Sept. 16, 2000
Box Score
By DAN LEWERENZ
Associated Press Writer
CLEMSON, S.C. - Woodrow Dantzler says he still has things to work on.
You couldn't tell from watching him play Saturday.
Dantzler ran for 166 yards and two touchdowns and passed for 157 yards and a
touchdown as No. 16 Clemson beat Wake Forest 55-7.
"The first drive of the game, I kind of screwed up a little bit," Dantzler
said, saying his performance was "maybe a D range, maybe a C."
Don't tell that to Wake Forest coach Jim Caldwell, who watched Dantzler
dismantle his offense.
"Oftentimes we find guys who are as effective as he's been in the passing
game, maybe they don't run very well," Caldwell said. "But he's the kind of
prototype quarterback everyone's looking for - one that can throw the ball
well, certainly can operate a complex system, but also can run the ball like a
tailback."
While Dantzler had a strong game for Clemson (3-0, 1-0 Atlantic Coast
Conference), Wake Forest (0-3, 0-2) lost C.J. Leak to a dislocated knee. Leak
completed just 6 of 15 passes for 51 yards.
Dantzler showed a dizzying array of spins and escapes, including the
second-longest run of his career on Clemson's second scoring drive.
With Clemson leading 3-0, Dantzler slid through the middle on a third-and-4,
then scrambled to the right sideline where Justin Watts' block cleared the way
for a 54-yard run. Three plays later, Bernard Rambert carried 13 yards into the
end zone to put Clemson up 10-0 with 33 seconds left in the first quarter.
Dantzler scored on a 39-yard keeper to put the Tigers up 17-0 with 9:14 left
in the first half. Tony Lazzara's 26-yard field goal with 5:57 left in the half
made it 20-0.
"It wasn't by design that we ran more than we threw, but we just took what
they gave us," Clemson coach Tommy Bowden said. "I thought our offensive
staff did a good job finding the opportunities that their defense gave us -
take what was there and don't force anything."
In the final minute of the half, Rambert had another 13-yard sweep to the
right - almost identical to his earlier score - to put the Tigers up 27-0 at
halftime.
Clemson's defense dominated the game, giving up just 48 yards in the first
three quarters. Wake Forest didn't earn a first down until Leak's pass to Ira
Williams with less than a minute left in the first half.
Leak fumbled on the first play of the second half, giving Clemson the ball
on the 7. Dantzler carried it in from the 1 two plays later to make it 34-0.
On Clemson's next possession, Dantzler threw a 52-yard touchdown pass to
Travis Zachery.
Willie Simmons, leading Clemson's second-string offense, threw a 30-yard
touchdown pass to Kevin Youngblood to put the Tigers up 48-0 with 1:38 left in
the third quarter.
Wake Forest scored its only touchdown after Leak left the game. Anthony
Young, playing for the first time this year, ran 55 yards on his second play
from scrimmage, then threw a 6-yard touchdown pass to Williams seven plays
later.
"I thought he did a good job under the circumstances," Caldwell said. "He
came in and really gave us a lift with that last drive."
With 49 seconds left, Chad Jasmin ran 11 yards into the end zone to give
Clemson its final score.
With a second-quarter stop, senior safety Robert Carswell became Clemson's
career leader in tackles. Carswell finished the game with 300 career tackles,
six more than two-time All-American Terry Kinard had from 1978-82.
The victory in Clemson's 1,000th game gave the Tigers a record of
565-390-45. Sixty-six of those games have come against Wake Forest, with
Clemson leading the series 51-14-1.