Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

When LSU has the ball

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What can Clemson defensive coordinato­r Brent Venables cook up to stop LSU’s hyper-aggressive passing game that often attacks with five receivers?

Clemson is playing a 3-3-5 defensive alignment and using lots of eight-man coverage. Lacking dominant defensive linemen, Venables has needed to be creative to pressure the quarterbac­k.

“Brent’s going to blitz,” Fisher said. “But LSU has been good at either picking it up or Burrow identifyin­g it and getting the ball out quickly. Or he can scramble away from it and keep his eyes down field. He is so patient.”

The stars of Clemson’s defense are versatile back-seven players such as All-America linebacker Isaiah Simmons and strong safety K’Lavon Wallace, both of whom can play multiple positions, and free safety Tanner Muse.

Mellor said Burrow was the top-graded quarterbac­k in the country this season when facing pressure.

“Pressure doesn’t matter in this game as much as allowing Simmons and Muse to roam the back end freely,” Mellor said.

LSU has five players who can consistent­ly win one-on-one matchups in the passing game in wide receivers Ja’Marr Chase, Justin Jefferson and Terrace Marshall Jr., tight end Thadeus Moss and running back Clyde Edwards-Helaire. All have more than 40 catches, allowing Burrow to feast on a defense’s weak links.

“They move those guys inside and force your linebacker­s and safeties to cover,” Fisher said.

In the semifinal against Oklahoma, Chase, an All-American, was locked down by the Sooners. No big deal: Jefferson caught 14 passes and scored four touchdowns, mostly working from the slot.

Burrow’s raw numbers are eye-popping (55 touchdown passes and 5,208 yards). Go deeper and it gets even more impressive. He rarely forces throws into tight coverage, but when he does he completes those passes at a higher rate than any quarterbac­k in the country, Mellor said.

“There isn’t really much you can do to stop them,” he added.

When Clemson has the ball

Over his last seven games, Lawrence has been the highest-graded quarterbac­k in college football by Pro Football Focus.

As prolific as LSU has been offensivel­y, Clemson has the weapons to keep pace, with two-time Atlantic Coast Conference player of the year Travis Etienne at running back and wide receivers Tee Higgins, Justyn Ross (both 6-foot-4) and Amari Rodgers.

Higgins has been dominant, averaging 19.9 yards per catch with 13 touchdowns. Ross has been good, but not quite the breakout star he was during last season’s playoff.

LSU has its own $2 million per year defensive coordinato­r in Dave Aranda, who will try to frustrate Lawrence with a plan built around two of the best cornerback­s in the country: Kristian Fulton is a possible first-round NFL draft pick, while freshman Derek Stingley Jr., an All-American, was PFF’s highest-graded cornerback.

Safety Grant Delpit also grades well in coverage, but his tackling has been spotty. That has improved of late after a high ankle sprain healed.

“Avoiding those three (in coverage) is the biggest win for Clemson,” Mellor said.

The LSU defensive line is huge, with three 300-pounders usually on the field at once.

“Against that 3-4, it’s hard to get a push inside,” said Fisher, who expects Clemson to run outside the tackles.

Etienne is maybe the toughest back in the country to take down so getting him out in space is the way to go. Mellor said the junior set a PFF record by forcing missed tackles on 45% of his carries. The previous best was 33% last year by Iowa State’s David Montgomery.

 ?? NORM HALL/GETTY ?? Clemson RB Travis Etienne (9) is congratula­ted by teammates after scoring a TD in the Fiesta Bowl.
NORM HALL/GETTY Clemson RB Travis Etienne (9) is congratula­ted by teammates after scoring a TD in the Fiesta Bowl.

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