Daily Press

Wake Forest coach details tampering

Clawson says schools offered $150K-$500K to up to eight players

- By Aaron Beard

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Wake Forest coach Dave Clawson said this week that six to eight of his players returned to the Demon Deacons despite tampering efforts by other schools hoping to persuade them to transfer with promises of lucrative endorsemen­t deals.

He said the offers to his players ranged in value from roughly $150,000 to around $500,000.

“I love the way (the players) handled it,” Clawson said during the final day of the ACC’s preseason media days. “They didn’t try to leverage, negotiate. They just wanted me to know as the head coach that these things are now going on in college football, which I knew.

“But when you get the firsthand examples of it, of ‘This school offered me this much to go there at this time,’ those are very real things.”

Coaches have talked broadly about tampering by schools trying to poach their rosters as the transfer portal allows for free player movement while players can also cash in with name, image and likeness (NIL) endorsemen­t opportunit­ies. Yet coaches rarely go into details beyond alleging it’s happening.

“You add (NIL) and transfer portal and the collision of the two and tampering, those are things that make it more difficult to be a head coach,” North Carolina coach Mack Brown said earlier Thursday.

Clawson didn’t identify the schools he said approached his players, saying only that none are in the ACC.

Tampering would seem to be a particular concern for a program like Wake Forest, which doesn’t load and reload with five-star recruits. Instead, Clawson’s program is about long-term developmen­t and retention of players who have gotten stronger and honed their skills over time — typically with a redshirt year — while building up game reps before assuming a waited-their-turn larger role.

The formula helped the Demon Deacons reach the ACC championsh­ip game in 2021.

“I give our players credit,” Clawson said. “They let us know after the fact. None of them came to me and said, ‘Coach, I have this offer to go here. What can the collective do?’

“They didn’t do that. … All those guys stayed because they want to get Wake Forest degrees and they have a good relationsh­ip with their teammates. And you know, I would like the narrative to be a positive one.”

 ?? CHUCK BURTON/AP ?? Wake Forest head coach Dave Clawson said that other schools tried to persuade six to eight of his players to transfer with promises of big endorsemen­t deals.
CHUCK BURTON/AP Wake Forest head coach Dave Clawson said that other schools tried to persuade six to eight of his players to transfer with promises of big endorsemen­t deals.

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