The Capital

Clemson using chemistry, poise to power 9-0 start

- By Pete Iacobelli

CLEMSON, S.C. — Clemson coach Brad Brownell waited at the Toronto airport after the 13th-ranked Tigers’ latest win Saturday, watching nine of his players acting like a middle-school team, smiling, laughing and bonding despite a delayed flight home.

“That’s part of our secret sauce,” Brownell said.

The secret is out these days as Clemson (9-0) is off to its best start since opening 16-0 in 2008-09 and among seven undefeated teams left in college basketball.

“Every time you start a season, there’s a new voice in the room,” Brownell said. “They’ve done a good job of listening to each other, trusting each other and playing well.”

Especially away from home where the Tigers have already won five times, including resume building victories at then-No. 23 Alabama (85-77), at ACC rival Pitt (79-70) and in Canada last Saturday against TCU (74-66). The travels continue this weekend at Memphis, where Clemson hopes to continue its perfect start.

The success has the Tigers riding high and digging in even more.

“After wins, guys are in the next day, lifting, dancing, with good vibes,” forward Ian Schieffeli­n said. “We know every game is going to be a challenge, especially on the road. But we believe in each other.”

Clemson players believed in each other last season while going 23-11 and posting their most ever ACC victories in a season in tying for third in the league at 14-6. But stumbles in the early season shuffled them out of the NCAA Tournament.

The snub lingered into the NIT, where top-seeded Clemson was beaten at home in the first round by Morehead State to close a strong year with a disappoint­ing finish.

Schieffeli­n and the veterans like leading scorer PJ Hall and senior point guard Chase Hunter don’t want to leave the question of their NCAA worth in anyone’s hands but their own. And they haven’t in the quick start, standing 11th in the latest NET rankings with three Quad 1 victories after having just four such wins all of last season.

“It was a lot of fuel during the summer,” Schieffeli­n said. “Not wanting that feeling ever again.”

Brownell said midway through the summer his message changed to relying on each other and not the past.

The Tigers have called on those memories to pull out victories they might not have in years past. They trailed UAB on Nov. 11 before Hunter’s two foul shots with 3.6 seconds left lifted them to a 77-76 win. They trailed Davidson by 18 points a game later, yet pulled out a 68-65 victory.

Clemson was down to SEC opponents in the Crimson Tide and South Carolina before rallying for victories.

Hall leads the team with 20.5 points a game. Second is Syracuse transfer Joe Girard III, who is averaging 14.4 points and has 25 3-pointers on a team that struggled at times with its outside shooting.

Brownell likes his team’s resiliency and poise, no matter how far behind its been in games.

“I do think we have a group that loves each other and cares for each other deeply,” said Brownell, who has won a program best 250 games in 14 seasons as Clemson coach. “I think we have really good human beings on our team.”

The blend has the Tigers clicking at a perfect pace.

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