I didn't read all of the posts in this thread, so sorry if I repeat anything, but a few things:
1. A few people in the game thread keep saying "USC is going to score 100 on this defense" and things like that. Clemson came out of the gate with a clear edge in intensity, which is understandable, and rode that to two early scores. But for the final 54 minutes, the defense only gave up one short-field TD that was the result of us putting the ball on the ground, and a FG where a TD probably would have ended the game.
2. It is so cliche for a college football fan base to call for the head coach to be fired after a loss in a big game. I get that it happens, but it is kind of hard to take it seriously. Kelly didn't coach a perfect game, but his team is clearly capable and they fight their asses off. From the 10,000 feet view, for a team that has suffered so much attrition and to the positions we've suffered it at, 3-1 with our only loss coming on the road to a top-10 team in a notoriously tough venue in a game we could have won despite it being one of "those" games, I really think slamming Kelly just looks silly if you take a step back.
3. As I said above, I don't think Kelly deserves to be ripped apart for losing this game, but I also don't think he coached a perfect game. Lots of complaining about the playcall on the conversion at the end, but everything you call there is more likely to fail than succeed - that's why everyone doesn't go for it every time. If Kizer walked in, it would have been a great call. That's how it goes. The real mistake was not kicking the PAT when they scored to make it 21-9. I get what he was going for (make is a 10 pt game, so TD & FG tie it), but (1) it is way too early in the game to start doing that, (2) if you did need a conversion, do it later - if Clemson didn't score again, you'd have to go for 2 once and kick the PAT once (plus the FG), so might as well take the point while you can and worry about the 2 later. As it turned out, if they didn't try for 2 there, they could have kicked 2 PATs and tied the game. That was his worst decision of the night. (As it happened, going for 2 was especially bad because it led to us burning a TO when we only had 10 on the field.)
4. Losing sucks. I hate losing, especially a game like this where we are the better more talented team and shot ourselves in the foot so many times. But still, I am really proud of the fight of the guys to come all the way back in that environment and have that chance at the end. Hopefully they rally around this and realize that if they can play match the opponents' intensity for 60 minutes and limit mental errors, they can still do serious damage. I was out on this team after the second fumble to open the second half, but all they did from there was fight when they could rolled over, so this group won me over and I will ride with them for the rest of the season - whatever happens.