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Dave Clawson hopes ACC makes 'the right decision' on Wake Forest-Florida State game

On3 imageby:Andrew Graham09/29/22

AndrewEdGraham

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(Photo by Ryan M. Kelly/Getty Images)

A number of college football games across the state of Florida were postponed or relocated ahead of Hurricane Ian making landfall on Wednesday, but Florida State has held on to a 3:30 p.m. kickoff against Wake Forest on Saturday. The determination of whether to play or not mostly rests with the FSU athletic department and the ACC, but Wake Forest head coach Dave Clawson was adamant that he won’t be putting his team in harms way.

Speaking on Tuesday ahead of the storm, Clawson didn’t explicitly argue for the game to be cancelled, only saying that he hopes the league and Florida State make “the right decision.” And Clawson’s own desires to play won’t be outweighed by his responsibility to put the health and safety of his players and staff first.

“It’s one of those deals that you certainly hope the ACC office makes the right decision,” Clawson said. “So it’s — if they don’t, we will. We’re not going to travel down there and put anybody at risk. We’re monitoring the weather. Obviously this is in the league’s hands and Florida State’s hands. We would hope that they make the right decision. But if we feel there’s any danger to our players going down there, we’re not going to go.”

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It’s pretty jarring to hear a coach openly discussing likely forfeiting a league game — that’s what would be at stake here, even if Clawson didn’t say it out right — if only because they never do, but it’s clear that the Wake Forest coach has bigger concerns about traveling south right after the storm.

For one, the Wake Forest team will be chartering a flight to Tallahassee, which isn’t a guaranteed smooth ride in the wake of a hurricane. Furthermore, when they’re in Florida, Clawson knows there’s still a bevy of other things that need attending to for a football team to function. The hotel obviously needs to still have electricity, and then there’s the challenge of feeding an entire college football team and staff.

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Furthermore, there’s a question about the morals and ethics of expending these resources by bringing in a 100-plus person traveling party.

This has all, clearly, weighed on Clawson, who really doesn’t have a ton of say in the matter at the moment.

“It’s really, right now, Florida State and the ACC. And then ultimately, we do have some say in this. So at any point Florida State could say ‘No, we’re not playing.’ Or the ACC could say it, and then our say doesn’t matter,” Clawson said. “But if they say that they feel they can host the game and it’s safe and the ACC feels that way, then it’s our hands whether we feel traveling is safe.

“We wanna play, we absolutely wanna play, but only if it is safe and appropriate.”