Helmet Stickers

MIAMI GARDENS, Fla.—TCI handed out some helmet stickers following Clemson’s ??-?? win over Oklahoma. Find out who earned the honors in the Tigers’ first trip to the College Football Playoff…

Wayne Gallman

Gallman was as steady as can be in the second half. After totaling only seven carries prior to halftime, the Tigers used the sophomore as a workhorse late in the game. He finished with 22 carries for 139 yards and a pair of second-half touchdowns as the Tigers dominated on the ground with 302 yards as a team.

Deshaun Watson

It wasn’t Watson’s best game—not by a long shot. However, the stud quarterback accounted for a whopping 330 yards of total offense (187 passing, 143 rushing). He was especially efficient after halftime, completing seven of eight pass attempts for 72 yards and a touchdown and not turning the ball over while Clemson build its lead.

Ben Boulware

For the second straight season, Boulware intercepted a pass in a big spot in a bowl game against an Oklahoma quarterback. This time, instead of scoring a touchdown, he stopped one, as he intercepted Baker Mayfield in his final pass attempt of the season with a nifty one-handed tip-and-catch. Boulware also added a sack in the game and finished with eight tackles.

B.J. Goodson

An unsung leader on defense all season long, Goodson put together another solid performance. Clemson’s leading tackler for the year had seven stops in Thursday’s game and made a huge interception with Oklahoma driving the football in the third quarter that seemed to put the momentum squarely in Clemson’s hands.

Hunter Renfrow

Many wondered where Clemson would get its big-play ability in the passing game. It came from Renfrow, who caught a post-corner pass from Watson in the third quarter and took it to the house from 35 yards away. It was the biggest of Renfrow’s four catches in the game that netted him 59 yards receiving.

Greg Huegel

Yeah, “Greg the Leg” missed a field goal in the game, but it would have tied his career high. Plus, the walk-on knocked in three field goals when Clemson’s offense was sputtering a bit in the first half. Perhaps most importantly, however, Huegel—whose struggles on kickoffs have been discussed all season—boomed four of his seven kickoffs into the end zone for touchbacks in a clutch performance.