Note: The following appears in the Miami gameday football program.
It was the summer of 2004, and Clemson camper and now Wide Receivers Coach Tyler Grisham, a rising senior in high school from the Birmingham, Ala. area with no Division I college offers, shocked those in attendance with his 40-yard dash time.
All of the stopwatches were under 4.5, including some at 4.44, a time the Clemson roster of wide receivers could not match, with the exception of Airese Currie.
“Coach (Tommy) Bowden and the other coaches on staff at the time were big on having the campers run the 40,” recalled Dabo Swinney, who was in his second year as wide receivers coach on Bowden’s staff.
“When he ran that first 40, the coaches couldn’t believe it, so they made him run it again. When he was sub 4.5 the second time, they had him run it again. On the third run, a lot of coaches came over to see it, including Coach Bowden.
“He ran sub 4.5 on all three runs.”
Those might have been the most important sprints of Grisham’s football career…even more important than any run during a game in his Tiger career.
“I had known him since he was in second grade,” said Swinney. “I met his dad through my brother when I was an assistant coach at Alabama, and Tyler came to the Alabama summer camp every year. He was always the smallest kid in camp, but he was the smartest, the quickest and the most locked-in kid we had.
“When I came to Clemson, there was Tyler in camp as a high school player. He was still small, but he was also still the quickest and the smartest.
“I had been telling Coach Bowden this kid could play. But he had no other offers, so it was a tough sell. But when Coach Bowden saw him run, everything changed.
“By the end of camp, Coach Bowden said we could offer him. We did in his office, and he committed on the spot.”
Grisham recalled it was a very easy decision.
“I had known Coach Swinney since I was a kid. My dad used to sit in his seats at Alabama games.
“I knew he was a great man and phenomenal coach. People trusted in him and believed in him. Plus, he was going to be my position coach. I knew I would get the holistic development from him.”
Grisham played 11 of the 12 games as a freshman in 2005, missing only the South Carolina contest with a back injury. He backed up Chansi Stuckey, who is now on the staff, most of the year.
Grisham came back to play 28 snaps in the bowl game against Colorado and had two receptions for 34 yards, helping the Tigers to a victory that moved Clemson into the top 25 of the final AP poll.
He started six games in 2006 and finished the season with 25 catches for 264 yards and three touchdowns. He was the third-leading receiver on the 2006 team that featured the running game of James Davis and C.J. Spiller.
Grisham had a breakout junior season when he joined forces with Aaron Kelly to form one of the top receiving combinations in the ACC. In 13 games (eight starts), Grisham had 60 catches, seventh in the ACC, for 653 yards. He also amassed 11 receptions for 100 yards against Virginia Tech and nine catches for 100 yards against Wake Forest.
Swinney always impressed upon his wide receivers the importance of blocking to the position. Grisham had one of the top blocking seasons ever by a Clemson wideout in 2007, as he finished with 68.5 knockdown blocks, more than any other non-offensive lineman. He also had 15 in one game against Maryland.
“Tyler was such a good tactician,” said Swinney. “He was precise in running his routes, had great ball skills and was a terrific blocker even though he was not very big.”
The Tigers finished the 2007 season ranked in the top 25 once again.