San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

EAST TITLE

- BY STEVE REED Reed writes for The Associated Press.

NFL

Buffalo QB Josh Allen scores two touchdowns and throws for two more as the Bills win the AFC East for the first time since 1995.

After a heartbreak­ing 4740 double-overtime loss to Notre Dame last month, Clemson coach Dabo Swinney assured his players in the locker room that there would be no trophy handed out that night.

There would, however, be one up for grabs when they got to Charlotte for the Atlantic Coast Conference championsh­ip game.

The Tigers haven’t blinked since, staying focused on their goal. On Saturday they collected the hardware — again.

Trevor Lawrence had 412 yards of offense and three touchdowns, Travis Etienne ran for 124 yards and a score and No. 3 Clemson dominated No. 2 Notre Dame 3410 on Saturday to win its sixth straight ACC title.

“All we had to do was take care of business after that,” Lawrence said about the loss in South Bend. “We remember fans running on the field and getting in our face. You remember those images and keep those things in your head.”

Lawrence, who didn’t play in the first meeting because the coronaviru­s, threw long scoring passes to Amari Rodgers and E.J Williams in the first half to help the Tigers (10-1) lock up a spot in the College Football Playoff for the sixth straight season.

Lawrence, the game MVP and presumptiv­e No. 1 pick in the NFL Draft, overcame an early intercepti­on on a tipped ball to complete 25 of 36 passes for 322 yards. He ran 14 times for 90 yards, with a 34-yard TD scamper.

“His ability to run really stresses your coverage calls,” Notre Dame coach Brian Kelly said. “So what you try to do is bring some pressures that eliminate those runs. It just opens up some 1-on-1 matchups that are not favorable.”

The junior quarterbac­k did it all, even throwing a block to spring Etienne for a 15-yard gain on a third-down run late in the second quarter leading to a touchdown and a 24-3 halftime lead.

Clemson has won all nine games Lawrence has started by at least 18 points and their average margin of victory in those games is 33.6 points.

Swinney called Lawrence the best player in the country.

“It would be a crying shame if the Heisman didn’t attach their name to Trevor Lawrence,” Swinney said. “I know that has become a stat award, but if you watch and you don’t know this is the best player in the country, I don’t what you’re looking at.”

Rodgers had eight catches for 121 yards, and Williams added four for 80 yards including a dynamic one-handed grab where he reached behind his head to snag the ball.

The momentum changed late in the first quarter when Notre Dame kicker Jonathan Doerer, who had converted an ACC title-game record 51-yard field goal on the game’s opening drive, clanked a 21-yard attempt off the right upright.

The Tigers quickly capitalize­d when Rodgers got cornerback Shaun Crawford to bite on a double move and hauled in a perfectly thrown pass from Lawrence for a 67yard strike, the first of four straight scoring drives to close the first half.

After Clemson stopped Notre Dame on a key fourthand-3, Lawrence moved the Tigers 72 yards in six plays, showing his pocket awareness by stepping up to avoid pressure and buy enough time to find Williams on a crossing route for a 33-yard score and a 14-3 lead — Notre Dame’s largest deficit of the season.

Etienne broke it open when he took a handoff, slipped an ankle tackle and raced 44 yards for a touchdown on fourth-and-1 for a 24-3 lead with 21 seconds left in the first half.

“We let the second quarter get away from us, and that was the difference in the game,” Kelly said.

Clemson’s depleted defense allowed Notre Dame to pile up 518 yards in the previous meeting, but limited the Fighting Irish (10-1) to 263 yards Saturday and sacked quarterbac­k Ian Book six times. Book spent most of the game under duress, regularly flushed from the pocket.

 ??  ??
 ?? BRIAN BLANCO AP ?? Clemson quarterbac­k Trevor Lawrence had 412 yards of offense in Clemson’s ACC title win over Notre Dame.
BRIAN BLANCO AP Clemson quarterbac­k Trevor Lawrence had 412 yards of offense in Clemson’s ACC title win over Notre Dame.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States