The Oklahoman

Swinney keeps mood light at Clemson

- BY PETE IACOBELLI

CLEMSON, S.C. — Dabo Swinney likes to keep the mood around Clemson's football program light, with lots of revelry.

It's the Dabo Way. And it seems to be working. Top recruits keep arriving each year, assistants don't want to leave and the Tigers keep winning.

Swinney, in his 10th year at Clemson, like most coaches is a stickler for hard work. But he also is keen on celebratin­g success.

There are memorable locker room dance parties after victories.

There was a stadium pizza party for fans following Clemson's first trip to the College Football Playoff in 2015, and even a trip to an area amusement park this week amid preparatio­ns for its latest playoff run, which starts for the second ranked Tigers (13-0, CFP No. 2) against No. 3 Notre Dame (12-0, CFP No. 3).

"Coach Swinney calls it joy," receiver Amari Rodgers said.

There's been plenty of joy for the Tigers in the decade since Swinney, a little known receivers coach, earned the fulltime job after the 2008 season without any experience as coach or coordinato­r.

Clemson has won five Atlantic Coast Conference titles (the last four in a row) under Swinney and the 2016 national championsh­ip.

And Swinney is ardent defender of his team's right to happiness.

Last month, he angrily chided fans critical of a closer-than-expected 56-35 win over rival South Carolina.

"We've got people complainin­g," Swinney said. "Give me a break. If 12-0 ain't good enough, then it's time to seek other places."

It's an atmosphere in which players and assistants feel welcome, and seek to stay.

Three Clemson AllAmerica­ns, defensive end Clelin Ferrell, defensive tackle Christian Wilkins and left tackle Mitch Hyatt — all considered high-round NFL prospects a year ago — returned last January for another season in college.

Highly regarded head coaching candidates in defensive coordinato­r Brent Venables and cooffensiv­e coordinato­rs Tony Elliott and Jeff Scott have, so far, resisted queries from other programs.

Houston Texans quarterbac­k Deshaun Watson, who led the Tigers to that national title two years ago, said Swinney's style creates loyalty, appreciati­on and respect.

"He let us be us," Watson said. "He didn't try to control us in any way. He had a great culture there that everyone bought into. We (were) all on the same page and everyone loved it. That was the reason why we were winning and very successful."

And things don't look like they're changing anytime soon.

Clemson's current quarterbac­k, Trevor Lawrence, is a freshman who's already popped up on several early Heisman Trophy lists for 2019. The Tigers signed 27 players last Wednesday, including 13 considered fouror five-star players per 247sports.com.

Wilkins is a player that seems born for Swinney's system; he's hard-working and fun-loving. He's a Power Rangers fanatic who has had linemates dress up as the fictional superheroe­s and visit coaches' houses on Halloween.

"I almost try to take it to new levels, new heights," Wilkins said. "I try to have as much fun as anybody when I'm playing the game, doing my job. But I also try and work harder than anybody."

It's a blend that's kept Clemson's staff stable, too. Nine of Swinney's 10 assistants have been with the program four years or more, including Venables, the highly regarded defensive leader whose name regularly surfaces in coaching searches.

 ?? [AP PHOTO] ?? Clemson coach Dabo Swinney greets defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence (90) during practice Monday at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.
[AP PHOTO] Clemson coach Dabo Swinney greets defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence (90) during practice Monday at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.

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