The Record (Troy, NY)

Swinney builds championsh­ip program at Clemson

- By Pete Iacobelli

CLEMSON, S.C. » Few believed 10 years ago Dabo Swinney could transform Clemson into a perennial championsh­ip contender.

It was a longshot that he even got the job. But there he stood in an ill-fitting orange coach, the down-home guy with the folksy dialogue and no head coaching experience, smiling, trying to make a good first impression.

It sounded like the normal rhetoric from the new guy when Swinney vowed Clemson’s football program would be second to none and that the skeptics should take another look because, “We will not disappoint.”

But a decade later, they haven’t.

Clemson has lived up to that bold pledge with seven 10-win seasons, four Atlantic Coast Conference crowns, the 2016 national title and has become one of the top programs in the sport.

There isn’t one blueprint for college football success, but former Texas coach Mack Brown said Clemson has all the necessary ingredient­s:

— A dynamic leader people believe in;

— Resolve to stick with an overall plan yet having a willingnes­s to adjust;

— Ability to consistent­ly recruit the best in players;

— Top-notch coaches and resources;

— Commitment from administra­tors.

“You can’t have a program that wins like Clemson’s without those things,” said Brown, who has a national championsh­ip on his resume.

Brown also believes Clemson has the mix to keep the run going for a while.

Swinney is still one of Clemson’s biggest cheerleade­rs, but he has demonstrat­ed to players that he is a leader with vision who’ll accept nothing less than their best.

“You’ve got to change the inside before you can change the outside,” Swinney said.

Swinney seemed to have little chance at the fulltime job when then- Clemson athletic director Terry Don Phillips showed Tommy Bowden the door six games into the 2008 season and elevated the Tigers’ 38-yearold receivers coach to take over.

Phillips, who retired in 2012, said when he went to Clemson’s practices, he’d find himself watching receivers and Swinney’s animated coaching style. When Phillips walked through the football offices, he’d find players packed in Swinney’s room, many who were not receivers.

“He just has a way” with players, Phillips said.

Still, when entrusting a football team like Clemson’s to a new coach, everyone has an opinion “and hiring a receivers coach who was never a coordinato­r is not what they had in mind,” Phillips said with a laugh.

Swinney was called a stop-gap, a “coupon coach” hired on the cheap at less than $1 million who was way out of his depth.

And for a minute, it looked like it would be a short ride for Swinney.

Clemson won its first ACC Atlantic Division title in Swinney’s initial season, yet when the Tigers finished 6-7 in 2010, plenty of fans, boosters and people of influence wondered if Swinney was indeed the guy to make Clemson a perennial title contender.

Inside the program, there was still belief in Swinney.

“We knew he was and we knew if we kept believing, things would change,” said record-setting quarterbac­k Tajh Boyd.

They did. Boyd and the Tigers were 32-8 from 20112013.

It helped, Boyd said, that Tiger coaches went after and landed some of the top players in the country. The 2011 roster included NFL receivers DeAndre Hopkins, Martavis Bryant and Sammy Watkins.

“You could see the talent getting better each time,” Boyd said.

When you win, more players get to play meaning a bigger buy-in from everyone, said Brown, who also revived North Carolina before moving to Texas.

An appealing style of play under the leadership of personable coaches has also contribute­d to Clemson’s rise.

Defensive coordinato­r Brent Venables is on the top of that list.

 ?? MIKE STEWART — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? In this file photo, Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney leads the team down the lane before the first half of an NCAA college football game against the Florida State, in Clemson, S.C.
MIKE STEWART — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE In this file photo, Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney leads the team down the lane before the first half of an NCAA college football game against the Florida State, in Clemson, S.C.

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