Clemson is heading into 2026 with a lot less shine than fans around the program are used to, and Josh Pate thinks that might be exactly where Dabo Swinney wants to be.
On his show last week, the college football analyst framed the Tigers’ situation as a reset of sorts after a rough 2025 season. Clemson finished with its lowest win total in more than a decade, and for the first time since 2010, Swinney’s team failed to reach nine wins. That snapped a long stretch of double-digit-win seasons that had become part of the program’s identity.
Still, Pate wasn’t interested in treating Swinney like anything less than one of the sport’s giants. Clemson’s run under him includes ACC titles, College Football Playoff trips and two national championships, and Pate said that body of work already puts him in rare company.
“He is Clemson football,” Pate said. “He totally redefined what the Tiger Paw means, and so, he’s an icon. He is a legend.”
The issue, though, is that Clemson has taken real hits in the current NIL era, and Pate said that shift has shown up in the results. The Tigers have not looked like the same machine they were during their peak years, and 2025 made that impossible to ignore.
Even so, Pate argued that the bigger picture isn’t as bleak as the recent record might suggest. He pointed out that elite programs like Alabama and Georgia have also stumbled and then found their way back. That, in his view, is part of what separates the top tier from everyone else.
Clemson may also be in a spot that fits Swinney perfectly: not favored, not flashy, and not getting much national attention. Pate said the Tigers have been overlooked, and with a roster that lost a lot of players to the draft, the outside noise has only grown louder.
“It’s the year after they were expected to be something last year and they weren’t, and now they lost a lot of guys to the draft in which he would describe the roster as a bunch of nobodies,” Pate said.
“They’ve been forgotten. That is Dabo Swinney’s sweet spot.”
The schedule won’t give Clemson much time to settle in. The Tigers open 2026 at LSU, then face Miami and Virginia Tech in what should be a fast early test of where this team really stands. If Clemson is going to change the conversation, the chances come quickly.
Pate pushed back on any talk of Swinney being in danger, but he made clear that this season carries weight.
“I’m not doing the hot seat thing,” Pate said. “I’m saying just the conversation around it, maybe the well would get poisoned a little bit. So, it’s a big year this year.”
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