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3 takeaways from Clemson’s stunning ACC Championship Game upset of SMU

Brett Friedlander

By Brett Friedlander

Published:


SMU staged a comeback for the ages in the ACC Championship Game on Saturday.

Then Clemson did it one better.

The Mustangs came all the way back from a 17-point second half deficit to tie the game on a 4-yard pass from Kevin Jennings to Roderick Daniels with 16 seconds remaining, capping a clutch 16-play, 79-yard drive.

But instead of going to overtime, the Tigers had an answer.

A 41-yard kickoff return by Adam Randall and a 17-yard pass from Cade Klubnik to Antonio Williams put kicker Nolan Hauser in position to kick a game-winning 56-yard field goal that gave Clemson a 34-31 victory and the ACCโ€™s automatic Playoff bid.

Not only was it the longest field goal in the 20-year history of the ACC Championship Game, it was also the first time the game has ended on a walkoff field goal.

Here are 3 takeaways from the win that clinched Clemsonโ€™s 8th conference title in the past 10 years โ€“ against its seventh different opponent โ€“ and put SMU squarely on the College Football Playoff bubble:

Clemsonโ€™s Texas 2-step

Saturday wasnโ€™t a good day for the team from Texas at the ACC Championship Game. For that, the Mustangs can blame 2 players from the Lone State State.

Klubnik, a native of Austin, completed 24-of-41 passes for 260 yards and 4 touchdowns. His favorite receiver, freshman Bryant Wesco Jr. from the Dallas suburb of Midlothian, had the best game of his young career with 8 catches for 142 yards and 2 scores.

The duo got going early by connecting on a 35-yard touchdown strike to open the scoring just 1:25 into the game. They hooked up again for an even longer score later in the opening quarter when Wesco took a pass across the middle, slipped the grasp of 2 SMU defenders and sprinted the rest of the way for a 43-yard touchdown that increased the Tigersโ€™ lead to 21-7.

Wescoโ€™s previous bests were 7 catches in a loss to Louisville and 130 receiving yards in an early season win against Appalachian State.

This time the other team started fast

SMU has made a habit of putting pressure on teams this season by scoring early and often, and playing with a lead. The Mustangs outscored the opposition by a whopping 125-41 margin in the first quarter during the regular season. And by a 247-105 margin in the first half.

But it was a different story Saturday against Clemson.

The Tigers scored 2 touchdowns in the opening 5 minutes and 3 on their first 3 offensive possessions on the way to building a 24-7 halftime advantage.

While Clemsonโ€™s offense had a lot to do with the fast start โ€“ Klubnik completed 11-of-19 passes for 129 yards and 3 touchdowns, including 2 to Bryant Wesco, over the first 2 periods โ€“ SMU was equally complicit.

SMU outgained Clemson 193-183 in the first half. But its mistakes were costly. The Tigers’ first touchdown was set up by a Jennings fumble deep in his own territory. Another was aided by a special teams penalty that gave Clemson a short field. The Mustangs quarterback also threw an interception while kicker Collin Rogers issued a field goal.

Clean game for the Tigers

While SMU had a hard time getting out of its own way during the first half, Clemson did everything championship teams are supposed to do. The Tigers took advantage of their opportunities, didnโ€™t turn the ball over and most importantly did commit a penalty in the game.

At least one that was accepted or counted.

The closest they came to getting penalized came with 4:25 remaining in the third quarter. Clemson was originally called for offensive pass interference on a 37-yard completion from Klubnik to Williams. But after a discussion among the officials, it was determined that there was no foul and the flag was picked up.

The Tigers were also called for running into the kicker on Rogersโ€™ 46-yard field goal with just under 7 minutes remaining. But because the call wouldnโ€™t have resulted in a first down, the Mustangs declined and kept the points on the board.

SMU committed 6 penalties for 65 yards.

Brett Friedlander

Award-winning columnist Brett Friedlander has covered the ACC and college basketball since the 1980s.

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