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Dabo Swinney didn't deliver after passionate defense of Clemson
Clemson Tigers head coach Dabo Swinney reacts with wide receiver Antonio Williams (0) after the offense did not get a first down against the Syracuse Orange in the fourth quarter at Memorial Stadium. GREENVILLE NEWS-USA TODAY Network via Imagn Images

Dabo Swinney didn't deliver after passionate defense of Clemson

Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney did not like the suggestion earlier this week that he might potentially be on the hot seat after his team lost two of its first three games. Whether he is actually on the hot seat or not is mostly irrelevant at this point because the outside noise and criticism are only going to continue following Saturday's ugly 34-21 blowout loss at home to Syracuse.

That loss drops Clemson to 1-3 on the season and is another devastating blow to their already slim College Football Playoff chances. 

It is Clemson's first 1-3 start since the 2004 season. 

Clemson and Dabo Swinney did not back up his talk

Swinney spent a significant portion of his weekly press conference defending not only his tenure with the program, but the program in general.

His most pointed comments were centered around that if Clemson was tired of winning, they could move on from him, and he would simply go somewhere else. 

From ESPN:

"Hey, listen, if Clemson's tired of winning, they can send me on my way," Swinney said. "But I'm gonna go somewhere else and coach. I ain't going to the beach. Hell, I'm 55. I've got a long way to go. Y'all are gonna have to deal with me for a while. I would just say, if you don't believe in us because we've lost two games down to the last play and we're 1-2? You didn't believe in us anyways, so it don't matter," Swinney said. "You weren't all-in anyway."

On one hand, Swinney is right to be dismissive of any hot-seat talk that might have been surfacing. His resume at Clemson speaks for itself and includes four national championship game appearances and two national championships. The Tigers have also regularly won the ACC, including most recently during the 2024 season.

But big-time sports, whether they be professional or major college sports, have a tendency to be a what have you done for me lately type of business. It's not only been seven years since the last National Championship at Clemson, and six years since the last National Championship game appearance; there is a pretty big drop-off from what the program was doing at its peak under Swinney.

With Saturday's loss, Clemson is now 20-11 over its past three seasons, and is just 3-6 in its past nine games against power conference opponents. 

This is a Clemson team that opened the season ranked No. 4 in the country, and is now just 1-3 with its only win coming against Troy, where it had to overcome an early 16-0 deficit. 

Given his track record, as well as the size of the buyout in his contract, it remains highly unlikely that Swinney's job is actually in danger. But if this season does not turn around quickly, the seat is going to start getting warm. Especially after he made a point of calling attention to how great he's been and how great the team has been, only to follow it up with a two-touchdown loss at home to Syracuse. 

Adam Gretz

Adam Gretz is a freelance writer based in Pittsburgh. He covers the NHL, NFL, MLB and NBA. Baseball is his favorite sport -- he is nearly halfway through his goal of seeing a game in every MLB ballpark. Catch him on Twitter @AGretz

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