New York Post

Trevor back to get what eluded him

- By ZACH BRAZILLER zbraziller@nypost.com

One by one, Trevor Lawrence approached each teammate with the same message.

“We’ll be right back here next year,” Clemson’s superstar quarterbac­k promised them.

This was after the first defeat of his college career, a humbling experience for a player only used to winning. But in the losing locker room following the one-sided national championsh­ip game loss to LSU, Lawrence was doing his best to lift the spirits of those around him.

“It would have been cool to have the opportunit­y to not lose a game in college, but I think some things are necessary for you to grow,” the long-haired, 6-foot-6 quarterbac­k said Tuesday over Zoom, as preparatio­n continued for Friday night’s College Football Playoff semifinal in the Sugar Bowl. “You’ve got to face a little bit of adversity and sometimes you’re a little bit blinded by success if you don’t have any hiccups along the way.

“I think for us [Clemson] and for me personally, it was good for us to not win that [championsh­ip] game in a lot of ways.”

Lawrence did more than just talk about getting back to the playoff. He spent the offseason working on his weaknesses, most notably improving his footwork with personal quarterbac­k coach Ron Veal. When there was doubt whether the season would be played, he was one of the big voices in the #WeWantToPl­ay movement across the sport. And once the season hit, he was back to his same dominant self, producing 29 touchdowns and completing a career-best 69.2 percent of his passes, and going 9-0 as the Clemson starter. If not for missing two games due to a positive COVID-19 test, he likely would be in line to become Clemson’s first Heisman Trophy winner, though he still was announced as a finalist.

“I would say he’s arguably one of the great college

football quarterbac­ks of all time based on his production and winning games,” Ohio State defensive coordinato­r Kerry Combs said.

His 34-1 record as a starter, three playoff berths and three ACC championsh­ips certainly support that statement.

Lawrence took the sport by storm in his first trip to the playoff, throwing for 674 yards and six touchdowns in a pair of blowout victories over Notre Dame and Alabama, capping a magical true-freshman season. Last year under immense pressure and expectatio­ns, he struggled somewhat with his consistenc­y, and completed just 51.4 percent of his passes in the playoff. He did, however, lead Clemson back from a 16-0 deficit in the semifinals against Ohio State, running for a careerbest 107 yards.

This will likely be his final go-round, barring a stunning decision to return to school for his senior year. He is expected to be the first pick in the draft in April as the consensus top quarterbac­k prospect since Andrew Luck.

There will be instant pressure, a significan­t amount of hype attached to his right arm before he throws an NFL pass. Of course, the same could be said of Lawrence upon arriving at Clemson. He was the top-ranked prospect in the country and needed just three games until coach Dabo Swinney benched popular starter Kelly Bryant in favor of Lawrence.

“There’s not a moment too big for Trevor Lawrence,” Swinney said.

There have been a lot of comparison­s between Lawrence and Texans Pro Bowl quarterbac­k Deshaun Watson, who led Clemson to its first national championsh­ip in 35 years back in January 2017. Watson was so pivotal to Clemson getting over the hump, as the player who made the Tigers into a national powerhouse. Lawrence has taken the program to another level.

“There will be a lot of people,” Swinney said, “trying to live up to the standard that he set as a [college] quarterbac­k for a long time in this game.”

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 ?? AP (2) ?? FINISH THE JOB: A year ago, Trevor Lawrence trudged off the field after his only college loss (right), but he has Clemson back in the playoff, hoping to finish the job this time.
AP (2) FINISH THE JOB: A year ago, Trevor Lawrence trudged off the field after his only college loss (right), but he has Clemson back in the playoff, hoping to finish the job this time.

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