Dabo Swinney defends Clemson on ESPN, explains Notre Dame comments
Dabo Swinney joined ESPN to go against the current narrative on Clemson football and defend his comments about Notre Dame.
Dabo Swinney isn’t interested in spending much more time talking about Clemson football’s disappointing 2025 season. While speaking with ESPN during the ACC Spring Meetings in Amelia Island this week, the longtime Tigers coach admitted last year fell well below the standard Clemson has built over the last decade. The Tigers entered the season ranked inside the preseason Top 5, but stumbled to a 7-6 finish that led to heavy criticism from around the country.
Swinney understands the frustration, but he believes the reaction to one down season has become exaggerated. “The narrative of our program, it’s just not accurate,” Swinney said. “If we go have a bunch of bad years, that’s different, but we’ve had one bad year in 15 years.
” He pointed to Clemson’s sustained success under his leadership and said people have lost perspective on what the program has accomplished. Swinney compared the situation to elite coaches in other sports who have also endured occasional disappointing years, stressing that every long-running program eventually hits adversity. “It didn’t work last year,” Swinney said.
“If you do this long enough, you can have a year where it just doesn’t work. ” The Clemson coach has made several national media appearances recently, including interviews with ESPN’s Greg McElroy and Josh Pate. One topic that continues following him is his comments about NIL and the financial gap between programs across college football.