No. 1 Clemson holds off Texas A&M 24-10

Clemson shows No. 1 swagger after Aggies come in confident.

The Associated Press
September 8, 2019 at 1:09AM
Clemson's Trevor Lawrence, left, scores a touchdown while being defended by Texas A&M's Keldrick Carper during the first half of an NCAA college football game Saturday, Sept. 7, 2019, in Clemson, S.C. (AP Photo/Richard Shiro)
Clemson’s Trevor Lawrence drove to the goal line while Texas A&M’s Keldrick Carper tried unsuccessfully to drag him down. Lawrence also passed for two TDs. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)

CLEMSON, S.C.

The Aggies (1-1) talked of an upset all week and figured to be the sternest test left for the defending national champions. Instead, the Tigers (2-0) methodically made plays, stretched out drives and pressured A&M junior quarterback Kellen Mond into an awful showing.

The decisive win tied Clemson's best-ever run of success that spanned the 2014 and 2015 seasons. It also left a major question in college football: Who can stop these guys?

"That is definitely not how we think," Clemson co-offensive coordinator Jeff Scott said. "We'll look back at this game in six or seven weeks and go, `Hey, that was a really big-time win early in the year."' The Tigers will be double-digit favorites the rest of the regular season in their try for a fifth straight Atlantic Coast Conference title and College Football Playoff berth.

Texas A&M came in filled with confidence. The Aggies vowed they wouldn't let their near-miss, 28-26 loss to Clemson happen this time. They shrugged off the Death Valley crowd with all their own experience in loud Southeastern Conference venues. Offensive lineman Jared Hocker even predicted the upset.

Instead, it was A&M shaking its head about what went wrong as Clemson relentlessly wore down the Aggies with its collection of fast, talented playmakers.

Lawrence said the team remembered how some thought Clemson "lucky" to escape the Aggies. "We wanted to leave no doubt this year," he said. "I think we did that."

It began with Lawrence, who scrambled out of pressure as Justyn Ross broke behind defenders for a way-too-easy, 30-yard touchdown catch that put Clemson up for good.

Then safety Nolan Turner jarred Mond on what would have been a first-down run to cause a fumble that linebacker James Skalski pounced on to blunt an Aggies' drive.

With the half running out, Clemson receiver Tee Higgins reached behind him to snag Lawrence's throw at the A&M 2. Two plays later, Lawrence had a 1-yard scoring run to send Clemson up 17-3 at the break.

The Aggies could not respond.

"We're a good team," Texas A&M coach Jimbo Fisher said. "We've just got to play better." Lawrence went 24 of 35 passing for 268 yards.

Texas A&M's offense and Mond struggled against the rebuilt Tigers defense. Gone were the swarming front four led by All-American — and first-round NFL draft picks — Clelin Ferrell and Christian Wilkins. But the new group, led by sophomore defensive end Xavier Thomas, was just as potent. Thomas had a sack and the Tigers held Texas A&M to 92 yards in the opening half.

Mond, who threw for 430 yards against Clemson a season ago, finished with 236 yards passing — only 115 of those the first three quarters — with an interception and a fumble. His lone TD pass came with 6 seconds remaining in the game, a 2-yard lob to Jalen Wydermeyer.

Mond said he spoke to players before coach Jimbo Fisher, reminding them there was a long way to go before anything was determined this season. He believes the Aggies will learn and improve.

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