Disclaimer: The site is not affiliated with James Davis, nor Clemson Tigers, or even associated with James Davis and we are a fan site of JamesDavisOnline.com
jamesdavisonline.com
Home    Sitemap    Contact Us
James Davis - Clemson Tigers James Davis
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
    
James Davis News
  
Six Clemson University football players on award watch lists

Tigers pick up verbal from Florida rb

Clemson's Cullen Harper on preseason Johnny Unitas list

Clemson Makes Slow Motion Fast With DNF

Clemson gets times for first three games

Pell’s story of hope

Magazine picks Clemson football No. 10 in preseason

Clemson lands recruit from Lonestar State

Memphis Grizzlies Getting Inside

Bowden happy focus on Tigers, not him

Clemson's Rivers to return for senior season

Tigers put on show for fans in Orange and White game

Desire to get even better drives Clemson's Harper

McDaniel switches to strong side linebacker

Wrenn to host coaching clinic, with Danny Ford among speakers

Clemson bounces BC

Clemson Spring Football Practice Opens

Four Tigers to Change Positions in Spring

Clemson Announces Special Game Day Designations

Scouting Report: Chris McDuffie, DT, Clemson

Five Tigers Named to All-ACC Academic Team

Cheraw receiver picks Tigers

Tigers land two top line prospects

State colleges | Clemson’s Richardson to play in Senior Bowl

Clemson names Jeff Scott graduate assistant

3 Clemson football players to stay, 3 going to NFL

Clemson's Davis not done yet

Davis runs past poverty to Clemson stardom

FLASHBACK: First-year struggles at WVU only made Rodriguez more determined

Davis told bowl role will be forecast of his ’08 duties

Auburn looks forward to bowl

Davis, Kelly, McDuffie and Richardson All Make First Team All-ACC

Koenning still haunted by last year's loss to Gamecocks

BC hopes to tighten up on defense

Wake Forest-Clemson Preview

Clemson-Duke Preview

Davis' guarantee adds spice to practice

Tigers try to regroup vs. Central Michigan

Halfbacks running low on chances

Davis Lends Advice To Spiller

Coming Home Again

Clemson-N.C. State Preview

Davis Leaning Towards A Senior Year

What we learned at FSU-Clemson

Tigers looking for another fast start

Clemson's Harper set to take over as QB

Clemson junior back's future part of present

Clemson, South Carolina start football practice

Ranking the ACC’s top rushers

10 reasons why ACC's on the rise

Clemson Tight Ends

Preseason mags fill fans’ appetite

More Honors for Richardson, Davis, Spiller

Clemson spotlight: Alex Pearson

ACC Preview

A New Advantage.

  
  
View our Legal Disclaimer.
Other James Davis News
  
Syndicated content not available
  
  

James Davis News

  

Bowden happy focus on Tigers, not him

Clemson head football coach Tommy Bowden sees one welcome change this fall – it will be his Tigers instead of himself in the crosshairs.

"It'll be a lot better because the bullseye won't be on me," Bowden said Tuesday. "That'll be a different angle."

Bowden received a contract extension after last year's 9-4 season that ties him to the university through 2014. The enormous expectations are still there for Clemson, which has several stars back and should be among the early favorites to win the Atlantic Coast Conference.

"We've finished second in the division the past three years and we have some people coming back from last year's team," Bowden said. "Based on last year's accomplishments, some people are picking us."

And with good reason. Quarterback Cullen Harper, the running duo of James Davis and C.J. Spiller, receiver Aaron Kelly and defensive lineman Dorrell Scott have all returned. The lone standout to go was defensive end Phillip Merling. But Bowden's got a decent option to replace him – incoming freshman Da'Quan Bowers, who is rated as the country's top recruit by some recruiting services.

"I'm anxious, naturally, to see how the team will respond," Bowden said. "Hopefully, they can understand like coaches that it's the ranking at the end of the season that's most important."

Bowden is confident his team will respond well to the pressure. Harper, Davis and Kelly are all seniors and head up one of the Tigers' strongest group of upperclassmen in recent memory.

Harper set records as a junior and settled a position that figured to be in flux between himself and heralded recruit Willy Korn.

Davis and Spiller, the team's "Thunder and Lightning" duo, looked like they were done with junior Davis declaring for the NFL draft. About a week later, Davis decided to stay for his senior year. He has a chance to be Clemson's first rusher with three straight 1,000-yard seasons.

Spiller showed his electrifying skill in Clemson's Chick-fil-A Bowl overtime loss to Auburn with an 83-yard TD run.

Kelly set records with his 88 receptions and 11 touchdown grabs last year.

Bowden knows they all understand how to take that next step from second place to a spot in the ACC's title game. Last season's shot at the league championship slipped away by the width of Kelly's fingers as the receiver failed to haul in a catchable TD pass at the end of Clemson's 20-17 loss to Boston College last November.

However, Kelly rebounded the next week with two critical catches on Clemson's game-winning drive in a 23-21 win over rival South Carolina.

Bowden spent much of spring practice looking to shore up his two biggest concerns – linebackers and the offensive line.

The Tigers lost two senior linebackers in Nick Watkins, the team's top tackler, and Tramaine Billie. Also, Antonio Clay withdrew from school last winter. His return is uncertain. Watkins was the Tigers' top tackler last fall.

Along the offensive line, Bowden needs to replace four starters from a year ago for the second straight season. While the Tigers had the depth from 2006 to plug in last fall, there aren't as many experienced performers to call on this year to fill in for seniors Barry Richardson, Chris McDuffie, Brandon Pilgrim and Christian Capote.

Still, Bowden thinks "we got the right pegs in the right slots. Now how much they mature over the summer and how ready they are to play Alabama, I don't know."

The Tigers open up against the Crimson Tide at the Georgia Dome on Aug. 30.

"The biggest thing we got out of spring is that we came out relatively injury free," Bowden said.

There were five players who had minor operations right after Clemson's annual Orange-and-White game. Bowden expected all of them to be ready when fall camp opens in August.

Freshman linebacker Brandon Maye, junior receiver Tyler Grisham and junior tight end Akeem Robinson had knee operations. Freshman offensive tackle Chris Hairston had a shoulder operation. Freshman fullback/tight end Chad Diehl had ankle surgery. Clemson does not identify which ankle, shoulder or knee is affected, athletic spokesman Tim Bourret said.

 

 

See more at www.theitem.com

These pages are covered by the “fair use” clause of the Copyright law.
  

James Davis News:

  

James Davis Related News:

Syndicated content not available
  
Reading this website constitutes agreement with this
Legal Disclaimer.

Please note we are not affiilated with James Davis or the official site of James Davis and we are only a fan site.

Home | Biography | Statistics | News | Jersey | Card | Videos | Pictures | Links | Sitemap | Contact Us
©2007 WWW.JAMESDAVISONLINE.ORG