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QB Sean Clifford ready to take over new-look Penn State team

Associated Press
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FILE - In this Nov. 3, 2018, file photo, Penn State quarterback Sean Clifford (14) warms up before an NCAA college football game against Michigan in Ann Arbor, Mich. Clifford always planned to be Penn State’s starting quarterback. The opportunity came sooner than even he expected. Clifford has huge task in replacing Trace McSorley, but he sounds and looks the part. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya, File)

UNIVERSITY PARK — Sean Clifford always planned to be Penn State’s starting quarterback. The opportunity came sooner than even he expected.

Clifford has a huge task in replacing Trace McSorley, but he sounds and looks the part.

“This is the most confident and most ready I’ve ever been in my life,” Clifford said this summer.

The Nittany Lions return just 11 seniors from last season’s 9-4 team that finished third in the Big Ten East. Penn State has 55 first- or second-year players.

“You’ve got a bunch of guys that are hungry and are excited and that have something to really prove and got a chip on their shoulder,” Penn State coach James Franklin said. “Obviously, you lack experience, and experience counts and experience matters.”

Clifford got a taste last season when backup quarterback Tommy Stevens missed time with injuries. The 6-foot-2, 216-pound Clifford completed 5 of 7 passes for 165 yards and two touchdowns in mop-up duty.

Injuries followed Stevens into the offseason, when he missed nearly all of spring practice. Afterward, he opted to transfer to Mississippi State. That left Clifford, a third-year sophomore, as the most experienced quarterback on the team ahead of freshman Will Levis.

Clifford appears to have the inside track to lead an offense that is also replacing its leading rusher and two starting offensive linemen. He sees potential for the Nittany Lions, who are ranked No. 15 in the Associated Press preseason Top 25.

“I think you’re going to see one of the quickest and fastest Penn State football offenses that you’ve seen in a long time,” Clifford said. “Our offense is really hungry to prove that we can be a 400-, 500-, 600-yard offense each and every game consistently.”

Meanwhile, defensive coordinator Brent Pry is encouraged with the depth and playmaking ability the Nittany Lions will have at all three levels. He would like to see them close out games unlike last season, when fourth-quarter collapses at home against Ohio State and Michigan State all but ended championship hopes.

“To have a lead in the fourth quarter and give it up is upsetting, for all of us,” Pry said. “It’s been something that has been talked about in our room since the bowl game.”

Franklin derided his team after last season’s agonizing loss to Ohio State, insisting the Nittany Lions had gone from “average, to good, to great” but had a ways to go to be “elite.”

Excluding a one-sided loss at Michigan last season, Penn State’s last five losses have come by a combined total of 12 points, including back-to-back one-point losses to the Buckeyes.

“Our mantra this year that we are going to talk about all the time is championship habits,” Franklin said. “You know, just big believers in the habits that our guys have on and off the field are really going to allow them to be successful in both areas, as well.”

Penn State is hoping the combined experience and raw skill of players like defensive ends Yetur Gross-Matos and Shaka Toney, linebackers Micah Parsons and Cam Brown and cornerback John Reid will pay off.

Gross-Matos, suspended for two months after spring practice for an unspecified violation of team rules, wasn’t around his teammates for much of the summer. But when the junior defensive end returned from his two-month ban to start training camp, it was as if he never left.

Now, a self-proclaimed more mature Gross-Matos is ready to pick up where he left off last season. Six of his team-leading eight sacks came in the second half of the season.

“I think he’s going to have a really big year for us,” Franklin said. “As the year went on last year, he really started to kind of separate himself I think into one of the more elite defensive ends in college football.”

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Categories: Penn State | Sports
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