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The Clemson Tigers , traditionally known as "Clemson University Tigers", represents Clemson University in American football. Tigers compete in the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and Atlantic Division of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC).

Formed in 1896, the program has more than 700 wins and has reached two consensus Division I National Football Championships in the modern era and Finalists of the Playoff College Football National Championship in 2015 and 2016, winning a championship match over Alabama Crimson Tide for the 2016 season. Clemson has had 6 unbeaten seasons including 3 perfect seasons, 23 conference championships, 6 division titles since 2005, and has produced over 100 All-American, 17 Academic All-Americans and more than 200 NFL players. Clemson has seven members sworn in to College Football Hall of Fame, including former Banks McFadden players, Terry Kinard, Jeff Davis, and former coaches John Heisman, Jess Neely, Frank Howard, and Danny Ford.

With 23 total conference titles, Clemson is one of the founding members of ACC, and holds 17 ACC degrees, the most members, and holds the most combined conference football degree from any Atlantic Coast Conference school. The last ACC Championship of the Tigers' always returned in 2015, 2016 and 2017 with the last 12-1 regular season and a 38-3 win over # 7 Miami Hurricanes.

Among his six unbeaten regular seasons, Clemson was named the National Champion of the polling season and finished with his perfect third season with a victory over Nebraska at the 48th Orange Bowl, and became the National Championship Final Champion with a 14-1 record in 2015 The following year Clemson won the National Title above # 1 Alabama in the rematch of the first National College Championship Match in 2016. The Tigers has 41 bowl appearances, 18 of which are among New Year's Six Bowls, including 2 during the BCS "big four" era. Clemson has finished in the top 25 Final 31 times in the modern era, and finished either on AP or Coaches Polls who combined 53 times since 1939.

The Tigers play their home game at the Memorial Stadium on the Clemson campus, the South Carolina university. The stadium was also known as "Death Valley" after the head coach of Presbyterian College gave him a moniker in 1948 due to the number of defeats his team suffered there. Currently, it is the 16th largest stadium in college football.

Victory seven seasons in a row from Clemson's second consecutive 2nd win in an active streak behind Alabama Crimson Tide. Tigers have 14 seasons in total with 10 wins or more, seven of them with 11 to 12 wins or more at the end of the posting season.


Video Clemson Tigers football



Histori

Sejarah awal (1896-1899)

Walter Merritt Riggs can be characterized as "Father of Clemson Football", when he brought the game with him from Agricultural and Mechanical College of Alabama (now Auburn University). The fact that Auburn and Clemson share the same mascot is not a coincidence. Riggs allowed his players to choose the team mascot and, although he may have influenced their decision, the players chose the Tigers because Princeton University had just won the national championship. Riggs helped organize and train the baby Tiger team in 1896. With a little money to spend on the uniform, Riggs brought some old Auburn training uniforms with him, who happened to have an orange and navy shirt. Since his shirts had gone through several sweeps of scrubbers, the colors were quite faded, the navy was worse than orange. So Riggs makes the dominant orange color in school and the faded condition of the navy becomes a purplish color, which is officially known today as the Regalia. The team plays as a member of the Southern Athletic Athletic Association (SIAA), the first southern athletic conference.

When the Tigers traveled to Greenville on Halloween to play Furman in their first game, only Coach Riggs and background player Frank Thompkins had seen football matches played. Today at Clemson, a soccer field named the field of Historic Riggs after Walter Riggs. Riggs took the team to a 2-1 record in the first year. He then put aside the pressure of the military cadets/students, who felt that he should concentrate on his scholastic tasks rather than coaching the team for free.

William M. Williams coached the Tigers in 1897, guiding them to a 2-2 record. The team beat South Carolina for the first time and became the country champion. In 1898, John Penton led the Tigers to a 3-1 record.

In 1899, when the Clemson Athletic Association was unable to pay training salaries, Riggs once again took over the reins, one of only two Clemson football coaches to return to position after resigning. The 1899 squad went 4-2. Riggs's overall record of 6-3 gave him a.667 percentage point.

After decades as professor of Mechanical Engineering, he was appointed acting president of Clemson Agricultural College in 1910, confirmed by the Supervisory Board as permanent president on March 7, 1911. He served until his death on January 22, 1924 while on a trip to Washington, DC to meet officials of other land grant agencies.

Era John Heisman (1900-1903)

Riggs hired John Heisman to train Clemson. Heisman lived only four years at Clemson, where he composed a 19-3-2 record, a 0.833 percentage, the best in Clemson's soccer history. In four seasons, he has three SIAA titles.

In his first season of 1900, he coached the Tigers into their first unbeaten season (6-0), [3] and the first conference championship, defeating their 222-10 opponents - a 64-0 victory over Davidson on opening day is the greatest value ever made in the South. This season has many other "firsts", including the first school defeat of Georgia Bulldogs and Alabama Crimson Tide. The only close match is with the VPI school of the South Atlantic.

Team 1902 again won the SIAA. This is the first season with Hope Sadler and Carl Sitton over. One writer recalled, "Sitton and Hope Sadler are the best end Clemson has ever had."

The only loss that year was the first to rival South Carolina since 1896. "The Carolina fans of that week carried posters with pictures of tigers with goksters standing on them, holding a tiger's tail as if he were directing a tiger with a tail," said Jay McCormick. "Of course, the Clemson people are not very good at it, and on Wednesdays and again on Thursday, there are sporadic fights involving brass plates and other objects and so on, some of which produce, according to newspapers, in spilled blood and people should seek medical help.After Thursday's game, Clemson people frankly told the Carolina students that if you carry this poster, which insults us, to a big march on Friday, you'll be in trouble. And of course, of course, the Carolina students bring the poster to the parade.If you give an ultimatum to someone and they are your rivals, they will do what you tell them not to do. "

As expected, other fights occurred before both sides agreed to burn each other posters in an effort to ease the tension. Immediately after resulting in the cessation of competition until 1909.

Team 1903 is probably Heisman's best team at Clemson. After losing 73-0 to Georgia Tech in 1903, Yellow Jackets hired Heisman as their first full-time soccer coach. Fullback Jock Hanvey raced as far as 104 yards in the first half. Accounts in Constitution of Atlanta read "Hanvey, Clemson full back, beat them all.Her time and time again he sent through the line to get 10, 15 and 20 yards, and his tekel is spectacular. "

After the 1903 season, Clemson tied 11-11 in a game called "SIAA Championship Game." Cumberland rushed to an early 11-0 lead, but Clemson returned to tie. In the second half of the kickoff, Clemson quarterback John Maxwell ran 100 yards for a touchdown. Clemson missed his efforts. Then, Cumberland fumbled the kick and Clemson recovered. Cumberland expected a play trick when Fritz Furtick just ran into the middle and scored.

Post-Heisman Era (1904-1926)

After Heisman left Clemson to become head coach at Georgia Tech, Shack Shealy, ending for the Tigers in the 1890s, coaching the 1904 team to a 3-3-1 record - the only Clemson graduate who had served as head coach of his Alma mater

Eddie Cochems, a future innovator of his former graduation, had just lost out to Phil King for Wisconsin work, when he was accepted to train the Clemson 1905 team, which lost to Vanderbilt and Georgia Tech, but closed Georgia, Alabama, and Auburn, featuring stars - the remaining stars from Heisman like Furtick and Puss Derrick.

Bob Williams, who defeated Heisman in 1902, came to Clemson in 1906, and also coached the 1909 and 1913-1915 teams. The Tigers are unbeaten with a 4-0-3 record in 1906, with victories over Georgia, Auburn, Tennessee, and Georgia Tech team coached by John Heisman. Clemson's first graduate took place during a game with Tech in Atlanta. Left End Powell Lykes, dropped back to kick but threw a 30-yard pass into George Warren instead. Clemson wins, 10-0. 1909 USC-Clemson is the first game to be broadcast in the state, by the United Wireless Telegraph Company. William Schilletter starred in 1913 and 1914, and was the son of Augustus "Shorty" Schilletter, a German immigrant in charge of the Clemson College dining room.

Frank Shaughnessy led the 1907 team to a. 4-4 notes. Captain Mac McLaurin and R. T. Gaston starred in the tackle position. Vanderbilt's legend, Stein Stone, posted only 1-6 recordings in 1908. Captain Sticker Coles is All-Southern. Frank Dobson scored an overall 11-12-1 record from 1910-1912. Wayne Hart had a 3-6 record in 1916.

Washington & amp; Lee's Edward Donahue coached Tiger to a 21-12-3 record for three seasons, from 1917-1920. Stumpy Banks scored five goals against Furman in 1917 for a school record. Yen Lightsey starred in 1919 and 1920. Doc Stewart trained the Tigers through the transition from SIAA to the Southern Conference, with a 6-10-2 record from 1921-1922. Bud Saunders led the Tiger to a 10-22-1 record from 1923-1926.

Josh_Cody_era_.281927.E2.80.931930.29 ">

Josh Cody coached the Tigers from 1927 to 1930, setting a 29-11-1 record. The tigers are unbeaten at home (13-0-1) and against South Carolina (3-0) during Cody's tenure. In 1927 Cody gave Red Sanders his first coaching job as a backfield coach. O. K. Pressley made an All-American third team in 1928. "A better center than Captain O.K. Pressley of Clemson is hard to find," said former South Carolina chief coach Billy Laval.

In May 1929, when the rumors circled so he might go to train the big name program, the students, faculty, and staff took the collection to buy him a new black Buick. Raymond Johnson writes about Cody's death: "Josh Cody wants to become Vanderbilt's coach so badly that he relinquishes a men's head job at Clemson College after four successful seasons." Era Jess Neely (1931-1939)

In 1931, Jess Neely (another McGugin product, and former head coach at Rhodes and assistant in Alabama) became Clemson's head coach. During his tenure, Neely led the Tigers to a 43-35-7 record. His last season at Clemson was a turning point in the Tamil Tiger program. His team went 9-1 during the season, finishing second to Duke at the Southern Conference. The Tigers also received their first bowl invitations and bowls of the year, beating Boston College 6-3 nationally in 1940 Cotton Bowl Classic. The 1939 Tiger finished with a # 12 ranking in the final AP poll. Clemson also had their first All-American Associated Press of the year at Banks McFadden. Jess Neely, along with later athletic director Rupert Fike, founded the IPTAY Scholarship Fund, which supports the Clemson Athletic Department. An acronym for "I Pay Ten Years," because that's what donors are asking to contribute when it was established in 1934, IPTAY has evolved into one of the largest and most comprehensive college sports schools in the country and a model for other programs.

After Jess Neely went on to become head coach at Rice, Frank Howard (assistant coach under Neely) was appointed head coach. Known for its colorful persona, and a tendency to imaginative language with both possibilities, and impossible tales, within 30 years at Clemson, Howard set a 165-118-12 record, a 3-3 bowl record, winning two Southern Conference championships, and six ACC championships. Seven of Howard's teams finished this year at the rank of at least one final poll. During his stay at Clemson, Howard also oversees the athletic department, ticket sales, and assistant coaches for the baseball team. He also incorporated a Single Wing, a T formation, and an I-formation formation at a different point during his coaching career at Clemson. Clemson had two unbeaten seasons under Howard, one in 1948 (11-0), and one in 1950 (9-0-1).

As a coach and coach, Howard was part of the 1939 Clemson season's success under Neely, reaching an 8-1 record and bid to a 1940 Cotton Bowl in Dallas to play the undefeated Boston College. When Neely left Clemson in 1940, Clemson Sports Council met to name a successor and a member of Prof.'s board. Sam Rhodes suggested Howard's name. Howard, standing behind the room, said, "I'm a second nominee." He got a job, became Clemson's seventeenth head coach and never left. He signed a one-year contract soon to disappear, and he never had another in thirty years.

Although Clemson remained a small military college until 1957, under the command of Frank Howard, the Tiger remained a nationally recognized contender throughout the 1950s. In the sterling season of 1948, the team won the Southern Conference championship (the first of eight Howard). The Tiger also won their second bowl game, the 1948 Gator Bowl win over Missouri, and finished eleventh in the national rankings. For the rest of his life, Howard praised the 1948 team by saving his job.

Howard almost repeated the 1948 triumph in 1950 when the Tamil Tigers were ranked tenth by the Associated Press with a 9-0-1 season and a 15-14 victory over Miami (Florida) in Clathson's first Orange Bowl victory. Under Howard's guidance, the Tigers are thus, champions in their first three attempts.

In January 1952, after the regular-season 7-2 campaign, Tiger was invited back to Gator Bowl, and by winning the conference once again in 1956, Clemson played at the Orange Bowl in 1957. In their second trip at Gator Bowl, Miami defeated Clemson 14-0; Colorado led Clemson 20-0, then trailed 21-20, in a comeback game, before finally defeating the Tigers 27-21 in the Clemson appearance of the second Orange Bowl. Two seasons later, after an 8-3 season, the Tigers played in Sugar Bowl in 1959 and with their formidable defenses, holding the LSU Tigers # 1 ranking to a halt before losing 7-0, leading to the LSU National Championship.

The invitation to play at the first Bluebonnet Bowl in Houston in December 1959 was the eighth bowl that Howard had been part of either as a player, assistant coach or head coach. This is the seventh bowl trip for Clemson's team and sixth in 12 years. Howard said Clemson's 23-7 victory over Texas Christian's seventh at the Bluebonnet Bowl was the best performance he ever witnessed by Clemson's team. Clemson is the first school to play in two bowls in the same calendar year.

A Single Wing Expert for 22 seasons (including nine as a track coach), Howard transformed into T-formations and many variations in 1953. There are still other major changes in the offense mounted in 1965 with "I" and pro-type sets. In 12 seasons as head coach using a single wing, Clemson won 69, lost 47 and tied 7. In 12 years of "T" team, Tigers won 71, lost 47 and tied 4. While using "I" in his last five years of training, Clemson set a 25-24-1 record.

Howard was named Southern Conference Coach-of-the-Year in 1948. In 1959 he was appointed Atlantic Coast-of-the-Year Conference Coach and awarded honor again in 1966. As a footballing style flourished in 1960, Howard land game became obsolete, and Clemson gridiron's luck declined. The Tigers' last victory season under Howard came in 1967. On December 10, 1969, he stepped down as coach of the fifth winner in the country, with 165 wins, 96 of which were at the Atlantic Coast Conference. Howard also runs an athletic department during his tenure, and continued as an athletic director until February 4, 1971, when he was appointed assistant vice-president of the university. On June 30, 1974, he retired from university salary, but kept coming to his office every day until his failing health slowed him down, serving as Clemson's ambassador until his death in 1996.

The tradition of rubbing "Howard's Rock" before running downhill before the home game begins during Howard's tenure. The play field at the Memorial Stadium was named "Frank Howard Field" in 1974 after retiring to honor his years of service for the university. He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame, the South Carolina Sports Hall of Fame, the Clemson Hall of Fame, the Clemson Ring of Honor, the Helms Athletic Hall of Fame, the State of Alabama Hall of Fame, the National Football Foundation Hall of Fame, the Orange Bowl Hall of Honor, and Gator Bowl Hall of Fame. Hootie_Ingram_era_ (1970-1972) "> The Hootie Ingram Era (1970-1972) h3>

Clemson fought for years after his retirement Frank Howard. His successor, Hootie Ingram, made only a 12-21 record. During his tenure, the tradition of running down the hill was stopped from 1970 until the end of the 1972 season, when the team decided to go downhill for the last home game against South Carolina. The traditional "tiger paw" logo, designed by John Antonio of Henderson Advertising, was introduced in 1970 by Ingram and Clemson President R.C. Edwards.

Era Red Parker (1973-1976)

After his success as head coach of The Citadel from 1966 to 1972, Jimmy "Red" Parker coached the Tigers from 1973 to 1976, setting a 17-25-2 record. Clemson had a 7-4 season under Parker in 1974, with Parker being named ACC Coach of the Year. The Tigers went 2-9 in 1975, and 3-6-2 in 1976. Red Parker was cut loosely by the Supervisory Board at the end of the Bicentennial season. Athletics Director Bill McClellan gets the job of telling Parker that he left when Parker refused to fire his assistant. Although Parker is largely credited with building and recruiting a foundation that will ultimately set the stage for much of Clemson's success the following season.

Charlie_Pell_era_.281977.E2.80.931978.29 "> era Charlie Pell (1977-1978)

Utilizing some of the talents listed during Parker's season, Charlie Pell coached the Tigers for two seasons, won the ACC Coach of the Year twice and led the Tigers to the ACC Championship 1978 en route to an 18-4-1 record.

Quarterback double-threat Steve Fuller and run back tandem Lester Brown and Marvin Sims pioneered the dynamic rushing attack that helped the Tigers win the ACC. The only defeat occurred on Sunday 2 against the strength of Georgia's SEC, and, after Gator Bowl won over No. 20 Ohio State, Clemson posted the final results of the second-best AP poll of the school's No. 1 ranking.

In both seasons, Clemson got a place in the Gator Bowl, though Pell went before the last game. Pell is involved in the NCAA rules and recruits the offenses revealed under his replacement tenure, Danny Ford. Charlie Pell will leave after 1978 to become head coach in Florida, where his coaching career will end in 1984 following violations of other NCAA rules.

Era Danny Ford (1978-1989)

Danny Ford was promoted from the offensive coach to the head coach in 1978, after Charlie Pell left for the University of Florida. He won his first game, Gator Bowl 1978, with a 17-15 win over Ohio State and legendary coach Woody Hayes, who beat LB Charlie Bauman in the throat after a decisive interception game. In his third season, Ford guided Clemson to the top of college football by winning the National Championships, and recording his fifth unbeaten program season. The Tigers, unbeaten in preseason, toppled three top-10 teams (Georgia, North Carolina and Nebraska) during the 12-0 season which ended in a 22-15 win over Nebraska at the 1982 Orange Bowl. Ford, named National Coach of the Year 1981, holds the record as the youngest coach (33 years) to win a national championship on a green field.

The college football season of 1981 was one of the most insane and most unexpected in sports history. No one seems to want to win a national championship. At some point this season, six different teams are ranked # 1 by the Associated Press. Most of them were beaten as fast as they reached the top spot. The slow tigers climbed to # 1 quickly gaining momentum with a winning start to the season's 13-3 victory over defending the national champions of Georgia. Clemson's defense contains Herschel Walker's superb left back from Georgia and gets him out of the final zone. Week after week, Clemson was getting better. Offensive teams are led by Homer Jordan's junior quarterback, which is a double threat as runners and runners. It was a run-oriented offense that featured a good tandem from the tailback at Cliff Austin and Chuck McSwain. When they need a big game, Jordan often throws away to the recipient Perry Tuttle, who then becomes the first choice of the Buffalo Bills draft. But Clemson's true strength is his defense. The Tigers have three All Americans including safety Terry Kinard, midfielder Jeff Davis and defensive Jeff Bryant. The trio continued their solid pro career. But the most famous member of Clemson's defense is a new big defender named William Perry. Perry will then gain fame for his nickname "The Refrigerator" and become a folk soccer hero with the Chicago Bears as a fun heavyweight surviving midfielder who sometimes scores goals while lining up at fullback.

After finishing the regular season with a perfect 11-0 record, Clemson was invited to the Orange Bowl to play the Big 8 Nebraska champions. To mark his first trip to the Orange Bowl for more than 30 years, Clemson wore an orange uniform for the second time. The Tigers took a 3-0 lead in the first quarter behind a 41-yard field goal from Donald Igwebuike. But Nebraska came back with some trickery when I returned Mike Rozier threw a 25-yard bait option for Anthony Steels for a touchdown to lead 7-3. Leading 13-7 in the third quarter, Clemson took control for good when Homer Jordan threw a 13-yard touchdown pass to Perry Tuttle, giving Tiger a 19-7 lead. Clemson survived to win 22-15 to take home the national consensus championship. At 34 years old, Danny Ford became the youngest coach to lead his team to a national title.

Ranked # 10 before the 1982 season begins, with six players entering the NFL Draft, including First Round taking on DE Jeff Bryant and WR Perry Tuttle, along with Hollis Hall, Tony Berryhill Center, Brian Clark, and linebacker and former team captain Jeff Davis, which is clear about how well the team will perform in 1982 after the championship season. The Tigers opened the season on the road of rival border rivals and Georgia SEC champions, losing this time in another close match with 6 points ahead of a crowd of over 82,000. The following weekend, Clemson hosted Boston College, in another fourth-quarter match that resulted in a 17-17 match. Like the previous season, the Tiger gradually improved during the season. In November, Clemson's defense was tenacious enough to hold # 18 Maryland and # 18 North Carolina. Clemson went on to run the remaining table of the season with nine consecutive wins, and ended with a regular season with a 9-1-1 record. After Tiger # 8 accepted an offer to Cotton Bowl with only one loss in that season, the senior class chose to decline the invitation.

On 22 November 1982, the soccer program at Clemson was placed on probation for a period of 2 years to include the 1983 and 1984 seasons. These sanctions were imposed on the program by the NCAA Committee on Violations due to the long history of recruitment violations to gain athletic benefits that have occurred from the year 1977 to the 1988 and 1982 National Championship seasons, under the administration of two head coaches, Charlie Pell and Danny Ford. More than 150 documented violations and 69 allegations cited by NCAA bylaws in inappropriate categories of improper recruitment, additional benefits for students-athletes, ethical behavior, improper financial aid, inappropriate college visits, improper transportation and entertainment, improper use of funds, inappropriate work, and improper hiring contacts.

As a result of this violation, Clemson is openly reprimanded and criticized by the NCAA. Football teams were banned from participating in bowl games after the 1982 and 1983 seasons, and were banned from live television in the 1983 and 1984 seasons. Also, the number of scholarships that the university could allocate to footballers was limited to 20 (from the normal limit of 30) for the academic year 1983 -84 and 1984-85. Charles Alan Wright, chair of the NCAA Committee on Violations said at the time, "Due to the large number and serious nature of the violations in this case, the committee believes that institutional sanctions are linked to television appearances and in post-soccer basketball games are in addition , because violations indicate an inappropriate pattern of recruitment activities, the committee decided that a two-year restriction on financial assistance to new members should be put in place to offset the recruitment gains improperly obtained by the university. "

The 1983 team, like the previous season, had a defeat and tie at the start of the season, this time with a 16-16 game with rivals # 11 Georgia and a defeat at Boston College. The team finished the rest of the season without losing and was unbeaten in the conference game, while ending with seasons 9-1-1 and # 10, and another # 11. Scholarship reductions could be felt, in the next two seasons when Clemson was still motivated, posted a 7-4 season win in 1984, and even 6-6 campaigns in 1985.

From 1987 to 1990, Clemson posted four successive win seasons and won three ACC titles, including a 35-10 victory over Penn State and a 13-6 defeat of Oklahoma Sooners at Florida Citrus Bowl. At that time, no team in Clemson's history started higher in the AP polls than the 1988 team that started this year as the 4th ranked team in the country and the pre-season favorites to win the national title. After the initial annoyance by # 10 FSU, the Tigers finished with # 9 after winning their bowls over Oklahoma. The 1988 team plays one of the toughest school schedules, beating three ranks and losing out to the other two. Rodney Williams was pacing while Terry Allen rushed for 1,192 yards and 10 goals for the ACC champions. In this age of offense, the '88 team is the fourth in the country in defense scoring. In 1989, Clemson enrolled the season 10-2 and was ranked 12th nationally for the fourth consecutive season, ending his career at Clemson with a 27-7 win over West Virginia (and All-America quarterback Major Harris) at Gator 1989 Bowl.

Just five years after their first probation under Ford ended, Clemson once again found their football program accused of multiple recruitment violations in January 1990. The NCAA accused Clemson's coach of 14 rule violations, ranging from giving cash in the amount of $ 50 to $ 150 until players have illegal contacts with recruits during the period 1984-1988. Although later cleared by the NCAA's direct involvement, this chain of events immediately led to the forced resignation of Clemson's popular head coach.

While at Clemson, Ford also coached wins over a number of coaches then sworn in to the College Football Hall of Fame, including Joe Paterno, Tom Osborne, Barry Switzer, Bobby Bowden, Vince Dooley and Woody Hayes. Ford coaches set a 96-29-4 record (0.760) at Clemson, 5 ACC Championships, and a record of 6-2 bowls. She is tied for second on the school winning list with Dabo Swinney and behind only Frank Howard. Ford is the country's third winner coach in percentage after the 1989 season. Ford also coached 21 All-American and 41 players who continued to play in the NFL for 11 seasons at Clemson. After several years away from training, Ford was employed by Arkansas in 1992, where he will spend five seasons guiding the Razorbacks.

In 2017, Ford was appointed to the High Level Football Hall of Fame.

The Ken Hatfield Era (1990-1993)

Ken Hatfield, former coach at Air Force and Arkansas, took over as head coach at Clemson in late 1989. He has a 32-13-1 record with the Tamil Tigers and leads them into three bowl matches.

Hatfield works to clean up the program image after Ford era sanctions. However, behind the success of Ford, Hatfield and many Clemson fanbase do not see eye-to-eye. A common saying among Tiger fans so far is "Howard built it, Ford filled it in. Hatfield killed it." This sentiment follows the first autumn of Clemson (1992) since 1976.

In large part due to this discontent, school officials refused to give him a one-year extension on his contract after the 1993 season, although the Tigers had recovered from 5-6 in 1992 to a record of 8-3 that year and were invited to the Peach Bowl. Expressing "a lot of disappointment" in what he saw as a lack of support by Clemson fans and some university officials, Hatfield resigned at the end of the regular season. He was then hired at Rice.

The purple home jersey used by Clemson in a special game made their debut during the 1991 ACC championship season, with the Tigers wearing it in regular season against NC State and at Citrus Bowl vs. California.

The Era of Tommy West (1993-1998)

Tommy West replaced Ken Hatfield at the end of the 1993 season, training the Tiger to a 14-13 victory at the 1993 Peach Bowl against Kentucky. West has a 31-28 record for five seasons at Clemson and leads the Tigers to three bowl matches but no ACC championships. West was fired after a bleak 1998 campaign that saw Clemson go 3-8 and finish last at the ACC. West went on to become head coach in Memphis.

Tommy Bowden era (1999-2008)

After Tommy West's dismissal after the 1998 season, Clemson hired Tommy Bowden, son of Bobby Bowden and coach at Tulane. Bowden led the Tiger to a 6-6 record and a Peach Bowl bid in 1999, with the team navigating its way through a schedule that included the unbeaten MAC and Marshall champions, Big East champion and BCS runner-up Virginia Tech (unbeaten during the regular season) , and finally the National Champion of Florida State (which ended the year unbeaten). The 1999 meeting between Macan and Seminoles was dubbed the "Bowden Bowl" and was the first time a father and son coached each other in Division I soccer. The FSU won the game 17-14 ahead of the biggest crowd in Death Valley history.

During the reign of Bowden, the Tamil Tigers qualified every season but did not win the ACC championship (the team in 2004 declined the bowl invitation as punishment for a massive fight during a game against the University of South Carolina). Bowden was criticized for his underachieving team. The 2000 tiger started 8-0 and rose to position # 5 in the poll before losing three of their last four. The same thing happened during the 2006 season following the start of 7-1 and with the team on the verge of winning the ACC Atlantic Division. The Tigers also showed great determinations on points during Bowden's tenure. The 2003 team won four games at the end of the season to finish 9-4, which included victories over # 3 Florida State and # 7 Tennessee at Chick-Fil-A Peach Bowl. The 2004 season saw the Tigers start 1-4 just to win five of their last six games (which included overtime from Miami # 10), while the 2005 team tackled the early 2-3 to finish the 9-4 season.

Tommy Bowden agreed to resign for $ 3.5 million on October 13, 2008, after leading the team to a disappointing 3-3 (1-2 ACC) record at the mid-point of the season where the Tigers were an almost unanimous pre-season choice to win their title The first ACC was under Bowden and was ranked # 9 in pre-season elections. Assistant coach Dabo Swinney was appointed as the temporary head coach.

After the departure of Tommy Bowden, wide-ranging coach Dabo Swinney was nicknamed the interim head coach and led the Tigers to a 4-2 record, completing the 2008 regular season at 7-6. On December 1, 2008, Swinney signed a five-year contract as permanent head coach of Clemson.

On November 21, 2009, Swinney and Macan were eligible to get first place for their ACC game, only to lose to Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets 39-34. They were awarded a trip to the Music City Bowl 2009, and defeated the Kentucky Wildcats 21-13, avenging their disappointment at Music City Bowl 2006.

During the 2010 season, after closing 24-27 overtime for the Auburn national champion on the road, Clemson was later defeated at the Meineke Car Care Bowl in Charlotte, North Carolina. In January 2011, Swinney hired a new offensive coordinator, Chad Morris. Morris became tied to Gus Malzahn as the highest paid assistant in college football after Clemson gave Morris a six-year contract worth $ 1.3 million per year. Dabo also added on running back coach Tony Elliott, and behind-back line coach Marion Hobby.

On September 17, 2011, Clemson beat the defending national champions, Tiger Tigers # 21-ranked, and ended the 17-match winning streak of Auburn, the longest winning streak in the country. On October 1, 2011, Clemson became the first ACC team to beat three consecutive national ranking challengers: # 21-ranked Auburn, # 11-ranked Florida State, and # 11-ranked Virginia Tech. On 12 November 2011, Clemson defeated Wake Forest, winning the ACC Atlantic Division title. On November 26, 2011, Clemson lost to South Carolina for the third year in a row, the first time Clemson has lost three straight to his instates rivals since the 1968-1970 season. On December 3rd, the Tigers won their first ACC Championship since 1991, beating Virginia Tech 38-10 in Game Championship. # 15 Clemson will continue to lose with # 23 West Virginia Mountaineers in the 2012 Orange Bowl 70-33, handing the record number of points all the time in quarter (35), half (49) and game (70)) in the 109-year history of bowl matches.

On December 31, 2012, Clemson reached his first season of 11-wins since the national championship year with a last-gasp victory over the # 8 LSU Tigers at Chick-fil-A Bowl. Clemson trailed 24-13 in the fourth quarter, but bounced back with a drive that won a game that saw 4th and 16 conversions deep in their own territory that will lead to a 37-yard field goal Chandler Catanzaro as the time expires to give Clemson 25 -24 win.

The 2013 season is historic for the Clemson football program. The Tigers started the season with a 38-35 home victory over rivals and fifth-placed Georgia and ended the regular season with a record-breaking fifth straight loss to South Carolina rivals 31-17 at the first major gathering of two schools (Clemson # 4, Carolina # 9). The Tigers finished 11-2 in 2013 and secured the win of the first BCS bowl of the school with a 40-35 win over # 7 Ohio State at the Orange Bowl. Quarterback Tajh Boyd and wide receiver Sammy Watkins set the yard-size Orange Bowl record. Boyd collected 505 total yards and threw five goals. It was the fourth victory over 10 opponents under Swinney.

Clemson finished 10-3 in 2014, highlighted by a 35-17 victory over rivals South Carolina and a 40-6 win over Oklahoma at the Russell Athletic Bowl. The Tigers took on ACC Florida State rivals in their third week of the season only to suffer a heartbreaking loss in overtime as Clemson's # 22 lost to # 1 Florida State 17-23. The Tigers then claimed a six-match winning streak in their mid-season but lost to Georgia Tech as new quarterback star Deshaun Watson went out with a knee injury early in the 1st quarter. The Tigers claim the nation's number one defense under the Brent Venables defense coordinator in 2014, and the emergence of new quarterback Deshaun Watson pushed Tiger into another 10-win season for the 4th time in six years as head coach Dabo Swinney.

The 2015 season is considered by sports writers as one of the most successful seasons in Clemson's history. The Tigers have ranked number one nation throughout the second half of the regular season and end up with an overall record of 14-1. Behind the leadership of Heisman Trophy finalist Deshaun Watson, the Tigers won the 2015 ACC Championship against 10 North Carolina with a score of 45-37. The Tigers were selected to participate in the 2016 Football Playoff Championship as the top seeded team in the tournament. Clemson beat the # 4 Oklahoma Sooners ranking at the Orange Bowl 2015 with a score of 37-17 to advance to the 2016 Football Championship National Football Championship game against 2nd Alabama Crimson Tide on 11 January 2016. Clemson lost 2016 College Football Playoff National Championship Game to Alabama, 45-40 ended 17 straight wins at school. Heisman Quarterback finalist Deshaun Watson has a historic performance that sets the record for total yard total in the history of the national championship game, with 478 yards (405 passing; 73 rushing) against the nation's best defense, and became the first player in history to garner more than 4,000 yards past and 1,000 yards rushing in a season.

The Clemson-South Carolina competition that started in 1896 was the largest annual sporting event in ticket sales in the state of South Carolina. From 1896 to 1959, the Clemson-South Carolina game was played, at the fair, in Columbia, South Carolina and referred to as "Big Thursday". In 1960 an alternative site format was applied using both teams' home stadiums. The annual game has since been set "The Palmetto Bowl." The last eight contests between programs have been broadcast nationally (4 on ESPN, 4 on ESPN2). Clemson holds a 69-42-4 lead in the series.

Florida State

Between 1999 and 2007 the ACC Atlantic Division match between Clemson and Florida State was named as "Bowden Bowl" to reflect a father-son head coach between Bobby Bowden (Father, FSU) and Tommy Bowden (Son, Clemson). Their first meeting, in 1999, was the first time in the history of the I-A Division that a father and a son met as an opponent's head coach in a soccer game. Bobby Bowden won the first four games extending FSU victory over Clemson to 11 since 1992. Since 2003, Clemson 7-6, including a 26-10 win at Clemson over FSU # 3. Also so far, the Tigers recorded a 27-20 victory at Tallahassee in 2006 who broke a 17-year losing streak at Doak Campbell Stadium. 2007 was the last Bowden Bowl game when Tommy resigned as head coach in October 2008. # 3 Clemson took off his thriller in Tallahassee in 2016, 37-34, above 12th Seminoles. In 2017, the State of Florida led the entire 20- 11.

Georgia Tech

Clemson's rivalry with Georgia Tech dates back to 1898 with the first game played in Atlanta. The game was played in Atlanta for 44 of the first 47 games, until Georgia Tech joined the ACC. When Georgia Tech joined the ACC in 1978, the series switched to a more traditional home and home setting starting with the 1983 game. When the ACC expanded to 12 teams and split into two divisions in 2005, Clemson and Georgia Tech were placed in the opposite division but is designated as a permanent cross-division rival so the series can continue uninterrupted. The two schools are separated 127 miles away and connected to each other with Interstate 85. This distance is slightly closer than the distance between Clemson and traditional South Carolina rivals (137 miles). Georgia Tech leads the 50-30-2 series.

Georgia

The Bulldogs and the Tigers have played 64 other times starting in 1897, with the 64th meeting being played in 2014. Only defeats Clemson's regular season of the 1978, 1982 and 1991 campaigns all came in the hands of Georgia "between the fences", while the only Georgia's regular season setback for three years of the Walker Herschel era came at Death Valley during Danny Ford's 1981 national championship.

During two programs of 'simultaneous glory days of the early 1980s, there was no competition in all of the more important college football at the national level. Bulldog and Tiger played every season from 1973 to 1987, with Scott Woerner's dramatic results in 1980 and nine turnovers forced by the Tigers in 1981 to effectively complete the national champions in the end. There was no competition in that period that was more competitive, as evidenced by the 11th minute critical field goals kicked by Kevin Butler in 1984 and by David Treadwell more than once later in the decade. Despite an explosion in 1990 by the Tiger and in 1994 and 2003 by the Bulldogs, the series usually remained very competitive with equally uneven games. Georgia currently maintains a 41-18-4 lead in the series.

NC State

The annual conference and meeting division with NC State is known as the Textile Bowl for similar school missions in research and development for the textile industry in the Carolinas. The first meeting of two schools took place in 1899. Clemson currently holds a 57-28-1 series advantage.

Boston College

The O'Rourke-McFadden Trophy was created in 2008 by the Boston College Gridiron Club to honor traditions in both schools and to honor the heritage of Charlie O'Rourke and Banks McFadden, who played during the era of leather helmets. The club plans to make this annual presentation. Clemson first met Boston College on a soccer field in the 1940 Cotton Bowl Classic, the first bowl game for the Tigers and Eagles. Over the next 43 years, the team meets 13 times. In 2005, Boston College joined the ACC and the Atlantic Division. Since then, this game is played every year with Clemson's victory in 7 of the last 8 meetings. In 2017, the Tigers lead the series 16-9-2.

Auburn

The old rival was first played in 1899 but until 2010, has not faced each other in the regular season since 1971. Auburn led the whole series 34-15-2 and has won 14 consecutive games since 1952, before Clemson snapped a streak in 2011. , beating the rank 22 Auburn 38-24 in Death Valley, in front of a crowd of exactly 82,000. Along with a snap one streak, Clemson also snapped a seventh successive Auburn winning streak coming from the 2009-2011 season. The Georgia Dome hosted the Auburn-Clemson competition at Chick-fil-A Kickoff Game 2012. Clemson beat Auburn 26-19 with a 231-yard performance by Andre Ellington. The game is notorious for Sammy Watkins' absence, having suspended the first two games for drug-related arrests in May 2012. # 3 Clemson again beat Auburn's # 13 in 2017 14-6 at Clemson.

Maps Clemson Tigers football



Recording and results

Championship

National championships

Clemson completed an unbeaten 1981 season with a 22-15 win over Nebraska Cornhuskers # 4 at the Orange Bowl 1982, and was crowned the national champion by all major voters.

Other consensus voters include Berryman, Billingsley, DeVold, FACT, FB News, Soccer Research, FW, Helms, Litkenhous, Matthews, National Championship Foundation, NFF, New York Times, Poling, Sagarin, and Sporting News

Playoffs

Clemson was selected as a seed in the second College Football playoff and defeated fourth-seeded Oklahoma on 31 December 2015 at the Orange Bowl 2015. They lost to Alabama Crimson Tide in a championship game on 11 January 2016.

Clemson was selected to playoff College Football third as second seed and defeated third seed Ohio State on December 31, 2016 at the PlayStation Fiesta Bowl 2016. The Tigers beat Alabama Crimson Tide in a national championship match on January 9, 2017.

Unspeakable season

Since the beginning of 1896, Clemson has completed five unbeatable seasons. This includes the perfect three seasons in which the Tigers are invincible and unbound.

Conference Championships

Clemson won the Association of South Interpersonal Athletes in 1900 and 1902 (tied 1903 and 1906) along with Southern Conference titles in 1940 and 1948. Their 16 ACC degrees (15 direct, 1 tied) were the most ACC football championships.

In 1965, South Carolina violated the rules of participation relating to two ineligibile players and was asked to lose victory against North Carolina State and Clemson. North Carolina State and Clemson were later announced as co-champions.

Division Championships

In 2005, the Atlantic Coast Conference was split into two divisions of six teams each and began holding the Acc Championship Championship at the end of the regular football season to determine the ACC Football Champions. Clemson won the first ACC Atlantic Division championship in 2009 and again in 2011. In 2012, Clemson is tied for part of the Atlantic Division Championships and was selected as the co-champion of the division.

On August 18, 2011, Georgia Tech vacated their victory due to a violation of the NCAA and the game was considered by the NCAA and the ACC for not having a winner.

? Clemson finished 7-1 at ACC and was named co-champion of the Atlantic Division per ACC rule. Florida State plays in the ACC Championship with a tie-breaker advantage.

^ Clemson finished 7-1 in ACC and was named co-champion of the Atlantic Division per ACC rule. Clemson plays in the ACC Championship with a tie-breaker advantage.

Clemson vs. NCAA School Division I in the State


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National poll

Clemson has ended their football season with a rating of 32 times in AP or Coaches Poll. Clemson currently has eight seasons of 10 wins in a row. This is the second longest active row behind Alabama with ten.

AP Poll began selecting the top 20 teams in America in 1936. Only the top 10 teams were recognized from 1962 to 1967. The AP Polls expanded back to the top 20 teams in 1968. In 1989, they began recognizing the top 25 teams.

? UPI/Coaches Poll began selecting the top 20 teams on a weekly basis in 1950 before expanding to the top 25 teams in the country in 1990.

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Bowl game

This is a list of ten Clemson's latest bowl games.

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Individual award winners

Hall of Fame College of Fame adopted

In 1951, the College Football Hall of Fame opened in South Bend, Indiana. Clemson already has 3 players and 4 former coaches inducted into the Hall of Fame.

Retired number

Steve Fuller number 4 was retired in 1979. However, he is out of retirement in 2014 to be worn by quarterback Deshaun Watson.

C. J. Spiller number 28 was retired in 2010. However, it was taken out of retirement in 2016 to be used by running back Tavien Feaster

National award winners

National training awards

Consensus All-Americans

Pemain Clemson telah dihormati 25 kali sebagai konsensus All-American pada 2014.

Penghargaan Atlantic Coast Conference

Tim sepak bola 50th Anniversary Atlantic Coast Conference

On July 23, 2002 for the 50th anniversary of the Atlantic Coast Conference, a 120-member blue band committee selected 50 of the best footballers in ACC history. Clemson leads all school conferences with most of the elected players to the Golden Anniversary team. Each of Clemson's honors is the All-American and former NFL player. The nine people selected from Clemson are:

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Current NFL player

Sumber ESPN

  • Mackensie Alexander - Cornerback, Minnesota Vikings No. 20
  • Dwayne Allen - Ujung yang ketat, New England Patriots No. 83
  • Stephone Anthony - Linebacker, Miami Dolphins No. 44
  • Tavaris Barnes - Posisi bertahan, Washington Redskins No. 63
  • Isaiah Battle - Serangan ofensif, Seattle Seahawks No. 79
  • Vic Beasley - Linebacker, Atlanta Falcons No. 44
  • Cabang Andre - Ujung bertahan, Miami Dolphins No. 50
  • Jaron Brown - penerima lebar, Seattle Seahawks No. 18
  • Martavis Bryant - penerima lebar, Oakland Raiders No. 12
  • Deon Cain - Penerima lebar, Indianapolis Colts No. 8
  • Ryan Carter - Cornerback, Buffalo Bills No. 46
  • Chandler Catanzaro - Placekicker, Tampa Bay Buccaneers No. 7
  • Kevin Dodd - Linebacker, Tennessee Titans No. 92
  • Marcus Edmond - Cornerback, Los Angeles Chargers No. 41
  • Wayne Gallman - Jalan kembali, New York Giants No. 22
  • Marcus Gilchrist - Keselamatan, Oakland Raiders No. 31
  • B. J. Goodson - Linebacker, New York Giants No. 93
  • T. J. Green - Keamanan, Indianapolis Colts No. 32
  • Taylor Hearn - Penjaga ofensif, Carolina Panthers No. 62
  • DeAndre Hopkins - Penerima lebar, Houston Texans No. 10
  • Adam Humphries - Penerima lebar, Tampa Bay Buccaneers No. 10
  • Grady Jarrett - Taktik pertahanan, Atlanta Falcons No. 97
  • Jayron Kearse - Keselamatan, Minnesota Vikings No. 27
  • Shaq Lawson - Akhir defensif, Buffalo Bills No. 90
  • Jordan Leggett - Akhir yang ketat, New York Jets No. 86
  • Ray-Ray McCloud - penerima lebar, Buffalo Bills No. 3
  • Dorian O'Daniel - Linebacker, Kepala Kansas City No. 44
  • Charone Peake - Penerima lebar, New York Jets No. 17
  • Bradley Pinion - Punter, San Francisco 49ers No. 5
  • D. J. Pembaca - Tekel defensif, Houston Texans No. 98
  • Artavis Scott - Penerima lebar, Pengisi Daya Los Angeles No. 10
  • Coty Sensabaugh - Cornerback, Pittsburgh Steelers No. 24
  • Tyler Shatley - Penjaga ofensif, Jacksonville Jaguars No. 69
  • Van Smith - Keamanan, Atlanta Falcons No.
  • Cordrea Tankersley - Cornerback, Miami Dolphins No. 30
  • Brandon Thomas - Penjaga ofensif, Jacksonville Jaguars No. 70
  • Carlos Watkins - Penjagaan defensif, Houston Texans No. 91
  • Sammy Watkins - penerima lebar, Kepala Kansas City No. 14
  • Deshaun Watson - Quarterback, Houston Texans No. 4
  • DeShawn Williams - Tekel defensif, Denver Broncos No. 93
  • Mike Williams - penerima lebar, Pengisi Los Angeles No. 81

NCAA College Football 11/25/2017 - #3 Clemson Tigers vs #24 South ...
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Rekaman sepanjang waktu vs. tim ACC saat ini


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Non-conference opponents in the future

Announce the schedule on August 23, 2017

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Recruit

Clemson Tigers Football from team recruitment rankings Rivals.com :

Week 7-Breakouts « First and Ten
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References


What it takes to be the Tiger: A look into the secret lives of ...
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Further reading

  • Bob Bradley; Sam Blackman; Chuck Kriese (1999). Clemson: Tiger Playground - Clamson University Athletic History . Sports Publishing. ISBNÃ, 1-58261-369-9.

Clemson Tiger Band performs during the NCAA Football game between ...
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External links

  • Official website

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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