The Record (Troy, NY)

Orange Is The New Fast

- By John Kekis

Syracuse won't be favored against defending National Champion Clemson on Friday night. But they have a chance to put on a show at home while playing one of the nation's most potent teams.

Syracuse’s Dino Babers has coached at 15 colleges since he started at Hawaii in 1984 as a graduate assistant, so he knows what he and his Orange will be up against with secondrank­ed Clemson.

“I played very, very, very good football teams before,” Babers said. “This Clemson team is like one of those teams.”

The reigning national champion Tigers (6-0, 4-0 Atlantic Coast Conference) visit the Carrier Dome on Friday night. The game offers the Orange (3-3, 1-1) a chance to be in the national spotlight in primetime — for one night at least.

There are dreams of an upset just like last year’s Carrier Dome stunner against No. 17 Virginia Tech. That brought national attention to the Orange after Babers orchestrat­ed a postgame rant that went viral . The Hokies were favored by just over 20 points in that one and Clemson is a 22 1/2-point favorite for this matchup.

“This is huge, to have the nation tuning in to the Carrier Dome,” Babers said. “It’s a heck of a task, there’s no doubt about it. But let’s ... watch and see what can happen.”

Syracuse is coming off an important 27-24 win over Pittsburgh , which kept alive the Orange’s hopes of playing in a bowl game.

Despite noticeable gains on defense (ranked 46th, allowing 357.7 yards per game) and special teams (Sean Riley has 399 return yards, punter Sterling Hofrichter is averaging 45 yards per kick, and placekicke­r Cole Murphy is 10 for 12 on field goals), the Syracuse offense still hasn’t developed the sort of rhythm to consistent­ly put defenses on their heels, though it has the components to do so. Senior wideout Steve Ishmael has 56 catches for 729 yards to lead the nation in both categories and sidekick Ervin Philips isn’t far behind (52 catches, 475 yards).

Still, the uptempo offense behind quarterbac­k Eric Dungey has struggled in each of the team’s losses. That the Orange rank near the bottom of the FBS, averaging 7.5 penalties per game, has been a factor, and the mistakes have been magnified by the slim margins of defeat. All three losses — to Middle Tennessee, LSU and North Carolina State — have been by single digits.

“It’s been a little bit frustratin­g,” Ishmael said. “We know that we’re there. I feel like we are a team that can compete. We’ve just got to do the little things better.”

Against Pitt last Saturday, Dungey brought two more receivers into the mix. Junior college transfer Ravian Pierce had a team-high nine catches for 99 yards at tight end, with all but one reception coming in the decisive second half, and Devin C. Butler had seven catches for 64 yards and a score. Ishmael and Philips combined for 13 catches for 152 yards and one touchdown.

“It puts a lot of pressure on defenses when you not only have to cover Steve and Erv,” said Dungey, who’s averaging 300 yards passing per game and has thrown for nine TDs with four intercepti­ons.

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