Published • loading... • Updated
Welling, Davidson lead No. 22 Clemson to a 63-52 victory, its 15th straight against Pittsburgh
Clemson’s defense fueled a 26-9 run and balanced scoring led by Carter Welling and Nick Davidson secured the Tigers’ 15th consecutive win over Pittsburgh.
- On Jan. 31, 2026, the Clemson men's basketball team beat Pittsburgh 63-52 at Littlejohn Coliseum, extending its streak to 15 games.
- Clemson seized control with a 26-9 opening-half run over 13 minutes and ended the half on a 13-3 run to lead by 17, forcing 14 turnovers and making eight first-half free throws after seven days of rest.
- Three Tigers — Carter Welling , Nick Davidson and RJ Godfrey — reached double digits, and every Tiger who played scored, with Welling and Davidson combining for 17 second-half points.
- The victory improved Clemson's record to 18-4 and 8-1 in the ACC, counted as a Quad 3 win, and gave Brad Brownell his 200th home win over 16 seasons.
- With a 29th NET ranking, Clemson faces a pivotal road test at Stanford on Feb. 4 at Maples Pavilion on the ACC Network.
Insights by Ground AI
14 Articles
14 Articles
+7 Reposted by 7 other sources
Welling, Davidson lead No. 22 Clemson to a 63-52 victory, its 15th straight against Pittsburgh
Carter Welling and Nick Davidson scored 12 points each and No. 22 Clemson used a big first-half run to take control for its 15th straight win over Pittsuburgh, 63-52, on Saturday.
·United States
Read Full ArticleTigers Stifle Panthers in 63-52 Victory on Saturday
CLEMSON, S.C. – Carter Welling (Draper, Utah/Corner Canyon/Utah Valley) and Nick Davidson (Mission Viejo, Calif./Mater Dei) each scored 12 points to lead Clemson University men’s basketball’s offense and push Clemson to a 63-52 win over Pittsburgh on Saturday afternoon in Littlejohn Coliseum. The Tigers (18-4, 8-1 ACC) made eight 3-pointers in the contest, including 5-of-11 in the opening stanza. Butta Johnson (Huntsville, Ala./Grissom/UAB) scor…
·Columbia, United States
Read Full ArticleCoverage Details
Total News Sources14
Leaning Left5Leaning Right0Center5Last UpdatedBias Distribution50% Left, 50% Center
Bias Distribution
- 50% of the sources lean Left, 50% of the sources are Center
50% Center
L 50%
C 50%
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium












