• Duke football defeated Clemson 46-45 for the first time in Death Valley since 1980. • A tight ends coach predicted the game-winning two-point conversion play the night before the game. • The game-winning play was nicknamed "Waffle House" because the team believed it is "always open."
CLEMSON, SC — Duke football knew exactly what was coming hours before it actually happened.
The night before the Blue Devils' road game at Clemson , tight ends coach Justin Watts called the eventual 2-point conversion play that Duke used to take down Clemson in Death Valley for the first time since 1980.
"He gave us a little speech: He basically called how it was going to happen," wide receiver Sahmir Hagans said following the 46-45 win on Saturday, Nov. 1. "He said we were going to get the ball last,

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