Oct 27, 2001
Final Stats |
Notes | Quotes
By JENNA FRYER
AP Sports Writer
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. - Woodrow Dantzler rebounded from his worst game of
the season, passing for two touchdowns and running for another score in
Clemson's 21-14 victory over Wake Forest on Saturday.
Dantzler, held to 116 yards before being benched in the third quarter during
North Carolina's 38-3 rout over the Tigers last week, had 330 of Clemson's 391
total yards against Wake Forest.
He threw for 211 on 16-of-27 passing and ran for 119 more on 20 carries as
Clemson (5-2, 3-2 Atlantic Coast Conference) won its third straight over Wake
Forest (3-4, 1-4).
After a lackluster first half from both teams, Clemson's defense came up
with a big stop to start the second half and Dantlzer fed off of it to ignite
the offense.
With the game tied at 7, Wake Forest started the third quarter at its own 47
when Clemson apparently tried an on-side kick to open the half. The ball went
out of bounds on the left sideline, giving the Demon Deacons excellent field
position.
James MacPherson, playing a full game because the usual rotating quarterback
system was scrapped when Anthony Young missed the game with a stress fracture
in his foot, moved Wake to the Clemson 25 before the drive stalled.
The Deacons went for it on fourth-and-1, but Fred Staton was stopped short
of the first down by Chad Carson to give Clemson the ball.
Dantzler answered with a sharp 11-play drive, putting the Tigers up 14-7 on
a 3-yard touchdown pass to Ben Hall with 6:35 to play in the quarter. It was
his second TD pass of the game, the first coming at the end of the first half
on a 32-yard strike to Derrick Hamilton.
Dantzler put Clemson up 21-7 on the first play of the fourth quarter with a
10-yard touchdown run that proved to be all the scoring Clemson needed.
Wake cut it to 21-14 on Stanton's 1-yard TD run on the Deacons' next drive,
but the bid to tie the game ended when MacPherson was intercepted in the end
zone by Kevin Johnson with 2:09 left to play.
Hamilton had six catches for 91 yards, giving him 36 receptions for the
season, a Clemson freshman record.
Wake Forest, which came into the game as the ACC's rushing leader and was
ranked sixth in the nation with 235.5 yards a game, gained 193 on the ground.
Staton led the attack with 95 yards. Leading rusher Tarence Williams was held
to just 37 and left the game in the third quarter with a sprained right ankle.