Tigers DL Lawrence, 2 more can’t return vs. Tide
Brad Edwards crunches the numbers on Clemson’s and Alabama’s greatest strengths in the College Football Playoff National Championship. (1:40)
For the second consecutive game, Clemson will officially be without three players, including starting defensive lineman Dexter Lawrence, for the College Football Playoff National Championship against Alabama.
B samples of NCAA drug tests of the three last week showed trace amounts of ostarine, which is a banned substance.
“Clemson will not have tight end Braden Galloway, offensive lineman Zach Giella and defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence available for Monday’s College Football Playoff National Championship against Alabama,” Clemson athletic director Dan Radakovich said in a statement. “However, Clemson has been informed by the NCAA that the three student-athletes will be permitted to travel to Santa Clara, Calif., with the team later this week.
“As requested by these student-athletes, Clemson filed notices of appeal with the NCAA. We will continue to work with the three impacted student-athletes and their legal representatives over the coming weeks to prepare the appeals. Neither Clemson, Galloway, Giella nor Lawrence anticipate having further comment on this matter until after the appeals have concluded.”
Expect the Bay Area to be flooded with tiger-paw-stamped $2 bills this weekend. That means Clemson football is in town.
Everybody at Clemson has a story about the walk-on who was originally mistaken for a water boy but became an icon.
No grumbling over the fourth Alabama-Clemson CFP game. Why wouldn’t you want to watch the Tide play the Tigers for the national title?
No. 2 Clemson plays No. 1 Alabama for the national title Monday (8 p.m. ET, ESPN/ESPN App) at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California.
The Tigers had been preparing for their Goodyear Cotton Bowl Classic matchup with Notre Dame when they learned that the three would not play. Lawrence, a junior who has 133 tackles and 10.5 sacks during his Clemson career, is widely projected as a future first-round NFL draft pick.
Ostarine is not approved by the Food and Drug Administration and is not legally for sale in the United States. There have been instances, however, of the drug being used in supplements without being included on the label. Clemson players have said that the school closely monitors what supplements are made available to players, and all players have a list of what has been approved by the training staff.
Lawrence said prior to the Cotton Bowl that he had no idea how the substance got into his system and denied ever taking performance-enhancing drugs.
“We get tested regularly and we know not to do anything stupid or selfish like that,” Lawrence said last week. “That’s why this is such a shock.”
Lawrence, Galloway and Giella now face a suspension of up to one year, pending their appeals. That probably means the end of Lawrence’s college career, although he has said he had not made a final decision about his NFL prospects.
Galloway is a freshman, while Giella is a junior.
Coach Dabo Swinney said last week that the school was investigating potential ways the substance could have been consumed without knowledge by the suspended players, including looking at supplements and aspects of treatment (such as its salt-water float pool) that Lawrence received following offseason surgery.
ESPN’s David M. Hale contributed to this report.