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Clemson’s shocking loss came at just the right time

- By Paul Newberry Associated Press National Writer

NEW ORLEANS — It seems so long ago but no less surreal.

Turns out, a shocking loss was just what Clemson needed to make a run at its second straight national championsh­ip.

The top-ranked Tigers (12-1) undoubtedl­y have the worst defeat among the four teams in the College Football Playoff, really one of the worst for any team in the Top 25.

When Syracuse stunned Clemson 27-24 on a Friday night in mid-October, it was the last win of the season for the Orange. They finished with a five-game skid and a 4-8 record.

Clemson, of course, didn’t lose again. The Tigers had only one close call the rest of the way, romping to the Atlantic Coast Conference title and setting up a New Year’s night rematch against No. 4 Alabama in the Sugar Bowl semifinal game.

“That told us if we don’t bring it for one game, it doesn’t matter who we’re playing,” Clemson defensive tackle Christian Wilkins said Thursday. “We can definitely get beat. That was really a time for us to grow up.”

Spurred on by a raucous home crowd, Syracuse shook off a fumble that was returned for a 63-yard touchdown to play an almost perfect game in every other aspect. Eric Dungey threw three touchdown passes as the Orange piled up 28 first downs, a 440-317 advantage in total yards and a nearly 10-minute edge in time of possession.

The Tigers were largely doomed when quarterbac­k Kelly Bryant, already slowed by an injured ankle, was knocked out of the game with a concussion in the final minute of the first half, forcing redshirt freshman Zerrick Cooper to go the rest of the way.

“We had a lot of young guys in terms of experience,” Wilkins said. “Not a lot of guys who had played, who had that specific situation happen to them, having to come from behind on the road in a pretty hostile environmen­t.”

In the playoff era, it’s certainly not unusual for the eventual national champion to overcome a surprising defeat. A year ago, Clemson had to bounce back from

a home loss to Pittsburgh. In 2015, Alabama finished No. 1 after losing at home to Ole Miss. In 2014, Ohio State took the first playoff title despite a home loss to a Virginia Tech team that finished 7-6.

With the regular season now at 12 games, not to mention conference championsh­ip games and a playoff system that requires two more wins, a slip-up along the way is almost impossible to avoid. When coach Dabo Swinney entered the locker room that night in Syracuse, he assured his team that all their goals — an ACC title, a national championsh­ip — were still within reach.

Team leaders such as Wilkins reiterated that message in the days and weeks to come.

“We’ll be fine,” he told his teammates. “We had a loss last year and were still able to accomplish great things. Don’t lose confidence in us. We’re still a really good team. We just had one bad night.”

But make no mistake, it was a really bad night.

So bad, in fact, that Clemson is trying to pull off an accomplish­ment that hasn’t been done in 40 years — win a national title after losing to a sub-.500 team during the regular season.

In 1977, Notre Dame bounced back from a 20-13 loss at Ole Miss (which would go on to finish 5-6) by winning its final 10 games, culminatin­g with a 38-10 blowout of then-No. 1 Texas in the Cotton Bowl.

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 ?? Tyler Kaufman / AP ?? Clemson players attend a practice session for the upcoming Sugar Bowl against Alabama in New Orleans.
Tyler Kaufman / AP Clemson players attend a practice session for the upcoming Sugar Bowl against Alabama in New Orleans.

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