EASLEY, S.C. — Barrett Carter might be the most dynamic linebacker in the country, a player Clemson coach Dabo Swinney said he’s comfortable rushing off the edge or dropping into coverage against a top-tier receiver. He’s a former five-star recruit and an All-America candidate.
And yet, none of that interests the horde of third graders crowded around Carter on this Friday afternoon in April at West End Elementary School. They have more urgent concerns.
What’s your favorite movie?
If you could turn into any animal, what would it be?
Have you ever had any loose teeth?
(Carter’s replies, in order: “Paul Blart: Mall Cop,” a shark, and “Yes, a long time ago.”)
Carter is used to this strange bit of celebrity. He’s wearing a black Clemson sweatshirt and a bright smile, and the kids are keenly aware he’s important, even if they’re not entirely sure why. Mostly, they’re excited to have a visitor.
This is exactly the reception Carter was hoping for.
“Seeing how their faces light up with smiles,” Carter said, “I’ve always had a passion for kids because I put myself in their shoes. The 30, 45 minutes I spend with them can really impact their lives.”
When Carter was growing up in Georgia, he remembered how the high school football players came to eat lunch with the younger kids. He was in awe of them at the time, but more than that, he was inspired. He wanted to be like them on the football field, but he also understood even then he wanted to be in a position to help others, too.
So for the past two years, Carter has been visiting schools, reading books and answering the barrage of questions that inevitably follows.
One kid is disappointed to learn Carter has never heard of a particular rapper he likes. Another kid is frustrated that Carter has only seen the “Harry Potter” movies and not read the books. Another has tips on playing Minecraft. There are a few football-related questions — How do you tackle so many people? Answer: Lots of practice. — but mostly, the kids like having a grown-up talk about things they like.
Carter takes it all in with equal parts amusement and genuine interest. Visits are supposed to last about 20 minutes. It’s rare Carter stays less than an hour. It’s time, Carter said, that makes him better.
“It’s an escape,” he said. “I’m surrounded by football, so to take some time out of my day to give back to the kids — that escape from football, you have to have that.”
SWINNEY KICKED OFF his 15th fall camp as Clemson’s head coach this week. He’s had dozens of all-Americans, first-round NFL picks, genuine superstars, and he calls Carter “easily” one of the 10 best players to step onto Clemson’s campus.
The case for Carter as one of the ACC’s best players is an easy one. He played all over the defense — nickel, safety, inside and outside linebacker and at the line of scrimmage — and finished with 73 tackles (10 for a loss), 5.5 sacks, two picks, two forced fumbles, seven pass breakups and 25 QB pressures in 2022. No other FBS player has done all that in the same season in the past five years.
“He can fly, he’s tough, he’s smart,” Swinney said. “You don’t get to coach many guys like Barrett Carter. He’s everything.”
And yet, ask Swinney what really separates Carter, and it’s not the speed or strength or quickness. Swinney built his program on culture, and if he’d designed the ideal guy for Clemson in a lab, it would probably be a carbon copy of Carter.
“We say, ‘Excellence in everything you do all the time,’ and that’s what we’re trying to get these kids to buy into,” Swinney said. “Well, Barrett epitomizes that.”
Recruiting was a whirlwind for Carter, but he knew Clemson was the perfect fit for him almost instantly.
Carter started playing when he was 5 or 6, soon after his family moved from Chicago to Georgia, and he was good immediately.
“The size I am now,” he said, “I was like the same size in the second grade. I was that kid.”
Carter excelled at baseball and basketball, too, but slowly shifted his focus entirely to football, where he figured he had the brightest future. By his sophomore season in high school, his dad, Barrett Sr. — “Big B,” as mom, Alexis, says — thought his kid might have a shot at a scholarship. By the end of his sophomore year, he had more than 60 offers.
Carter seriously considered Georgia and Ohio State, among others, but after his first unofficial visit to Clemson, he told his dad on the drive home that he’d found the right school.
“OK,” Barrett Sr. said, “but let’s give it some time before you make a decision.”
Carter agreed. No need to rush things.
He went home, and he went to bed, and the next morning, he promptly announced to his parents that he was going to Clemson.
“I kind of just had butterflies in my stomach,” Carter said of his first trip to Clemson. “I didn’t have that feeling anywhere else, and I couldn’t let that feeling go.”
Once he got to Clemson as a freshman in 2021, Carter was ready to make an impact. On the field, coaches gushed about his potential — “special,” Swinney said, “from the start” — but Carter wanted to do more.
He started visiting schools every Thursday to read to young kids around Clemson. Months passed before anyone at Clemson knew. He wasn’t looking for praise, he said, so he’d kept it to himself. Now, Clemson helps coordinate with the schools, but for the most part, it’s still a grassroots campaign, even if Carter isn’t exactly leaving football at the classroom door.
The visit to West End Elementary ends with Carter posing for photos and giving out a few hugs, including with one boy wearing a South Carolina jersey, who was eager to note his allegiance to the Clemson star.
“It’s OK,” Carter said on the way out of the school. “He’s young. He’ll learn.”
ON THE DRIVE back to Clemson, Carter’s phone buzzes with a call from his mom, Alexis, who wants an update on the school visit.
She loves hearing about her son’s interactions with the kids. She cackles at the question about loose teeth.
For Alexis, this is the side of her son that’s always brought her the most joy.
During his first real football practice, Barrett was the first to finish a sprint. He crossed the finish line and immediately looped back to find a teammate who was struggling, then ran with him the rest of the way. Barrett was 5 at the time. He still does that during every practice.
“He’s always been like this,” Alexis said. “He’s attracted to an underdog like a magnet.”
She remembers a time Barrett was in fifth grade, embroiled in a playground football game when a classmate with autism asked him to play with him instead. Barrett simply dropped the football, waved to his friends, and spent the rest of recess with the kid. Alexis heard the story from Barrett’s teacher, who’d texted her a picture of the two kids playing with a note: “Barrett is just perfect.”
On one of his early school visits, he noticed a boy who kept to himself, away from the crowd of eager kids. Barrett stayed late to talk to the boy one-on-one, and the two became pen pals. Now, when Barrett shows up at the school, the boy runs and jumps into his arms for a hug.
In high school, Carter volunteered for every charity event he could, his mom said. He volunteers now with “Our Friend Christopher,” a charity started to honor a high school teammate, Christopher Miles, who died of a brain tumor in 2020. A family member runs an outreach program in Columbus, Georgia, for at-risk teens. Carter and his mom made the drive in June to speak to the group.
Barrett and Alexis share a few more laughs about the kids at West End Elementary, and then she asks about the book he read.
The story was “Imagine,” by Juan Filipe Herrera, and on the first page — the first sentence, actually — he found a word he didn’t know.
“If I picked chamomile flowers…” the story began.
Chamomile. Carter isn’t a gardener or a tea drinker. He stumbled over the word at first.
“I’d never seen that word before,” he told his mom.
After games, Carter rehashes the action with his parents, and the conversation always ends by addressing his mistakes. Alexis remembers that text from Barrett’s fifth-grade teacher. He is perfect, Alexis said, but there’s always room for improvement.
They chat a few minutes longer, promise to talk again later, then hang up, a wide grin on Barrett’s face as he clicks off his phone.
The school visit was for the kids, of course, and Barrett loved every second of it. But if he’s being honest, that phone call with his mom is what really made it worth doing. That’s what drives him.
“All I want to do in life,” he said, “is make my parents proud. … I’m all right at football. But once I take the helmet off, that’s the true Barrett Carter. I want my impact in life to be much greater without the helmet.”
SAN FRANCISCO — Justin Verlander added another memorable chapter to his legendary pitching career Sunday, yet was hardly in the mood to celebrate.
Verlander struck out the side in the first inning against the Nationals to become the 10th pitcher in MLB history to reach 3,500 career strikeouts. Not long after, things began to unravel for the three-time Cy Young Award winner as the Giants dropped an 8-0 decision to Washington in front of 40,000 fans at Oracle Park.
Washington scored four times in the second inning and five overall on 11 hits against Verlander in the latest outing in what has been a season-long struggle for the 42-year-old.
“I was happy to get there, happy to have a moment with the fans,” said Verlander, who is 1-9 in 20 starts with the Giants and has a 4.53 ERA. “Cool milestone. I really appreciate what it’s taken to get there.”
Verlander hasn’t given the Giants much to celebrate this season, though he had been in the best stretch of the season before getting roughed up Sunday. In his three previous games, Verlander had a 0.60 ERA with 14 strikeouts in 15 innings.
He finished with six strikeouts against the Nationals, but spent most of his postgame media session focused on his season rather than the 3,500 strikeouts.
Though acknowledging frustration about his 2025 results, Verlander likened his performances to the 2022 campaign, when he went 18-4 with a 1.75 ERA with the Houston Astros en route to winning his third Cy Young.
“Stuff’s great, stuff’s fine,” Verlander said. “I’ve spent a lot of the season looking at comparables. It’s right on par, literally almost up and down the board, with [2022] when I won the Cy Young. So, I think the stuff is just fine. The results have been frustrating.”
With 3,503 career strikeouts after Sunday’s outing, Verlander trails Walter Johnson by 11 strikeouts for ninth most on the all-time list.
Raleigh’s two-run shot came off Rays starter Adrian Houser, before Eugenio Suarez added a two-run single for the M’s in the first.
Raleigh, who went 1-for-5, joins Ken Griffey Jr. as the only Mariners players to hit 45 home runs in a season, according to ESPN Research. Griffey did it 5 times.
Raleigh also moved into a tie with Johnny Bench (1970) at second all time for most homers by a catcher in a season. The Kansas City Royals‘ Salvador Perez belted 48 in 2021.
Raleigh homered in all three games of the series.
Sunday’s win was Seattle’s seventh straight, the longest active run in the American League. Josh Naylor also homered for the M’s, who wrapped up a 9-1 homestand.
Seattle starter Bryan Woo (10-6) allowed three runs on seven hits over six innings with nine strikeouts. It was his 23rd start this season of six innings or more. Woo, who walked one batter, also tied the MLB record set by Hall of Fame pitcher Juan Marichal in 1968 for the most consecutive games at the start of the season pitching that long and also allowing two walks or fewer.
WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. — Shane van Gisbergen earned his fourth victory this season, blowing out the competition again at Watkins Glen International.
The Trackhouse Racing driver joined 2020 champion Chase Elliott and NASCAR Hall of Famer Jeff Gordon as the only drivers to win four consecutive Cup races on road or street courses.
Unlike his prior wins at Mexico City, Chicago and Sonoma, van Gisbergen was unable to qualify from the pole position after he was nipped by Ryan Blaney. The Auckland, New Zealand, native bided his team after starting second, taking his first lead on Lap 25 of 90 and then settling into a typically flawless and smooth rhythm on the 2.45-mile road course.
The rookie made his final pit stop with 27 laps remaining and cycled into first place on Lap 74 of a clean race with only three yellow flags. Cruising to a big lead while leading the final 17 laps, van Gisbergen beat Christopher Bell by 11.116 seconds. Chris Buescher finished third, followed by William Byron and Chase Briscoe.
With five victories in only 38 career starts in NASCAR’s premier series, van Gisbergen trails only Elliott (seven wins) and Kyle Larson (six) among active drivers on street or road courses.
The win validated the decision by Trackhouse to sign van Gisbergen to a multiyear contract extension last week.
Feisty Gibbs
It was another frustrating race for Ty Gibbs, who spun John Hunter Nemechek late in Stage 2 and then complained about the handling and strategy of his No. 54 Toyota. Joe Gibbs Racing competition director Chris Gabehart, who recently began working as a strategist and consultant to Gibbs’ team, radioed the driver to “stay in the game” after the Nemechek wreck and later took issue after Gibbs questioned his team’s strategy.
“I’m sure you’ve got a real good understanding from inside the car,” Gabehart told Gibbs on the radio. “So you can call the strategy if you want, or we can keep rolling.”
Gibbs, the grandson of team owner Joe Gibbs, finished 33rd and remained winless since moving into Cup after winning the 2022 Xfinity Series championship. Teammates Chase Briscoe, Denny Hamlin and Bell each have qualified for the playoffs with victories this season.
Up next
The Cup Series will race Saturday, Aug. 16 at Richmond Raceway, which will play host to its only NASCAR race weekend this season. The 0.75-mile oval had two annual races on the Cup schedule from 1959-2024.