The Palm Beach Post

Former teammates now running Tigers’ offense

Elliott, Scott were walk-ons at Clemson under Bowden.

- Associated Press

CLEMSON, S.C. — Don’t look for any drama to engulf Clemson’s offense with co-coordinato­rs Tony Elliott and Jeff Scott running the show.

These smooth operators have been together since they were Tiger teammates, and they have history. In a joint effort some 15 years ago they kept one of Jeff ’s dad’s Jet Skis from sinking at a lake outing.

“I want to say we got a rope caught up in the intake valve, and it almost sunk,” Elliott said, smiling.

Elliott and Scott also have kept Clemson’s offense afloat since taking over two years ago from the Tigers’ frenetic coordinato­r Chad Morris, who brought in Clemson’s quickstrik­e, fast-pace attack until becoming SMU’s coach after the 2014 season.

Clemson coach Dabo Swinney said he had about “1,000 texts” from people telling him whom he should hire. Instead, Swinney picked his guys.

“After all, I raised them,” Swinney quipped.

The partnershi­p has worked extremely well these past two seasons, considerin­g Clemson is playing for the national championsh­ip for a second straight year. The third-ranked Tigers (13-1) get a rematch with defending champ No. 1 Alabama (14-0) on Monday night in Tampa.

Scott said he and Elliott work well together because neither one’s worried about the spotlight or grabbing credit.

“We don’t have one guy that’s up there, trying to get all the attention and be in the national news,” Scott said.

Alabama received lots of attention this week for its h i g h - p r o f i l e c o o r d i n a t o r change on offense. Threeyear Crimson Tide offensive guru Lane Kiffin left to start his new head coaching job at Florida Atlantic. Steve Sarkisian, like Kiffin a former Southern Cal coach, will step in immediatel­y instead of taking over coordinato­r duties next season.

Crimson Tide coach Nick Saban has done his best to quash any drama, saying Sarkisian has complete knowledge of the offense.

“He knows the system inside and out,” Saban said Wednesday.

Few know the Clemson culture such as Elliott and Scott.

T h e t wo were wal k- o n r e c e i v e r s u n d e r To mmy Bowden starting in 2000. Elliott started four of 44 games in his career and rose to team captain in 2003. Scott spent his time largely on special teams as a holder who was occasional­ly called for fake kicks.

Elliott and Scott grew close as te ammates bec ause of their similar circumstan­ces, although their paths diverted after graduation. While Elliott began an corporate track as an industrial engineer at Michelin North America, Scott took up the family business — father Brad Scott was South Carolina’s head coach from 1994-98 and was an assistant for Bobby Bowden at Florida State and son Tommy at Clemson.

They reconnecte­d with the Tigers when Elliott, whose last receivers coach at Clemson was Swinney, felt the coaching tug while at Michelin. Swinney counseled him to do what his heart told him, and Elliott became an assistant coach at South Carolina State in 2006.

Elliott joined Clemson as running backs coach in 2011. He and Scott, at Clemson since 2008 as receivers coach at recruiting coordinato­r, soaked up as much as Morris gave them about playing-calling.

So once Morris left, Swinney quickly filled the void from within.

“There was an unknown,” Scott acknowledg­ed. “It’s like whenever you get married, you love your spouse, but what’s this going to look like?”

The two have a game-week routine. They meet together and come up with plan, then share it with the rest of the staff. They meet soon after and share informatio­n from the rest of the offensive staff, then are in lock step the rest of the week.

On game day, Elliott is in the press box calling plays with input from all staffers. Scott is on the sidelines as a point of contact for players. So far, the Tigers are 27-2 with that system in place.

Of course, the timing for success coincides with Clemson having once-in-generation talent like quarterbac­k Deshaun Watson, single-season rushing leader Wayne Gallman and Artavis Scott, the Tigers’ all-time leader in pass receptions.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States