When Clemson kicks off fall camp, two of its top wideouts will be ready to roll.
Wide receivers coach Tyler Grisham met with members of the media on Monday and provided an update on both Bryant Wesco and T.J. Moore, noting both wideouts are already “full go.”
“They are 100%,” Grisham said during Clemson’s annual media day.
Wesco suffered a serious injury after landing on his head during a punt return against SMU, causing him to miss the rest of the season. The talented wideout was also limited during the spring.
“Wesco was not doing a lot of competitive work, but he was running a lot of routes (in the spring),” Grisham added. “He was doing the routes on air with the quarterbacks. He was doing all the indy, some team-separate stuff. He was going through all those periods, so he got a lot of reps. And he looked phenomenal.”
Moore was also limited during the spring after having what Dabo Swinney described as a lower-body surgery after last season.
“TJ got less reps because of the recovery that he was going through,” Grisham said. “But he was standing behind his line. He was helping coach, learning the offense, taking notes as if he was practicing that day.”
Moore will enter the 2026 season having totaled 97 receptions for 1,488 yards and nine touchdowns over 27 games (22 starts) in his first two seasons. He joins Justyn Ross, Artavis Scott and Sammy Watkins as the only players in Clemson history to record at least 650 receiving yards in each of their freshman and sophomore seasons.
Wesco was on track for an all-conference-caliber season through six games in 2025 before suffering the season-ending injury in the seventh game. The 6-foot-2, 190-pounder caught 31 passes for 537 yards with a team-high six receiving touchdowns over seven games (all starts).
Wesco became the fourth Clemson player in Swinney’s head coaching tenure to record at least six receiving touchdowns over the first six games of a season, joining DeAndre Hopkins, Deon Cain and Watkins. Wesco also became the fourth player in Clemson history to record 1,000 receiving yards in the first 15 games of a career alongside Watkins, Scott and Ross.
“I have seen a lot of growth for both of them,” Grisham said. “I think TJ has taken an even greater step in his approach. He would love to have the kind of year that we would all love for him to have to where he could say, ‘You know what, I have a decision to make.’ Whether to go pro or not. If he has that decision to make, that means we have had a pretty dang good year and our offense has done pretty dang good.”