usatoday_20170111_USA_Today

(ff) #1

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 11, 2017 SECTION C


Derrick Rose
is back with
the Knicks
after going
AWOL for
what he said
was a family
issue, 5C

Rose


returns


USA TODAY SPORTS

USA SNAPSHOTS©


Sack master


SOURCE Pro-Football-Reference.com
ELLEN J. HORROW AND JANET LOEHRKE, USA TODAY


Sacks recorded by the
New England Patriots’
Willie McGinest on Jan. 7,
2006, most in one NFL
playoff game

4 ½


TIGERLINE


FIRST WORD
IT WAS CALM. NO
ONE OVER THERE
PANICKED. ... I SAID LET’S BE
LEGENDARY, LET’S BE
GREAT.”

Clemson quarterback Deshaun
Watson, on what he told his
teammates before the final
drive that ended with the
game-winning touchdown with
one second left against Ala-
bama.


NAMES TO KNOW
ALABAMA, AUBURN, OHIO
STATE, FLORIDA STATE


MAGIC NUMBER


1
Ranking on four recruiting sites
(247, ESPN, Rivals, Scout) for
Alabama’s projected football
signing class. National signing
day is Feb. 1. Clemson is tied for
13th.


TWEETS OF THE DAY
@RepJeffDuncan
To win it in under two
minutes after blowing the
first and only lead you had
all night! Clemson Tigers
2016 National Champions!

Rep. Jeff Duncan, R-S.C., and
1988 Clemson grad.


@MarkIngram 22
Congrats to Clemson and
coach Dabo!! Them boys
were the better team to-
night! We will be back, be-
lieve that!! #RollTide

Mark Ingram II, the former
Alabama running back and
2009 Heisman Trophy winner,
congratulating Clemson.


ALMOST LAST WORD
“I TOLD THE PLAYERS I WAS
PROUD OF WHATTHEYAC-
COMPLISHED THIS YEAR. ...
ONE GAME DOESN’T DEFINE
WHO YOU ARE.”

Alabama coach Nick Saban.


LAST WORD
“ON THURSDAY, I HAVE MY
FIRST MEETING WITH THE
2017 TEAM. ALL I CAN TELL
YOU IS THE BEST IS YET TO
COME WITH CLEMSON.”

Clemson coach Dabo Swinney.


Edited by Thomas O’Toole


MARK J. REBILAS, USA TODAY SPORTS

KIRBY LEE, USA TODAY SPORTS

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Death of North-
western wom-
en’s basketball
player’s hits
home for col-
umnist Christine
Brennan, 3C

Tragedy


on campus


The name is Hunter Greene.
You might not know him, but
every team in baseball recogniz-
es that he’s perhaps the most
gifted amateur baseball player in
this country, projected to be the
first player chosen in June’s
draft.
Greene, who first attended the
Urban Youth Academy in Comp-
ton, Calif., when he was 7, also
represents Major League Base-
ball’s potential star role model in
its battle to reverse the indus-
try’s scarcity of African-Ameri-

can players.
Greene, who is 6-4, 205
pounds and throws 98 mph with
a solid slider and changeup,
could become the first right-
handed high school pitcher se-

Greene model


in MLB pitch


for diversity


CAYLOR ARNOLD, USA TODAY SPORTS
Hunter Greene could be the
top pick in the 2017 draft.

v STORY CONTINUES ON2C

Bob Nightengale
[email protected]
USA TODAY Sports

When junior quarterback
Deshaun Watson led Clemson
past Alabama in a championship
game thriller Monday night, it
was another reminder of a life-
blood to the multibillion-dollar
college football industry: a mo-
nopoly on players three years or

fewer removed from their high
school graduating class, who by
rule are ineligible to enter the
NFL draft.
What if some of those players
didn’t have to wait to go pro?
The people behind a new pro-
fessional league that hopes to
launch in 2018 say they don’t in-
tend to compete with the NCAA.
They have a long way to go finan-
cially and otherwise just to get
their venture off the ground. But

if they can play even one season,
paying the bills and cutting 18- to
22-year-olds in on the action, it’s
easy to see where the impact
could be significant.
“It’ll make sense for a lot of
young men and a lot of families,”
longtime NFL receiver Ed Mc-
Caffrey, one of the nascent Pacif-
ic Pro Football League’s co-
founders, told USA TODAY

Pro option in the works

Proposed league to offer pay


for college-age football players


v STORY CONTINUES ON 4 C

Tom Pelissero
[email protected]
USA TODAY Sports

TAMPA The celebration was al-
ready swirling on the sideline,
but the selection committee
member urged caution.
“We’ve got to get that one sec-

ond,” Clemson athletics director
Dan Radakovich said, to no one
in particular but anyone within
earshot. “One more second!”
A second stretched into sever-
al minutes during an official re-
view. But then, finally, an instant
classic was finished: Clemson 35,
Alabama 31. And as the party
really cranked up, it was time to
pick your story line.
Dabo Swinney and the Tigers
finally climbed all the way to the

top, completing an eight-year
building project, winning the
school’s first national champion-
ship since 1981.
“There was really only one lid
left on the program,” Swinney
said, “and that was to win the
whole dadgum thing.”
The problem for Clemson, like
so many others, was Alabama.
But with Deshaun Watson’s
touchdown pass to Hunter Ren-
frow with one second left, the Ti-

gers knocked off college football’s
biggest dragon.
It was the ultimate ending for
a program whose coach likes to
say stuff like, “Bring Your Own
Guts” — and whatever that
means, no one doubts Swinney
means it. No one doubts this,
either.
“Clemson has arrived,” senior
linebacker Ben Boulware said. “It

MATTHEW EMMONS, USA TODAY SPORTS
“Clemson has arrived,” Tigers linebacker Ben Boulware said after Monday’s victory. “It took us 35 years, but we’re here now.”

CLEMSON SAVORS MOMENT


Climb culminates with hard-fought win vs. mighty Alabama


v STORY CONTINUES ON5C

George Schroeder
[email protected]
USA TODAY Sports
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