The Denver Post

Tigers had 15-0 in early sights

- By Pete Iacobelli

clemson, s.c.» Clemson quarterbac­k Deshaun Watson had nearly wrapped up a summertime appearance when someone asked if the Tigers could win a national championsh­ip.

“No doubt about it,” Watson said with a grin. “15-0.”

Fifteen? Are there even that many games?

In the College Football Playoff era, the Tigers are trying to break new ground. Watson and the top-ranked Tigers are trying to make history against No. 2 Alabama on Monday night as the first team with 15 wins, hoping to finish off a goal set down as the ultimate target long ago.

Sure, there have been other undefeated teams. Clemson’s last national championsh­ip team, in 1981, finished with a 12-0 record. Florida State was 14-0 in its national championsh­ip year two years ago. With the playoff in the mix, the Tigers could be the first team to reach 15-0.

The undefeated mind-set was set as the team’s theme for the season before the Tigers ever stepped on the field. Swinney put 15 up on the board at an early gathering. He passed out T-shirts with “15 for 15” on the back.

“It’s 2015,” Swinney told them. “Right now, we’ve sold every ticket, but there’s only 12. We want to make them print 15 tickets.”

That part’s done. Now, it’s up to Clemson to finish off its first perfect season since the 1981 national champions.

“It was not easy to get everyone to buy into this,” cooffensiv­e coordinato­r Jeff Scott said. “It took planning and preparatio­n.”

Swinney regularly worked with a sports psychologi­st, Milt Lowder, who has consulted with Clemson athletes and coaches since 2005. Lowder said he met with Swinney at least once a week during the season, the coach sharing ideas about techniques on keeping the Tigers focused.

Lowder said none of this season’s success would have happened without Clemson’s steady success the past several seasons. The Tigers have won 10 or more games each of the past five years, defeating college powers LSU, Ohio State and Oklahoma — twice in a row — in bowl games.

Older players understood and accepted the work it took to win games. Without that, Lowder said, Swinney’s words would ring hollow.

So when the season began, the team forgot about the big goal. They looked at the milestone in increments. They didn’t think about 15 anymore. 2-0 became 3-0. Then 4-0, and 5-0. 6-0, then 7-0. The win column kept changing, the loss column never did.

Swinney put it simply: “You can’t be 15-0 unless you’re 3-0.”

“You’ve got to have a process on getting there, something that you’re confident works with your team,” said Brent Walker, president of the Associatio­n for Applied Sport Psychology. “It’s easier to do that once your players understand your commitment to them.”

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