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Clemson Basketball

Clemson Selected for Second NCAA Tournament in Four Years

March 15, 2021
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CLEMSON, S.C. — Clemson University men’s basketball earned an at-large bid into the 2021 NCAA Tournament as a No. 7 seed and will face the No. 10 seed Rutgers. The first-round Midwest Region matchup will take place on Friday, Mar. 19 at a to-be-announced time, network and location. All games in the 2021 Tournament are being held in the Indianapolis area. The winner will take on the winner of a matchup between (2) Houston and (15) Cleveland State. 

This marks the second time in the last four seasons that Head Coach Brad Brownell has the Tigers advancing to the NCAA Tournament. Overall, Brownell this will be Brownell’s sixth NCAA Tournament, and third at Clemson. The Tigers will be making their 13th appearance overall. All have taken place since 1980.

Clemson enters the first-round game with a 16-7 record, including a 10-6 mark in regular season ACC games. The 10 conference victories are tied for the second-most in program history, while the win percentage is tied for fourth best. The Tigers are 2-1 all-time against Rutgers with the last matchup coming in the 2015-16 season, a 76-58 victory in Las Vegas, Nev. 

Clemson enters the NCAA Tournament ranked No. 41 in the NET, No. 21 in RPI, 25 in strength of schedule. Its three Quad 1 wins rank tied for second in the ACC. The Tigers are 10-6 in Quad 1 and Quad 2 games and rank first in Quad 1 and Quad 2 wins. 

The Tigers have four non-conference wins over Power 5 teams, the only ACC team that can make that claim. In average NET ranking of wins, the Tigers are tied for 10th with a score of 92. They are 3-0 against teams listed in the top 12 (Alabama, Purdue and Maryland).

Aamir Simms earned All-ACC postseason accolades when the regular season concluded. Simms was named to the All-ACC second team, while also headlining a group of six Tigers to earn All-ACC Academic honors after earning the prestigious ACC Skip Prosser Scholar-Athlete Award.

The Tigers are led in scoring (13.3 ppg), rebounding (6.2 rpg) and assists (2.7 apg) by Simms. Simms has 15 double-digit scoring games, including three 20-point contests. He tied his career-high twice this season with 25 points each in wins over Miami (Jan. 2) and Georgia Tech (Feb. 12).

Hunter Tyson has turned in a career year to this point of the season. The junior is shooting a career-best 47.3 percent from the floor, 41.7 percent from three and 77.1 percent from the foul line. He is averaging 7.4 points and 4.3 rebounds per game.

Clemson’s guard play has been more than stellar this season with the combination of Al-Amir Dawes, Nick Honor and Clyde Trapp.

Dawes, Honor and Trapp account for nearly 25.0 points per game, nearly 9.0 rebounds per game and nearly 7.0 assists per game. Trapp posted a career-high 11 assists in a win over Syracuse (Feb. 6). Dawes and Honor have combined for 20 double-digit scoring games and two 20-point outings.

Dawes scored a career-high 21 points against Pittsburgh (March 6) and Honor scored a career-high 21 points in a win over NC State (Jan. 5). Honor’s heroics lifted Clemson to victory against Georgia Tech when he banked in a 3-pointer at the buzzer to best the Yellow Jackets 74-72.

The Tigers have been ultra-impressive from the free throw line this season. As a team, Clemson is fourth in the league and 31st in the country. It’s mark of 76.5 percent is currently first in program history. Five other Brad Brownell teams are listed in the top 10.

Clemson’s most successful NCAA run came in 1980, the first year Clemson was selected. The Tigers won three tournament games under head coach Bill Foster and reached the Elite Eight of the tournament before losing to UCLA. Clemson also made the Sweet 16 in 1990 under Cliff Ellis and 1997 under Rick Barnes.

Most recently, Clemson returned to the Sweet 16 in 2018 behind two wins in San Diego, Calif., including a 31-point victory over No. 4 seed Auburn in the second round. It was the largest margin of victory by a lower seed in tournament history.

Coach Brownell has taken three different programs to the NCAA Tournament. He previously took UNC Wilmington in 2003 and 2006, Wright State in 2007 and Clemson in 2011 and 2018. He took each school to the tournament in his first year with the program.

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Clemson Selected for Second NCAA Tournament in Four Years

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