The Province

Clemson’s time for title is now

Monday game with Alabama might be Tigers’ best chance for national championsh­ip

- Mark Long

Clemson coach Dabo Swinney still has a picture from that night on his phone.

Swinney and Alabama’s Nick Saban were on the same dinner cruise in March near Boca Grande, a popular fishing spot in southwest Florida. Swinney approached Saban early in the trip and handed him a gift certificat­e to his favourite restaurant in the vacation destinatio­n.

On the back was a message: “See you in Tampa next year.”

Ten months later, they’re here and getting ready to play for the national championsh­ip Monday night.

Saban and the Tide are regulars on college football’s biggest stage, having advanced to five of the last eight title games. Swinney and the Tigers, who lost the finale to Alabama in Glendale, Ariz., last season, are back for another shot.

It might be their best — and maybe last — chance. At least for awhile.

The window is closing on Swinney’s talented team. Sure, Clemson has recruited as well as anyone in the country in recent years and has all the resources and facilities to remain a yearly threat to win it all.

But there’s little doubt that this team is special and unlikely to be matched next season.

“We know this is our opportunit­y,” receiver Mike Williams said Saturday. “We’re losing a bunch of guys and need to get it done.”

The Tigers (13-1) are losing just about everyone. Quarterbac­k Deshaun Watson, who became the first player in Football Bowl Subdivisio­n history to top 1,000 yards rushing and 4,000 yards passing in 2015, is turning pro.

Running back Wayne Gallman, Williams and fellow receiver Artavis Scott will join Watson in the NFL. Gallman set the school’s single-season rushing (1,527 yards) last year. Williams is widely expected to be the first receiver drafted in April. And Scott is Clemson’s all-time career leader in receptions (242).

Throw in tight end Jordan Leggett and centre Jay Guillermo, and Clemson will have to replace a big chunk of its high-scoring offence.

They will have nearly as many losses on the other side of the ball, with cornerback Cordrea Tankersley, safety Jadar Johnson, linebacker Ben Boulware and defensive end Carlos Watkins all gone. That’s the team’s top two defensive backs, who have nine intercepti­ons between them this season, its leading tackler and sacks leader. So now’s the time to get it done. Clemson’s lone national championsh­ip came in 1981, the year before NCAA probation hit in a recruiting scandal.

“I think we’re just now building our brand,” Boulware said. “For a long time, we haven’t been that good. We were very inconsiste­nt. We weren’t ever really a part that have national championsh­ip conversati­on up until the past couple years.

“It takes a while to get the respect. It’s slowly but surely getting there.”

Of course, Alabama (14-0) stands in the way — again.

“Got to beat them,” Boulware said. “If you want to be the best, you got to beat the best. And that’s Alabama right now. So we’re definitely, in my opinion, at their heels. But they’re the standard, and they have been the best for a while, but we want to get up there, too.”

Clemson blew its chance last year, losing 45-40 thanks partly to two blown coverages against tight end O.J. Howard and a 95-yard kickoff return. Those three plays have haunted the Tigers for a year.

“We’re definitely the underdog,” Guillermo said. “It’s one thing that I feel like people love an underdog story and people love the guys who aren’t supposed to win who are able to get it done.”

Saban told Swinney that night on the cruise that he thought Clemson had a “great opportunit­y” to return to the title game because of all of Swinney’s returning players.

“To see what we’ve been able to do the last eight seasons has been special,” said Swinney. “It’s just been one day at a time.”

They might, though, need to get it done this year.

“If you want to be the best, you got to beat the best. And that’s Alabama right now.” — BEN BOULWARE CLEMSON LINEBACKER

 ?? — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Clemson quarterbac­k Deshaun Watson, who topped 1,000 yards rushing and 4,000 yards passing, answers questions during media day Saturday for Monday’s College Football Playoff championsh­ip game against Alabama in Tampa.
— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Clemson quarterbac­k Deshaun Watson, who topped 1,000 yards rushing and 4,000 yards passing, answers questions during media day Saturday for Monday’s College Football Playoff championsh­ip game against Alabama in Tampa.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada