The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

QB Uiagalelei in charge of Clemson with Lawrence gone

- By PETE IACOBELLI

COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) » D.J. Uiagalelei took charge of Clemson’s offense Saturday as the Tigers closed spring practice with the Orange and White game.

It was the first spring in several years that Clemson was without its two main offensive playmakers, quarterbac­k Trevor Lawrence and tailback Travis Etienne. Both were instrument­al is helping the Tigers remain atop the Atlantic Coast Conference and win the national title after the 2018 season.

Lawrence and Etienne were both ACC players of the year — Lawrence this past season, Etienne in 2018 and 2019 — and the two are expected to be first-round

NFL draft picks. Lawrence is projected to go No. 1 overall to Jacksonvil­le while Etienne figures to be one of the first running backs chosen.

Together, the pair had a hand in 48 of the Tigers’ 64 offensive touchdowns last year. That’s a lot of firepower for Clemson to make up for next fall.

But Uiagalelei, a 6-foot-4, 250-pound powerhouse, has embraced the challenge.

“Obviously, he’s got the worst job in America,” offensive lineman Matt Bockhorst joked last month. “He’s got some pretty big shoes to fill, but he’s a very talented kid and a steady worker. And I know all of us have full confidence in D.J. and we’re excited to see him let it rip.”

Uiagalelei’s Orange team fell to the White squad 1413. He completed 20 of 28 passes for 174 yards and his lone touchdown came on the game’s opening series, a 14-yard throw to freshman Beaux Collins.

“I think I need to get better, get better at everything, I feel like,” he said. “I want to be the best I can for my team.”

Uiagalelei gave Clemson a taste of his talents while pressed into action last season when Lawrence missed two games after contractin­g COVID-19.

Uiagalelei rallied the Tigers from 18 points down to beat Boston College 3428 last October. Uiagalelei, who threw for 342 yards against the Eagles, topped that showing a week later at Notre Dame, where he passed for 439 yards in a drama-filled, 47-40, double overtime loss.

Uiagalelei was grateful to spend last year learning from Lawrence and is ready to take control of the sixtime defending ACC champions.

“He stands tall, he’s very confident,” receiver E.J. Williams said. “It’s just a great vibe to have in a quarterbac­k.”

Uiagalelei, a rising sophomore, soaked up as much as he could from Lawrence, both on and off the field. Uiagalelei watched how Lawrence handled himself at practice and even how the 6-6, strong-armed quarterbac­k got his schoolwork done.

Uiagalelei is not concerned with matching Lawrence, just continuing the success of Clemson’s offense.

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