Deal Saver - brought to you by the Charlotte Observer

Clemson 27, Boston College 21

0 comments
  • Print
  • Share Share

Tigers beat Eagles for first time in 50 years

By Jimmy Golen
Associated Press

BOSTON C.J. Spiller caught six passes for 105 yards – the most for a running back in Clemson history – and set up another touchdown with a 57-yard scamper Saturday to lead the Tigers to a 27-21 victory over Boston College and give interim coach Dabo Swinney his first victory.

Spiller, who missed most of the third quarter after a hit on the sideline, was awarded a leather helmet as the game's MVP as Clemson snapped a string of three heartbreaking losses since BC joined the Atlantic Coast Conference. The Tigers (4-4, 2-3 ACC) had not beaten the Eagles (5-3, 2-3) in six tries since 1958.

Cullen Harper completed 21 of 33 passes for 252 yards, and linebacker DeAndre McDaniel forced a key fourth-quarter fumble to set up the Tigers' final field goal. Chris Crane completed 18 of 39 passes for 116 yards, but he was helped by a special teams touchdown and two set up by interceptions that left the offense with a short field.

Spiller, who had 242 total yards in the game, helped the Tigers take a 17-0 halftime lead. Then he helped them go ahead with a 64-yard touchdown return.

After Spiller was forced out of bounds at the BC 15, Harper hit Michael Palmer to put the ball on the 1. Three plays later the QB found Aaron Kelly in the right corner of the end zone with 7:10 left; it was originally ruled out of bounds but overturned on replay.

It was Kelly's 19th career touchdown, a school record.

BC receiver Clarence Megwa was taken off the field after a hit by McDaniel and fumbled what would have been a first-down reception, setting up the Tigers up at the BC 40 and leading to a 43-yard field goal with 2:46 to play that made it 27-21. BC turned the ball over on downs when Crane's sideline pass to James McCluskey was ruled out of bounds and upheld by replay.

Swinney took over the consensus preseason picks to win the conference championship when Tommy Bowden stepped down, then lost his debut to Georgia Tech as the Tigers fell a third straight week.

The game featured the debut of the O'Rourke-McFadden Trophy, created to honor the winner of what has become a budding ACC rivalry. As MVP, Spiller got a leather helmet in the blue and orange colors worn by Clemson when Hall of Famers “Chuckin' Charlie” O'Rourke and James “Bonnie Banks” McFadden met in the 1940 Cotton Bowl.

Spiller, who missed the previous game with a hamstring injury, left early in the second half when he was hit out of bounds after a 40-yard catch-and-run. He wobbled across to the Clemson sideline; but shortly after it was announced that he was doubtful to return, he was back on the field.


Hide Comments

This affects comments on all stories.

Cancel OK

The Charlotte Observer welcomes your comments on news of the day. The more voices engaged in conversation, the better for us all, but do keep it civil. Please refrain from profanity, obscenity, spam, name-calling or attacking others for their views.   Read more

Quick Job Search
Salary Databases