Sept. 20, 2004
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Bowden Bowl VI
When Florida State's Bobby Bowden and Clemson's Tommy Bowden take
the field Saturday to coach their respective teams at Clemson Memorial Stadium,
it will be the sixth competition of father and son in NCAA Division I history.
The previous five occasions have taken place the last five years when the two
teams met. Father has beaten son four of the previous five, but Tommy won last
year by a 26-10 score. The average margin of victory for Bobby over Tommy is
34-21. Only the first game has been a close contest, as Florida State defeated
Clemson 17-14 in Bowden Bowl I. Since then the closest margin has been 14 points.
Clemson has moved the ball against Florida State the last three years. The
current senior class has seen the Tigers average 28 points, 443 yards total
offense and 294 yards passing over the last three contests vs. Florida State.
- 1999--The first meeting in 1999 was a festive atmosphere
at Clemson as a record 86,092 fans attended, a Death Valley record that still
stands today. In addition to the hype concerning a father coaching against
a son for the first time, Bobby Bowden was going for career victory number-300.
He got it, but it was a struggle, as the Tigers fought the Seminoles to the
wire before #1 ranked Florida State came away with a 17-14 victory. It was
the closest victory for the Seminoles on the way to the 1999 National Championship.
Clemson had two offensive touchdowns to Florida State's one and Florida
State's 17 points were the fewest scored by the Seminoles that year.
- 2000--Florida State won the second meeting in 2000 in Tallahassee
by a 54-7 count. Clemson entered the game with an 8-1 record and #10 national
ranking, while Florida State was ranked fourth in the nation. It was just
the third meeting of top 10 ACC teams in league history. Clemson was coming
off a heart-breaking 31-28 loss to Georgia Tech the previous week, a game
that Georgia Tech had won with a touchdown pass with just seven seconds left.
(Georgia Tech beat Clemson in similar fashion this year on a touchdown pass
with 11 seconds left). Florida State gained 771 yards of total offense, most
ever against a Clemson team, including 521 passing, also a high against a
Clemson team.
- 2001-- In a game at Death Valley, Clemson gained 463 yards
of total offense against Florida State, its high total ever against the Seminoles,
but still lost 41-27. The Tigers could not stop freshman quarterback Chris
Rix and the Florida State passing game as the Seminoles threw for 369 yards
and gained 557 overall. Woody Dantzler had 336 yards of total offense, but
it was not enough as the Seminoles won for the sixth straight time in Death
Valley.
- 2002--The last time the two teams met in Tallahassee,
FSU came away with a 48-31 victory. It was the most points scored by Clemson
in Tallahassee since its last victory in 1989. Clemson won the total offense
war 441-386, as Willie Simmons had a career high 343 yards rushing and passing,
the most total offense in history by a Clemson player against the Seminoles.
J.J. McKelvey had five catches for 117 yards to key the Clemson offense. But,
Florida State scored on a 97-yard kickoff return by Leon Washington and Greg
Jones rushed for 165 yards and three scores to give Florida State its victory.
- 2003--Clemson finally defeated Bobby Bowden in Death
Valley with a convincing 26-10 victory. It was just the second of what would
be three losses for the Seminole in the 2003 season. Florida State was ranked
third in the nation entering the game and it was the highest ranked team Clemson
has beaten in history. Charlie Whitehurst threw for 272 yards to lead Clemson
as Bobby Bowden suffered a loss on his birthday for the first time ever. It
was the first loss for Bobby Bowden in Death Valley after six straight wins,
the longest winning streak for any opposing coach in the facility.
The Clemson vs. Florida State games the last five years are not the only times
Bowdens have been on opposite sides of the field. In 1991, Auburn, with assistant
coach Tommy Bowden, faced Southern Mississippi, with assistant coach Jeff Bowden.
Southern Mississippi upset Auburn that day. Jeff Bowden will also be at the
scene this year also as he is Florida State's offensive coordinator.
Past Bowden Bowl Stats
| Year |
Site |
Score
CU-FS |
Total Off
CU-FS |
Rushing
CU-FS |
Passing
CU-FS |
Turn
CU-FS |
| 1999 |
CU |
14-17 |
265-356 |
126-98 |
139-258 |
1-1 |
| 2000 |
FS |
7-54 |
262-771 |
95-250 |
167-521 |
6-2 |
| 2001 |
CU |
27-41 |
463-557 |
186-188 |
277-369 |
1-2 |
| 2002 |
FS |
31-48 |
441-386 |
107-272 |
334-114 |
4-0 |
| 2003 |
CU |
26-10 |
425-369 |
153-11 |
272-358 |
1-3 |
| Totals |
|
105-170 |
1856-2439 |
667-819 |
1189-1620 |
13-8 |
| Averages |
|
21-34 |
371-488 |
133-164 |
238-324 |
2.6-1.6 |
Clemson-Florida State Series
Florida State holds a 14-3 advantage in the series with Clemson dating to a
38-13 Florida State win in Tallahassee in 1970. Clemson has three wins in the
series, but two took place in Tallahassee, in 1976 by a 15-12 score and in 1989
by a 34-23 score. Clemson's only win in Death Valley took place last year,
a 26-10 victory.
Florida State is 7-1 at Clemson and 7-2 at Florida State against the Tigers.
Florida State had won 11 in a row prior to last year and all 11 had taken place
since Florida State joined the ACC in 1992. Florida State has been ranked in
the top 15 in the nation heading into all 13 games in the series since the Seminoles
joined the ACC (including this year . Clemson, Virginia, NC State (three times)
and North Carolina are the only league schools to beat Florida State since they
joined the league for the 1992 season, a total of six losses.
In four straight meetings between 1988 and 1993 both Clemson and Florida State
were ranked in the top 25. Both teams have been ranked in the top 25 of at least
one poll in seven of the last 13 meetings, including 2001 when Clemson entered
the game 24th in USA Today and Florida Sate was 14th in both polls. Clemson
and Florida State were both ranked in the top 25 of the final AP and USA Today
polls.
In 2000, in the game played in Tallahassee both were ranked in the top 10 of
the AP, as Clemson was 10th and Florida State was fourth. That marked just the
third time in ACC history that two league teams were ranked in the top 10 heading
into a contest.
The three meetings between the two teams played between 1988 and 1992, were
classics. In 1988, Florida State won at Clemson 24-21, thanks in part to the
famous "puntrooskie play", a 78-yard run on a fake punt by Leroy
Butler, and a 76-yard punt return by Deion Sanders, the only time a Chris Gardocki
punt was returned for a touchdown in his Clemson career.
In 1989, Clemson defeated a Florida State team that ended the season ranked
third in the final AP poll by a 34-23 score. That was the only loss by Florida
State at home against a non-Florida team in a 17-year period. A pair of 73-yard
plays were pivotal for Clemson in that game. The late Wayne Simmons ran 73 yards
with an interception and Terry Allen ran 73 yards from scrimmage in the second
period to give Clemson a 28-7 lead. Clemson was trying to run out the clock
on Allen's run. Florida State scored in the last minute to close the gap
to 11 points.
In 1992, before over 84,000 fans and a nationally televised audience at Clemson,
fifth-ranked Florida State defeated 15th-ranked Clemson 24-20 in Death Valley.
Florida State scored the winning TD in the final two minutes of the contest
behind the passing of Charlie Ward. Clemson did pick off four passes in the
game, including one that James Trapp returned for a touchdown. Trapp went on
to play 10 years in the NFL and that play certainly made the NFL scouts take
notice.
The 1997 game featured one of the greatest individual duals in the history
of Death Valley. Tony Horne gained 267 all-purpose yards in the game, while
Florida State's Peter Warrick had 372 for the Seminoles, including a 90-yard
punt return and an 80-yard pass reception. Horne's all-purpose running
total is the second highest in Clemson history, while Warrick's total
is the most ever against Clemson.
The 1999 game was certainly a series highlight as it was the first father-son
coaching matchup in NCAA history. Florida State claimed a 17-14 victory behind
the passing of Chris Weinke and went on to win the national championship. It
was the closest game the Seminoles had all season.
Last Year vs. Florida State
Clemson ended 14 years of frustration by defeating #3 Florida
State 26-10 in front of 79,826 fans in Death Valley. The win over the third-ranked
Seminoles was the highest-ranked victory in Clemson history. It also marked
the first time since 1989 that Clemson defeated Florida State. The victory came
just one week after Clemson had suffered a 45-17 loss at Wake Forest.
Several landmarks occurred in the 16-point victory for Clemson. For coach Tommy
Bowden, it was his first win in five tries against father Bobby. He was doused
with Gatorade by Kevin Youngblood and Khaleed Vaughn in the final moments of
the win. Aaron Hunt became Clemson's all-time scoring leader with 302 points,
breaking Nelson Welch's previous record of 301. Derrick Hamilton became the
school's all-time all-purpose yardage leader with 4,412, breaking Travis Zachery's
record. Charlie Whitehurst broke Woodrow Dantzler's single-season record for
passing yards (2,682) with two regular season games remaining.
Clemson set the tone in the game's opening moments. On its first offensive
possession, the Tigers moved 65 yards in 11 plays before Aaron Hunt connected
on a 23-yard field goal. On Florida State's ensuing possession, Tye Hill notched
his second interception of the season when he stepped in front of a long Chris
Rix pass. The Tigers tacked on Hunt's second field goal minutes later, giving
Clemson a 6-0 lead. Clemson got the ball back with less than three minutes to
go in the first half. Whitehurst drove the Tigers from their own 35-yard line.
The big play was a 51-yard hookup with Youngblood on third-and-10. Three plays
later, Whitehurst rolled to the right and then scrambled back to the left for
a one-yard touchdown run. His effort gave Clemson a 13-0 lead at halftime.
Florida State missed a field goal on its opening possession of the second half.
Clemson took advantage by marching 63 yards in 11 plays. Hunt kicked his third
field goal of the game from 32 yards away, giving Clemson a 16-0 cushion. The
drive was set up by Whitehurst, who zipped a pass between three defenders as
he was getting hit and found Curtis Baham for a 23-yard gain on third down.
The Seminoles responded with three points, as Xavier Beitia made a 46-yard
field goal. However, Clemson put the game away on the next two drives. First,
Whitehurst executed a beautiful pump-fake to the right before throwing left
to a streaking Hamilton. His 58-yard touchdown catch gave Clemson a commanding
23-3 lead. Clemson kept the intensity up, as Leroy Hill intercepted a Rix pass
four plays later. The ball was tipped by Khaleed Vaughn. On the next Seminole
drive, David Dunham sacked Rix 10 yards behind the line of scrimmage and forced
a fumble. It was recovered by DeJuan Polk of Clemson. Hunt came on to nail his
fourth field goal of the night, giving Clemson the 26-3 lead.
Florida State finally scored a touchdown in the final three minutes of the
contest. Chauncey Stovall was able to get behind the Tiger secondary for a 71-yard
touchdown, but it mattered little at that point of the game.
Whitehurst was outstanding in his first career start against Florida State.
He finished 17-27 for 272 yards and one touchdown pass and he also rushed for
39 yards and a touchdown. His favorite target was Hamilton, who grabbed six
balls for 123 yards and a touchdown. Hunt came into the game needing 14 points
to set the school scoring record, and he did just that. He was 4-4 on field
goals and 2-2 on extra points.
Defensively, the Tigers held Florida State to 11 rushing yards the entire game,
the fewest total by Florida State in the Bobby Bowden era. Leroy Hill had 10
tackles and was named ACC Lineman-of-the-Week. Clemson also blitzed more than
normal, and the result was 15 quarterback hurries in the contest. Five Tigers
recorded tackles for loss, including two by freshman Gaines Adams. John Leake
and David Dunham each recorded their first sacks of the year as well.
Tye Hill played well for Clemson, as he grabbed his second career interception
and also had another pass breakup in earning ACC Defensive Back-of-the-Week
honors. Travis Pugh tied for the team lead in tackles with 10 from his free
safety position.
Last Meeting at Tallahassee (2002)
Florida State 48, Clemson 31
Florida State Head Coach Bobby Bowden defeated his son and Clemson Head Coach
Tommy Bowden for the fourth consecutive game as the Seminoles rolled to a 48-31
victory in front of a nationally-televised audience on ESPN on October 3rd,
2002 The 11th ranked Seminoles handed the Tigers their second defeat of the
season and also their second defeat against a nationally ranked opponent.
Despite the loss, the Tigers made a significant improvement on their recent
performances at Doak Campbell Stadium. Clemson had scored only one touchdown
in five previous appearances in Tallahassee and averaged just two points per
game in those contests. The Tigers dominated the game statistically in the first
half and finished with 334 passing yards, more than 200 yards greater than the
total reached by the Seminoles (114). Clemson averaged 7.2 yards per play, highest
average in history in a Clemson loss.
In the end, however, the play of Florida State running back Greg Jones proved
to be the difference in the game. The South Carolina native gained 165 yards
rushing on 22 carries and scored three times. He also had a 64-yard run just
before halftime that swayed the momentum in favor of the Seminoles. The run
set up a with six seconds remaining that gave Florida State the lead for good.
Clemson would close the gap to 35-31 in the third period, but could get no closer.
A host of Tigers led the team offensively in the losing effort. Willie Simmons
had a tremendous performance, gaining 50 yards rushing while completing 17 of
his 27 passes for 293 yards and two touchdowns. It was his ability to run and
pass in the first half that helped keep the Tigers in front for much of the
first half. Derrick Hamilton had another all-around stellar performance as he
racked up 248 all-purpose yards. J.J. McKelvey had over 100 yards receiving
for the second straight game as he tallied 117 yards on five receptions.
Clemson suffered in the kicking game. The Tigers fumbled a kickoff return and
a punt return and dropped the snap from center in a punt situation that gave
Florida State the ball at the Clemson 18. Florida State drove from its territory
for a touchdown just one time in the game. The Seminoles had 155 kickoff return
yards in the game and won the turnover stat 4-0.
It was Rix who gave the Seminoles the lead on their first possession of the
game. Following the fumbled punt snap by Wynn Kopp, Florida State took over
at the Clemson 18. Three plays later, Rix took a one-yard plunge over the goal
line that gave the Seminoles the lead. Two possessions later, Simmons and the
Tiger offense capitalized on a big play by special teams.
After Hamilton returned Chance Gwaltney's punt 46 yards to the Seminoles'
39-yard line, Simmons took just two plays to connect with Airese Currie for
a 28-yard touchdown pass. Stephen Furr's ensuing onside kick was recovered
by the Tigers just inside Florida State territory, and five plays later, Yusef
Kelly found the end zone on a two-yard touchdown run that gave Clemson a lead
it would hold until the end of the first quarter. It marked the first time since
1979 that Clemson has successfully executed an onside kick.
Florida State retaliated in the first 10 seconds of the second quarter. Greg
Jones rushed for a 20-yard touchdown run on the first play of the period that
tied the game at 14. Clemson re-gained the lead 17-14 on Aaron Hunt's
20-yard field goal with 6:20 remaining before halftime, but immediately relinquished
it when Leon Washington returned the ensuing kickoff 97 yards for a touchdown.
The Tigers gained their final lead of the game with less than one minute remaining
before halftime. Following a 59-yard completion to McKelvey, Simmons capped
off a six-play, 86-yard drive when he found Hamilton in the end zone for a nine-yard
touchdown pass. On the Seminoles' first play of the ensuing possession,
Jones took the handoff from Rix and rumbled 64 yards down the left sideline
before being knocked out of bounds at the five-yard line. Rix's touchdown
pass to Talman Gardner two plays later sealed the momentum-swinging effort.
Clemson-Florida State Connections
There are many connections between Clemson and Florida State
in terms of coaching and administrative personnel:
- Clemson Assistant Head Coach and offensive line coach Brad Scott served
as offensive coordinator of Florida State's National Championship team
of 1993. He served as an assistant with the Florida State program from 1983-93,
including the 1990-93 era when he was offensive coordinator. He has a master's
degree from Florida State in athletic administration, a degree he earned in
1984. He was on the Florida State sideline in 1988 when the Seminoles executed
the "Puntrooskie play".
- Florida State defensive coordinator Mickey Andrews served in the same capacity
for Clemson between 1976-80 and held the assistant head coach title under
Danny Ford in 1980.
- Clemson Head Coach Tommy Bowden was a graduate assistant at Florida State
in 1978 and 1979, then served as tight ends coach of the Seminoles in 1981
and 1982.
- Clemson defensive backs coach Jack Hines was a graduate assistant at Florida
State in 1985-86. He is married to Robyn Bowden, one of Bobby Bowden's
daughters. Hines played for Bowden at West Virginia.
- Tommy Bowden's brother Jeff Bowden is the offensive coordinator for
Florida State.
- Hootie Ingram, now retired and living in Alabama, was Clemson's head
football coach from 1970-72, then served as Florida State's Athletic
Director in the 1980s.
Tigers Face Top 15 Teams Next Two Weeks
Clemson could face a pair of top 12 teams over its next two games. In the Associated
Press poll of September 19, Florida State is ranked 8th and Virginia, Clemson's
opponent on October 7, is 12th. Florida State is 11th in USA Today and Virginia
is 12th .
Clemson has not had to play consecutive games against top 12 opponents since
the 1983 season when the Tigers defeated a 10th ranked North Carolina team 16-3
and an 11th ranked Maryland team, 52-27, in November. It could be the first
time Clemson has played consecutive games against top 12 teams on the road since
1966 when Clemson played at #9 Georgia Tech and at #4 Alabama in consecutive
non-conference games.
Clemson has had to play consecutive games against teams ranked in the top dozen
in the nation just four times in its history. In addition to the 1983 listing,
the other seasons were in 1966 (vs. #9 Georgia Tech and #4 Alabama), 1963 (vs.
#4 Oklahoma and #9 Georgia Tech), and 1955 (vs. #2 Maryland and #12 Auburn).
Clemson did not win any of those games.
Clemson's Highest Ranked Wins
When Clemson defeated third-ranked Florida State last year at Clemson it was
the highest ranked team Clemson has beaten in its history. Clemson has 12 wins
over top 10 teams in its history and three have been recorded by head coach
Tommy Bowden. In addition to the win over Florida State, Clemson's win
over sixth-ranked Tennessee in the 2004 Gator Bowl was the fourth highest ranked
team Clemson has beaten. Bowden and the Tigers also won over a ninth-ranked
Georgia Tech team in 2001. Thus, a win over #8 Florida State would be the sixth
highest ranked team Clemson has defeated.
Prior to last year, the highest ranked teams Clemson had beaten were #4 ranked
Georgia and #4 Nebraska, both in the 1981 season. Regardless of site, Clemson
has 12 wins over top 10 teams in its history, four in Death Valley four on an
opponent's home field and four at a neutral site (bowl game).
Clemson has had 25 wins over top 25 teams since 1986 and has had at least one
ranked win in 15 of the last 17 seasons. That includes last year's three
wins. Clemson enters this Florida State game with a three-game winning streak
against top 25 teams.. This is the longest winning streak against ranked teams
since the Tigers won three in a row between 1990-91. The record is five straight
wins over ranked teams from 1988-89.
Prior to last year's win over Florida State, Clemson was 0-9 all-time
in games against teams ranked in the top three in the nation.
Clemson's Highest Ranked
Wins
| Year |
Opponent |
Site |
Rk |
Score |
| 2003 |
Florida State |
Clemson, SC |
3 |
26-10 |
| 1981 |
Georgia |
Clemson, SC |
4 |
13-3 |
| 1981 |
Nebraska |
Miami, FL |
4 |
22-15 |
| 2003 |
Tennessee |
Atlanta, GA |
6 |
27-14 |
| 1959 |
Texas Christian |
Houston, TX |
7 |
23-7 |
| 1981 |
North Carolina |
Chapel Hill, NC |
8 |
10-8 |
| 2001 |
Georgia Tech |
Atlanta, GA |
9 |
#47-44 |
| 1967 |
NC State |
Clemson, SC |
10 |
14-6 |
| 1991 |
NC State |
Clemson, SC |
10 |
29-19 |
| 1983 |
North Carolina |
Clemson, SC |
10 |
16-3 |
| 1988 |
Oklahoma |
Orlando, FL |
10 |
13-6 |
| 1992 |
Virginia |
Charlottesville, VA |
10 |
29-28 |
| 1983 |
Maryland |
Clemson, SC |
11 |
52-27 |
| 1978 |
Maryland |
College Park, MD |
11 |
28-24 |
#Overtime
Tommy Bowden coached wins in bold face.
Ranked Wins on the Road
Clemson has 53 wins over Associated Press top 25 teams over the years and 16
of them have taken place on an opponent's home field. The highest ranked
team Clemson has beaten on its home field is a victory over an eighth-ranked
North Carolina team in Chapel Hill in 1981, Clemson's national championship
season. Thus, a victory on Saturday over #8 Florida State would tie for the
highest ranked road win in Clemson history.
The second highest ranked road win is the 47-44 overtime victory against #9
Georgia Tech in 2001, a victory that was recorded under current head coach Tommy
Bowden. To document such victories, Clemson has constructed a Graveyard at the
entrance to the practice field and a tombstone has been erected for each victory
over a ranked team on the road.
One of the 16 road wins over ranked teams took place at Florida State, a 34-23
win over a 16th ranked Seminole team in 1989. It was Florida State's last
loss that season and the Seminoles ended the year third in the final AP poll.
The win over Miami (FL) on January 1, 1951 was in the Orange Bowl, but it was
still played on Miami's home field.
Clemson Ranked Road Wins
| Date |
Score |
Opp Rk |
Opponent |
| 11-13-48 |
21-14 |
19 |
Wake Forest |
| 10-28-50 |
13-12 |
17 |
Wake Forest |
| 1-1-51 |
15-14 |
15 |
Miami (FL) |
| 9-19-59 |
20-18 |
12 |
North Carolina |
| 9-17-77 |
7-6 |
17 |
Georgia |
| 11-18-78 |
28-24 |
11 |
Maryland |
| 11-8-81 |
10-8 |
8 |
North Carolina |
| 11-13-82 |
24-22 |
18 |
Maryland |
| 11-5-83 |
16-3 |
10 |
North Carolina |
| 9-20-86 |
31-28 |
14 |
Georgia |
| 9-9-89 |
34-23 |
16 |
Florida State |
| 10-10-92 |
29-28 |
10 |
Virginia |
| 11-5-94 |
28-17 |
19 |
North Carolina |
| 11-8-96 |
24-16 |
15 |
Virginia |
| 9-13-97 |
19-17 |
25 |
NC State |
| 9-29-01 |
47-44 |
9 |
Georgia Tech |
Bowden Comparison
- Florida State's record the two years prior to Bobby Bowden's
arrival was 4-18. Tulane's record the two years prior to Tommy Bowden's
arrival was 4-18.
- Bobby Bowden had Florida State in a bowl games and a top 15 final national
ranking in his second year with the program. Tommy Bowden had Tulane and Clemson
in a bowl game and a top 15 national ranking in his second year with each
program.
- This is Bobby Bowden's 52nd season in coaching. This is Tommy Bowden's
27th year in coaching (graduate assistant, full time assistant or head coach).
- Both Bowden's had perfect seasons as head coaches in the 1990s. Bobby
had an 11-0 season at Florida State in 1999 after Tommy had a perfect 11-0
regular season as head coach at Tulane.
- Tommy Bowden has a better record than Bobby Bowden at the 87-game mark
of his Division I coaching career. Tommy is 57-30 for his first 87 games as
a Division I head coach, while Bobby was 54-33 for his first 87 games. That
includes his six years at West Virginia and his first year plus eight games
at Florida State.
Here is a comparison of the Bowdens at similar stages of their careers:
| Category |
Tommy |
Bobby |
| First seven full Seasons as D-I Head Coach |
56-28 (.667) |
47-32 (.595) |
| First 87 Games as a Division I Head Coach |
57-30 (.655) |
54-33 (.621) |
Tigers From Florida
Clemson has 17 players on its roster from the state of Florida. That list includes
starters Jamaal Fudge and Eric Sampson on defense and Duane Coleman, who was
a starter last year, but has been injured much of this season, but is returning
to health.
Jacksonville is the home of five current Tigers. In addition to Fudge and Sampson
, Tavaghn Monts, Gerald McCloud and freshman Brandon Croley are all from the
home of the Gator Bowl. Jacksonville has been good to Clemson as former Clemson
All-Americans Rod Gardner and Brian Dawkins came to Clemson from that city.
Both are now starters in the NFL. In fact, Dawkins is a three-time Pro Bowl
selection.
Clemson Players From Florida
| Player |
Pos |
Yr |
City |
High School |
| Christian Capote |
OL |
Fr. |
Miami |
Killian |
| Chris Clemons |
DB |
Fr. |
Arcadia |
DeSoto |
| Duane Coleman |
RB |
Jr. |
Naples |
Naples |
| Brandon Croley |
CB |
Fr. |
Jacksonville |
First Coast |
| Andrew Diomonde |
WR |
Fr. |
Miami |
Christopher Columbus |
| David Dunham |
LB |
So. |
Lake City |
Columbia |
| Jamaal Fudge |
CB |
Jr. |
Jacksonville |
White |
| Stephen Furr |
PK |
Jr. |
Lakeland |
Lakeland |
| Cliff Harrell |
FB |
Jr. |
Tallahassee |
N. Florida Chris. Acad. |
| Bobby Hutchinson |
C |
Fr. |
Greenville |
Madison County |
| Gerald McCloud |
WR |
So. |
Jacksonville |
Arlington Cnty Day |
| Tavaghn Monts |
ROV |
Jr. |
Jacksonville |
Ribault |
| Will Proctor |
QB |
So. |
Winter Park |
Trinity Prep |
| Akeem Robinson |
OT |
Fr. |
Miami |
Carol City |
| Eric Sampson |
LB |
Sr. |
Jacksonville |
White |
| Taylor Tremel |
OL |
Fr. |
Lake Mary |
Lake Mary |
| Bobby Williamson |
DE |
Jr. |
Tarpon Springs |
East Lake |
·Denotes starter
Currie Three Catches from 100
If Reggie Jackson was known as Mr. October then Clemson wide receiver Airese
Currie could be known as Mr. September. For the second year in a row the Clemson
senior is off to a great start. A year ago, Currie had 26 receptions for 339
yards and three touchdowns before the end of that month. He then suffered some
injuries and had just 17 catches the rest of the season.
So far this year, Currie has 20 catches for 296 yards and a touchdown. Currie
ranks 15th in the nation in receptions per game with a 6.67 figure, the highest
average in the ACC, and is 17th in reception yards per game at 98.6, also first
in the ACC. Currie had nine catches for 152 yards in the season opener against
Wake Forest. The 152 receiving yards in that game rank in a tie for sixth best
in school history and the 15th best single game performance in the nation so
far this year. He continued his fine performance at Texas A&M with five
catches for 64 yards.
In addition to his receiving accomplishments, Currie has been outstanding in
terms of kickoff returns, averaging 37.3 yards per return. He is not ranked
nationally because he does not have enough attempts.. He has 136.3 all-purpose
yards per game, 30th best in the nation. Currie's strong start has him
closing in on 100 career receptions and 1500 yards. He could eclipse both at
Florida State, as he enters that game with 97 receptions for 1458 yards.When
he reaches the 100 receptions mark he will become just the 11th Tiger in history
to do so. When he reaches 1500 reception yards he will also be the 11th Tiger
to reach that plateau.
The effect Tommy Bowden has had on the Clemson passing game is shown by the
list of players below. Even though he is in just his sixth year as Clemson head
coach, seven of the top 12 receivers in Clemson history have played under Bowden
at some point in their career.
Clemson Career Reception Leaders
| Rk |
Player |
Years |
Yards |
Avg. |
TD |
Rec |
| 1. |
Derrick Hamilton |
2001-03 |
2312 |
13.8 |
16 |
167 |
| 2. |
Rod Gardner |
1997-00 |
2498 |
15.0 |
13 |
166 |
| 3. |
Terry Smith |
1990-03 |
2681 |
16.5 |
15 |
162 |
| 4. |
Perry Tuttle |
1978-81 |
2534 |
16.9 |
17 |
150 |
| 5. |
Kevin Youngblood |
2000-03 |
1713 |
12.1 |
6 |
142 |
| 6. |
Jerry Butler |
1975-78 |
2223 |
16.0 |
11 |
139 |
| 7. |
Brian Wofford |
1996-99 |
1857 |
13.5 |
13 |
138 |
| 8. |
Tony Horne |
1994-97 |
1750 |
14.6 |
13 |
120 |
| 9. |
Phil Rogers |
1965-67 |
1469 |
13.9 |
5 |
106 |
| 10. |
Travis Zachery |
1998-01 |
1057 |
10.1 |
9 |
105 |
| 11. |
Mal Lawyer |
1996-99 |
1255 |
12.7 |
9 |
99 |
| 12. |
Airese Currie |
2001-04 |
1458 |
15.0 |
9 |
97 |
Clemson Career Reception Yardage
Leaders
| Rk |
Player |
Years |
Rec |
Avg. |
TD |
Yds |
| 1. |
Terry Smith |
1990-93 |
162 |
16.5 |
15 |
2681 |
| 2. |
Perry Tuttle |
1978-81 |
150 |
16.9 |
17 |
2534 |
| 3. |
Rod Gardner |
1997-00 |
166 |
15.0 |
13 |
2498 |
| 4. |
Derrick Hamilton |
2001-03 |
167 |
13.8 |
16 |
2312 |
| 5. |
Jerry Butler |
1975-78 |
139 |
16.0 |
11 |
2223 |
| 6. |
Brian Wofford |
1996-99 |
138 |
13.5 |
13 |
1857 |
| 7. |
Tony Horne |
1994-97 |
120 |
14.6 |
13 |
1750 |
| 8. |
Kevin Youngblood |
2000-03 |
142 |
12.1 |
6 |
1713 |
| 9. |
Gary Cooper |
1985-89 |
79 |
20.2 |
11 |
1592 |
| 10. |
Glenn Smith |
1949-51 |
88 |
17.9 |
18 |
1576 |
| 11. |
Terrance Roulhac |
1983-86 |
92 |
16.2 |
16 |
1487 |
| 12. |
Phil Rogers |
1965-67 |
106 |
13.9 |
5 |
1469 |
| 13. |
Airese Currie |
2001-04 |
97 |
15.0 |
9 |
1458 |
Ben Hall Has TD Catch in All Four Seasons
Clemson tight end Ben Hall had a 15-yard touchdown pass against Texas A&M,
Clemson's only score of the game. It was the first touchdown catch of
the year for Hall, but the sixth of his career. He had three touchdown receptions
his first year (2001), one in 2002 and one in 2003. That means Hall now has
at least one touchdown reception in each season he has been at Clemson. Hall
is the first tight end in Clemson history to catch at least one touchdown pass
in four consecutive seasons. Bennie Cunningham had at least one every year he
played, but he did not appear in a game as a freshman in 1972, the first year
freshmen were eligible.
Hall has three catches for 55 yards so far this season and now has 26 for 346
yards for his career, a 13.3 average. One of his top games as a Tiger took place
at Florida State in 2002 when he had three catches for 69 yards, including a
41-yarder that set up a Tiger score. It is still the longest reception of his
Clemson career.
Grant Exceeds 2003 Stats
Clemson sophomore Kelvin Grant is the second leading receiver on the Tiger squad
with 14 catches for 157 yards. His 4.7 receptions per game rank third in the
ACC. He was Clemson's top receiver at Texas A&M with seven receptions
for 63 yards, a performance that came off a six-catch game against Georgia Tech.
Grant has already exceeded his numbers from 2003 when he had 12 catches for
79 yards. He had 10 of those 12 catches over the last five games of the 2003
season, so he has 24 of his 26 career receptions over Clemson's last eight
games.
Miller Ranks in Top 25 in Punt and Kickoff Returns
Clemson cornerback Justin Miller is one of the top return men in the nation.
Through the first three games, Miller ranks 14th kickoff returns with a 27.3
average and 23rd in punt returns with a 12.7 figure. Miller and Adam Jones of
West Virginia are the only two players in the nation ranked in the top 25 in
both categories. Jones is 13th in kickoff returns and fourth in punt returns.
Miller already has a 69-yard punt return for a score this year, a return he
made against Wake Forest on the last play of the first quarter. He ranks first
in the ACC in kickoff returns and second in punt returns. Over his career, Miller
has two punt returns for touchdowns and one kickoff return for a score. He joins
Bobby Gage (1945-48) as the only players in Clemson history with at least one
kickoff return and one punt return for a touchdown over their career.
Miller enters the FSU game ranked fifth in Clemson history in total kickoff
return yards with 1064. He had 134 on four returns at Texas A&M to go over
the 1000-yard mark in that category. He is first in school history in kickoff
return average on a career basis with a 28.8 figure. That list requires a minimum
of 20 attempts.
Clemson Career Leaders in Yards/Kickoff
Return
| Rk |
Player |
Years |
No |
Yds |
Avg |
| 1. |
Justin Miller |
2002-03 |
37 |
1064 |
28.8 |
| 2. |
Joe Henderson |
1987-89 |
30 |
802 |
27.6 |
| 3. |
Derrick Hamilton |
2001-03 |
58 |
1552 |
26.8 |
| 4. |
Tony Horne |
1994-97 |
30 |
795 |
26.5 |
| 5. |
Terrance Roulhac |
1983-86 |
42 |
1108 |
26.4 |
| 6. |
Doug Thomas |
1987-90 |
23 |
582 |
25.3 |
Clemson Career Leaders in Career
Kickoff Return Yards
| Rk |
Player |
Years |
No |
Avg. |
Yards |
| 1. |
Derrick Hamilton |
2001-03 |
58 |
26.8 |
1552 |
| 2. |
Andre Humphrey |
1992-95 |
68 |
21.9 |
1486 |
| 3. |
Ray Williams |
1983-86 |
66 |
20.5 |
1350 |
| 4. |
Terrence Roulhac |
1983-86 |
42 |
26.4 |
1108 |
| 5. |
Justin Miller |
2002-04 |
37 |
28.8 |
1064 |
Whitehurst, Rix Have Similar Stats
Clemson quarterback Charlie Whitehurst and Florida State quarterback Chris Rix
have both had a positive impact the recent history of their respective programs
and have similar passing statistics. A look to the career record books of each
school shows that both players rank second in career passing yardage at their
respective schools. Rix has more yards, but has played an extra year and 13
more games as a starter. But, Whitehurst needs just 168 yards passing against
Florida State to become Clemson's career leader in that category.
Whitehurst just set the Clemson career completion record last week and now
has 471 as a Tiger, while Rix is tied for second in Florida State history with
529. Both are also second in their respective school's history in career
touchdown passes.
Both are not off to starts that are in line with their career numbers, but
both have had outstanding games against Saturday's opposition. As a freshman
in 2001, Rix threw for 369 yards and four touchdowns at Death Valley in a 14-point
Florida State win. A year ago, Whitehurst had 272 yards passing and 311 in total
offense to lead Clemson to a 16-point win over the Seminoles.
Career Ranking Comparison of Chris
Rix and Charlie Whitehurst
|
Whitehurst |
Rix |
| Category |
Figure (Rank) |
Figure (Rank) |
| Completions |
471 (1st) |
529 (tied for 2nd) |
| Passing Yards |
5870 (2nd) |
7824 (2nd) |
| Touchdowns |
35 (tied for 2nd) |
60 (2nd) |
| 300-yard passing games |
6 (1st) |
9 (3rd) |
| Total Offense |
5898 (4th) |
8649 (2nd) |
Fastest Football Players
Who is the fastest football player in the country. That is hard to say, but
one means of evaluation is to look at the 100 meter track times of college track
athletes who are also members of their track team. Based on that theory, Clemson
has the two fastest football players in the nation.
During the 2004 track season, Airese Currie ran a 10.22 time in the 100 meters
at the Clemson Orange & Purple Track Classic, the fastest time recorded
in that event by a track athlete who also plays on his school's football
team. Hill ran a 10.27 at the NCAA national meet for the second fastest time.
Hill was the ACC 60 meter indoor champion and the 100-meter outdoor champion,
the seventh sprinter in Clemson history to win both in the same year. One of
the other former Tigers to do it is Shawn Crawford, a sprinter on the United
States Olympic track team in 2004.
It is interesting to note that four of the top 12 players listed will be on
the same field when Clemson plays Miami (FL) in the Orange Bowl on November
6, 2004.
Here is a list of the fastest college football players for 2004 based on 100
meter track times recorded in the spring of 2004:
Fastest College Football Players
based on Track Times
|
Athlete, Pos. |
School |
Time |
| 1. |
Airese Currie, WR |
Clemson |
10.22 |
| 2/ |
Tye Hill, DB |
Clemson |
10.27 |
| 3. |
Jonathan Wade, DB |
Tennessee |
10.38 |
| 4. |
Stanford Routt, DB |
Houston |
10.39 |
| 5. |
Devin Hester, WR |
Miami (FL) |
10.42 |
| 6. |
Pedro Holiday, WR |
Middle Tennessee |
10.43 |
|
Terrell Walden, DB |
Miami (FL) |
10.43 |
|
Dennis Mitchell, DB |
W. Kentucky |
10.43 |
| 9. |
Stanley Wilson, DB |
Stanford |
10.46 |
|
Nate Soleberg, DB |
BYU |
10.46 |
| 11. |
Jarvis Murchison, WR |
Louisiana-Laf. |
10.47 |
|
Darnell Jenkins, WR |
Miami (FL) |
10.47 |
Notes on Clemson's 2004 Schedule
- Clemson's fourth game of the year will be at Florida State. The Tigers
defeated a sixth ranked Seminoles team at Clemson last season by a 26-10 score.
Clemson has not won in Tallahassee since 1989.
- The Tigers will have October 2 open, then face Virginia in Charlottesville
for a Thursday night game. It will be Clemson's third straight road
game, the first time Clemson has played three straight road games since 1994.
The contest will be televised nationally by ESPN. Clemson defeated Virginia
30-27 in overtime last year and each of the last three meetings between the
two schools have been decided by five points or less, including two on plays
within the last five seconds.
- Clemson will return home on October 16 to face Utah State for the first
time in history. It will be Clemson's first home game in 35 days. This
is the longest stretch without a home game during the regular season since
1984. Utah State is a member of the Sun Belt Conference, the same league as
2003 Clemson opponent Middle Tennessee.
- Clemson concludes a three-game home stand with conference games against
Maryland (October 23) and NC State (October 30), two teams that defeated the
Tigers in 2003.
- The Tigers then will go back on the road to face first-year ACC school
Miami (FL) in the Orange Bowl. Clemson has not played Miami (FL) since 1956,
but the Tigers have played in their stadium. Clemson won the 1982 Orange Bowl,
by a 22-15 score over Nebraska to win the 1981 National Championship at the
Orange Bowl. It will be Clemson's first game in that facility since
that triumph.
- Clemson and Miami (FL) have played five times in history, including two
games in bowl games. All five games were played in the Frank Howard era at
Clemson and all five were played in the state of Florida. Clemson defeated
Miami (FL) 15-14 in the 1951 Orange Bowl. The following year Miami (FL) defeated
Clemson 14-0 in the Gator Bowl in Jacksonville.
- Miami (FL) defeated Clemson 21-0 in a regular season game at the Orange
Bowl in 1956, the last time Clemson has played the Hurricanes. That game was
a match-up of a 12th ranked Clemson team against an eighth ranked Miami (FL)
team.
- Clemson finishes its road schedule at Duke. The Tigers have defeated the
Blue Devils all five years Tommy Bowden has been the head coach at Clemson,
but the last meeting in Durham was a close 34-31 Tiger victory.
- Clemson concludes the season against archrival South Carolina on November
20. The game will be played at Clemson. The Tigers have won six of the last
seven meetings between the two teams overall and each of the last three played
at Death Valley. The last South Carolina coach to win at Death Valley is current
Clemson offensive coordinator Brad Scott, who led the Gamecocks to a 34-31
win at Clemson in 1996.
Clemson Record by Uniform
Clemson has used many uniform combinations over the last six years. Clemson
has had a different combination for each game this year. Last year, the Tigers
broke out purple jerseys for the Georgia Tech game in Atlanta on September 20
and the Tigers gained a 39-3 victory. It was the first time Clemson had worn
purple jerseys since the 1991 season when Clemson wore them in a regular season
game against NC State and for a bowl game against California.
Clemson has had seven jersey/pant combinations since Tommy Bowden came to Clemson.
Clemson was in orange jersey and white pants for the opening win over Wake Forest,
then all orange for the Georgia Tech game. Clemson had a white jersey and purple
pants at Texas A&M.
Clemson Record by Uniform Combination
Under Bowden
| Jersey |
Pant |
2004 |
Record |
Pct |
| Purple |
White |
|
1-0 |
1.000 |
| Purple |
Orange |
|
1-0 |
1.000 |
| Orange |
White |
1-0 |
19-6 |
.731 |
| White |
Orange |
|
9-7 |
.500 |
| White |
White |
|
2-2 |
.500 |
| Orange |
Orange |
0-1 |
5-6 |
.444 |
| White |
Purple |
0-1 |
2-5 |
.286 |
|
|
1-2 |
39-26 |
.600 |
Whitehurst, Baham Offspring of NFL Players
Clemson has two players who are the offspring of NFL players. Curtis Baham,
a wide receiver who has four caches for 48 yards so far this season, and quarterback
Charlie Whitehurst, both have NFL blood. Both are juniors on the current Clemson
team.
Baham was injured much of the preseason, but is healthy now. Last year he was
fourth on the team in receptions with 22 for 241 yards. He had at least one
catch in each of the last eight games. Baham's father Curtis played in
three games for the Seattle Seahawks in 1987. He was a star player at Tulane
prior to his year in the NFL.
Whitehurst is the son of former Green Bay Packers quarterback David Whitehurst.
The elder Whitehurst played seven years in the NFL. During that time he played
in 54 games, completed 51.4 percent of his passes for 6205 yards and 28 scores.
He was the Green Bay starter for most of the 1978 and 1979 seasons when he passed
for over 2000 yards each season.
Clemson Has three of top 10 ACC Receivers
Clemson has three of the top 10 receivers in the ACC on a receptions
per game and reception yardage basis. Airese Currie leads the ACC with 6.67
receptions per game and 98.7 yards per game. Kelvin Grant is third in receptions
at 4.67 per game and seventh in yardage at 52.3 per game. Chansi Stuckey stands
tied for eighth in catches per game at 3.67 and is eighth in yards per game
at 51.7. The trio is a big reason Clemson stands first in the ACC in passing
yards per game at 251.7, 25 yards per game more than any other team.
Quarterbacks Have Flourished under Bowden
Watching Charlie Whitehurst have an impact on the Clemson record book is no
surprise. Clemson head coach Tommy Bowden has a history of developing outstanding
quarterbacks since he became a head coach in 1997.
In his two years at Tulane, he guided Shawn King to many school and national
records. In fact, in 1998, King led the nation with a passing efficiency rating
of 183.3. That year he completed 223-328 passes for 3232 yards, 36 touchdowns
and just six interceptions. That 183.3 rating remains the all-time NCAA record
for passing efficiency rating over the course of a season.
One of the players Bowden recruited before he left Tulane was current Washington
Redskins quarterback Patrick Ramsey. Ramsey played at Tulane through the 2001
season and is now the starting signal caller for the Washington Redskins. Ironically,
one of his top receivers is former Tiger Rod Gardner.
Since Bowden has been at Clemson, 57 Clemson passing records have been set
or tied. Brandon Streeter set the Clemson single season completion percentage
in 1999 when he connected on 63.1 percent of his passes. In 2001, Woodrow Dantzler
became the first player in college football history to pass for 2000 yards and
rush for 1000 in the same season. Whitehurst owns 33 Clemson passing records
and needs just 168 yards passing at Florida State to establish another, most
yards passing in a career.
Bring a Pillow
Clemson's games so far in 2004 have lasted nearly four hours. The double
overtime victory against Wake Forest took 3:58, and the Georgia Tech game took
3:48. The Wake Forest game ranks as the second longest in Clemson history in
terms of clock time and the longest in terms of overtime periods. Clemson's
three previous overtime games were just one period.
The longest game in Clemson history was the victory over Tennessee in the 2004
Peach Bowl, a game that last four hours and five minutes. Of course there was
a 27-minute halftime that contributed to the record length. There was a Maryland
game that took 3:50 in 1992 in College Park. Those are the only games longer
than last Saturday's night's game with Georgia Tech that took 3:48.
Thus, three of the four longest games in Clemson history have been Clemson's
last three games.
Clemson's Longest Games in
terms of Real Time
| Season |
Opponent |
Score |
Time |
| 2003 |
#Tennessee |
27-14 |
4:05 |
| 2004 |
Wake Forest (2OT) |
37-30 |
3:58 |
| 1992 |
at Maryland |
23-53 |
3:50 |
| 2004 |
Georgia Tech |
24-28 |
3:48 |
| 1999 |
at NC State |
31-35 |
3:45 |
| 2002 |
at Duke |
34-31 |
3:45 |
| 1997 |
Florida State |
28-35 |
3:44 |
| 2001 |
at NC State |
45-37 |
3:43 |
| 2001 |
$Louisiana Tech |
49-24 |
3:43 |
| 1998 |
NC State |
39-46 |
3:42 |
#at Peach Bowl, $Humanitarian Bowl
Leroy Hill Leads the Defense
Leroy Hill had an All-America quality 2003 season when he had 145 tackles, including
27 tackles for loss, second in the nation. He has picked up where he left off
with 29 tackles over the first three games, including seven behind the line
of scrimmage, three of which have been sacks. That is an average of 9.7 tackles,
2.3 tackles for loss per game and 1 sacks per game. In 2003 he averaged 11.1
tackles per game, 2.08 tackles for loss per game and 0.6 sacks per game. In
other words, he is playing at the same level or better this year.
For his career, Hill now has 234 tackles, 36 tackles for loss and 11 quarterback
sacks. He has done this even though he has started just 16 games in his Clemson
career. Over his first two years, he played just 182 snaps from scrimmage. He
had 14 tackles against Georgia Tech. Despite the loss, he was named ACC Defensive
Lineman of the Week.
During the preseason, Hill was named to the Butkus, Lombardi and Nagurski Award
lists, one of 16 players nationally to appear on all three lists. The only other
ACC player on all three is Pat Thomas of NC State.
The 16 Players on Butkus, Lombardi and Nagurski Preseason Lists:
Brian Atkinson, Northern Illinois
Andy Avalos, Boise State
Michael Broley, Southern Miss
Nick Bunting, Tulsa
Channing Crowder, Florida
Will Derting, Washington State
Spencer Havner, UCLA
Leroy Hill, Clemson
Derrick Johnson, Texas
James Kinney, Missouri
Kirk Morrison, San Diego State
Robert Rodriquez, UTEP
Pat Thomas, NC State
Rian Wallace, Temple
Zac Woodfin, UAB
Pierre Woods, Michigan
First Two Games Have Been Thrillers
Clemson's opening two games of the season have been thrillers, a 37-30
overtime victory against Wake Forest, and a 28-24 loss to Georgia Tech. Tech
scored the winning touchdown with just 11 seconds left.
This is the first time since 1986 that each of the first two games of the season
have been decided by seven points or less, never mind being decided within the
last minute of the game. In 1986, Clemson lost to Virginia Tech in the opener,
20-14, then defeated Georgia in Athens 31-28 on a 46-yard field goal by David
Treadwell on the last play of the game.
Overall, this is just the 12th time in Clemson history the first two games
have been decided by a touchdown or less. A close game at Texas A&M would
create a first because Clemson has never had the first three games of the year
decided by seven points or less. The 1958 season came close, as the Tigers beat
Virginia in the opener by 20-15, then stopped North Carolina 26-21 before defeating
Maryland 8-0 in the third game of the year.
Clemson actually won the fourth game that year 12-7, giving Frank Howard's
team four wins by eight points or less to open the season. That team won six
games by eight or less on the way to an 8-3 record and#12 final ranking in the
AP poll. The only loss that year by eight points or less was to #1 ranked LSU
by a 7-0 score in Clemson's only Sugar Bowl appearance in history.
You can see by the following Chart that the first two games have been close
in many areas:
Stat Comparison First Two Games
of the Season
| Category |
Clemson |
Opponent |
| Points |
61 |
58 |
| Touchdowns |
7 |
7 |
| Field Goals |
3 |
3 |
| Total Offense/G |
416 |
386.5 |
| Yards/Pass Attempt |
6.70 |
6.67 |
| Punting Average |
39.6 |
40.3 |
| First Downs |
42 |
44 |
| Penalties |
15 |
18 |
Whitehurst Leads ACC in Passing Yards
Clemson quarterback Charlie Whitehurst leads the ACC in passing yardage per
game and total offense per game in the young season. He has averaged a league
best 251.7 in terms of passing yardage and 251.3 in terms of total offense.
Whitehurst threw for 275 yards in Clemson's loss to Georgia Tech after
recording 288 in the opener against Wake Forest. He had 192 passing yards at
Texas A&M breaking his streak of eight straight games with at least 200
yards passing. In fact, his streak was eight straight with at least 246 yards
through the air. He has thrown for at least 246 yards in 17 of his 21 games
as a starter. Whitehurst is now 13-8 as a starter in his Clemson career, 8-3
at home, 4-4 on the road and 1-1 at neutral site.
Whitehurst Moving up Career Marks
Clemson quarterback Charlie Whitehurst became Clemson's
career leader in completions in the Texas A&M game. He had 20 completions
in that contest (third consecutive game with exactly 20) and now has 471 for
his career. He needs just 168 passing yards at Florida State to become Clemson's
career leader in that category. He now has 5870 and the record is 6037 by Woody
Dantzler. His touchdown pass total of 35 is now tied for second in school history
and seven away from breaking Dantzler's mark in that category. Not bad
for just 25 total games played, 21 as a starter.
Whitehurst owns 33 Clemson records. He had the mark for passing efficiency
entering this season, but his128.46 career figure through three games is now
fourth . Dantzler has the record at 132.46, so another good game or two should
move Whitehurst back to the top. He still has the record for completion percentage
at 59., ahead of Dantzler's 57.8.
Whitehurst is fourth in school history in terms of total offense with 5898,
trailing only Dantzler (8798), Greene (6786) and Steve Fuller (6096).
Clemson Career Leaders in Completion
Percentage
(Minimum of 150 attempts)
| Rk |
Player |
Years |
Com |
Att |
Pct |
| 1. |
Charlie Whitehurst |
2002-03 |
471 |
798 |
.590 |
| 2. |
Woodrow Dantzler |
1998-01 |
460 |
796 |
.578 |
| 3. |
Nealon Greene |
1994-97 |
458 |
805 |
.569 |
| 4. |
Chris Morocco |
1986-89 |
89 |
157 |
.567 |
| 5. |
Brandon Streeter |
1996-99 |
294 |
519 |
.566 |
| 6. |
Mike Eppley |
1980-84 |
252 |
449 |
.561 |
| 7. |
DeChane Cameron |
1988-91 |
257 |
470 |
.547 |
| 8. |
Billy Lott |
1977-79 |
105 |
198 |
.530 |
| 9. |
Homer Jordan |
1979-82 |
250 |
479 |
.5219 |
| 10. |
Willie Simmons |
2000-02 |
204 |
391 |
.5217 |
Clemson Career Passing Efficiency Leaders
(Minimum of 100 attempts)
| Rk |
Player |
Years |
Com |
Att |
Yds |
TD-I |
Eff |
| 1. |
Woodrow Dantzler |
1998-01 |
460 |
796 |
6037 |
41-24 |
132.46 |
| 2. |
Mark Fellers |
1972-74 |
58 |
124 |
943 |
12-7 |
131.30 |
| 3. |
Chris Morocco |
1986-89 |
89 |
157 |
1238 |
6-4 |
130.44 |
| 4. |
Charlie Whitehurst |
2002-03 |
471 |
798 |
5870 |
35-26 |
128.46 |
| 5. |
Mike Eppley |
1980-84 |
252 |
449 |
3354 |
28-26 |
127.85 |
| 6. |
Bobby Gage |
1945-48 |
123 |
278 |
2448 |
24-27 |
127.26 |
| 7. |
Nealon Greene |
1994-97 |
458 |
805 |
5719 |
35-26 |
124.46 |
| 8. |
Harvey White |
1957-59 |
145 |
289 |
2103 |
18-12 |
123.58 |
| 9. |
Jackie Calvert |
1948-50 |
40 |
101 |
885 |
8-8 |
123.48 |
| 10. |
Steve Fuller |
1975-78 |
287 |
554 |
4359 |
22-21 |
123.43 |
Clemson Career Leaders in Completions
(Minimum of 150 attempts)
| Rk |
Player |
Years |
Att |
Yards |
Comp. |
| 1. |
Charlie Whitehurst |
2002-03 |
762 |
5870 |
471 |
| 2. |
Woodrow Dantzler |
1998-01 |
796 |
6037 |
460 |
| 3. |
Nealon Greene |
1994-97 |
805 |
5719 |
458 |
| 4. |
Rodney Willaims |
1985-88 |
717 |
4647 |
333 |
| 5. |
Tommy Kendrick |
1969-71 |
644 |
3893 |
303 |
Clemson Career Leaders in Passing Yardage
(Minimum of 150 attempts)
| Rk |
Player |
Years |
Att |
Com |
Yards |
| 1. |
Woodrow Dantzler |
1998-01 |
796 |
460 |
6037 |
| 2. |
Charlie Whitehurst |
2002-04 |
798 |
471 |
5870 |
| 3. |
Nealon Greene |
1994-97 |
805 |
458 |
5719 |
| 4. |
Rodney Williams |
1985-88 |
717 |
333 |
4647 |
| 5. |
Steve Fuller |
1975-78 |
554 |
|
|