How Clemson football has prepared for life after Trevor Lawrence with D.J. Uiagalelei

D.J. Uiagalelei, Clemson Tigers. (Mandatory Credit: Josh Morgan-USA TODAY Sports)
D.J. Uiagalelei, Clemson Tigers. (Mandatory Credit: Josh Morgan-USA TODAY Sports) /
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Clemson football is QBU with D.J. Uiagalelei prepared to step in once Trevor Lawrence leaves for the NFL and continue the Tigers’ quarterback legacy. /

The Clemson Tigers quickly rose to power under head coach Dabo Swinney thanks to their ability to stack talent around an explosive quarterback. Tajh Boyd and Deshaun Watson allowed the program to become an elite one nationally, and then Trevor Lawrence supplanted Watson. Clemson has finished in the top-four of the final AP poll every year since 2015, and should again this season.

Lawrence has been fantastic in his three seasons, and although the Tigers recruit as well as almost anyone, losing that type of transformative NFL talent can stifle a program quickly. Landing 5-star recruit D.J. Uiagalelei from California was a massive get but he still had to prove himself as the future after Lawrence departs. But in only two starts that came thanks to a positive Covid test for Lawrence, we can already determine that Uiagalelei is the next star playmaking quarterback for the Tigers.

Clemson football is prepared for life after Trevor Lawrence

Uiagalelei has the physical profile that evaluators dream of. His 6-foot-4, 250-pound frame pops off the screen immediately, and he’s a quality athlete for his size. His ability to make plays within the pocket and outside of the tackle box has already been flashed in only two starts.

His numbers in games against Boston College and No. 4 Notre Dame have been nothing but outstanding for a veteran starter, let alone a true freshman. He completed 69-of-99 attempts for 872 yards and four scores with zero interceptions. And he’s attained those numbers by dominating on short and intermediate passes.

72 percent of his non-throwaway attempts have come between zero and 19 yards, while 16 attempts have been behind the line of scrimmage, and he’s had five deep balls beyond 20 yards. This is unique for his skill set and archetype since he has such a strong arm and powerful build that one would assume he’d be more of a downfield thrower. His pass distribution looks more like a weak-armed quarterback is limited to, not one that has the effortless velocity and downfield touch that Uiagalelei has displayed.

This is far from a bad thing. Clemson has relied on his quick processing at a very young age and has found success already. He’s thrown a catchable pass on a whopping 83 percent of his short throws, which is better than all but six drafted quarterbacks’ full-season numbers since 2012. It’s unlikely he’d sustain that level of accuracy over the course of a full season once defenses adjust but the baseline is high for Uiagalelei’s acumen.

His delivery is a bit slow and requires his large arm to travel more distance than small passers but the result is impressive. His placement on throws between the numbers quickly hit the ideal target window to protect his man from a big hit and to also finish the play. There’s not much better coverage possible on this throw below.

Defenses will concede the short game to Clemson because of the caliber of athletes they boast. It’s better to allow five yards on a quick route than 55 on a deep pass, and Uiagalelei took full advantage when he could. The entire playbook is open for him already based on his advanced intelligence and extreme physical gifts.

This is an important facet of life post-Lawrence. Watson had a vertical-heavy passing game that limited some of his game to be on display. Lawrence has a more open playbook because he’s better at certain throws, but not quite as good at creating outside of the pocket as Watson.

Uiagalelei could be a mixture of the two based on early results. Tailoring an offense around him shouldn’t be too hard and most of the basics are baked into the scheme already. Watson’s 2016 season had 63 percent of his throws be 10 yards or under, for example, while Lawrence has that same exact rate this season so far.

The route patterns and formations have been different along the way to build around strengths, though, and the Clemson staff needs credit for that creativity. It’s likely that plugging Uiagalelei into this same offense in 2021 would work well enough to win the ACC and push for the playoff, but there’s no reason the program shouldn’t further accentuate Uiagalelei’s immense talent.

In the meantime, there are some mechanical issues and the physical limitation of having a slower release to deal with. There are some bad misses he’s had when throwing to the far-sideline because of his lower body being misaligned. His touch on deeper throws has been solid but the ones where he must feather the ball across the field have been misses.

The play below is a good example. He rips his front-side hip open too far and then is unable to get the correct distance on the ball to match the airtime. Most of the few misses he’s had occurred on this same type of play. It’s clearly a weakness.

Clemson will happily take that being the big area to work on after an incredibly difficult set of circumstances. Uiagalelei was far from the reason why they lost against Notre Dame and he’s good enough to start at almost every school right now across the country if he were elsewhere.

The next time Uiagalelei’s number is called you can be sure we’ll be watching. The future of the Tigers’ program only continues to ascend based on these two games.

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