Chattanooga Times Free Press

Clemson OC Elliott seeking answers after bad showing

- BY PETE IACOBELLI

COLUMBIA, S.C. — One thing is certain for Clemson offensive coordinato­r Tony Elliott — he has to find a way to improve the offense to stay on top in the Atlantic Coast Conference. And the clock is ticking for the third-ranked Tigers.

Clemson failed to score a touchdown in the 10-3 loss to fifth-ranked Georgia, something the Tigers hadn’t experience­d since falling to Alabama 24-6 in the semifinals of the College Football Playoffs after the 2017 season.

That was before quarterbac­k Trevor Lawrence and tailback Travis Etienne were in full control of an explosive attack the past three seasons. With both ACC players of the year off to the NFL, Clemson came up way short of the level Elliott knows they must reach to return to the CFP.

Elliott has received some unpleasant mail and texts from Clemson fans angered by the showing.

“Yes, there’s a feeling of hurt, but we can’t wallow in our pity right now,” Elliott said. “We got to change our perspectiv­e.”

That starts with improved play from new starting quarterbac­k D.J. Uiagalelei, who was sacked seven times by the Bulldogs. Uiagalelei said the reason for the loss was simple: “I just didn’t play well,” he said Monday.

Uiagalelei finished 19 of 37 passing for 178 yards and a costly pick-six intercepti­on right before halftime that proved the difference.

There were plenty of others to share the blame on offense. The offensive line struggled to hold out Georgia’s pass rushers or generate holes for the Tigers’ tailbacks, who managed just 2 yards on 23 attempts.

Elliott thought his team played tough and fierce but made some mistakes in technique.

“You are going to lose some one-on-one matchups,” Elliott said. “The biggest thing we got to realize offensivel­y is just focusing on details, the little things, and everybody being on the same page.”

If the Tigers get there, that’s bad news for South Carolina State of the Football Championsh­ip Subdivisio­n. The Bulldogs of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference have lost the four games they’ve played against Clemson by a combined score of 238-20. The team’s last meeting came in 2016, a 59-0 Tigers victory.

“It’s all about us,” Elliott said. “We’re not going to get anywhere overlookin­g anybody.”

Clemson coach Dabo Swinney saw hopeful signs in the second half and on Sunday that Uiagalelei was moving forward. Despite his first half struggles, the Tigers drove for a field goal to stay within a score of tying.

Then on Sunday the sophomore passer was the first one in the team’s facility watching tape. “That is what you want to see,” Swinney said. “It would have been easy for him to get worse.”

Swinney acknowledg­ed that he wished the Tigers had stayed with the run more than relying on Uiagalelei’s arm to get them down field.

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