Clemson, Iowa St. fall short of expectations
ORLANDO, Fla. — When Iowa State and Clemson meet in Wednesday’s Cheez-it Bowl, it’ll be out with the old for the Cyclones and in with the new for Tigers.
Iowa State, a disappointing 7-5 after starting the season ranked No. 7 in the Associated Press Top 25, will say goodbye to 17 players who have made at least 21 starts under coach Matt Campbell. The group includes record-setting running back Breece Hall, who is planning to attend the game but won’t play as he prepares for the NFL draft.
Clemson similarly fell short of expectations after opening the season at No. 3 and seeing a six-year streak of reaching the College Football Playoff come to an end. For the Tigers, Brandon Streeter will make his debut in the Cheez-it Bowl
as the Tigers’ offensive coordinator, while co-defensive coordinators Wes Goodwin and Mickey Conn will call the shots on the other side of the ball.
Tigers’ long-time defensive and offensive coordinators Brent Venables and Tony Elliott — key cogs in Clemson’s runs to national titles in 2016 and ’18 — left
for head coaching jobs with Oklahoma and Virginia, respectively.
Tigers coach Dabo Swinney called his decision to promote from within a “nobrainer.”
Clemson’s 2021 struggles were somewhat washed away by a stirring five-game winning streak to close the season.
“Having that comfort level of being around the people that I’m around and then them having trust in me gives me a lot of confidence,” said Streeter, a former Tigers quarterback who has been on the coaching staff since 2014. “I’ve just got to do the best I possibly can. I’m excited about attacking the opportunity.”
Streeter previously called plays for the Tigers in the 2020 College Football Playoff after Elliot contracted COVID-19 and had to miss Clemson’s 44-28 loss to Ohio State. The Tigers’ offense mostly sputtered that game, and many of those same struggles carried over into this season.
Sophomore quarterback
D.J. Uiagalelei battled consistency issues, playing most of this season with a sprained posterior cruciate ligament in his right knee. But the QB said his familiarity with Streeter has smoothed out the transition to a new coordinator.
“Coach Streeter is the exact same person he was when he recruited me, when he was my quarterback coach and when he was the passing game coordinator,” Uiagalelei said. “Now, as offensive coordinator, he’s the exact same person. Nothing has changed. I’m just excited for the new opportunity to work with Coach Streeter.”
Uiagalelei may still be trying to find his footing as
Clemson’s quarterback, but Iowa State senior Brock Purdy has already cemented his legacy as the most successful signal-caller in school history.
In addition to being 30-16 as a starter with seven fourth-quarter comeback victories, Purdy enters his final college game with 11,966 passing yards with 80 career touchdowns.
“I’m trying to enjoy all the relationships and moments with my teammates this whole week being here,” said Purdy, whose 73.1 percent completion percentage this season ranked fourth in the nation. “It’s been special. It’s definitely going to be sad when the fourth quarter ends and that’s my last time in cardinal and gold.”
Iowa State thrived in defensive coordinator Jon Heacock’s 3-3-5 defensive alignment primarily because of the experience on that side of the ball.