CLEMSON - Dabo Swinney didn’t waste much time sizing up the NCAA’s latest eligibility overhaul. For Clemson’s coach, the new rule is more than a tweak - it’s a “game changer.”
On June 23, the NCAA approved a change that gives all athletes five years of eligibility over five seasons, replacing the old setup of five years to play four seasons. The shift also wipes out redshirts, while waivers will now be limited to pregnancy, military service or religious missions. An athlete’s five-year clock will begin the academic year after their 19th birthday or when they enroll in college, whichever comes first.
Swinney sees immediate ripple effects for Clemson. Any current Tiger who has not used a redshirt could gain an extra year of eligibility. He pointed to safeties Ronan Hanafin, Corey Myrick and Jerome Carter, along with offensive lineman Harris Sewell and cornerback Elliot Washington II, as players who stand to benefit.
There are still exceptions that could create a sixth year for some current players. An athlete who used a standard four-game redshirt and also earned a medical redshirt could still get that extra season, something future players won’t have available.
For Swinney, the bigger change is the freedom it gives coaches and players. Instead of holding freshmen back to preserve eligibility, Clemson can now use them more aggressively. That means players like safety Polo Anderson, wide receiver Naeem Burroughs and quarterback Tait Reynolds could see action in more than four regular-season games in 2026 without it affecting their eligibility.
Swinney said he recently talked with special teams coordinator Rich Bisaccia about how the old system forced coaches to make redshirt calls before the season even started, leaving some freshmen “on the shelf” despite the four-game rule.
Now, he believes Clemson can deploy players in more targeted ways. A freshman offensive lineman, for instance, could be used in a goal-line package where the job is straightforward and the team still gets useful snaps out of him.
“(It) just gives you a lot more freedom,” Swinney said.
He did note that ACC road-game roster limits of 80 players could still affect how often Clemson can use everyone. Even so, he backed the change because he thinks it will reduce the number of players stretching their careers through redshirts and waivers.
Swinney also believes the new setup will discourage a familiar modern move: playing four games, then shutting it down for the rest of the season to protect eligibility before entering the transfer portal. Clemson cornerback Shelton Lewis did that last season.
“I think that will drastically change,” Swinney said. “I'd be surprised if it doesn't because at the end of the day, these guys want to play, and it's good for them, even if they know they're going to leave.”
As for players who are likely to head to the NFL after their third or fourth seasons, Swinney doesn’t expect the rule to matter much. He mentioned edge rusher Will Heldt as one of those cases and made his stance clear.
"I'm gonna try, but he ain't gonna be back," Swinney said July 14 at Clemson's media day.
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