The Columbus Dispatch

Freshman QB will start for Clemson with Lawrence out

- Pete Iacobelli

Clemson football coach Dabo Swinney always planned for talented freshman quarterbac­k DJ Uiagalelei to take over for Trevor Lawrence, just not this weekend against Boston College.

That’s the situation for the Tigers, however, after Lawrence tested positive for COVID-19. He is out against the Eagles (4-2, 3-2 Atlantic Coast Conference) and his status going forward against No. 4 Notre Dame on Nov. 7 is unclear since Lawrence must sit out at least 10 days.

So ready or not, Uiagalelei (oo-eeAhn-ga-leh-lay) gets the chance to show his skills as Clemson’s starter.

Uiagalelei was a highly rated passer – ranked the No. 2 overall college prospect by Rivals.com – and is expected to be the next standout Clemson quarterbac­k. Swinney hopes Uiagalelei has the kind of success at Clemson that Lawrence is enjoying as the leading Heisman Trophy candidate and likely top pick in the 2021 NFL draft.

Uiagalelei, 6-foot-4, 250-pounder from Inland Empire, California, near Los Angeles, enrolled in January and went through nine spring practices before the coronaviru­s pandemic shut down all college athletic activities in March.

He’s shown a big arm and a power run game in five appearance­s, mostly after Lawrence and the Tigers (6-0, 5-0) have had games in hand.

“I just want to be mentally prepared and do my job,” Uiagalelei said earlier this month. “Just to get live bullets and get playing time. It’s just super cool.”

He’ll get plenty of playing time Saturday, sooner than even he expected.

Uiagalelei had scholarshi­p offers from a host of top 25 teams including Alabama, Georgia, Ohio State and Oklahoma. He picked the Tigers, he said, partly because of Lawrence and the chance to shadow him for a season.

“Just to see what makes him great,” Uiagalelei said. “Seeing every day the way he works, the different sacrifices he makes on the football field, off the football field and how he organizes his time. There are a lot of things I take from him to try and be as great a player as he is.”

In addition to Lawrence’s talent, part of what makes him great is the talent around him, including another Heisman candidate in running back Travis Etiennne. And that should also help Uiagalelei.

Etienne, the two-time reigning ACC player of the year, has 522 yards and eight touchdowns this season.

Uiagalelei missed the Georgia Tech game with a bruised shoulder. He returned last week against Syracuse, completing one of his three passes in the fourth quarter.

Behind Uiagalelei is last year’s backup, redshirt freshman Taisun Phommachan­h, from Bridgeport, Connecticu­t. Phommachan­h played in three games last year.

The only quarterbac­k on Clemson’s roster to throw a touchdown pass other than Lawrence is walk-on Hunter Helms, a fourth-stringer who had two scoring throws in a 73-7 blowout at Georgia Tech two weeks ago.

Lawrence has been exceptiona­l this season. He’s thrown for Acc-leading 1,833 yards and 17 touchdowns with only two intercepti­ons. Lawrence is 31-1 as a starter in college, his lone loss coming to LSU in the national championsh­ip game in January.

Swinney and Lawrence say he has mild symptoms from the virus and has isolated since first feeling ill. Swinney said no other players are in danger of catching the virus due to contact with Lawrence. The Tigers were to test again Friday (part of a thrice-a-week regimen) and any players positive will be on the unavailabl­e list against Boston College.

The 10-day isolation, if counted back from Wednesday’s testing session, would end in time for Lawrence to play the Fighting Irish.

On Tuesday, Lawrence said the Tigers had done well to stay safe amid the ongoing pandemic.

“We do a good job here staying our social distance, six feet, in our meeting rooms wearing masks, all those things to where we’re not close contacts, we’re not around each other, so we couldn’t transmit the virus,” Lawrence said.

The hardest part, Lawrence said Thursday, was missing a game with his teammates. He said he’ll be watching and rooting for the Tigers “while I wait for the opportunit­y to rejoin the team.”

 ?? EN RUINARD/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Clemson’s Trevor Lawrence waves to fans after a game against Syracuse.
EN RUINARD/USA TODAY SPORTS Clemson’s Trevor Lawrence waves to fans after a game against Syracuse.

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