Las Vegas Review-Journal

Both teams healthy for ACC title clash

Irish beat Tigers in 2OT in November

- By Pete Iacobelli

No. 2 Notre Dame and No. 4 Clemson expect to be rested and at full strength when they meet Saturday for the Atlantic Coast Conference championsh­ip.

That wasn’t the case when they first played a month ago, and it adds even more intrigue to the much-anticipate­d rematch.

The Fighting Irish (10-0,

9-0 ACC; No. 2 CFP) rallied to defeat the Tigers 47-40 in a drama-filled, double-overtime showdown last month.

This time, though, Clemson (9-1, 8-1; No. 3 CFP) will have several players back, including Heisman Trophy contender Trevor Lawrence. The quarterbac­k missed the first matchup after testing positive for COVID-19.

Notre Dame has had to shuffle its talented and massive offensive line the past few weeks because of injuries.

Right guard Tommy Kraemer was the ACC offensive lineman of the week after Notre Dame beat Boston College on Nov. 14, but missed the following week against North Carolina and saw limited action against Syracuse in the regular-season finale.

Defensive lineman Jayson Adamilola wasn’t on the field for the Fighting Irish against Boston College or North Carolina, but practiced all last week.

The extra week off before the championsh­ip game has helped the Irish recover, coach Brian Kelly said. After talking with medical personnel, the coach said “we’re in a green light situation” with those players.

Clemson also is giving the green light to linebacker James Skalski, a senior considered the heart and soul of the defense who had groin surgery in October and missed the Notre Dame game.

Along with Skalski, Clemson’s defense will have starting linebacker Mike Jones Jr. and defensive tackle Tyler Davis in the lineup; neither played the first time against Notre Dame.

Tigers coach Dabo Swinney said the presence of his starters should bring more consistenc­y to the defense that gave up 518 yards in their first meeting.

“Hopefully, we can do a better job of not giving up some of the big plays,” Swinney said.

That’ll be a challenge if Irish quarterbac­k Ian Book plays as well as he did the first time.

The Tigers led 33-26 in the final two minutes when Book connected on a 53-yard pass to Avery Davis to the Clemson 4. Book found Davis again three plays later for the tying TD with 22 seconds left.

Book threw for 310 yards and a touchdown. He also ran for 67 yards.

Clemson’s DJ Uiagalelei passed for a freshman school record 439 yards in the loss.

Lawrence will be a steadying presence, said Clemson offensive coordinato­r Tony Elliott.

The QB returned to the field Nov. 28 against Pittsburgh and has been dominant in his two appearance­s since, throwing for 598 yards and three touchdowns in victories over Pittsburgh and Virginia Tech.

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