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Tigers face major holes to fill on defensive line

- By Pete Iacobelli

CLEMSON, S.C. — Clemson coach Dabo Swinney hears so many questions about the Tigers’ defensive losses that he has lost count.

He heard it again Tuesday — probably not for the last time.

This time it came from one of those impact players no longer on the roster.

Former Tiger Albert Huggins followed up a statement with the burning question for his college coach. “Last year, the defensive line was so deep, man. How much are you going to miss those guys?” Quite a lot, Swinney said. Clemson is without seven defensive starters from the lineup that walloped Alabama 44-16 last January to win its second college crown in three seasons. That includes All-americans in defensive end Clelin Ferrell and tackle Christian Wilkins, who were among three Tiger lineman selected in the opening round of the NFL draft last April.

Huggins started in place of suspended tackle Dexter Lawrence — the third firstround­er — in that title game. Linebacker­s Kendall Joseph and Tre Lamar are gone as is cornerback Trayvon Mullen, the defensive MVP of the championsh­ip game who was picked 40th overall by the Oakland Raiders.

“We’ve got good depth talent wise,” Swinney said. “But we don’t have experience­d depth. Whereas last year, it was just the opposite because we were rolling NFL guys in there.”

Swinney is sure to face more questions about his defense when he, safety Tanner Muse and offensive lineman John Simpson appear at ACC media days Wednesday in Charlotte, North Carolina. Little, Swinney said, will be answered until Clemson’s new lineup goes through summer workouts and a bunch of games in defense of their 15-0 title season.

“We just got a lot to teach them,” Swinney said.

It is a wholesale replacemen­t job defensive coordinato­r Brent Venables has faced before.

After the 2014 season, the Tigers lost its four starting

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linemen including Vic Beasley and tackle Grady Jarrett, both now with the Atlanta Falcons. Following Clemson’s first national championsh­ip game after the 2015 season, eight of the Tigers defensive starters were not back the next September.

“I feel sorry for myself sometimes,” Venables joked.

Clemson’s initial summer depth chart has junior Justin Foster and sophomore Xavier Thomas starting at defensive ends with graduate Nyles Pickney and sophomore Jordan Williams filling the middle. Pickney and Williams missed spring drills due to injuries, which Swinney and Venables gave opportunit­y for others to rep at the position and build the depth are seeking.

“We’ve got a lot to prove, especially up front,” Venables said.

Swinney is more confident about the team’s back seven, anchored by linebacker­s James Skalski and Isaiah Simmons, safety Tanner Muse and cornerback A.J. Terrell. Swinney believes their skill on the back end will give Clemson a buffer for the players up front to gain some reps and experience and be ready as the season goes on.

Swinney believes Clemson’s linebacker­s and secondary could be the best of his 11-plus seasons. But the coach said It will take some time with twothirds of the Tigers’ roster consisting of underclass­men.

“They’re still young,” Swinney said. “So we have to keep our hand on the wheel.”

Then again, the Tigers might just be able to score their way out of any defensive lapses. They enter the season with two players on most prospectiv­e Heisman Trophy lists — quarterbac­k Trevor Lawrence and tailback Travis Etienne.

Lawrence, just a freshman, showed poise and precision after taking over for Missouribo­und Kelly Bryant after four games to lead Clemson to college football’s first 15-0 mark of the Division I modern era. Etienne, the ACC player of the year last season, set Clemson marks with 1,628 yards and 24 touchdowns on the ground. Preparing for his second season at the helm at Texas A&M, Jimbo Fisher is embracing a challengin­g schedule that includes defending national champion Clemson and SEC powers Alabama and Georgia.

HOOVER, Ala. — Texas A&M’S schedule looks pretty brutal this season. Coach Jimbo Fisher can’t wait to get it started.

If the Aggies are going to be among the best teams in the country this season, they’ll have to beat some of the nation’s preseason favorites. According to Fisher, he expects to be right there with them by the end of the season.

“We don’t want to spoil anything. We want to take care of our own,” Fisher said on Tuesday at SEC media days. “They’re all great teams, but we expect to play with them, compete with them and win those games. That’s why we’re here.”

The Aggies play Clemson, Alabama and Georgia this year and all three of those programs will likely be among the preseason top five.

Texas A&M finished with a 9-4 record last season, including a 5-3 mark in the SEC. The Aggies are expected to be competitiv­e again thanks to an experience­d offense that includes junior quarterbac­k Kellen Mond, who threw for 3,107 yards, 24 touchdowns and nine intercepti­ons last year.

Mond says the team is reminded of the tough schedule every day during weightlift­ing and other workouts and that “it’s a really good opportunit­y for us.”

BEEFY OFFENSE

Jeremy Pruitt dryly stated the obvious when describing why he thought

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