Santa Fe New Mexican

Clemson’s Swinney navigates staffing changes

- By Pete Iacobelli

CLEMSON, S.C. — Clemson coach Dabo Swinney kept getting calls and texts from friends and colleagues asking how he was doing the past two weeks.

Swinney and his championsh­ip football program underwent a shakeup unlike anything he had faced in 13-plus seasons as Tigers coach. Defensive coordinato­r Brent Venables left to become head coach at Oklahoma. Offensive leader Tony Elliott is now the Virginia head coach and athletic director Dan Radakovich left Clemson to take the same job at Miami.

All trusted confidants, all significan­t contributo­rs to Clemson’s success the past decade.

“Trust me,” Swinney said. “We’re going to be just fine.” That remains to be seen. Much of the credit for Clemson’s run of six straight Atlantic Coast Conference titles from 2015-2020 and national championsh­ips after the 2016 and 2018 seasons has been its stability.

Venables was hired from Oklahoma after the 2011 season and created one of the best defenses in the country for a decade.

Elliot, a former Clemson player under then-receivers coach Swinney in 2003, rejoined the team as an offensive assistant 10 years ago and rose to coordinato­r after Chad Morris’ departure in 2014. The Tigers offense averaged better than 500 yards a game in five of seven seasons under Elliott.

Radakovich came to Clemson in 2012 and was a driving force behind football’s $55 million headquarte­rs, which at the time of its opening in 2017 was considered state of the art in college football.

Swinney said he will miss working with them but understand­s their choices to go.

“Continuity is great,” the coach said. “I love continuity, but new opportunit­y is great, too.”

Swinney believes his new football coordinato­rs — offensive leader Brandon Streeter and co-defensive coordinato­rs Wesley Goodwin and Mickey Conn, who all have spent years on the Tigers’ staff — will keep Clemson moving forward.

Roddy Jones, a college football analyst for the ACC Network, said Swinney’s track record on hiring the past decade should give him some breathing room at seeing how things shake out.

Clemson, Jones said, will still have the most talent in the ACC entering next season and will likely be favorites for the 2022 league crown after missing out on lifting the conference trophy for the first time since 2014.

“It’s OK for them to have a year when things didn’t all go their way,” Jones said.

Clemson was No. 3 in the preseason rankings and then out of the Top 25 by September’s end after losses to Georgia and North Carolina State. The 19th-ranked Tigers (9-3; No. 19 CFP) finished by winning seven of eight and will look for its 11th straight 10-win season when they play Iowa State (7-5) in the Cheez-It Bowl in Orlando, Florida later this month.

While Swinney, 52, has embraced change on his staff, he is not happy with the national landscape, particular­ly player transfer rules. He’s long been against the revamped guidelines, including giving undergradu­ate transfers a one-time opportunit­y to play immediatel­y at their new school.

Clemson has seen several players including former starters in running back Lyn-J Dixon and receiver Frank Ladson enter the portal this season.

“It’s total chaos right now,” Swinney said this week. “Tampering galore. Kids are being manipulate­d. Grass is greener and all that stuff as opposed to putting the work in and graduating. There’s no consequenc­es.”

“No consequenc­es,” Swinney continued, “equals no conscience.”

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Dabo Swinney

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