Miami Herald (Sunday)

After rough start, Lawrence leads Clemson to final

- Miami Herald Wire Services

SAN JOSE, CALIF.

The choice was clear for Clemson coach Dabo Swinney last September — freshman quarterbac­k Trevor Lawrence deserved to start over well-liked, well-respected senior Kelly Bryant.

It’s a move that could have led to dissension, in-fighting and a divided locker room. Instead, the switch started the secondrank­ed Tigers on a glide path to the national championsh­ip game where they’ll take on defending champion Alabama on Monday night.

“It’s just a situation where [Lawrence] has been in the game, he has been productive and to be fair to competitio­n, just like we do at every position, coach [Swinney] decided to name him the starter,” Clemson co-offensive coordinato­r Tony Elliott said.

Swinney insists, that despite Lawrence’s talent, the swap wasn’t made with Alabama in mind.

“You’ve got to prove that you deserve to be the starter this year,” he said Saturday. “That’s just the culture we have.”

Lawrence’s play has borne that out.

He has thrown for 2,933 yards with 27 touchdowns with just four intercepti­ons. Clemson has averaged more than 45 points and 540 yards a game since Lawrence took over against Syracuse in game five.

Swinney said Lawrence never acted like he didn’t belong, showing a mix of confidence, poise and ability that stood out. Swinney realized that last spring when he “saw how quickly [Lawrence] processed things, how easy it was for him,” the coach said.

The hard part for Swinney came in September when he elevated Lawrence to starter over Bryant.

The quarterbac­k selection was a choice looming since the 6-6, strong-armed, long-haired Lawrence arrived on campus. Two expe- rienced reserve passers in Zerrick Cooper and Tucker Israel transferre­d in January. Another five-star quarterbac­k in Hunter Johnson left in May for Northweste­rn after going through spring ball.

Bryant, who went 16-2 as a starter, led Clemson to the Atlantic Coast Conference title and the College Football Playoff a season ago. But he struggled in the Tigers’ passing game and a poor showing in the 24-6 loss to Alabama in the Sugar Bowl last year left the door wide open for speculator­s to pencil in Lawrence ahead of the popular Bryant.

Bryant kept the job into the season and started Clemson’s first four games until Swinney knew what he had to do.

“At the end of the day, this is not middle school,” Swinney said in September. “There’s tough decisions that have to be made at his level, and you have to do what’s best for the team.”

Some programs might not have moved forward unscathed after such a switch. Clemson All-American defensive tackle Christian Wilkins never had a doubt the Tigers would remain on track.

“I’m sure a lot of you all would’ve liked more controvers­y,” Wilkins joked this week. “That’s more of a testament to our leadership. We’ve got a lot of older guys who’ve been around for a while, just experience­d a lot and we weren’t going to let that faze us.”

Wilkins said they all still love and respect Bryant, who has transferre­d to Missouri, “but we weren’t going to let that stop us.”

Wilkins, the 6-4, 315pound senior, went a long way to calming any locker room concerns about the switch when he took Lawrence to breakfast the week of Bryant’s demotion. Wilkins downplays the meeting — “I was going to eat breakfast anyway,” he said — but Lawrence believes it gave him instant credibilit­y to lead a veteran-stocked club.

“It meant a lot,” Lawrence said.

Things couldn’t have started worse for Lawrence and the Tigers when the freshman left with an injury before halftime of his first college start against Syracuse on Sept. 29 and the Tigers trailed 23-13 with less than 13 minutes left.

But Clemson rallied with one-time sixth-string passer Chase Brice in the game and tailback Travis Etienne rushing for two TDs down the stretch of the 27-23 win.

Lawrence threw two touchdown passes in his next start, a 63-3 win at Wake Forest, and has not slowed down since.

Alabama quarterbac­k

A and Heisman Trophy runner-up Tua Tagovailoa said his sprained left ankle is feeling good two days before the top-ranked Crimson Tide play Clemson.

FCS TITLE GAME

Easton Stick ran for three touchdowns and threw two quick scoring passes to Darrius Shepherd in a wild start to the second half as North Dakota State won its record seventh FCS championsh­ip with a 38-24 victory over Eastern Washington on Saturday in Frisco, Texas.

North Dakota State

(15-0) has won all seven of its FCS titles over the past eight seasons. Stick, who succeeded Carson Wentz as NDSU’s quarterbac­k, threw for 198 yards and ran for 121 in his 49th victory to become the winningest FCS quarterbac­k. Stick leaves with school records for total yards (11,216), passing yards (8,693) and 129 total touchdowns (88 passing, 41 rushing).

It also was the last game for Bison coach Chris Klieman, who now takes over as Kansas State’s coach after going 69-6 with a record-matching four FCS titles in his five seasons since being promoted from defensive coordinato­r to head coach at NDSU.

Eastern Washington (12-3) got to within 17-10 with a 2-yard touchdown on a fake field goal in the final minute of the first half. Holder and backup quarterbac­k Gunner Talkington took the snap and was still on his knee when he shuffled the ball to a sweeping Jayce Gilder, who dived into the end zone.

 ?? THEARON W. HENDERSON Getty Images ?? Freshman Trevor Lawrence, above, replaced Kelly Bryant as Clemson’s starting quarterbac­k in late September.
THEARON W. HENDERSON Getty Images Freshman Trevor Lawrence, above, replaced Kelly Bryant as Clemson’s starting quarterbac­k in late September.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States