2010s
Sept. 4, 2010 – Dawson Zimmerman booted a 79-yard punt in a victory over North Texas, the second-longest punt in Clemson history at the time. He finished the day with a 51.0-yard net average on six punts, best in Clemson history.
Sept. 18, 2010 – Clemson lost a 27-24 overtime contest at Auburn, the closest it came to suffering a loss in the 2010 season. Auburn won the national title with a 14-0 record. Andre Ellington had 140 rushing yards and Kyle Parker passed for 220 yards to lead the Clemson offense, while Da’Quan Bowers had four tackles for loss.
Nov. 13, 2010 – Dustin Hopkins kicked a 55-yard field goal on the last play of the game to give Florida State a 16-13 victory over Clemson. Had the Tigers won that game, they would have been ACC Atlantic Division champions. Jamie Harper totaled 143 yards on 27 carries and nine receptions for 54 yard in the best all-around performance of his career. The nine receptions set a Clemson record for a running back.
Dec. 6, 2010 – Da’Quan Bowers won the Bronko Nagurski Award as the top defensive player in the nation according to the Football Writers of America. He became the first Tiger to win that award and the first to win any national position award since 1982, when Terry Kinard won the CBS Sports National Defensive Player-of-the-Year award. Bowers was presented the award at a banquet in Charlotte, N.C.
Sept. 17, 2011 – Clemson defeated defending National Champion Auburn 38-24 in Death Valley. The win elevated Clemson’s record against a defending National Champion in games played at Clemson to 3-0 and it ended Auburn’s 17-game winning streak, the longest winning streak snapped by a Clemson football team in history. The Tigers gained 624 yards of total offense, their most-ever against an SEC team.
Sept. 24, 2011 – Tajh Boyd passed for 344 yards and three touchdowns in leading Clemson to a 35-30 victory over No. 11 Florida State. Freshman Sammy Watkins had seven receptions for 141 yards and two touchdowns. The Tigers had 443 yards of total offense against a defense that finished the year fifth in the country in total defense.
Oct. 1, 2011 – Clemson defeated Virginia Tech for the first time in 22 years with a 23-3 victory in Blacksburg. Clemson held Virginia Tech to 258 yards of total offense. Virginia Tech was ranked No. 10 entering the game and the victory gave Clemson three straight wins over top-20 AP-ranked teams, a first for an ACC team.
Oct. 15, 2011 – Sammy Watkins set a school record with 345 all-purpose yards in Clemson’s 56-45 win at Maryland. He had an 89-yard kickoff return for a score and added two receiving touchdowns. Clemson overcame an 18-point deficit to win the game.
Oct. 22, 2011 – Kourtnei Brown had two returns for touchdowns in Clemson 59-38 win over North Carolina. Brown became the first Clemson defensive player to score two touchdowns in one game since 1954. Tajh Boyd tied a Tiger record for passing touchdowns with five. Clemson scored all 59 of its points in the first three quarters.
Oct. 23, 2011 – With an 8-0 record, Clemson moved up to No. 5 in the nation in the BCS standings, its first top-five mark in school history.
Nov. 12, 2011 – Chandler Catanzaro booted a 43-yard field goal on the last play of the game to give Clemson a 31-28 victory over Wake Forest and clinch the ACC Atlantic Division title. It was Clemson’ first walkoff kick in regulation in Memorial Stadium.
Dec. 3, 2011 – Clemson won its first ACC title in 20 years with a 38-10 win over Virginia Tech in Charlotte. Virginia Tech was ranked No. 3 in the nation in the coaches poll and the win tied for the highest-ranked team Clemson beat in its history. Tajh Boyd was named MVP, as he completed 20-29 passes for 240 yards and three scores. The win clinched Clemson’s first Orange Bowl berth in 30 years.
Dec. 7, 2011 – Dwayne Allen was named winner of the John Mackey Award as the nation’s top tight end. He became the first offensive player in Clemson history to win a national position award.
Dec. 15, 2011 – Dwayne Allen and Sammy Watkins were both named AP First-Team All-Americans. Allen was the first Clemson tight end named to the first team since Bennie Cunningham in 1975. Watkins became just the fourth first-year freshman in college football history to be named an AP First-Team All-American.
Dec. 31, 2011 – Head Coach Dabo Swinney was named the winner of the Bobby Dodd National Coach-of-the-Year Award. It marked the first time a Clemson head coach won a national coach-of-the-year award since Danny Ford in 1981.
Sept. 1, 2012 – DeAndre Hopkins set a school record with 13 receptions, including the go-ahead touchdown catch in the fourth quarter, in Clemson’s 26-19 win over No. 25 Auburn to open the season in the Georgia Dome.
Sept. 8, 2012 – Spencer Benton set an ACC and Clemson record when he booted a 61-yard field goal on the last play of the first half against Ball State at Memorial Stadium. It was the only field goal he made all season in three attempts, all 55 yards or longer.
Oct. 20, 2012 – Clemson defeated Virginia Tech 38-17 at Memorial Stadium, its third win over the Hokies in a two-year span. All three wins were by 20 points or more.
Nov. 17, 2012 – In a wild shootout that saw the Tigers amass 754 yards on 102 plays, Clemson defeated NC State 62-48 at Memorial Stadium. The Tigers trailed 24-13 in the second quarter, but scored the game’s next 42 points to pull away. It gave Clemson a final ACC regular-season record of 7-1, the first time it ever won seven league games, and 13 straight wins at Death Valley to set a stadium record. Tajh Boyd, who set a school record with 529 total yards, totaled five passing touchdowns for the third time in four games.
Nov. 26, 2012 – Six of the 11 players on the First-Team All-ACC offense were from Clemson. It was the first time since 1995 (Florida State) that a team had six First-Team All-ACC players on offense and the first time Clemson accomplished that feat. Tajh Boyd (QB), Andre Ellington (RB), Brandon Ford (TE), Dalton Freeman (C), DeAndre Hopkins (WR) and Brandon Thomas (OT) all received First-Team All-ACC honors.
Nov. 28, 2012 – Tajh Boyd was named ACC Player-of-the-Year, the first Tiger quarterback to win the award since Steve Fuller (1978). Boyd passed for 3,896 yards and 36 touchdowns while completing 67.2 percent of his passes.
Dec. 31, 2012 – Chandler Catanzaro kicked a 37-yard field goal as time expired to give Clemson a 25-24 win over No. 7 LSU in the Chick-fil-A Bowl. The ACC Tigers trailed 24-13 entering the fourth quarter, but scored the final 12 points for the dramatic victory. It was Clemson’s 11th win of the season, its highest total since its National Championship season of 1981 (12-0), and gave the Tigers a final USA Today ranking of No. 9.
Aug. 31, 2013 – Clemson defeated No. 5 Georgia 38-35 in front of 84,350 fans at Death Valley. Clemson was ranked No. 8 and the win gave the Tigers consecutive wins over top-10 SEC teams. Clemson became the first non-conference school to win consecutive games against top-10 SEC teams. Sammy Watkins had a 77-yard receiving touchdown from Tajh Boyd, who threw three passing touchdowns and ran for two others. Danny Ford was inducted into the Clemson Ring of Honor prior to the game. ESPN College GameDay was also in town prior to the game.
Nov. 2, 2013 – No. 8 Clemson defeated Virginia 59-10 in Charlottesville, as Tajh Boyd passed for 377 yards and Sammy Watkins had eight receptions for 169 yards. That included a 96-yard receiving touchdown in the second half, one of the longest pass plays in Clemson history.
Nov. 23, 2013 – Clemson defeated The Citadel 52-6 on Military Appreciation Day. The highlight came when U.S. Army veteran Daniel Rodriguez had a two-yard receiving touchdown from Cole Stoudt in the fourth quarter, the first score of the Purple Heart recipients career. It was also the final home game of Tajh Boyd’s career, who completed 21-28 passes for 288 yards and five passing touchdowns. Sammy Watkins became Clemson’s career leader in receiving yards in the game, breaking the record of 3,020 by his former teammate, DeAndre Hopkins.
Nov. 27, 2013 – Chad Morris was named National Assistant Coach-of-the-Year by the AFCA.
Jan. 3, 2014 – Clemson concluded its 11-win season with 40-35 victory over No. 6 Ohio State. It gave Clemson wins over a top-10 team to end the season in consecutive year, the only FBS team to do that in 2012,13. Sammy Watkins set an Orange Bowl and Clemson record with 16 catches for 227 yards and two scores. Tajh Boyd had 505 yards of total offense and accounted for six touchdowns in his final game. He also had a career-high 127 rushing yards. Vic Beasley had a Clemson bowl game record four tackles for loss. Stanton Seckinger caught what proved to be the winning touchdown on a pass from Boyd in the fourth quarter. It was the 32nd win as a starting quarterback for Boyd, tying the career record held by Rodney Williams (1985-88).
Jan. 7, 2014 – Clemson was ranked No. 7 in the final USA Today poll and No. 8 in the final AP poll. Both were the best final rankings for the program since the Tigers won the 1981 national title.
Sept. 27, 2014 – Making his first start, freshman Deshaun Watson set a Clemson record with six touchdown passes in a 50-35 win over North Carolina. It was the first time in history Clemson has scored exactly 50 points in a game.
Oct. 11, 2014 – Vic Beasley became Clemson’s all-time sack leader in a 23-17 win over Louisville. He recorded a three-yard sack in the first half, his 29th as a Tiger, one better than Michael Dean Perry and Gaines Adams had accumulated. Clemson scored a touchdown on a 72-yard punt return by Adam Humphries and a fumble recovery by Tavaris Barnes. DeShawn Williams deflected a pass at the goal line on Louisville’s last play to preserve the win. Ten defensive players from this game would be drafted the following May.
Nov. 29, 2014 – Playing with a torn ACL, Deshaun Watson threw for two scores and ran for two others in Clemson’s 35-17 win over South Carolina that ended the Gamecocks’ record five-game winning streak in the series. Artavis Scott had seven catches for 185 yards and two scores, the most receiving yards by a Clemson player against South Carolina and the most ever by a Tiger in Death Valley. Wayne Gallman added 191 yards rushing in 27 carries, the second most rushing yards by a Tiger against South Carolina.
Dec. 29, 2014 – Clemson concluded the season with its 10th victory, a 40-6 win over No. 24 Oklahoma. Cole Stoudt earned MVP honors by throwing for 319 yards and three touchdowns as the Tigers’ 34-point win tied a school record for victory margin over a ranked opponent. The win gave Clemson three straight bowl wins over opposing coaches that had won the national championship, a first in college football history.
Oct. 3, 2015 – Clemson defeated sixth-ranked Notre Dame in the first meeting between the two teams since 1979. In a torrential downpour, the Tigers jumped out to a big lead and escaped with a 24-22 win in the final seconds as Carlos Watkins led a host of tacklers that stopped the Fighting Irish’s two-point try.
Oct. 24, 2015 – Clemson tied the program’s largest margin of victory against an ACC opponent and gave Miami (Fla.) its worst defeat in history with a 58-0 rout in Sun Life Stadium. The Tigers rushed for over 400 yards in the victory.
Nov. 3, 2015 – The Tigers were ranked No. 1 in the College Football Playoff poll for the first time in history. Clemson would go on to be ranked first in each of the six polls released during the season.
Dec. 5, 2015 – The running tandem of Deshaun Watson and Wayne Gallman led Clemson to a thrilling 45-37 win over North Carolina in the ACC Championship Game, cementing Clemson’s place as the No. 1 seed for the College Football Playoff.
Dec. 9, 2015 – Dabo Swinney was named Home Depot National Coach-of-the-Year, the first of 10 the Tiger coach would receive from a national standpoint. He was also the ACC Coach-of-the-Year.
Dec. 12, 2015 – Deshaun Watson, Clemson’s first Heisman Trophy finalist in history, finished third in the voting for the top award in college football. He was the first player in FBS history to pass for over 4,000 yards and rush over 1,000 in the same season.
Dec. 31, 2015 – For a second straight bowl game and fourth consecutive year against a coach that had previously won a national championship, Clemson beat Bob Stoops’ Oklahoma team in the Orange Bowl, 37-17. The win was the 14th of the season, a school record.
Jan. 11, 2016 – Clemson played for the National Championship against Alabama. The Crimson Tide won, 45-40, but Deshaun Watson set a championship game record with 478 yards of total offense.
Jan. 16, 2016 – Dabo Swinney wins the Bear Bryant Award as the National Coach of the Year. It is the 11th coach of the year award for Swinney for his efforts in the 2015 season.
April 23, 2016 – For the sixth year in a row Clemson is ranked in the top 10 percent in the nation in terms of APR scores. It is the fifth year in a row Clemson is in the top 10 percent in APR scores and the top 25 of the final AP poll, the only school in the country that can make that claim.
April 28-30, 2016 – Clemson has nine players selected in the NFL draft, second most in the nation and second most in one draft in school history.
Oct. 1, 2016 – Clemson wins a meeting of top five teams in a 42-36 victory over No. 3 Louisville. The game would prove to be a meeting of the top two contenders for the Heisman trophy as Louisville’s Lamar Jackson and Clemson’s Deshaun Watson took their teams up and down the field. But the game’s biggest play proved to be a tackle at the two-yard line by Clemson’s Marcus Edmond in the final seconds of the game.
Nov. 26, 2016 – Clemson finishes the regular season with a 56-7 victory over rival South Carolina. It is the largest victory margin in history for any ACC team against an SEC team. Deshaun Watson throws six touchdown passes, three to Mike Williams, both Clemson records in the rivalry.
Dec. 3, 2016 – Clemson wins its second consecutive ACC title with a 42-35 victory over Virginia Tech in Orlando. It is the first time since the 1986-88 era that Clemson has won consecutive ACC titles.
Dec. 31, 2016 – In one of the most dominating performances in Clemson history, the Tigers defeated No. 2 Ohio State 31-0 in the College Football Playoff semifinals at the Fiesta Bowl in Arizona. It is the first time an Urban Meyer coached team has been shutout and the first time Ohio State has been shut out since 1993. It is the first time Clemson has defeated the No. 2 ranked team.
Jan. 9, 2017 – Clemson won its second national title in history and first in 35 years with a 35-31 win over No. 1 Alabama, who had entered the game with a 26-game winning streak. Hunter Renfrow scored the winning touchdown with one second remaining on a two-yard pass from Deshaun Watson. It is Clemson’s first win over the nation’s top-ranked team. It is the fifth consecutive year Clemson has won a bowl game over a coach who has previously won the national championship.
Jan. 10, 2017 – Clemson is the No. 1 ranked team in the final AP and USA Today polls. The Tigers achieved the championship by playing the nation’s toughest schedule. Six teams Clemson defeated are ranked in the final Top 25.
Jan. 16, 2017 – Dabo Swinney is the recipient of the Bear Bryant National Coach of the Year award for the second consecutive year. He is the first coach to win the award in consecutive years.
Feb. 1, 2017 – Clemson football program moves into its new state-of-the-art Reeves Football Facility. The facility is connected to the Poe Indoor Football Facility, giving Clemson one of the top facilities in the nation.
April 27, 2017 – Mike Williams and Deshaun Watson are both selected within the first 12 picks of the NFL draft. It is the first time Clemson has had two top 12 picks in the same draft and the second time in three years Clemson has had two first-round selections. It gives Swinney six first-round draft picks in four years.
June 12, 2017 – The Clemson football team goes to the White House and is honored by President Donald Trump for its national championship.
Sept. 9, 2017 – In a battle of outstanding defenses, Clemson defeated Auburn for the fourth time in a row by a score of 14-6. Brent Venables’ defense recorded 11 sacks, second most in school history and most against an FBS school. Austin Bryant led the way with four sacks, most in history by a Tiger against an SEC team. Clemson allowed -15 rushing yards and just 25 total yards in the second half against the only team to beat eventual national champion Alabama in 2017.
Sept. 16, 2017 – Clemson defeated No. 14 Louisville on the road 47-21 in one of the Tigers’ top all-around performances in recent years. Kelly Bryant had a career-high 316 passing yards and added 26 rushing yards, as Clemson gained 613 total yards. Defending Heisman Trophy winner Lamar Jackson had 381 total yards, but 200 came in the fourth quarter when the game had long been decided.
Sept. 30, 2017 – Clemson defeated No. 12 Virginia Tech 31-17 on the road. With the victory, Clemson became the first school in the history of the AP poll to beat three top-15 teams in the month of September. Dorian O’Daniel keyed the defense with a 22-yard interception return for a touchdown and was named national defensive player-of-the-week.
Nov. 11, 2017 – Clemson scored the last 14 points of the game to defeat Florida State 31-14 and clinch its third straight ACC Atlantic Division championship. It was the Tigers’ third straight win over Florida State, something Clemson had not done since 2005-07.
Nov. 25, 2017 – Clemson defeated rival South Carolina for the fourth straight year behind the receiving of Hunter Renfrow and a defense that allowed just 207 yards and 10 points. Renfrow had two receiving touchdowns, including a 61-yard catch, where he eluded the entire South Carolina defense.
Dec. 2, 2017 – Clemson won its third straight ACC title with a 38-3 win over No. 7 Miami (Fla.). It was the largest margin of victory in an ACC Championship Game and Clemson’s largest victory margin in any game against a ranked opponent. Kelly Bryant completed 15 straight passes at one point and finished 23-29 passing for 252 yards. He was also named the game’s MVP.
Sept. 29, 2018 – After a week in which Kelly Bryant elected to transfer after Trevor Lawrence was named the starting quarterback, Lawrence exited a game against Syracuse due to injury in the second quarter. Quarterback Chase Brice helped Clemson overcome a 10-point fourth quarter deficit in a 27-23 win, completing a fourth-and-six pass to Tee Higgins on the game-winning drive, leading to a game-winning touchdown run by Travis Etienne with 41 seconds remaining.
Dec. 1, 2018 – Travis Etienne scored on a 75-yard touchdown run on the game’s first play from scrimmage as Clemson blasted Pittsburgh 42-10 in the ACC Championship Game at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, N.C. Clemson became the first team in ACC history to win the conference outright in four straight seasons.
Dec. 4, 2018 – Christian Wilkins became the first recipient of the William V. Campbell Trophy in Clemson history, accepting the award known as the “Academic Heisman Trophy” from the National Football Foundation in New York.
Dec. 29, 2018 – Clemson appeared in the Cotton Bowl for the first time since Jan. 1, 1940. Clemson defeated Notre Dame 30-3 in a College Football Playoff semifinal game that represented the first matchup of undefeated teams in CFP history.
Jan. 7, 2019 – Clemson finished the first 15-0 season in major college football since 1897 with a 44-16 victory against top-ranked Alabama in the College Football Playoff National Championship Game at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif. The win was the 55th by Clemson’s 2018 senior class, tying for the most in college football history.
Jan. 9, 2019 – Head Coach Dabo Swinney became the first three-time winner in the history of the Paul “Bear” Bryant Award, collecting the honor in Houston, Texas. It was one of several coach-of-the-year honors earned by Swinney for the 2018 season, including ACC Coach-of-the-Year and the Woody Hayes Award from the Touchdown Club of Columbus (Ohio).
Jan. 14, 2019 – Members of Clemson’s 2018 national championship squad were honored by President Donald Trump during a visit to the White House.
April 25, 2019 – Clemson made history, becoming the first school to have three players selected as defensive linemen in the first round of an NFL draft. The Oakland Raiders selected Clelin Ferrell No. 4 overall, followed by the Miami Dolphins’ selection of Christian Wilkins at No. 13 and the New York Giants’ pick of Dexter Lawrence at No. 17. Six Tigers in all were selected in the draft in Nashville, Tenn.
Aug. 29, 2019 – On a Thursday night in Death Valley, Clemson hosted the first live football game ever aired on ACC Network, which launched a week earlier. In front of a new television audience and with a special edition of ESPN College GameDay on site from Memorial Stadium’s northeast corner, the Tigers steamrolled Georgia Tech 52-14 behind 205 rushing yards from Travis Etienne, including the longest run in Memorial Stadium history (90 yards).
Sept. 21, 2019 – Clemson defeated Charlotte 52-10. At halftime, parts of the movie “Safety” were filmed on the field with actors in Clemson and Florida Atlantic uniforms. The movie documented the life of former Tiger Ray Ray McElrathbey.
Sept. 28, 2019 – Clemson saved its undefeated regular season with a 21-20 win at North Carolina. Tied 14-14 in the fourth quarter, Clemson took the lead on a 38-yard Trevor Lawrence touchdown pass to Tee Higgins. The Tar Heels pulled within one with 1:17 remaining, but Clemson stopped a two-point attempt and recovered an onside kick attempt to preserve the victory.
Oct. 12, 2019 – Clemson won its 750th game in program history with a 45-14 home win against Florida State. Clemson became the 15th FBS program, and the first in the ACC, to total 750 wins all-time.
Nov. 9, 2019 – Clemson’s “Orange Britches” added another anecdote to their history in Raleigh. Clemson warmed up in all-white for a primetime game against NC State, but upon learning that Wake Forest had lost to Virginia Tech and a Clemson win that evening would clinch an ACC Atlantic Division title, Head Coach Dabo Swinney gathered his team at the end of warmups and hollered “get them orange pants on. Let’s go!” The players, who did not know the orange pants had traveled with the team, changed and led the Tigers to a 55-10 win.
Nov. 30, 2019 – Running back Travis Etienne scored two touchdowns in a 38-3 win at South Carolina, breaking ACC records for career touchdowns and career rushing touchdowns previously held by Pittsburgh’s James Conner.
Dec. 7, 2019 – Clemson scored an ACC Championship Game record 62 points in a 62-17 win over No. 22 Virginia in Charlotte. The win was the Tigers’ 19th ACC title (and 25th conference title overall) and made Clemson the first team in history to win five consecutive conference championship games.
Dec. 8, 2019 – In the midst of Clemson’s College Football Playoff Selection Show watch party, Matt Butkus, the son of Pro Football and College Football Hall of Famer Dick Butkus, arrived for a surprise presentation to award the 2019 Butkus Award to Isaiah Simmons as the nation’s top linebacker.
Dec. 28, 2019 – Clemson advanced to its fourth national championship game in five years in thrilling fashion, overcoming an early 16-0 deficit to defeat Ohio State 29-23 in the Fiesta Bowl. The 16-point comeback was Clemson fifth-largest comeback in school history and was secured when Nolan Turner recorded the Tigers’ second interception of Justin Fields (who had entered the game with only one interception on the season) in the endzone with 37 seconds to play.