USA TODAY Sports

Coaches make dozens of decisions in every game. Most of them aren't that noticeable. Some of them very much are.

Some can change a game. Some are just thrilling to watch.

Each week this season, USA TODAY Sports will select four calls from across the nation that we think rank among the best for the Amway Coach's Call of the Week.

We let you, the fans, decide which call from the four below had the most impact.

Initial voting ended on Monday. The winner was decided in our Facebook poll.

This week's winner:

Dabo Swinney, Clemson

Big moments call for big-time plays.

Faced with fourth-and-6 and trailing 23-20 with less than three minutes left, Clemson needed a first down to avoid a shocking upset against Syracuse.

With freshman Chase Brice seeing his first significant moments at quarterback, the Tigers needed the right call for an inexperience signal caller. A pass to Tee Higgins was delivered perfectly and the drive continued.

Later, Brice perfectly kept on a zone read for a big gain. And shortly after that, Clemson had the game-winning touchdown.

This week's finalists:

Jim Harbaugh, Michigan

Your team was trailing 17-0 on the road in the first half. And now you have a chance to punch in the go-ahead touchdown with four minutes left. That was the situation facing Michigan.

It required a simple solution. Feed your power back and let him find a path to the end zone. And Karan Higdon did just that to give the Wolverines a 20-17 defeat of Northwestern.

Brian Kelly, Notre Dame

Critical decisions can come in the first half. They set the tone for later in the game.

Faced with fourth-and-2 on the Stanford 33 late in the first quarter, Kelly decided make a statement. He was playing aggressive against the No. 7 team in the country.

A deft play-action fake by quarterback Ian Book allowed time for Cole Kmet to get downfield for a connection that extended the drive. The Irish would punch it in for a touchdown and eventually go on to defeat the Cardinal 38-17.

Dan Mullen, Florida

Sometimes you need to go backwards first before going forward.

Florida did exactly that for the game-winning touchdown in the third quarter. After taking a snap, quarterback Feleipe Franks threw a lateral to Kadarius Toney.

Toney then calmly hit Moral Stephens for the game's only touchdown as Mullen won his return to Mississippi State.