Clemson Is Entering A New Weight Room Era Fans Will Feel

A fresh chapter begins for Clemson football's strength program as Dennis Love introduces innovative, team-building workouts set to energize both players and fans alike.

A new look has settled into Clemson’s weight room, and Dennis Love is wasting no time putting his stamp on the program.

With Joey Batson retired after 29 seasons as the Tigers’ director of strength and conditioning, Clemson moved quickly to keep the job in-house. Dabo Swinney promoted Love into the role, and the change has already brought a different rhythm to the Tigers’ offseason work in 2026.

Love has been around Clemson before, of course, but this stretch feels different. He spent 11 years with the Tigers from 2004-14 in a variety of jobs, including his final four seasons as the director of Olympic sports strength and conditioning.

He also worked with much of the rest of Clemson’s athletic department during that time. More recently, he was with the Denver Broncos as an assistant strength and conditioning coach from 2015-16 and was part of the Super Bowl 50 team.

Now football is his main assignment, and the players are noticing the shift.

Will Heldt has already bought in.

“I’ve been loving it,” Tigers defensive end Will Heldt said. “Just the changes that he made, I’m really excited about that. “I feel like we’re really structured now, and we’re really organized, and I’m excited about that.”

Jahiem Lawson has had a longer window to see Love at work, having been around him for all five seasons he’s been at Clemson. That familiarity has made the new expectations clear.

“He’s one of those guys that he’s going to play like he’s going to joke around with you, but don’t,” he said. “He’s serious about everything.”

Jeremiah Alexander described the approach in a way that fits the moment.

“I feel like he’s more of a modern-day (coach); it’s more of being efficient with the time,” linebacker Jeremiah Alexander added.

Love got rolling with the new roster back in January, even while Swinney stayed in the background and watched.

“Nobody knew I was in there, and I was so impressed with what I saw,” he said.

The biggest wrinkle so far has been something Clemson calls squat parties. Instead of a typical Friday night, the team gets a workout with bright lights, loud music and a chance to max out on squats. The idea is meant to bring energy and pull the group together.

Heldt said the session left such an impression that he wanted it to stick around.

“Pretty much just put a lot of weight on the bar and throw it around and have some fun,” he said. “But, that was a blast.”

The concept didn’t start in Clemson. Love picked it up from the Florida Gators during Urban Meyer’s 2005-10 run, when Tim Tebow was the star quarterback. For the Tigers, the payoff is supposed to be more than just a good time.

“Just to have everybody encouraging you, lights off, cameras in your face,” linebacker Kobe McCloud said. “It just gives you that extra confidence and boost to fight.”

Lawson sees the same value in the added time together.

“I’m glad that they brought that. That’s another thing that’s more bonding, so we’re together,” Lawson added. “We’re getting to spend more time together, and that’s good for us.”

Batson’s retirement closes the book on one of Clemson’s most recognizable figures in the strength program. He spent 29 seasons with the Tigers and became familiar to fans as the voice behind the fourth quarter video, along with the line, “they don’t put championship rings on smooth hands.”

That legacy is now part of Clemson history, while Love starts shaping what comes next. The players are already responding to the structure, the accountability and the new energy he’s brought with him.

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