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TOP SECRET! DONT CLICK! 2
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TOP SECRET! DONT CLICK! 2


Aug 17, 2025, 4:42 PM
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On the 4th day before Clemson plays again, let’s spotlight Clemson’s Assistant Head Coach, Co-Offensive Coordinator, Offensive Linemen coach Matt Luke.

He “Played collegiately at Ole Miss as a center from 1995-98 and earned his degree in business administration in 2000. Started 33 career games for the Rebels and was voted as a team captain in 1998 in helping lead the team to a 7-5 record and an Independence Bowl victory against Texas Tech. The native of Gulfport, Miss. was a two-time Academic All-SEC selection as a student-athlete.”.

He “Began his coaching career at Ole Miss, his alma mater, in 1999 as a student assistant coach. Served as Murray State’s offensive line coach from 2000-01. Returned to Ole Miss in 2002 to oversee the offensive line and tight ends from 2002-05 under head coaches David Cutcliffe and Ed Orgeron.”.

“In 2006, reunited with Cutcliffe at Tennessee, serving as the Volunteers’ offensive line and tight ends coach for two seasons. In that time, he helped the Vols to a 19-8 record and a division title while also serving as recruiting coordinator for Tennessee’s top-five recruiting class in 2007.”

He “Followed Cutcliffe to Duke in 2008, serving as the Blue Devils’ co-offensive coordinator and offensive line coach. His offensive line ranked among the ACC’s top five in fewest sacks allowed throughout his tenure, including finishing third in 2009 and 2010.”.

He “Spent eight years (2012-19) at Ole Miss, serving initially as its assistant head coach/offensive line coach from 2012-16 prior to being elevated to interim head coach in the weeks leading up to the 2017 season.”.

“In 2015, his offensive line powered Ole Miss to program records for points (531), touchdowns (68), total offense (6,731), passing yards (4,351) and passing touchdowns (35), among others. The Rebels led the SEC and were top 10 nationally in scoring (40.8), total offense (517.8 yards per game) and passing (334.7 yards per game). Luke’s prized pupils on Ole Miss’s offensive line were Tunsil, who twice earned All-SEC and was taken in the first round of the 2015 NFL Draft, and Fahn Cooper, who was drafted by San Francisco in 2016. Both linemen collected the Kent Hull Trophy, sponsored by the Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame, which goes annually to the state’s outstanding offensive lineman.”

“During his Ole Miss tenure, he guided tackle Laremy Tunsil to three All-SEC honors en route to Tunsil’s selection as the No. 13 overall pick in the 2016 NFL Draft, Ole Miss’ highest-selected offensive lineman in more than 60 years. Was recognized by 247Sports in 2016 as one of the nation’s top recruiters.”

He “Faced the daunting challenge of taking over as Ole Miss’ head coach a week before 2017 fall camp, but his Rebels responded by posting a 6-6 record and winning three of their final four games, leading to the removal of the interim tag from his title.”.

He “Joined Clemson in December 2023 with more than 20 years of experience as an offensive line coach, co-offensive coordinator and head coach. Added the titles of assistant head coach and co-offensive coordinator prior to the 2025 season.”.

“Said Head Coach Dabo Swinney of Luke’s hire, “Matt is exactly what we needed with his hire. He brings an incredible résumé and a wealth of experience and has worked with a bunch of great coaches and players over his career.””.

He “Coached his first game with Clemson in the 2023 TaxSlayer Gator Bowl, as his offensive line helped power MVP Phil Mafah to a Clemson bowl-record four rushing touchdowns in the victory.”

He “Engineered a significant improvement in Clemson’s offensive line in his first full season, producing multiple All-ACC picks (Blake Miller and Marcus Tate) and helping Clemson tie for the national lead with six games reaching both 200 rushing yards and 200 passing yards.”.

Here are a few articles about Matt Luke: https://www.tigernet.com/clemson-football/story/matt-luke-knows-the-secret-sauce-of-recruiting-23314
https://www.si.com/college/clemson/football/clemson-tigers-ol-coach-matt-luke-s-simple-approach-no-shortcuts-01k0ktf6zrv2

Here is his bio: https://clemsontigers.com/coaches/matt-luke/

Here is his wiki: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matt_Luke_(American_football)

Here is his twitter: https://x.com/coachmattluke?lang=en
And finally here is some videos of him: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nc-Jgts2-5o
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kgOZfQt_2YA
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gGjJ9ZmYj20
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G6zvwvMHxRU
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PvG0-GhSGDE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rZQDS_fK6EQ
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_I_SdZsjiWw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UbO9xJiu4lA

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Re: TOP SECRET! DONT CLICK! 2


Aug 17, 2025, 10:02 PM
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From now on until game day. I will be posting a daily coach’s spotlight covering all the current coaches on the 2025 Clemson Football roster. This will coincide with my player spotlight on OJ’s Hill Watch but will be posted as its own post every day. (If I posted these spotlights in the Hill Watches, then it would just make it more cluttered there and it would take longer to scroll down because I got a lot of content to show you guys.)
Ps this first spotlight is almost pretty much copy and pasted from my spotlight from day 28 of the Hill Watch. (Since I used CJ Spiller as my person to spotlight on day 28.) Though I have added his wiki page to my post and added a bunch more videos of him that weren’t in his other spotlight. So enjoy!

(The rest of my coaches spotlights will be new content.)

On the 12th day before Clemson plays again, let’s spotlight Clemson’s Offensive Run Game Coordinator and Running Backs Coach CJ Spiller.

Here are some key stats from his time at Clemson.
“Key Career Stats:
All-Purpose Yards: 7,588 (3rd all-time in FBS history at the time of his graduation)
Rushing Yards: 3,541
Receptions: 198
Touchdowns: 51 (32 rushing, 11 receiving, 8 on returns)
Touchdowns of 50+ yards: 21 (11 of 80+ yards, both Clemson records)
ACC Record for All-Purpose Yards in a season: 2,680 (2009)
ACC Record for Kickoff Return Touchdowns: 8
Career Kickoff Return Touchdowns: 7 (NCAA record at the time of his graduation)
Touchdowns in every game of the 2009 season: (unique in college football)”

And his NFL stats:
“Rushing yards: 3,451
Rushing average: 4.8
Rushing touchdowns: 12
Receptions: 198
Receiving yards: 1,484
Receiving touchdowns: 9
Return yards: 2,056
Return touchdowns: 2”

Spiller “Graduated from Clemson with a degree in sociology in three-and-a-half years on Dec. 17, 2009, receiving a standing ovation from the Clemson University Board of Trustees, the first such occurrence for a student-athlete.”

“His NFL career included tenures with the Bills, New Orleans Saints, Seattle Seahawks, New York Jets and Kansas City Chiefs, and he was a Pro Bowl selection in 2012. He and college teammate Jacoby Ford remain the only Clemson products ever to record multiple rushing touchdowns, multiple receiving touchdowns and multiple kick return touchdowns during an NFL career.”.

He was “Inducted into both the Clemson Athletic Hall of Fame and South Carolina Athletic Hall of Fame in 2020 for his immense contribution to athletics at both the university and state levels.”

He “Was selected for induction into the College Football Hall of Fame as a member of the Class of 2021, earning the distinction in only his second year of eligibility.” and “Became Clemson’s eighth inductee in the College Football Hall of Fame, joining four coaches (John Heisman, Jess Neely, Frank Howard and Danny Ford) and three players (Banks McFadden, Terry Kinard and Jeff Davis). At the time of his selection, Spiller became one of only 1,038 players and 223 coaches immortalized in the Hall, putting him at the time in the top 0.02 percent of those who have played or coached the sport.”.

Spiller was “Named as Clemson’s running backs coach on Feb. 5, 2021 after serving as an unpaid coaching intern during the 2020 season. Added the title of Offensive Run Game Coordinator in 2025.”.

“In 2020, assisted the Tiger coaching staff that helped Travis Etienne become a consensus All-American as an all-purpose/athlete selection, becoming the 29th player ever to earn consensus All-America honors at Clemson and the school’s 31st total consensus selection. Spiller and Etienne comprise two of Clemson’s three all-time consensus All-Americans at the running back position. While on staff in an unpaid role, watched Etienne break Clemson single-season records for a running back in receptions (48) and receiving yards (588) and tie the running back mark for 100-yard receiving games (two) while adding two receiving touchdowns. Etienne joined Stanford’s Christian McCaffrey, Oklahoma’s Joe Mixon and Penn State’s Saquon Barkley as the only Power Five players to post 900 rushing yards and 500 receiving yards in a single season since 2015.“

“In his first season in an on-field role in 2021, he had two different rushers (Shipley and Kobe Pace) reach 500 rushing yards, giving Clemson multiple 500-yard rushers for the sixth time in a seven-year span. Shipley led Clemson in rushing touchdowns (11), total touchdowns (11), rushing attempts (149) and rushing yards (739) in 2021, becoming the first Clemson player other than Travis Etienne or Wayne Gallman to lead Clemson in rushing since 2013 (Rod McDowell) when Shipley was in fifth grade. Shipley’s 11 rushing touchdowns matched Spiller (11 in 2006) for the second-most by a Clemson true freshman since 1972 and finished two shy of the Clemson true freshman record (Travis Etienne, 13 in 2017).”

“In 2022, guided Shipley as he became the first player in ACC history to earn first-team all-conference honors at three different positions (running back, all-purpose and specialist) and be named as one of four finalists for the Paul Hornung Award, given annually to the nation’s most versatile player. With 15 rushing touchdowns as a sophomore, Shipley joined Clemson’s Travis Etienne, Louisville’s Lamar Jackson and North Carolina’s Giovani Bernard as the only ACC players since 2000 to rush for at least 11 touchdowns in both their freshman and sophomore seasons. Also mentored Shipley as the second-year back became Clemson’s first Academic All-American since 2012.”

“In 2023, helped both Mafah (965) and Will Shipley (827) exceed 800 rushing yards, marking only the ninth time since 1948 that Clemson has produced multiple 750-yard rushers. It marked the first time two Clemson running backs accomplished the feat since 2006, when Spiller himself was part of such a duo with James Davis. Clemson was one of only six schools in 2023 with multiple 800-yard rushers, and Clemson was one of only four to accomplish the feat with multiple running backs rather than one running back and one quarterback.”

He “Guided Phil Mafah to the 24th 1,000-yard rushing season in school history and third-team All-ACC recognition in 2024.”.

Here is his coaching bio: https://clemsontigers.com/coaches/c-j-spiller/

Here is his Wiki page: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C._J._Spiller

Here is his instagram: https://www.instagram.com/cjspiller28/

Here is his twitter: https://x.com/cjspiller?lang=en

And here are some of his highlights from when he played at Clemson and when he played for the Buffalo Bills.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iRs4DPfmf-M
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9kwSz7c06eU
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vBrWyGphyDg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gk5p6MS4ZGU
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UNlpYN7ln8M
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fs4uq5S1xd8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QV6SjckdWtE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PjAKZZ1i2p4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dIIJctwvYvA
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3_dAhLxj5Lo

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Re: TOP SECRET! DONT CLICK! 2


Aug 22, 2025, 5:04 PM
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On the 3rd day before Clemson plays again, let’s spotlight Clemson’s Associate Head Coach, Co-Defensive Coordinator, Defensive Tackles coach Nick Eason.

He is a “Veteran of 17 combined NFL seasons as a player and coach who returned to his alma mater on Jan. 7, 2022 upon being hired as Clemson’s defensive run game coordinator and defensive tackles coach. Added the title of Associate Head Coach in 2024 and the title of Co-Defensive Coordinator in 2025.”.

He “Was a four-year letterman at Clemson from 1999-2002, playing 47 games with 35 starts and recording 15 sacks and 30 tackles for loss. Among those who he played with at Clemson were former Clemson offensive coordinators Tony Elliott, Jeff Scott and Brandon Streeter.”.

He “Was a team captain, All-ACC selection and Strength & Conditioning All-American at Clemson. He was a two-time Dedication Award winner as awarded by the Clemson strength & conditioning staff. Selected to the AFCA Good Works Team in 2000 and was the first five-time Clemson recipient of the ACC Top Six award, which was presented annually to the conference’s top student-athletes in terms of community involvement.”.

He “Became the first Tiger football player to graduate with two years of eligibility remaining after earning a degree in sociology in August 2001. He added a master’s degree in human resource development in 2008.”.

He “Was a fourth-round selection by the Denver Broncos in the 2003 NFL Draft, but he spent his rookie season on the Reserve/Injured list after suffering an Achilles injury during training camp. Played 117 NFL games over 10 seasons from 2003-12 with the Cleveland Browns, Pittsburgh Steelers and Arizona Cardinals.”.

He “Spent four seasons (2007-10) with the Steelers and helped them to two Super Bowl appearances, including a victory in Super Bowl XLIII in the 2008 season. Finished his playing career with the Cardinals, where he spent two seasons from 2011-12, appearing in 32 games and registering two sacks.”.

He “Began his transition to coaching in 2013 as a coaching intern for the Cleveland Browns, for whom he had previously played three seasons from 2004-06.”.

He “Was hired by the Tennessee Titans in 2014 and helped oversee Tennessee’s transition from a 4-3 to a 3-4 front. Spent two seasons as an assistant defensive line coach for the Titans from 2014-15 before becoming the Titans’ outside linebackers and defensive line coach in 2016-17. Helped defensive tackle Jurrell Casey to the first three of his five career Pro Bowl selections to date through 2021 in those four years.”.

He “Briefly served as a defensive assistant at Austin Peay for part of 2018.”.

He “Served as outside linebackers and defensive line coach for the Cincinnati Bengals from 2019-20. In his first season, Eason led significant improvement in the Bengals’ defensive line as the season progressed, notching an 11-sack improvement and an 84.1-yard reduction in yards per game in the final eight games of the season as compared to the first eight games. Helped Bengals defensive tackle Geno Atkins earn his eighth career Pro Bowl selection.”.

“Prior to returning to Clemson, he served as defensive line coach at Auburn in 2021, helping the Tigers to their largest sack total since 2018. Coached a defensive interior that helped Auburn allow the third-fewest yards per carry in the SEC and finish fourth in the conference in tackles for loss in the 2021 season.”.

“Said Head Coach Dabo Swinney upon Eason’s hiring: “Nick is the epitome of what I look for in a coach. He has an incredible passion for the game, he has got a great background and he truly loves the player. In this hire, I really wanted a guy who had great experience at the NFL level. I wanted somebody who has coached the best of the best at the highest level, and that’s exactly what he’s done. He was a great player at Clemson and he’s a great Clemson man.””.

“In his first season at Clemson in 2022, helped Davis earn All-America honors, a first-team All-ACC selection and a semifinalist nod for the Chuck Bednarik Award in addition to helping Bryan Bresee to the No. 29 overall selection in the 2023 NFL Draft. His defensive tackles produced 14 of Clemson’s 44 sacks and 31 of its 111 tackles for loss as the Tigers finished in the top four in the nation in both categories in 2022.”.

“In his first year in the conference, he earned 247Sports’ ACC Recruiter of the Year for his first recruiting cycle, which ended on National Signing Day in 2023.”.

He “Produced multiple All-ACC honorees in 2023 in first-team selection Tyler Davis and third-team selection Ruke Orhorhoro in addition to mentoring Peter Woods amid a Freshman All-America debut campaign. Clemson’s interior helped the defense finish eighth in the nation in both total defense and passing defense while ranking 24th in rushing yards allowed per game.”.

He “Guided Payton Page to All-ACC recognition in his first year as a starter in 2024 as Clemson won the ACC and finished 13th nationally in tackles for loss.”

Here is his bio: https://clemsontigers.com/coaches/nick-eason/

Here is his Wiki page: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nick_Eason

Here is his twitter: https://x.com/coacheason1?lang=en
Here is a bunch of videos of him: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=89_BHOww9_0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1TKl1jLwx6U&list=PLHTd5uzGBleKWImULeerCbl6_sNUIyTXF&index=18
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ht5fnV7x64Y&list=PLHTd5uzGBleKWImULeerCbl6_sNUIyTXF&index=14
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhs419xphlQ&list=PLHTd5uzGBleKWImULeerCbl6_sNUIyTXF&index=8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W77EVSj3dQ4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uKOBZc_-xgw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iMu3CpZi0Uo

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Re: TOP SECRET! DONT CLICK! 2


Aug 25, 2025, 1:20 PM
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On the 2nd day before Clemson plays again, let’s spotlight Clemson’s Offensive Coordinator, Quarterbacks coach Garrett Riley.

He is a “Native of Muleshoe, Texas, where he was the 2007 Associated Press All-State 2A Offensive Player of the Year after playing a role in four straight playoff appearances for Muleshoe High School.”.

He “Played quarterback at Texas Tech from 2008-09 under Head Coach Mike Leach before transferring to Stephen F. Austin for the 2010 season. He saw action in 11 games in helping the Lumberjacks to a Southland Conference championship and a 9-3 record under head coach (and former Clemson defensive tackle) J.C. Harper. Earned degree in general business from Texas Tech in 2012.”.

“Began coaching career in 2011, when he served as a passing game assistant and quarterbacks coach at Roosevelt High School in Lubbock, Texas. Moved to the collegiate ranks in 2012, helping rebuild an Augustana (Ill.) College program that was 2-8 prior to his arrival into a 5-5 squad that improved its rushing total by 500 yards during his season as the program’s running backs coach. Selected to the AFCA 35 Under 35 Coaches Leadership Institute in 2021.”.

He “Made his FBS debut at East Carolina from 2013-15. After spending his first two seasons as a graduate assistant, he was promoted to Outside Receivers Coach in 2015. That year, East Carolina’s Zay Jones caught 98 passes for 1,009 yards as part of the receiver’s FBS-record 399 career receptions.“.

He “Spent three seasons at Kansas from 2016-18 in various capacities. He joined the Jayhawks as an offensive analyst in 2016 before transitioning to an on-field role as the team’s quarterbacks coach in 2017 and its tight ends/fullbacks coach in 2018.”.

He “Spent the 2019 season as the running backs coach at App State. The Mountaineers compiled a 13-1 record including a Sun Belt Conference title and a win in the New Orleans Bowl. Mentored Appalachian State’s Darrynton Evans to Sun Belt Offensive Player of the Year honors. Evans totaled 1,740 all-purpose yards, including 1,250 rushing yards and 20 touchdowns that year before later becoming a third-round selection of the Tennessee Titans in the 2020 NFL Draft.”.

He “Joined Clemson from TCU, where he served as the team’s offensive coordinator/quarterbacks coach in helping lead the Horned Frogs to a 13-2 record, a Fiesta Bowl title and a berth in the College Football Playoff National Championship Game in 2022.”.

He “Arrived at TCU following a 2021 campaign in which the Horned Frogs finished 5-7 and produced the nation’s 65th-ranked scoring offense. In his lone season in Fort Worth, he transformed the unit into the nation’s ninth-ranked scoring offense at 38.8 points per game. The explosive group led the FBS with 22 plays from scrimmage of 50 yards or more.”.

He was “Honored with the 2022 Broyles Award, presented annually to the nation’s top assistant coach. With Riley’s arrival, three of the seven Broyles Awards winners from 2016-22 will have served as a coordinator on Clemson’s staff, joining 2016 winner Brent Venables and 2017 winner Tony Elliott. He joined his brother, 2015 winner Lincoln Riley, to make them the only brother duo in the award’s history to earn the honor. Led TCU quarterback Max Duggan to the Davey O’Brien Award as the nation’s top quarterback, a runner-up finish in Heisman Trophy voting, All-America honors from several selectors and Big 12 Offensive Player of the Year.”.

He “Served two seasons at SMU from 2020-21 in the same role. His offenses with the Mustangs finished in the top 15 in the nation in both scoring offense and total offense in both seasons and helped garner postseason accolades for quarterbacks Shane Buechele and Tanner Mordecai.”.

He was “Announced as Clemson’s offensive coordinator/quarterbacks coach on Jan. 13, 2023.”.

He “Led Clemson to a No. 15 national rank in first downs per game (23.4), ninth-best in Clemson history, in 2023. Clemson’s 76.8 plays per game represented its highest average since 2016 (81.4), and Clemson finished fifth in the nation in average time of possession per game (33:19), its highest ranking and largest average since 1989. Helped Klubnik complete 290-of-454 passes in Klubnik’s first full season as a starter in 2023.”.

He “Produced one of the nation’s most balanced offenses in 2024 when Clemson tied for the national lead with six games reaching both 200 rushing yards and 200 passing yards. Clemson produced a 3,000-yard passer, 1,000-yard rusher and four 500-yard pass catchers in a season for the fourth time in school history, joining three seasons in which Clemson played for the national championship (2015, 2016 and 2018). Guided quarterback Cade Klubnik in 2024 as he threw 36 touchdowns against only six interceptions and finished third in the nation in touchdown responsibility (43, including seven rushing touchdowns), just one off the national lead.”.

Here is his bio: https://clemsontigers.com/coaches/garrett-riley/

Here is his Wiki page: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garrett_Riley

Here is his twitter: https://x.com/coachgriley?lang=en

Here is several videos of him: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8minTcS679g
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z85RtwCC3mk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IvPj8xUzwjg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oJyLwi1MlXc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=83kjvjbkK1Y
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GIxBQWsstB0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FE0rK_flnJw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6RKHJUIbCls

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Re: TOP SECRET! DONT CLICK! 2


Aug 26, 2025, 4:05 PM
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On the 4th day before Clemson plays again, let’s spotlight Clemson’s Defensive Coordinator, Linebackers coach Tom Allen.

He “Played football as a prolific defender and punter at Maranatha Baptist University in Wisconsin from 1988-91. Also competed intercollegiately as a wrestler. Native of New Castle, Ind.”

He “Began his coaching career in 1992, spending three seasons at Temple Heights Christian School in Tampa, Fla. including serving the 1993 season as its interim head coach and 1994 as its head coach. From 1995-96, he served as the defensive coordinator at Tampa’s Armwood High School.”.

“In 1997, he began a 10-year run as a successful high school coach in the state of Indiana. He served as defensive coordinator at Marion High School in 1997 before becoming the defensive coordinator at Ben Davis High School in Indianapolis from 1998-2003. In 2004, he was promoted to head coach, a position in which he served at Ben Davis for three seasons before making the jump to the collegiate level in 2007. Including his successful prep coaching career, teams on which Allen has coached are a combined 268-120 (.691) since 1995.”

He “Made his collegiate coaching debut in 2007 at Wabash College, where he served as the secondary coach and special teams coordinator. Was the assistant head coach, defensive coordinator, and linebackers coach at the NAIA’s Lambuth University from 2008-09, playing a role in two Mid-South Conference championships and the school’s first undefeated regular season (11-0) in 2009.“

He “Served as the defensive coordinator and linebackers coach at Drake in 2010, when the Bulldogs ranked No. 6 in the FCS in rush defense (94.2), No. 8 in sacks (33), No. 17 in tackles for loss (81) and No. 25 in scoring defense (20.4). Made FBS debut in 2011 as associate head coach at Arkansas State, which went 10-3 overall and earned the Sun Belt title. He coached Demario Davis to an eventual third-round selection in the NFL Draft.”

He “Spent the 2012-14 seasons coaching linebackers and special teams at Ole Miss. The Rebels earned a Peach Bowl berth in 2014 with a 9-4 record and led the nation in scoring defense (16.0 points per game) and allowed a national-low 24 touchdowns.”.

He “Served as South Florida’s defensive coordinator in 2015 as the Bulls went 8-5 and earned a trip to the Miami Beach Bowl. He mentored three all-conference selections and produced the AAC’s top scoring defense in league play (19.6 points per game).”.

He “Spent eight years at Indiana from 2016-23, including one year as the Hoosiers’ associate head coach/defense in 2016 and seven as head coach from 2017-23.”

“In his first season in Bloomington, he inherited a defense that ranked second-to-last among Power Five teams in passing yards allowed, third-to-last in total defense and scoring defense and fifth-to-last in first downs allowed prior to his arrival, but under Allen, Indiana held its opponents to 129.4 fewer total yards and 94.1 fewer passing yards per game, the nation’s largest improvement. Indiana’s defense allowed 10.4 fewer points per game and gave up 25 fewer touchdowns in its first year under his leadership.”.

“His head coaching tenure at Indiana included the 2020 campaign for which he earned AFCA National Coach of the Year as well as Big Ten Hayes-Schembechler Coach of the Year honors and Grant Teaff Coach of the Year from FCA. He was also a finalist for the 2020 Paul “Bear” Bryant Coach of the Year Award, the George Munger College Coach of the Year Award, the Dodd Trophy, and the Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year Award. Developed a 2020 staff that included future head coaches Kalen DeBoer and Kane Wommack as the Hoosiers went 6-2 in the pandemic-truncated season, Indiana’s highest winning percentage in a season (.750) since 1967. Indiana ranked as high as No. 7 in the AP Poll and finished No. 12, its highest end-of-year ranking since 1967.”.

He “Coached four All-Americans on Indiana’s defense, including linebacker Micah McFadden, linebacker Tegray Scales, linebacker Aaron Casey and defensive back Tiawan Mullen (the brother of former Clemson All-American Trayvon Mullen). Players under his tutelage also accounted for 35 All-Big Ten selections.”.

“Served as the defensive coordinator/linebackers coach at Penn State in 2024, helping lead the Nittany Lions to a school-record 13 wins and a College Football Playoff berth. His unit recorded two pick-sixes in Penn State’s win against SMU in the CFP First Round, and it bottled up Heisman runner-up Ashton Jeanty to a season-low 3.47 yards per carry and no touchdowns in a victory in the CFP National Quarterfinal at the Fiesta Bowl.”

“Penn State finished seventh in the nation in total defense (294.8 yards per game) and eighth in the nation in scoring defense (16.5 points per game) under Allen’s guidance in 2024. The unit finished second nationally in tackles for loss (119) and fifth in sacks (44), as he helped guide defensive end Abdul Carter to unanimous All-America honors and a No. 3 overall draft selection.”.

He is “Entering his first season as Clemson’s defensive coordinator after being named to the position on Jan. 14, 2025. Joined the Tigers with 33 previous years of coaching experience, including impact at the high school, Division III, NAIA, FCS and FBS levels.”

“Said Head Coach Dabo Swinney of Allen’s hire: “We’ve got a great football coach — and a great leader of men — coming to Clemson. He brings a ton of experience and was highly recommended by some of the best people in this business.””.

Here is his bio: https://clemsontigers.com/coaches/tom-allen/

Here is his Wiki page: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Allen_(American_football)

Here is his twitter: https://x.com/coach_tomallen
Here is several videos about him: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KKPA89Lkxdg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3wDvfM0jAa4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X4fKF77252U
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZmRd6nnuci4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VBByZ2PwHXc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ed6gUxouHs8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9qTW9Ha5gA8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KoFdoxe1ArY
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KYfjwJ2ADvo

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Aug 29, 2025, 9:07 AM
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On the day Clemson plays, Let’s spotlight Clemson’s Head Coach Dabo Swinney.

(I usually copy and paste the stuff from the coaches official bios and then rearrange them into order by year. On this one though, I’m just gonna copy and paste the whole thing as is. There is so much in Dabo’s bio and I don’t feel like rearranging all that.)

“An illustrious coaching heritage is embedded in the foundation of Clemson football. At the dawn of the 20th century, the Tigers were led by future College Football Hall of Famer John Heisman. Hall of Famers Jess Neely, Frank Howard and Danny Ford followed in Heisman’s winning tradition.

Now entering his 18th season (and 17th full season) as Clemson’s head coach, Dabo Swinney has already carved his name into that foundation, elevating himself amid a pantheon of Tiger greats as both the program’s all-time winningest coach and the first in history to lead Clemson to multiple national championships.

Swinney enters the 2025 campaign as the winningest coach in ACC history, as his 180 victories surpassed the 173 wins College Football Hall of Famer Bobby Bowden accrued after Florida State joined the conference prior to the 1992 season. Swinney passed Bowden in 2024 by earning his 174th career win, a feat he accomplished on the field bearing Bowden’s name in Tallahassee.

Clemson produced its 13th 10-win season in 14 years and its eighth ACC title in a 10-year span in 2024. A dramatic walk-off field goal to win the 2024 ACC Championship Game against SMU extended Clemson’s FBS record of consecutive seasons with a postseason win to 14 years, and the victory propelled Clemson to its seventh College Football Playoff berth (second-most all-time) in the first year of the 12-team CFP era. The conference championship was Swinney’s ninth, pushing him past College Football Hall of Famer Frank Howard (eight, including six ACC titles) for the most in school history.

Despite having only coached in 17 seasons, Swinney (180) already ranks seventh in FBS history for the most wins through the first 20 seasons of a head coaching career, trailing only Tom Osborne (195), Nick Saban (191), Bob Stoops (191), Joe Paterno (187), Urban Meyer (187) and LaVell Edwards (183). He is the nation’s fifth-longest-tenured head coach, and entering the 2025 NFL Draft, he has produced 83 NFL Draft picks and 18 first-round picks, both the most of any active coach since his hire.

Swinney coached the 200th game of his career in the 2022 Orange Bowl, and his 161-39 record through 200 career games positioned him alongside College Football Hall of Famers Bob Stoops and Robert Neyland for the fifth-most wins through 200 games in FBS history.

Swinney surpassed the legendary Howard as Clemson’s all-time winningest coach on Nov. 4, 2023, in a 31-23 defeat of No. 12 Notre Dame at Death Valley. The win was the 166th of his career in only his 209th career game. The win sparked Clemson’s five-game season-ending winning streak as the Tigers jumped from 4-4 to 9-4 and finished ranked in the AP Top 25 for a 13th consecutive season.

Swinney’s 2022 squad had an 11-3 record and returned the Tigers to the ACC throne, earning a 39-10 victory in the ACC Championship Game against North Carolina to give the Tigers their seventh ACC title in eight years. Clemson became the first program in an active Power Five conference to win seven outright championships in an eight-year span since Alabama won eight out of nine SEC titles outright from 1971-79. Clemson’s 2022 squad extended its streak of consecutive 10-win seasons to 12, the third-longest streak in FBS history.

In 2021, Swinney’s final win of the season in the Cheez-It Bowl was his 150th career win in his 186th game as head coach. In terms of games played, Swinney became the sixth-fastest coach in FBS history — and the fourth-fastest in the modern era — to earn 150 career wins, trailing Urban Meyer (176), Gil Dobie (180), Barry Switzer (180), Fielding Yost (184) and Joe Paterno (184). At the conclusion of that season, only 16 coaches in FBS history including Swinney had accomplished the feat within 200 games, and 14 of the 16 were College Football Hall of Fame inductees, with the lone exceptions being Swinney and Meyer, both of whom are not yet eligible.

Though other seasons resulted in more hardware, analysts and observers opined that 2021 might have been his best coaching job, as the Tiger mentor guided his team through adversity and attrition to overcome a 2-2 start to finish 10-3. Clemson entered that October as one of 28 Power Five teams with two or more losses, yet concluded the season as one of only two of those 28 programs to finish the season having reached 10 wins.

In 2021, Swinney’s team played seven one-possession games, one shy of the school record, and went 5-2 in those contests. The squad’s success came in spite of tremendous turnover and attrition, as 48 different players earned at least one start, eight more than in the pandemic-impacted 2020 season. Only 23 Tigers played in all 13 games, and only four offensive or defensive players started all 13. Between injuries and transfers, he held aloft the 2021 Cheez-It Bowl trophy following a game Clemson finished without the services of 30 scholarship players from its initial fall roster.

A year earlier, Swinney’s squad accomplished its “double-double mission” in 2020, going 10-2 in a condensed season to give Clemson 10 consecutive 10-win seasons. Clemson became only the third program in FBS history to accomplish the feat and became the first school to win 10 games in 10 straight seasons as a member of the ACC, as only the final nine of Florida State’s record 14-straight 10-win seasons came during the Seminoles’ tenure in the ACC.

The pandemic-affected 2020 campaign was a historic one for the Tigers both as a team and individually, as quarterback Trevor Lawrence ascended to become the winningest quarterback in school history (34-2) and running back Travis Etienne added the ACC’s all-time rushing crown (4,952 yards) to his arsenal of school and conference records. Etienne’s versatility as a rusher and receiver earned him consensus All-American honors as an all-purpose selection, while Lawrence became the second Heisman Trophy finalist in program history, tying Deshaun Watson (second in 2016) for the highest finish in Heisman Trophy voting in school history.

The prolific backfield duo under Swinney’s tutelage helped guide Clemson to its sixth consecutive outright conference title with a 34-10 win against Notre Dame in the ACC Championship Game. That day, Clemson and Oklahoma’s six-year streaks of outright conference titles made the two programs the first among current Power Five programs to win at least six straight outright titles since Oklahoma (12 from 1948-59) as part of the now-dissolved Big 8 Conference.

The conference title helped Clemson secure its sixth College Football Playoff berth, becoming the first program ever to reach the postseason tournament in six consecutive seasons. Clemson is also one of only three programs to have won at least six College Football Playoff games.

Clemson finished 2020 as the nation’s No. 3-ranked squad, the Tigers’ sixth consecutive top-four finish in the AP poll. In doing so, Swinney joined Bobby Bowden (13), Pete Carroll (7) and Bud Wilkinson (6) as the only coaches since the AP Poll’s inception in 1936 to record six consecutive top-four finishes. In that stretch, Clemson appeared in the top five of 57 consecutive AP Polls, the second-longest streak in poll history.

Clemson entered the third decade of the 21st century in 2020 after Swinney helped author one of the most prolific 10-year periods in the history of the sport. Clemson posted a 117-22 record under Swinney’s leadership in the 2010s, and the program’s 117 wins trailed only Penn (124 in the 1890s) and Alabama (124 in the 2010s) to tie for the third-most in a decade in major college football since 1890. Clemson’s 117 wins in the 2010s represented the first 100-win decade in Clemson history.

Before a pandemic-shortened season in 2020, Clemson won at least 12 games in five straight seasons from 2015-19, tied for the longest such streak in the modern era and only two seasons shy of Penn’s record seven-season streak from 1892-98. Clemson won 69 games in that five-year span, the most in a five-year stretch in the AP Poll era.

In 2019, the Tigers earned their fifth-consecutive CFP berth following their fifth-consecutive ACC title, becoming the first team in college football history to win five straight conference championship games since conference title games were created in 1992.

Clemson posted a 14-1 record that year, earning its fourth appearance in the College Football Playoff National Championship Game in five years. Prior to the season finale, Clemson extended its school-record winning streak to 29 games, tied with Florida State (2012-14) for the longest streak in ACC history and for the 12th-longest in FBS history.

Clemson dominated the vast majority of its 2019 opponents, including an eight-game streak of wins by 30 or more points to break the longest streak in the AP Poll era, surpassing the previous mark of seven games set by 2011 Houston and 1976 Michigan.

Clemson also produced the 2018 William V. Campbell Trophy winner (known colloquially as the “Academic Heisman”) in Christian Wilkins and won the program’s first AFCA Academic Achievement Award. Clemson repeated as AFCA Academic Achievement Award recipients in 2019, becoming the only school in the country to repeat and doing so while appearing in the national championship game in both seasons.

Swinney and Clemson’s 2018 season was one for which statistics and superlatives accumulated in historic fashion. The Tigers became the first major college football team in the modern era (and the first since Penn in 1897) to finish a season with a 15-0 record.

The list of “firsts” was long and distinguished. Clemson became the first program to win four consecutive Atlantic Division titles, and with a 42-10 win against Pittsburgh in the ACC Championship Game, it became the first program to win four straight ACC titles outright.

Clemson’s 15 wins included a school-record 12 against teams who finished with winning records. Clemson won by an average margin of 31.1 points per game, the best in the nation and the second-largest in school history, trailing only a 35.3-point average margin in 1900. Among the seasons it passed was a 30.4-point average margin in 1901, a season in which Clemson won one of its five games by a score of 122-0.

Clemson set school records in points (664) and total offense (7,718, also an ACC record). The defense held opponents to 13.1 points per game, leading the country in scoring defense for the first time in school history.

A critical point in the season came four games into the campaign. Following a 49-21 win at Georgia Tech in which true freshman quarterback Trevor Lawrence threw for four touchdowns in reserve, Swinney and the coaching staff elected to name Lawrence the starter, supplanting senior Kelly Bryant, who had led the Tigers to a 16-2 career record as a starter.

With Lawrence leading Swinney’s Tigers, Clemson took flight. After a dramatic come-from-behind 27-23 win against Syracuse in which Lawrence exited the game with an injury, Clemson rattled off 10 consecutive wins of 20 points or more to conclude the season, including blowout wins of No. 3 Notre Dame in the Cotton Bowl and No. 1 Alabama in the College Football Playoff National Championship.

Seven players earned first or second-team All-America honors, including a school-record three players who collected consensus honors. The 2018 Tigers produced a team-record 18 All-ACC selections and became the first team to produce the ACC Player of the Year, ACC Offensive Player of the Year, ACC Defensive Player of the Year, ACC Offensive Rookie of the Year and ACC Coach of the Year in a season since Florida State in 1997.

Accolades also accumulated for Swinney, who earned his second career ACC Coach-of-the-Year honor and brought home the Woody Hayes Award as national coach of the year. Less than a week after winning the national title, he also won the Paul “Bear” Bryant Award, becoming the first three-time winner of the award.

The 2018 season was preceded by a 2017 campaign in which Clemson was on a mission to prove that it was built to last. Swinney guided the team to a 12-2 record, an ACC title and a College Football Playoff berth despite having only six scholarship seniors and losing players who accounted for 77 percent of the offense during the 2016 national championship season.

While Clemson was ranked No. 5 in the preseason AP Poll, few expected the Tigers to be ranked No. 1 in both polls and the College Football Playoff ranking entering the bowl season. In fact, Clemson was not even the preseason choice to win the ACC Atlantic Division.

Despite a setback in the Sugar Bowl to eventual national champion Alabama, Clemson finished ranked No. 4 in both polls. Swinney was inducted into the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame following the season.

The Tiger-record six wins over top-25 teams in 2017, also a national best, included a school-record four on opponents’ home fields and five away from home. The defense, including three defensive linemen, featured four All-Americans, helping Clemson finish in the top four in the nation in scoring defense (No. 2) and total defense (No. 4). Clemson led the ACC in the four major defensive categories (scoring, total, rushing, passing), a first in conference history.

The 2016 Tigers lived up to their hype after compiling a 14-1 record and earning a spot in the College Football Playoff for the second-straight year. Along the way, Clemson knocked off five top-25 foes.

Clemson defeated the top two teams in the national polls in consecutive games in the College Football Playoff at the end of the season. The Tigers blanked Ohio State, 31-0, in the Fiesta Bowl, the first shutout suffered by head coach Urban Meyer in his career and the first for Ohio State since 1993.

The Tigers then earned a rematch with No. 1 Alabama, and for the first time in school history, took down the top-ranked team in a second epic battle with the storied Crimson Tide program. Quarterback Deshaun Watson’s touchdown pass to Hunter Renfrow with one second left on the clock gave Clemson a dramatic 35-31 national championship victory in Tampa, Fla. Swinney received the Bear Bryant Award as national coach-of-the-year for the second consecutive season.

Swinney coached Watson to two record-setting seasons in 2015 and 2016. The two-time Heisman Trophy finalist became the first FBS player to total 4,000 passing yards and 1,000 rushing yards in a season in 2015, and he followed by setting an ACC record with 41 passing touchdowns in 2016. Watson won the Davey O’Brien Award and Manning Award in back-to-back years.

Swinney guided Clemson to the No. 1 national ranking in every College Football Playoff poll in 2015 and led the Tigers to their first national championship game appearance under the new format after his team defeated Oklahoma, 37-17, in the 2015 Orange Bowl. The Tigers led Alabama in the fourth quarter of the championship contest, but came up just short (45-40) in an epic game in Glendale, Ariz.

Following the team’s 14-1 record and No. 2 final ranking, he was the recipient of 10 national and two ACC Coach-of-the-Year honors.

In 2015, a then-Tiger-record 17 players were named to one of three All-ACC teams, including all five starting offensive linemen for the first time in school history. In 2016, 15 players were honored, including a school-record three first-team All-ACC offensive line selections.

The 2012, 2013 and 2014 seasons were also noteworthy, with three top-15 final rankings.

With a 40-6 Russell Athletic Bowl win over Oklahoma in 2014, Swinney became the first coach to win three bowl games in consecutive seasons over teams whose head coaches had previously won the national title. He upped that mark to five years in a row in 2016.

Clemson capped off the 2013 season with a thrilling 40-35 victory over No. 6 Ohio State in the Orange Bowl. Clemson had an 11-2 record after finishing 7-1 in ACC regular-season games. It marked Clemson’s first back-to-back 11-win seasons in school history. For the fourth time in his first five full seasons as head coach, Swinney was a finalist for the Liberty Mutual National Coach of the Year in 2013.

The 2012 season (11-2) gave Clemson back-to-back 10-win seasons for the first time in 22 years. Its seven conference wins in the regular season were then a school record, and Clemson was co-champion of the ACC Atlantic Division.

With Clemson’s thrilling 25-24 win over No. 7 LSU in the 2012 Chick-fil-A Bowl, the Tigers finished the season ranked No. 9 in the USA Today poll. It was Clemson’s first top-10 finish in one of the two major polls since 1990. Clemson also reached the 11-win mark for the first time since its 1981 national championship season.

Swinney’s 2011 squad, which ended the season ranked No. 22 in the nation, captured Clemson’s first ACC title since 1991 when it beat No. 3 Virginia Tech, 38-10, in the ACC Championship Game in Charlotte, N.C. It gave Clemson its first 10-win season since 1990. For his efforts, Swinney was named Bobby Dodd National Coach of the Year to become the first Tiger head coach to win a national coach-of-the-year award since Ford in 1981.

In 2010, Swinney became just the second Tiger coach to lead Clemson to a bowl game in his first two full years as head coach, joining his predecessor, Tommy Bowden. The 2010 schedule was one of the most challenging in school history, as nine bowl teams were on the regular-season slate and two of the four non-conference opponents were ranked in the top 25.

In Swinney’s first full season as head coach at Clemson in 2009, he led the Tigers to their first ACC Atlantic Division championship. The Tigers came just six points short of winning their first ACC title in 18 years. Swinney was named ACC Coach of the Year by Sporting News and was a finalist for the Liberty Mutual Coach of the Year.

In October 2008, Swinney was named Clemson’s interim head coach, replacing Bowden, who had been his position coach as a player at Alabama and was Clemson’s head coach since 1999. He led the Tigers to a 4-2 record during the rest of the 2008 regular season, including a win over South Carolina in the regular-season finale to earn a Gator Bowl bid against Nebraska.

On Dec. 1, 2008, his interim tag was removed and he was named the program’s head coach. At the time, there had been 28 interim head coaches at the FBS level since 1970, and those coaches had combined for a 26-86-2 record. Only one of those 28 interim coaches posted a winning record, and that was Swinney. When he was hired as head coach, he became just the second interim coach to be elevated to the head coach position at the same school during that time period.

Swinney hit the ground running in his first week as interim head coach, as he prepared for a 5-1 Georgia Tech team. He had to reorganize his staff and regroup his team and the fanbase in just five days. While the Tigers lost by four points, he accomplished many goals in that first week through his outstanding leadership. One of the most impressive demonstrations of unity came during the team’s “Tiger Walk,” which has since become a staple of Clemson’s game day routine for both the team and fans.

With an initial hire date of Oct. 13, 2008, Swinney is the senior member of ACC head coaches and enters the 2025 season as the fifth-longest-tenured head coach in the FBS. He is one of three active coaches with an FBS national championship to his credit (Kirby Smart and Ryan Day) and one of only two with multiple national championships at college football’s highest level (Smart).

Clemson’s success on the gridiron has been matched by its prowess in the classroom. Clemson’s 99 percent mark in the NCAA Graduation Success Rate’s metric released in 2024 for the 2017 cohort was the highest ever recorded among public Power Five football programs in the 20 years the NCAA has tracked the metric. Swinney’s culture of pursuit of excellence in all areas of the program has made Clemson the only program in the country to have finished among the Top 25 in APR among FBS schools and the AP Top 25 in every reported APR cycle over the last 14 seasons. In May 2025, his program reached 400 unique graduates to have earned at least once Clemson degree since 2009.

Swinney has demonstrated his dedication to the community through Dabo’s All In Team Foundation. Since 2009, the foundation has given more than $13 million back to communities and programs in the state. Since 2012, its grant program has distributed more than 1,670 grants totaling in excess of $8.5 million, including $1.7 million to 274 organizations in 2024 alone.

One of the foundation’s core focus areas is breast cancer research, education, technology and aid, areas for which the foundation has raised and donated more than $2.25 million through events like the annual Dabo Swinney Ladies Clinic as well as from general donations. To date, the foundation has provided the lead gifts for three mobile mammography buses that travel across multiple counties to provide affordable and accessible mammograms to those that may not otherwise have easy access to care.

Swinney was named as the honorary coach for the 2019 Allstate AFCA Good Works Team, an honor for which Watson, a former Good Works Team selection, returned to Clemson to surprise Swinney during a team meeting. In the spring of 2021, Swinney accepted the Uncommon Award from Pro Football Hall of Fame Coach Tony Dungy, who presents the honor annually to figures in football who “take the tough road, follow a higher calling and set a higher standard.”

Swinney, a 1993 Alabama graduate, joined the Clemson staff prior to the 2003 season. In his first 22 years as an assistant or head coach, the Tigers finished in the top 25 of the polls 18 times and totaled 49 wins over top-25 teams.

Swinney coached his wide receiver position to a level of consistency that had not been seen previously at Clemson. He had a wideout finish first or second in the ACC in catches in five of his six seasons as an assistant coach. In his first season, he had three of the top-10 receivers in the conference, a first in Tiger history.

In his 22 seasons at Clemson, a Tiger wide receiver has earned All-ACC status in 18 of those campaigns, including a first- or second-team All-ACC selection (Derrick Hamilton, Airese Currie, Chansi Stuckey, Aaron Kelly, Jacoby Ford, Sammy Watkins, DeAndre Hopkins, Artavis Scott, Mike Williams, Tee Higgins, Amari Rodgers and Antonio Williams) in 17 of those 22 seasons. Five of his protégés (Hopkins, Watkins, M. Williams, Higgins and Hunter Renfrow) have recorded at least one 1,000-yard season in the NFL, while others (Chansi Stuckey and Xavier Dye) have served as wide receivers coach at power conference programs.

The Alabama native has a reputation as one of the top recruiters in the nation. In 2006, he was listed as the No. 5 recruiter in the nation by Rivals. He signed 38 players in his five recruiting seasons as an assistant coach and was a major reason Clemson’s 2008 recruiting class was rated No. 2 in the nation by ESPN when he signed 11 players.

When Swinney accepted the interim head coaching position at Clemson on Oct. 13, 2008, he described his feelings as “bittersweet” because he was taking over for Bowden, who had been his first position coach at Alabama in the 1989 season. He had also brought Swinney back to the coaching profession in 2003 and has had a profound effect on his life. Both had followed similar paths as players; Bowden was a walk-on at West Virginia, and Swinney was a walk-on at Alabama.

Swinney received his bachelor’s degree in commerce & business administration from Alabama in 1993 after lettering three times (1990-92). A walk-on who went on to earn a scholarship, Swinney was a wide receiver on Alabama’s 1992 national championship team. He was also named Academic All-SEC along with being an SEC Scholar-Athlete Honor Roll member in 1990 and 1992.

Along with his appearance in the 1993 Sugar Bowl, his Alabama teams played in the 1990 Sugar Bowl, 1991 Fiesta Bowl and 1991 Blockbuster Bowl. Both Sugar Bowls came after winning the SEC title game.

After his playing career, he was a graduate assistant at Alabama from 1993-95. He received a master’s degree in business administration from Alabama in 1995.

He became a full-time assistant coach at Alabama in February 1996 under head coach Gene Stallings and coached a total of five seasons there on a full-time basis. Swinney was assigned to coach the Crimson Tide’s wide receivers and tight ends in 1996, a season that saw Alabama win the SEC West Division title. The following year, he solely coached the tight ends.

In 1998, he coached Alabama’s wide receivers, a position he held for three years. At the end of 1999, Swinney coached the Crimson Tide in the 2000 Orange Bowl after winning the SEC Championship Game.

During his time at Alabama, Swinney was a part of six teams with double-digit wins, five top-10 finishes, one national title (1992), three SEC championships (1989,92,99) and five SEC West Division titles (1992,93,94,96,99) as a player and coach.

Swinney married the former Kathleen Bassett in 1994. They have three sons, Will, Drew and Clay. Will played for Clemson from 2017-21, appearing in 69 games and holding for 558 career kicking points while also scoring two touchdowns of his own. Drew was a core special teams player for Clemson from 2018-22 who served as the starting holder in his final campaign and caught 14 career passes. Both Will and Drew earned All-ACC Academic Team selections during their playing careers and are currently members of Clemson’s support staff. Clay is a redshirt junior on the 2025 Tiger football team.

PLAYING EXPERIENCE
Lettered three years at Alabama (1990-92); also a member of the 1989 team … member of the 1992 National Championship team … Academic All-SEC and SEC Scholar-Athlete Honor Roll member in 1990,92.

BOWL PARTICIPATION AS A PLAYER
1990 Sugar Bowl … 1991 Blockbuster Bowl … 1991 Fiesta Bowl … 1993 Sugar Bowl.

EDUCATION
B.S. degree in commerce & business administration from Alabama in 1993 … master of business administration from Alabama in 1995.

COACHING EXPERIENCE
Graduate assistant coach at Alabama (1993-95) … wide receivers/tight ends at Alabama (1996) … tight ends at Alabama (1997) … wide receivers at Alabama (1998-00) … wide receivers at Clemson (2003-06) … assistant head coach/wide receivers at Clemson (2007 – Oct. 13, 2008) … interim head coach/offensive coordinator at Clemson (Oct. 13 – Dec. 1, 2008) … head coach at Clemson (2009-present).

BOWL SEASONS AS AN ASSISTANT COACH
1994 Gator Bowl … 1995 Citrus Bowl … 1997 Outback Bowl … 1998 Music City Bowl … 2000 Orange Bowl … 2004 Peach Bowl … 2005 Champs Sports Bowl … 2006 Music City Bowl … 2007 Chick-fil-A Bowl.

BOWL SEASONS AS A HEAD COACH
2009 Gator Bowl … 2009 Music City Bowl … 2010 Meineke Car Care Bowl … 2012 Orange Bowl … 2012 Chick-fil-A Bowl … 2014 Orange Bowl … 2014 Russell Athletic Bowl … 2015 Orange Bowl … 2015 CFP National Championship Game … 2016 Fiesta Bowl … 2016 CFP National Championship Game … 2018 Sugar Bowl … 2018 Cotton Bowl … 2018 CFP National Championship Game … 2019 Fiesta Bowl … 2019 CFP National Championship Game … 2020 Sugar Bowl … 2021 Cheez-It Bowl … 2022 Orange Bowl … 2023 Gator Bowl … 2024 College Football Playoff First Round.

HEAD COACHING RECORD
180-47 (.793) in 17 seasons (16 full seasons) at Clemson … 110-24 (.821) in ACC regular-season games at Clemson … 9-1 (.900) in ACC Championship Games at Clemson … 12-9 (.571) in bowl/CFP games at Clemson.

PERSONAL DATA
Born Nov. 20, 1969 in Birmingham, Ala. … married to the former Kathleen Bassett … the couple has three sons (Will, Drew, Clay).”

Here is his bio: https://clemsontigers.com/coaches/dabo/

Here is his Wiki page: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dabo_Swinney

Here is several videos about him: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g-XDNOCbwco
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=suL9mmkI0ek
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5E3HvMHFFdU
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d64hv8i24xM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mQa933BFxYk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KfVipISfq88

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