Clemson Heads Into LSU With A Quarterback Decision Still Looming

As Clemson navigates its quarterback dilemma and prepares for the season opener against LSU, Dabo Swinney's faith in fresh talent highlights the dynamic landscape within the ACC.

Clemson’s quarterback battle is still alive, and Dabo Swinney isn’t pretending otherwise.

The Tigers came to ACC media days without a QB in tow, but the biggest question hanging over the program followed Swinney to Charlotte anyway. Christopher Vizzina is still the front-runner to replace Cade Klubnik, yet Swinney stopped short of shutting the door on true freshman Tait Reynolds.

Vizzina has been waiting for this chance for three seasons. He has appeared in 14 games and thrown 105 passes, with his lone start coming against SMU last November. In that game, he went 29 of 42 for 317 yards and three touchdowns in a 35-24 loss.

“We all know the magnitude of these decisions. We're not stupid,” Swinney said.

“But that's why we didn't go get the big shiny object out of the portal. We believe in (Vizzina).

But we also believe in Tait. He's a high-level dude, now.

He's special.”

Swinney made it clear that Clemson is not rushing to name a starter before the competition plays out.

“Neither one of them have great experience, so at the end of the day, if CV's 1, he'll run out there first,” Swinney said. “If Tait's 1, he'll run out there first. We just have to go through the process and see how it all works out.”

Whoever wins the job won’t get much of a runway. Clemson is coming off a 7-6 season and opens Sept. 5 at LSU.

Virginia Tech, meanwhile, is calling its offseason a success under new coach James Franklin.

Franklin said the Hokies have made real progress in the weight room and in the program’s culture since he arrived, and he didn’t shy away from putting a label on it.

“I think I would describe it as I think we have won the offseason,” Franklin said. “We've had a great offseason in terms of implementing our standards and our expectations and our culture.”

The challenge now is turning that into wins. Virginia Tech is trying to bounce back from a 3-9 season, its worst since 1992, and hasn’t finished with more than seven victories since 2019. Franklin said the team is bigger, stronger and faster, with enough depth to compete, but he also knows none of that matters unless it shows up when the games begin.

“All that's great. That sounds great in a press conference, it's a good sound bite,” Franklin said. “The reality is we have to make sure all that translates to the season.”

Franklin’s choice to keep former Hokies head coach Brent Pry on staff as defensive coordinator has also helped smooth the transition. Franklin pointed to Pry’s connection to the school and the community, while noting the program has to balance its history with the realities of modern college football.

Virginia Tech opens against VMI on Sept. 5.

Louisville is taking the opposite approach from teams that try to ease into the schedule.

Jeff Brohm’s Cardinals will face 11 Power Four opponents, beginning with a neutral-site matchup against Ole Miss in Nashville on Sept. 6. Brohm said the schedule is exactly the kind of test Louisville wants.

“We think that's what college football's all about,” Brohm said. “That will challenge our football team. Definitely what fans want to see, players and coaches want to prepare for.”

At quarterback, Louisville is expected to turn to Ohio State transfer Lincoln Kienholz after he spent three seasons buried in a crowded room with the Buckeyes. Brohm praised Kienholz’s mobility, his ability to extend plays and the patience he showed while waiting for his chance.

“We're really excited about Lincoln. I think when you look for quarterback play, you look for guys, in my opinion, that are hungry first, that are willing to put in the work,” Brohm said.

“I think he brings us some dimensions and skills that we have not had before. He's a great athlete.

He can run. He can extend plays.

He can throw on the run. And he enjoys doing that.”

Louisville has won at least nine games in each of Brohm’s first three seasons, but its ACC record has slipped every year. Brohm said the Cardinals need more consistency, especially in close league games, if they want another shot at the ACC championship game.

In Other News...

Pat Kelsey Is Suddenly In The Mix For A Massive Guard Win

Louisvilles recruiting momentum under Pat Kelsey has started to show up in the 2027 class, where the Cardinals are working through a list of top guard targets and trying to make an early impression on one of the nations most coveted backcourt prospects. The latest buzz has centered on Cayden Daughtry, a highly regarded point guard who is in the middle of competition at the 2026 Nike EYBL Peach Jam while schools continue to circle.

Daughtry has said Louisville is making a strong push, and that matters because this is the kind of recruitment that can shape a class for years if the Cardinals stay in the conversation. Tennessee is also among the programs he is hearing from most, so Louisville is not alone in the chase, but the fact that the Cardinals are already in that mix gives Kelseys staff a real foothold as the process moves toward Daughtrys next list of schools. [Read more 🡒]

Louisville Commit Ferlandes Wright Is Hinting At Something Bigger

Ferlandes Wright has been doing more than just holding steady in Louisvilles 2027 class. The 2027 commit has been working to round out his game and become more consistent, and that showed up recently at the Peach Jam, where he flashed the kind of scoring touch that can make a recruit stand out in a crowded summer circuit. For a player still early in his development, those moments matter because they hint at a ceiling that could keep rising.

Louisville has clearly stayed engaged, too, with Pat Kelsey making time to see Wright in person and keep the connection warm. Wright, for his part, is paying attention to how the rest of the class comes together and remains invested in what the Cardinals are building around him. He is also planning to get back to campus again this fall, another sign that the relationship is still moving in the right direction. [Read more 🡒]

Louisville Fans Are Already Rallying Around This Hometown 4-Star

Louisvilles recruiting push in the 2027 and 2028 classes has already put the Cardinals in the mix for some of the countrys most sought-after backcourt talent, and that includes 5-star point guard Reese Alston and hometown 4-star combo guard Josh Lindsay. Pat Kelsey has been visible on the trail during the contact period, showing up at games and reaching out to multiple recruits, which has helped keep Louisville in the conversation as the staff tries to build around elite young guards.

Lindsay, a Louisville native, has become especially easy for fans to latch onto because the local connection gives the pursuit a different feel than a typical national recruiting battle. He has picked up multiple offers and drawn attention from a long list of programs, but the reaction around Louisville has been loud enough to suggest the Cardinals are not just another school in the chase. For a fan base looking for the next in-state star to rally around, this is the kind of recruitment that can gain momentum fast. [Read more 🡒]