Clemson entered the 2025 season with championship aspirations, a veteran roster, and a quarterback in Cade Klubnik who had drawn legitimate Heisman buzz.

After a stellar 2024 where Klubnik threw for over 3,600 yards and accounted for 40 total touchdowns, expectations were massive.

Yet just two games in, cracks are forming in both Clemson‘s foundation and Klubnik’s reputation, and some anonymous coaches are already questioning whether the Tigers were overhyped.

The season opener against ninth-ranked LSU was a cold dose of reality. Clemson managed only 10 points at home and was physically outplayed at the line of scrimmage.

Klubnik finished with just 230 passing yards, no touchdowns, and an interception, completing only 50% of his passes.

Even more alarming was the lack of help around him, as Clemson‘s offensive line was manhandled, and the rushing attack produced only 31 total yards.

Without a credible run threat, LSU pinned its ears back and made Klubnik uncomfortable all night.

Though Clemson bounced back the following week to defeat Troy, it was far from convincing. Klubnik threw a pick-six and the Tigers trailed 16-0 at halftime.

A late rally, fueled by Bryant Wesco Jr.’s clutch receiving and Adam Randall‘s second-half ground game, bailed them out, but questions still linger.

Coaches and scouts share growing concerns

Behind the scenes, anonymous coaches and NFL scouts are voicing concerns that go beyond Clemson‘s slow start. Some have pointed directly to the offensive line.

“They’re just position-blocking. I don’t think they’re very talented,” one coach told The New York Times. That’s despite having veterans like Blake Miller and Ryan Linthicum, who were projected to anchor a top-10 unit nationally.

With the line struggling to establish the run and protect consistently, Klubnik has been under siege. He’s looked hurried and indecisive, two traits that NFL evaluators are noting.

ESPN’s Jordan Reid was blunt in his assessment: “I see issues when he faces pressure… he’s indecisive and slow to process.” That indecision has shown in his poor early-season QBRs – 29.7 against LSU and just 42.8 versus Troy – far below what’s expected from a first-round-caliber quarterback.

Arm strength has also become a topic of debate. Some scouts are questioning whether Klubnik has the velocity to make tight-window NFL throws.

Others argue he’s simply not elevating his teammates when adversity strikes, a key trait for any elite QB prospect.

The result? His draft stock is volatile. One AFC scout described Klubnik as “a Day 3 pick right now,” while others still see top-three QB potential.

The truth likely lies somewhere in between. Klubnik remains talented, athletic, and capable of heating up. But for now, he’s inconsistent, and inconsistencies at the quarterback position tend to amplify every other team weakness.

Clemson must address its line issues, find a balanced offensive rhythm, and limit mental mistakes, especially penalties and missed tackles, which cost them dearly against LSU.

As for Klubnik, each game ahead is a chance to either rebuild his NFL case or watch it unravel. The margin for error is gone.

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