Sports
Klubnik on Dabo support: Others said ‘I sucked’
CLEMSON, S.C. — Cade Klubnik read the comments on social media.
He heard the chatter around him, about how he simply wasn’t good enough to be the starting quarterback for the Clemson Tigers. He heard fans clamoring for coach Dabo Swinney to tap the transfer portal and find a quality replacement.
It was all coming to a head after Klubnik’s sophomore season in 2023, a year in which the Tigers struggled early but closed with five straight wins to finish 9-4. While that might be considered a good season for some schools, it was a down year for Clemson, snapping a streak of 12 straight double-digit-win seasons and leaving the Tigers out of the College Football Playoff for the second straight year.
There were questions about whether Clemson’s run was over, and much of the blame fell on Klubnik’s shoulders after throwing just 19 touchdown passes with nine interceptions that season.
“Everybody kind of told me I sucked, and wasn’t very good,” Klubnik said. “A lot of people wanted me out of Clemson.”
About two weeks after the Tigers’ 38-35 win over Kentucky in the Gator Bowl, Klubnik was still relatively uncertain about his status at Clemson and that’s when Swinney called Klubnik into his office and put any speculation about his future to rest.
As he sat across from Klubnik, Swinney told him directly: “I believe in you.”
“To have somebody that I look up to and believe in, tell me that he believes in me, it just filled me with confidence,” Klubnik said. “He could have gone and done what a lot of other coaches would do [and find a transfer quarterback], but he didn’t.””
Klubnik called it a moment in life he’ll never forget. He left Swinney’s office more confident than ever, and eager to reward his coach for the faith he showed in him. And Klubnik did just that.
Klubnik piled up more than 4,000 yards from scrimmage and 42 touchdowns last season while leading Clemson to its eighth ACC championship in 10 years with an MVP performance that included four touchdowns in a dramatic 34-31 win over SMU in the title game. The victory assured the Tigers a return to the playoff, where they lost 38-24 to Texas in the first round.
Now Klubnik enters his final season at Clemson as a likely Heisman Trophy contender and the fourth-ranked Tigers are expected to compete for a national championship.
“When you sign up to do this, whether you’re a coach at this level or certainly play the quarterback position, there’s a lot of criticism,” Swinney said. “I just knew there was going to be a lot of noise. He’s a young person and I just felt like it was important that I let him know that that I fully believed in him. I didn’t want him worrying about me going out and getting another guy. I wanted him to know, hey, you’re my guy.”
Added Swinney: “I told him if it don’t work out, then I’m going down with you.”
Swinney has been around college football for more than three decades and has won two national titles at Clemson, so he knows a thing or two about player development. He said one of the most difficult parts of coaching college football in today’s world is having the patience to develop a quarterback while remaining competitive.
Swinney saw enough in Klubnik after his sophomore season to believe he had plenty of potential.
“You know, this is a developmental game,” Swinney said. “We forget that because now we’re in this world where if you’re not great as a freshman it’s, oh well, you stink. And then you move on to the next guy.”
Tigers wide receiver Antonio Williams, who figures to be Klubnik’s primary target in the passing game, said off the field his quarterback is “kind of laid-back and goofy.” But Williams said Klubnik was all business last season.
“He’s definitely growing up a lot,” Williams said. “When it comes to leadership, he’s definitely been more vocal, and he has the respect of all the guys in the locker room. So when he speaks, everybody listens. That respect has gone a long way for him.”
Swinney called Klubnik an “amazing human being” and he continues to believe in him, perhaps on a run to the Tigers’ first national title since 2018.
“He’s got a lot of great days ahead,” Swinney said. “And you need a little luck, you know. I know everybody wants to make all these predictions and things like that, but you predict your way in anything. You gotta go do it. I know this if if that guy stays healthy, we will have a chance. He’s going to always give you a chance.”
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Geoffrey Boycott advises England to ‘use brains’ for Ashes remainder
Legendary England batter Geoffrey Boycott on Monday advised the Ben Stokes-led side to adopt a more strategic and thoughtful approach ahead of the second Ashes Test against Australia, scheduled for Thursday in Brisbane.
England suffered an agonising eight-wicket defeat in the series opener in Perth, which lasted less than two days, the first of which was dominated by the touring side as they had reduced the hosts to 123/9 after accumulating 172 all out.
The visitors now face another gruelling challenge in the blockbuster series as they take on the Baggy Greens in a pink-ball Test, in which the hosts boast a dominant record, having lost just one out of their previous 14 appearances, but Boycott, who has won Ashes both in England and Australia, believes that the Three Lions can win the upcoming game by adopting a calculated strategy.
He, however, warned England batters of self-destruction, advising them to “use their brains” and decide whether to attack or hold back after analysing the situation.
“But it doesn’t help our chances of success if Ben Stokes keeps encouraging our batsmen to attack, attack with one finger hovering over the self-destruct button,” Boycott wrote in his Daily Telegraph column.
“Nobody is asking the players to stop being positive because they have given us some marvellous, thrilling and entertaining cricket. All we ask is for them to use their brains and realise there are times when they should throttle back and be aware of situations and bat accordingly,” he added.
Boycott, who represented England in 108 Tests and 36 ODIs, also slammed Stokes for his comments in which he referred to former cricketers as “has-beens” but expressed satisfaction over the all-rounder’s partial apology.
“To call past players ‘has-beens’ was disrespectful, especially as some of those ‘has-beens’ played in teams that won the Ashes in England and Australia,” Boycott wrote.
“I am glad Ben has half apologised, saying it was a slip of the tongue, because none of this team has won the Ashes in Australia. Get the job done, because then you don’t need to say anything and you can bask in all the glory coming your way.”
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