Clemson’s quarterback picture for 2026 starts with one clear reality: the Tigers are moving on without Cade Klubnik as the starter, and that opens the door to a real competition in fall camp.
At the top of the board, it looks like a battle between Christopher Vizzina and freshman Trent Reynolds. Vizzina, the Birmingham, Ala. native, has spent years waiting for this moment, and now he enters his fourth season with the program with a chance to finally claim the job.
He doesn’t have a huge body of work to point to, but he does have one meaningful start - the only game Klubnik missed in his college career. Against SMU at home, Vizzina threw for 317 yards and three touchdowns in a loss.
Outside of that, his experience has mostly come in brief appearances during blowouts.
Dabo Swinney made it clear what he wants from him now. “I want to see him show up every day and prove it,” he said. “Just bring that edge every day."
Reynolds, though, has already forced his way into the conversation. The Queens Creek, Ariz. native arrived as a mid-year enrollee and put together a strong spring that created real momentum.
He’s a big dual-threat quarterback with the build of a two-sport athlete, and even before he has taken classes for Clemson, he looks the part. Reynolds is also working back from a hamstring injury that cost him part of his senior season.
In the spring game, he completed 70% of his passes and finished with 74 passing yards. Like any freshman, he showed some growing pains, but the tools are obvious.
Swinney usually leans toward experience when choosing a starter, but Reynolds has enough upside to keep this from feeling settled. If Clemson hits a rough stretch in the middle of the fall, he could absolutely start getting more chances in meaningful situations.
Behind those two, the room is more about projection than proven production. Swinney believes another year of the “crockpot” may be coming for the rest of the group.
Redshirt freshman Chris Denson drew attention early in the spring after an electric two-series showing against Furman last November, but the conversation around him has shifted more toward his speed and gadget potential than his arm. Trent Pearman, a local product from D.W.
Daniel High School, has plenty of fans, but there’s still no real answer on how he’ll hold up against top competition after practicing against Clemson for five years. Colson Brown, a transfer from Anderson who played multiple sports for Georgia Tech, brings athleticism but remains untested at the level Clemson wants.
Bradley is the undersized one in the room, though Swinney says he has a strong arm, and a redshirt seems likely unless the situation gets worse.
For now, the quarterback room feels mostly sorted. Vizzina should get the first shot, Reynolds is the challenger waiting in the wings, and the rest of the group is still developing. Clemson’s final call will come later this summer, but the shape of the competition is already clear.
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