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Bowden, Tigers can still salvage season on the brink
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CLEMSON This weekend, Tommy Bowden’s world was probably pretty quiet.
Clemson’s 10th-year head football coach says he “lives in a cave,” and there was no danger of negativity puncturing his humble abode. The Tigers enjoyed an off week.
Starting today, that’s a different story.
Bowden and the Tigers face their biggest game of the season — and perhaps his coaching career — Thursday night at Wake Forest.
All the goodwill of the No. 9 preseason ranking and belief that this would be the year Bowden broke through and led Clemson to its first ACC title since 1991 is long gone, evaporated in the wreckage of a 34-10 opening-game loss to Alabama.
Now, after last week’s mystifying 20-17 home loss to Maryland, Bowden might be fighting for his job despite receiving a lucrative contract extension that bumped his annual salary to $1.8 million dollars following last December’s flirtation with Arkansas.
If you’re Bowden (or athletics director Terry Don Phillips, for that matter), you probably aren’t sleeping well right now.
This week could be a fulcrum on which the rest of the season — and Bowden’s job security — turns.
BB&T Field (formerly Groves Stadium) has never been a happy place for Clemson, and 2008 is no different.
Two years ago, the Tigers were fortunate to leave with a victory, needing Gaines Adams’ amazing scoop-and-score of a muffed field goal to turn what looked like a 20-3 fourth-quarter deficit into a stunning comeback win.
Jim Grobe’s Demon Deacons have the talent to win their second ACC title in three years, and Navy didn’t do the Tigers any favors by pulling a 24-17 upset last week. The Deacs will be angry, and it’ll be near-impossible for Clemson to pull anything meaningful from the game film, given the huge contrasts between Rob Spence’s tight end-oriented spread system and the Middies’ triple-option offense.
But this is the hand Clemson has dealt itself with its downright ugly start.
Bowden always seems to be the best with his back pressed firmly against the wall, and this situation certainly applies.
The ACC is as wide-open as ever, and if the Tigers can get their act together, the Maryland loss won’t even sting, given the Terps’ ugly defeat at Virginia which pulled them immediately back to the Atlantic Division pack.
Clemson has six ACC games left, and if it can run the table (or something close), a trip to Tampa the first weekend of December remains a real possibility.
But Bowden and his staff must prove they can bring a wounded team together and put it in the right situation to succeed when it matters.
That process starts Thursday night in Winston-Salem.
Beat the Demon Deacons, and the early-season cloud lifts, the doubters run back to their hiding places.
Lose, and it’s open season on job security.
In other words, it’s gonna be one real interesting week.
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Two weeks off is scarcely enough TIME to build cohesiveness and ?continuity? in the 6th different O-Line in 7 weeks.
This should not be a excuse for ignoring the issue for TEN YEARS.
WF has a COACH. It should take him less time than it took Friedgen to figure out the necessarily simple, straight forward blocking schemes that BS is going to have the TIME to install.
TB can't win another game this season that will show me he is the HC for Clemson. The longer he keeps RS the more he proves it.
Those of us that have felt for years that he couldn't "finish the job" have to stick to our guns.
Even if tb does win, which I don't think he will, the doubters are not going back into hiding.
He can win @ Wake all he wants, that just means he's gonna lose on down the road enough to cost him an ACC title game appearance. Because he never does enough to win anything of worth for Clemson but does do just enough to save his hide.
It has become more than apparent that no one is going to hold tommy accountable for losing on purpose.
former players have questioned losses a lot harder than mainstream fans and writers...
I saw with my own eyes, tommy limit the tiger offense to lose on purpose to his dad in 2000...it was verified by a defensive lineman and a offense starter in 2001.
Where are the malcontents on this? Where are the fans on this unthinkable act? Where are the newsmen?
...and the tiger nation goes on about its business of grousing, but justice will never be served. Tommy will be fired...but justice and those many, many lives who were affected by his point shaving will never have closure.
I, for one, know the truth.
Last post on this subject...my heart goes out to the tiger faithful.
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