There was a time when Dabo Swinney looked like one of the untouchables in college football. Clemson was rolling, piling up six straight College Football Playoff trips from 2015 through 2020 and winning two national championships in that stretch, both times beating Nick Saban’s Alabama Crimson Tide.
That version of Clemson feels a lot farther away now.
Since 2021, the Tigers have managed only one playoff appearance, and even that came in 2024 after a last-second ACC Championship Game win delivered an automatic bid. The run ended quickly with a first-round loss to the Texas Longhorns. Then came last season, the roughest of Swinney’s tenure: Clemson opened ranked No. 4 in the country and talking national title, only to finish 7-6 for its worst season since 2010.
That slide has changed the conversation around Swinney, and ESPN’s Paul Finebaum didn’t soften it on “The Paul Finebaum Show.” Talking about Swinney’s hefty buyout, Finebaum said it wasn’t really an issue because no one is coming after him.
"What program has ever tried to hire Dabo Swinney?" Finebaum said.
"Why do you get that type of leverage at the back end of your contract. Dabo's never gotten an offer...
Nobody wants Dabo Swinney."
The bigger problem for Clemson is how badly the program has struggled to keep pace with the NIL and transfer portal era. The Tigers are usually near the bottom of transfer portal rankings because they’ve resisted using it as a major roster-building tool.
This offseason, Swinney used the portal more than he ever had before, but Clemson still only signed 11 players and landed at No. 56 in the recruiting rankings. Before that, the most he had signed in a class was four in 2025.
For Clemson, the next step is no longer about what the program did during its golden run. It comes down to whether Swinney can adapt quickly enough to the way college football works now before the gap between the Tigers and the sport’s elite grows even wider.
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Chad Morris Is Putting Clemsons Offense To A Real Test
Chad Morris is back in Clemson as offensive coordinator, and the move has the feel of a program looking to recapture some of its old spark by leaning on a familiar face from an earlier success era. Through spring practice, Morris has brought a high-energy, hard-nosed style that has made every rep feel more urgent, with the kind of tempo and edge that can reshape how an offense works before anyone even reaches the fall.
Quarterback Christopher Vizzina has already noticed the difference, and the early buy-in matters because this isnt just about coaching noise in April. Clemson is trying to build something sturdier after last seasons 7-6 finish, and Morris challenge is to turn all that conditioning, attention to detail and relationship-building into something that holds up once the games start counting for real. [Read more 🡒]
Jestin Porter Just Landed A Crucial Chance To Keep His NBA Dream Alive
Jestin Porters Clemson run was good enough to put him back on the NBA radar, and now the graduate transfer guard has a real chance to keep pushing toward that level. After a lone season with the Tigers in which he led the team in threes and steals, Porter has earned a shot in the summer showcase that has become a proving ground for players trying to turn a strong college year into something more.
The next step comes in mid-July in Las Vegas, where Porter will try to make enough of an impression to land the kind of deal that can keep his professional path moving. For Clemson, it is another reminder that the programs recent roster churn has still produced players capable of drawing NBA attention, even if the final destination remains to be seen. [Read more 🡒]
