Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Clemson’s success turns tide in ACC

Tigers put conference on a level field for football with the neighborin­g SEC

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CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Dabo Swinney has built Clemson into an every-year power with regular College Football Playoff appearance­s and a recent national championsh­ip. None of that could’ve happened without first asserting unquestion­ed control of the ACC.

The Tigers open practice this week as the overwhelmi­ng favorite to become the first team to win four consecutiv­e ACC titles since Florida State’s romp through the 1990s. They also could become only the second power conference team to win four league championsh­ip games in a row.

“I didn’t sit back and say, ‘Well we’re Clemson and we’re going to go out there and everybody’s going to try to catch us,’” Swinney said during the ACC Kickoff preseason media days. “But I definitely envisioned Clemson being one of the best programs in the country, and I envisioned this league growing and becoming one of the most dominant leagues in the country.”

Indeed, the Tigers’ rise helped the ACC climb onto level footing with its touted SEC neighbor.

It wasn’t long ago that Clemson was chasing Florida State in the ACC’s Atlantic Division. The Seminoles won three ACC titles in a row from 2012-14 while going 26-1 against league teams — 3-0 against Clemson — and winning a national championsh­ip in the final BCS season of 2013. But the Tigers followed that with their own impressive run, giving the league a sustained stretch of top-flight success while putting the ACC alongside the SEC as the only leagues to reach all four playoffs.

Clemson is 25-2 against ACC teams the past three seasons, with 18 wins by double-digit margins.

The losses at home against Pitt in 2016 and at Syracuse last year came by a combined four points. And the 38-3 rout of then-No. 7 Miami last season made Clemson only the fifth team to win at least three consecutiv­e power conference championsh­ip games since the SEC held the first in 1992, a group featuring FSU, Alabama (SEC) and Oklahoma (Big 12).

Another December crown in Charlotte would allow Clemson to join the Florida teams in the SEC (1993-96) as the only power-conference schools to win four league title games in a row.

“It all goes together: Their budgets are elite, their facilities are elite and they’re able to recruit and attract the elite players,” said Boston College coach Steve Addazio, whose Eagles face the Tigers annually in the Atlantic.

Clemson is on the verge of the ACC’s longest reign since Bobby Bowden’s Seminoles arrived in 1992 and won at least a share of the title for nine consecutiv­e seasons, going 70-2 in the nineteam league.

John Swofford got a close look at those Seminoles, first as North Carolina’s athletics director before becoming ACC commission­er in 1997. He told The Associated Press that Clemson’s run “does compare favorably” because the current 14-team league “is considerab­ly better.”

“I don’t think there’s anything wrong with a league having a dominant team when that dominant team is without question a premier team nationally,” Swofford said.

But offensive lineman Mitch Hyatt and defensive lineman Clelin Ferrell dismissed questions about a gap between Clemson and everyone else.

“I wouldn’t say that,” Ferrell said. “You can talk about that as far as the past years, it might be a big gap. This 2018 team hasn’t done anything.”

Besides, Hyatt noted, there have been close calls. There was a hang-on-for-dear-life home win against Louisville and eventual Heisman Trophy winner Lamar Jackson in 2016. There were one-possession margins in ACC title games against North Carolina in 2015 and Virginia Tech in 2016. And N.C. State played Clemson within a touchdown the past two years.

“It’s just executing in the final 2 minutes,” Wolfpack coach Dave Doeren said. “We missed a kick two years ago and had a couple of penalties [last year], and that’s us, that’s not them. So we’ve got to execute under pressure better.”

But Doeren’s observatio­n underlines another way the Tigers are equipped to fend off challenger­s. There’s a big-game-tested core from playoff routs of Oklahoma and Ohio State along with unforgetta­ble title-game thrillers against Alabama, with the Crimson Tide winning in 2015 and the Tigers claiming the rematch before Alabama won Round 3 in the semifinals last season.

Swinney isn’t changing his “you get what you earn” approach, either, even as the Tigers keep bringing trophies home.

“A big thing is coach Swinney told us not to beat ourselves,” Hyatt said. “We have the talent to win. We have the players, we have the coaches — we have everything we need to win.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? A bona fide power? Dabo Swinney’s Clemson Tigers are 25-2 against ACC teams in the past three seasons, with 18 of those wins by double-digit margins.
Associated Press A bona fide power? Dabo Swinney’s Clemson Tigers are 25-2 against ACC teams in the past three seasons, with 18 of those wins by double-digit margins.
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