Daily Press

Swinney says FSU should have taken field

Clemson coach: COVID was ‘ excuse to cancel’ for Florida State

- By Pete Iacobelli

Clemson coach Dabo Swinney said his team met the medical standard to play against Florida State and believes the Seminoles called off the game because of reasons other than COVID-19.

“This game was not canceled because of COVID. COVID was just an excuse to cancel the game,” an angry Swinney said Sunday night.

The fourth-ranked Tigers had arrived in Tallahasse­e, Florida, on Friday when they learned a reserve offensive lineman had tested positive in the team’s latest testing. Clemson quickly isolated the unidentifi­ed player and sent him back to campus.

Swinney said players had eaten breakfast under a large “Ringling Brothers” circus-type tent in their hotel parking lot for final preparatio­ns when they learned they would not play.

“We listened to our medical folks and their assessment of the risk and we decided it wasn’t safe to play today,” Florida State athletic director David Coburn told the AP.

Clemson administra­tors offered additional testing to satisfy FSU’s hesitation and to play the game later Saturday or Sunday or Monday. All suggestion­s were turned down, and the Atlantic

Coast Conference announced Saturday that medical personnel from both sides could not agree the game would be safe to play.

“To me the Florida State administra­tion forfeited the game, and if they want to play Clemson, in my opinion, they need to come to Clemson or they need to pay for all expenses,” Swinney said. “Other than that, there’s no reason for us to play them.”

The Tigers (7-1, 6-1 Atlantic Coast Conference) were nearly five-touchdown favorites against the Seminoles (2-6, 1-6), who are in

coach Mike Norvell’s first season.

The trip cost the Clemson athletic department about $300,000, according to athletic director Dan Radakovich.

Radakovich said he and Clemson would work with the ACC about rescheduli­ng the contest. The Tigers face Pittsburgh on Saturday in their final home game before heading to Virginia Tech on Dec. 5 for what was expected to be their last game of the regular season.

Clemson is off Dec. 12. The ACC championsh­ip game is set for Dec.

19.

Radakovich was comfortabl­e his school did everything possible to keep their players and staff, and those of the other team, safe from the coronaviru­s.

“We have followed protocol,” he said.

Swinney said he’s attending medical meetings where procedures for a late positive test were discussed and debated. Travel rosters were expanded for such reasons, the coach said.

He said if a late positive test can call off a game, why play the season at all?

It’s not the first time Clemson football has been hit by the pandemic.

Heisman Trophy-contending quarterbac­k Trevor Lawrence tested positive the Thursday before the Tigers played Boston College on Oct. 31. Lawrence also missed Clemson’s game at No. 2 Notre Dame — the Tigers’ first regular-season defeat since 2017 — a week later as he followed guidelines for his return.

That was supposed to happen against the Seminoles. “Man, we were ready to play,” Lawrence said on Twitter soon after the postponeme­nt.

Swinney has not talked with Norvell and does not blame FSU coaches or players for not playing.

“I feel bad for their players, too. There ain’t no way anybody can convince me their kids didn’t want to play,” Swinney said.

By the time Clemson kicks off against Pitt, it will have gone three weeks between games as it vies for a sixth straight ACC title and fifth national championsh­ip-game appearance since 2015.

“We feel great, we’re healthy, we’re ready to go, we were in a good place, ready for kickoff,” Swinney said. “We’ll just pick up where we left off.”

Monday, ACC commission­er John Swofford told ESPN about the postponeme­nt, “It’s unfortunat­e and I don’t think anyone is in a position to question the decision-making of a medical officer in this type of situation.”

 ?? TNS ?? Clemson coach Dabo Swinney, center, shown before a loss to Notre Dame, is frustrated that his team went to Tallahasse­e but didn’t get to play Florida State.
TNS Clemson coach Dabo Swinney, center, shown before a loss to Notre Dame, is frustrated that his team went to Tallahasse­e but didn’t get to play Florida State.

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