Paul Finebaum Takes Another Shot At Dabo Swinney

Paul Finebaum unleashes a flurry of critiques on Clemson's Dabo Swinney, questioning the rationale behind a hefty buyout and his standing in college football's coaching landscape.

ESPN’s Paul Finebaum is back at it with another sharp swing at Dabo Swinney, and this time the target was Clemson’s massive $57 million buyout.

On his radio show, Finebaum took a caller’s question and turned it into another critique of Swinney’s standing in the sport. Rather than treating the buyout as a reflection of everything Clemson has won under its coach, Finebaum framed it as evidence that nobody has seriously come calling for him.

"First of all, these buyouts are absurd," Finebaum declared during the segment. "What program has ever tried to hire Dabo Swinney?

Why do you get that type of leverage at the back end of your contract. Dabo’s never gotten an offer."

He kept pressing the point by comparing Clemson’s situation to Alabama’s decision to give Kalen DeBoer a huge extension, arguing that the Tide were protecting themselves from other programs. In Finebaum’s view, Clemson has never had that kind of threat with Swinney.

That led to one of his most direct shots yet.

"Nobody wants Dabo Swinney. Alabama, his alma mater, could’ve easily called him. That didn’t even enter their thought process."

The comments are the latest chapter in a long-running media beatdown that has grown louder since Clemson’s seven-win season last fall. Finebaum has already said, "I don’t have any faith or belief in Dabo Swinney anymore," and he’s also forecast another underwhelming year for the Tigers, pegging them for 8-4 and agreeing with a caller who said LSU would run Clemson out of the building in the opener.

This isn’t a new storyline for Finebaum, either. After Clemson’s loss to Syracuse last year dropped the Tigers to 1-3 for the first time under Swinney, he said it was over for Dabo at Clemson and suggested it was time for him to move on.

He even floated the idea that Swinney should leave coaching altogether and become a television analyst, pointing to the kind of career moves made by figures such as Nick Saban and Jimbo Fisher.

"There’s a lot of reasons for this, but my advice to Dabo - and I know he doesn’t like taking advice from people like me - is to get out of there," Finebaum said at the time. "Be quiet.

Quit talking, because he has no credibility now with his fan base. They’ve heard the whines before.

He’s become a meme. For a really good coach, and I do believe he’s a really good coach, he’s become somewhat of a laughing stock every time he opens his mouth."

Finebaum’s argument is that Swinney would be a strong media candidate if he stepped away from the sideline.

But the résumé says something very different. Swinney has 187 wins and 53 losses, making him the winningest coach in Clemson history and the top winner in ACC history. He and Kirby Smart are the only active coaches with multiple national championships, and Swinney’s list also includes nine conference titles and seven playoff trips.

Clemson hasn’t reached double-digit wins in two of the last three seasons, but Swinney is heading into year nineteen with a chance to answer plenty of the noise when the Tigers open against LSU in Baton Rouge.

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