FRONT SEVEN
Head Coach Dabo Swinney has routinely sung the praises of the versatility of linebacker Barrett Carter, a 2023 preseason All-American.
“He’s one of the best football players in my 20 years at Clemson,” Swinney said. “He’s a pure football player. I mean, the guy can play anywhere. He could go play tailback, he could play corner, he can play safety, he can play Nickel/Sam, he can play Mike, he can play Will. He’s special… He’s so smart and he’s got unbelievable instincts for the game.”
Close observers of Clemson in 2022 quickly recognized Carter’s impact in his first year as a starter, but Carter served notice of his arrival to the country with a signature performance against Louisville last November. In that game, Carter recorded eight tackles (3.5 for loss), two sacks, an interception and a pass breakup, becoming the first player to record 3.5 or more tackles for loss, 2.0 or more sacks and an interception in a game between two Power Five teams since South Carolina’s Melvin Ingram against Auburn in 2011.
Carter finished 2022 credited by the coaching staff with 77 tackles (10.5 for loss), tied for third-most on the team, with 5.5 sacks, eight pass breakups, two interceptions and two forced fumbles in a unit-high 832 snaps over 13 games (all starts). His 832 snaps were the sixth-most by a Clemson linebacker on record.
Carter was one of only three players in the Power Five with at least 10 tackles for loss, 5.0 sacks, multiple interceptions and multiple forced fumbles in 2022.Before Carter and two others reached the marks in 2022, the last two Power Five players to reach Carter’s numbers in all four categories were both Butkus Award winners: Georgia’s Nakobe Dean (2021) and Clemson’s Isaiah Simmons (2019).
No. 0 has also been a hero in the community. He has volunteered his time for the Our Friend Christopher organization in the memory of his late former teammate Christopher Miles, who died of a brain tumor. He also routinely reads to local elementary schools and serves as a mentor to local youth and has aspirations of one day opening a training facility for young athletes.
“I remember I was that young kid that looked up to football players,” Carter said. “Now that I have the opportunity to give back, I have no choice but to do so. I just put myself in those shoes and remember when I was that kid.”
OPENING A CAN OF WOODAZ
As conference and national acclaim began to accrue for Clemson’s young linebacking duo of Barrett Carter and Jeremiah Trotter Jr. in late 2022, Dabo Swinney was quick to advise observers not to sleep on Wade Woodaz, now a true sophomore.
“He’s a baller,” Swinney said in September. “The kid is tough, physical, he can really run. He really understands the game at a high level. He played most of his [prep] career as a quarterback and as a safety, so he has a great understanding of the game. He plays really, really hard; he’s a great effort guy, he’s a great preparer and he loves it. He’s a fun guy to coach and a fun guy to watch play because he plays the way you want everybody to play.”
The first career start for versatile hybrid linebacker from Tampa actually came at safety in the 2022 ACC Championship Game. He then served as Clemson’s primary Sam linebacker in the 2022 Orange Bowl.
Woodaz opened the 2023 season with a takeaway in three straight games. He recovered a muffed punt in the season opener at Duke, his second straight season opener with an impact special teams play after blocking a punt in his collegiate debut a year earlier. In Clemson’s second game against Charleston Southern, he recorded his first career interception and returned it 35 yards for a touchdown to help Clemson blow the game open.
A week later against Florida Atlantic, he returned another interception 59 yards. In doing so, he became the first Clemson linebacker with an interception in consecutive games since Isaiah Simmons accomplished the feat in the ACC Championship Game and Fiesta Bowl of his Butkus Award-winning 2019 campaign.
The only Clemson player since 1996 other than Woodaz to have a takeaway in each of the team’s first three games of a season was DeAndre McDaniel, Clemson’s current Senior Defensive Assistant, who posted a takeaway in each of Clemson’s first three games in 2009 en route to All-America honors that season.
While preseason praise and accolades for Clemson’s 2023 true freshmen defensive linemen were aimed primarily at preseason Freshman All-American Peter Woods, Woods’ best friend, defensive end T.J. Parker, emphatically announced his arrival last season.
Parker’s production behind the line of scrimmage in 2023 was the best by a first-year freshman in school history.

Parker tied for the national lead in tackles for loss among freshmen in 2023 with 12.5. Additionally, his 5.5 sacks ranked fourth nationally — and second in the Power Five — among freshmen.

In his fifth career game, Parker recorded 2.0 sacks against Syracuse, factoring into three different sacks with one full sack and two split sacks. He became only the fourth Clemson freshman under Dabo Swinney to record 2.0 sacks in a game. Two of the other three — Myles Murphy and Dexter Lawrence — were eventual first round picks in the NFL Draft.
Parker is a product of Central High School in Phenix City, Ala., a school that has become a Clemson hotbed in recent years. Parker became Clemson’s fourth signee (and fifth overall player including walk-on safety Caleb Nix) from Central since 2018, a pipeline that started with Justyn Ross in Clemson’s 2018 recruiting class.
Parker initially committed to Penn State but coveted a Clemson offer. He decommitted from the Nittany Lions in hopes of soliciting Clemson, and Clemson’s 2023 recruiting class immediately went to work.
“CV [Christopher Vizzina], Peter and a few other guys on the team, they hit me up with the eyes emoji on Instagram,” Parker said. “It was like, ‘You know what time it is.’ I texted Coach Ski [Clemson Defensive Ends Coach Lemanski Hall] the eyes emoji, the same thing they sent me, and from there we got in contact and a few days later they offered and I committed.”