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Clemson Football

The Notes: Clemson 27, Boston College 7

November 11, 2018
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Here are a few key notes coming out to Clemson's 27-7 win at Boston College last night.

  • Clemson outgained Boston College, 424-113. The 113 yards surrendered by the Tigers were the second-fewest allowed by Clemson against Boston College since the Eagles joined the ACC, trailing only a 54-yard defensive performance in 2009.
  • Clemson held the Eagles to nine yards rushing, 216 yards below Boston College’s season average entering the game.
  • The nine rushing yards allowed are the second-fewest by Clemson this season, trailing the team’s performance at Florida State (-21).
  • With 129 rushing yards on offense, Clemson outrushed an opponent for the ninth time this season. The Tigers have now outrushed opponents in 20 of their 24 games since 2017 and are 20-0 when outrushing opponents in that time frame.
  • During the contest, Clemson surpassed 5,000 yards of offense on the season, the 15th 5,000-yard season in school history.
  • Clemson forced 12 Boston College punts, matching the most by a Clemson opponent this season set at Wake Forest and at Florida State.
  • Quarterback Trevor Lawrence posted career highs in completions (29) and pass attempts (40) for 295 yards with one touchdown and one interception. Lawrence was the recipient of the Leather Helmet Award as the game’s most valuable player as awarded by the Boston College Gridiron Club.
  • During the contest, Lawrence broke Deshaun Watson's school record for total offense by a true freshman (1,666 in 2014).

  • Lawrence recorded his first career rushing touchdown on a six-yard scoring rush in the third quarter.
  • On his first carry, running back Travis Etienne reached 1,000 rushing yards on the year. His 1,076 rushing yards this year represent the 21st 1,000-yard rushing season in school history.
  • Etienne reached the 1,000-yard rushing milestone in his 10th game of the season to mark the ninth time in school history that a Clemson player has rushed for 1,000 yards in a season in as few as 10 games.
  • Wide receiver Hunter Renfrow recorded season highs in receptions (8) and receiving yards (80).
  • During the contest, Renfrow (172) passed Rod Gardner (166) and Derrick Hamilton (167) for sixth on the school's leaderboard for career receptions.
  • On a 13-yard reception in the first quarter, Renfrow tied Artavis Scott's team record of 38 consecutive games with a reception from 2014-16.
  • The game was Renfrow’s 42nd career start, tying him with Terry Smith (1990-93) for the most career starts by a wide receiver in school history.
  • Clemson opened the scoring with a 30-yard field goal by kicker Greg Huegel. Clemson has now scored on its opening drive in back-to-back games for the first time since a four-game stretch last season against Virginia Tech, Wake Forest, Syracuse and Georgia Tech.
  • Huegel added a 23-yard field goal in the second quarter with which he passed Jad Dean (51 from 2003-06) for sixth-most career field goals in school history.
  • Tight end Milan Richard recorded his first touchdown reception of the season on a two-yard pass from Lawrence on fourth-and-goal in the first quarter. It was Richard’s second career touchdown reception and his first since Oct. 28, 2017 against Georgia Tech.
  • Including Lawrence and Richard scoring their first touchdowns of the season, Clemson has now posted 61 total touchdowns scored by 21 different players. The 21 different players scoring a touchdown this season tie a school record, matching the mark set by the 2013 squad.
  • Wide receiver Amari Rodgers recorded a 58-yard punt return for touchdown in the fourth quarter, his first career punt return for touchdown.
  • The punt return for touchdown by Rodgers was Clemson’s first since Ray-Ray McCloud returned a punt 77 yards for a touchdown against NC State on Nov. 4, 2017.
  • Including the punt returns for touchdowns by Rodgers and McCloud during the last two seasons, Clemson has now recorded a punt return for touchdown in back-to-back seasons for the first time since a five-year stretch from 2003-07.
  • Clemson surrendered a 74-yard punt return for touchdown in the first quarter. The game was the first in Clemson history in which both teams recorded a punt return for touchdown.
  • Tackle Mitch Hyatt made his 52nd career start to tie kicker Chandler Catanzaro's school record for career starts.
  • Defensive tackle Christian Wilkins made his 40th career start to tie Jim Stuckey's school record for starts by a defensive tackle, set from 1976-79. (Note: Wilkins has also started at defensive end in his career but is currently listed at tackle).

  • With a sack in the third quarter, defensive end Clelin Ferrell moved past Adrian Dingle and Keith Adams (23.0 each) for sole possession of fifth-most career sacks in Clemson history.
  • Clemson held the ball for a season-high 35:23, surpassing a 32:51 time of possession vs. Syracuse. Clemson’s 35:23 time of possession was the school’s longest since holding the ball for 35:26 vs. South Carolina last season.
  • Official temperature at kickoff was 34 degrees, making it the third-coldest game in Clemson history and the coldest game at kickoff since a 32-degree game against Louisiana Tech in the 2001 Humanitarian Bowl in Boise, Idaho.
  • Captains for the contest were offensive tackle Mitch Hyatt, defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence, guard John Simpson and defensive tackle Christian Wilkins.

The Notes: Clemson 27, Boston College 7

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