-yard kick catching interference on the Tigers. Schaub found Patrick
Estes wide open in the endzone for a five-yard touchdown four plays later, giving
Virginia its first lead at 14-10.
Schaub avoided trouble on the next Cavalier possession after the Tigers were
penalized for a costly face mask on third down. Clemson appeared to have Schaub
stopped near the goal line. Instead, the drive continued and Schaub marched
the Cavaliers down the field. However, Jamaal Fudge made one of the biggest
plays of the game when he jarred a ball loose from Heath Miller in the endzone,
breaking up a touchdown catch. Virginia settled for a field goal.
Following a series of punts, Clemson got the ball in good field position. Whitehurst
was pressured on the first play of the possession and fumbled, but the ball
was picked up alertly by Duane Coleman and he ran for a 13-yard net gain. On
the very next play, the Tigers returned to the same trick play they used to
open the game. But this time, Hamilton threw his first pass of the season. He
found Youngblood down the left sideline, and he made it all the way to the one-yard
line. Whitehurst ran it in from the one to tie the score for Clemson.
Clemson took a 24-17 lead late in the game after Yusef Kelly pounded the ball
into the endzone from 12 yards out. Virginia responded on the ensuing possession,
as Alvin Pearman scored with 57 seconds left to send the game to overtime.
In overtime, the Tigers forced the Cavaliers to settle for a field goal after
LeRoy Hill stuffed Pearman for no gain on third-and-one. That left the door
open for Whitehurst, who led Clemson to victory. Coleman made his second big
play of the afternoon when he caught a pass from Whitehurst and scampered 12
yards for a key first down. Two plays later, Whitehurst lofted a ball into the
endzone and Youngblood used his height advantage to deliver the game-winning
score.
Whitehurst, who entered the game with a foot injury, performed well. He was
27-44 for 265 yards and two scores. Youngblood led the receiving corps with
nine catches for 87 yards. Clemson rushed for 194 yards, its season-high through
the first six games. A primary reason was the return of Kelly to the starting
lineup. He had 88 yards rushing. Defensively, Hill had a monster game for the
Tigers. He had 11 tackles, including four behind the line of scrimmage and a
sack. Fudge paced the defense with 20 tackles, to go along with his key pass
breakup of Miller.
Clemson Has Come Back History Against Virginia
Clemson has come back from a deficit of 13 points or more to win seven times
in its history and four of the victories have come against Virginia. Two of
those wins have taken place in Charlottesville and two in Clemson.
Clemson's greatest comeback in history took place at Virginia in 1992
when it overcame a 28-0 deficit with 32 minutes left to win 29-28. Louis Solomon,
now a high school coach in New Jersey, led that comeback with an option offense.
His 64-yard run just before halftime gave Clemson some momentum going into the
locker room at halftime. Nelson Welch booted a 32-yard field goal with 55 seconds
left to provide the winning margin. Virginia was undefeated and ranked 10th
in the nation heading into that game. That remains the greatest comeback in
ACC history involving two conference teams.
Clemson's greatest comeback in Death Valley also took place against Virginia.
Clemson trailed Virginia by 17 points at home in 1966, but came back to win
40-35. That was the first game that Howard's Rock was present in Death
Valley. Coincidence?
Clemson also overcame a 14-point deficit to Virginia in 1980 to win 27-24 in
Charlottesville. Bill Smith, now on the Clemson Board of Trustees, returned
a block punt for a touchdown to provide a key play in the victory. Obed Ariri
then booted a 52-yard field goal with six seconds left to win the game.
Clemson also overcame a 13-point deficit in 1973 to win 32-27.
Clemson's Greatest Comebacks
to win or Tie
| Date |
Opponent |
St |
Down |
Def |
Final |
| 10-10-92 |
Virginia |
A |
0-28 |
28 |
29-28 |
| 10-21-00 |
North Carolina |
A |
0-17 |
17 |
38-24 |
| 9-24-66 |
Virginia |
H |
18-35 |
17 |
40-35 |
| 10-11-80 |
Virginia |
A |
10-24 |
14 |
27-24 |
| 11-17-62 |
Maryland |
A |
0-14 |
14 |
17-14 |
| 9-26-53 |
Boston College |
A |
0-14 |
14 |
#14-14 |
| 11-2-02 |
Duke |
A |
10-24 |
14 |
34-31 |
| 10-13-73 |
Virginia |
H |
0-13 |
13 |
32-27 |
| 10-16-76 |
Duke |
H |
0-12 |
12 |
#18-18 |
| 9-29-01 |
Georgia Tech |
A |
7-19 |
12 |
47-44 (OT) |
| 11-22-97 |
South Carolina |
A |
3-14 |
11 |
47-21 |
| 10-20-90 |
NC. State |
A |
3-14 |
11 |
24-17 |
| 11-23-85 |
South Carolina |
A |
3-14 |
11 |
24-17 |
| 11-20-93 |
South Carolina |
A |
3-13 |
10 |
16-13 |
| 9-25-93 |
Georgia Tech |
H |
3-13 |
10 |
16-13 |
| 10-12-91 |
Virginia |
H |
7-17 |
10 |
#20-20 |
| 11-17-79 |
Notre Dame |
A |
0-10 |
10 |
16-10 |
| 10-5-74 |
Georgia |
H |
0-10 |
10 |
28-24 |
| 10-4-69 |
Georgia Tech |
A |
0-10 |
10 |
21-10 |
| 10-24-38 |
Tulane |
A |
0-10 |
10 |
13-10 |
# Denotes tie
Clemson's Highest Ranked Wins
When Clemson defeated third-ranked Florida State last year at Clemson it was
the highest ranked team Clemson has beaten in its history. Clemson has 12 wins
over top 10 teams in its history and three have been recorded by head coach
Tommy Bowden. In addition to the win over Florida State, Clemson's win
over sixth-ranked Tennessee in the 2004 Gator Bowl was the fourth highest ranked
team Clemson has beaten. Bowden and the Tigers also won over a ninth-ranked
Georgia Tech team in 2001.
Prior to last year, the highest ranked teams Clemson had beaten were #4 ranked
Georgia and #4 Nebraska, both in the 1981 season. Regardless of site, Clemson
has 12 wins over top 10 teams in its history, four in Death Valley four on an
opponent's home field and four at a neutral site (bowl game).
Clemson has had 25 wins over top 25 teams since 1986 and has had at least one
ranked win in 15 of the last 17 seasons. That includes last year's three
wins. That was the longest winning streak against ranked teams since the Tigers
won three in a row between 1990-91. The record is five straight wins over ranked
teams from 1988-89.
Clemson's Highest Ranked
Wins
| Year |
Opponent |
Site |
Rk |
Score |
| 2003 |
Florida State |
Clemson, SC |
3 |
26-10 |
| 1981 |
Georgia |
Clemson, SC |
4 |
13-3 |
| 1981 |
Nebraska |
Miami, FL |
4 |
22-15 |
| 2003 |
Tennessee |
Atlanta, GA |
6 |
27-14 |
| 1959 |
Texas Christian |
Houston, TX |
7 |
23-7 |
| 1981 |
North Carolina |
Chapel Hill, NC |
8 |
10-8 |
| 2001 |
Georgia Tech |
Atlanta, GA |
9 |
#47-44 |
| 1967 |
NC State |
Clemson, SC |
10 |
14-6 |
| 1991 |
NC State |
Clemson, SC |
10 |
29-19 |
| 1983 |
North Carolina |
Clemson, SC |
10 |
16-3 |
| 1988 |
Oklahoma |
Orlando, FL |
10 |
13-6 |
| 1992 |
Virginia |
Charlottesville, VA |
10 |
29-28 |
| 1983 |
Maryland |
Clemson, SC |
11 |
52-27 |
| 1978 |
Maryland |
College Park, MD |
11 |
28-24 |
#Overtime
Tommy Bowden coached wins in bold face
Ranked Wins on the Road
Clemson has 53 wins over Associated Press top 25 teams over the years and 16
of them have taken place on an opponent's home field. The highest ranked
team Clemson has beaten on its home field is a victory over an eighth-ranked
North Carolina team in Chapel Hill in 1981, Clemson's national championship
season.
The second highest ranked road win is the 47-44 overtime victory against #9
Georgia Tech in 2001, a victory that was recorded under current head coach Tommy
Bowden. To document such victories, Clemson has constructed a Graveyard at the
entrance to the practice field and a tombstone has been erected for each victory
over a ranked team on the road.
Two of the 16 wins over ranked teams on the road took place at Virginia, in
1992 and 1996.
Clemson Ranked Road Wins
| Date |
Score |
Opp Rk |
Opponent |
| 11-13-48 |
21-14 |
19 |
Wake Forest |
| 10-28-50 |
13-12 |
17 |
Wake Forest |
| 1-1-51 |
15-14 |
15 |
Miami (FL) |
| 9-19-59 |
20-18 |
12 |
North Carolina |
| 9-17-77 |
7-6 |
17 |
Georgia |
| 11-18-78 |
28-24 |
11 |
Maryland |
| 11-8-81 |
10-8 |
8 |
North Carolina |
| 11-13-82 |
24-22 |
18 |
Maryland |
| 11-5-83 |
16-3 |
10 |
North Carolina |
| 9-20-86 |
31-28 |
14 |
Georgia |
| 9-9-89 |
34-23 |
16 |
Florida State |
| 10-10-92 |
29-28 |
10 |
Virginia |
| 11-5-94 |
28-17 |
19 |
North Carolina |
| 11-8-96 |
24-16 |
15 |
Virginia |
| 9-13-97 |
19-17 |
25 |
NC State |
| 9-29-01 |
47-44 |
9 |
Georgia Tech |
Whitehurst Moving up Career Marks
Clemson quarterback Charlie Whitehurst became Clemson's career leader
in completions in the Texas A&M game. He had 20 completions in that contest
(third consecutive game with exactly 20) and now has 481 for his career.
He needs just 80 passing yards at Virginia to become Clemson's career
leader in that category. He now has 5958 and the record is 6037 by Woody Dantzler.
His touchdown pass total of 36 is now second in school history and six away
from breaking Dantzler's mark in that category. Not bad for just 26 total
games played, 22 as a starter. Whitehurst owns 33 Clemson records.
Clemson Career Leaders in Completions
(Minimum of 150 attempts)
| Rk |
Player |
Years |
Att |
Yards |
Comp. |
| 1. |
Charlie Whitehurst |
2002-03 |
784 |
5958 |
481 |
| 2. |
Woodrow Dantzler |
1998-01 |
796 |
6037 |
460 |
| 3. |
Nealon Greene |
1994-97 |
805 |
5719 |
458 |
| 4. |
Rodney Willaims |
1985-88 |
717 |
4647 |
333 |
| 5. |
Tommy Kendrick |
1969-71 |
644 |
3893 |
303 |
Clemson Career Leaders in Passing Yardage
(Minimum of 150 attempts)
Game To Be Broadcast On XM Satelite Radio
Thursday night's Clemson-Virginia game will also be broadcast on XM Satelite Radio. Tune in to ACC Channel 180 beginning at 7:15 to listen to the Virginia pre-game show, Kickoff is at 7:45 PM.