Note: The following appears in the Pittsburgh gameday football program.
One of the most underrated statistics in football is field position. Three (Clemson, Louisiana State, Ohio State) of the four teams in the College Football Playoff last season were in the top 10 in average defensive starting field position according to Coaches | By The Numbers, a statistical platform dedicated to college football analysis. Starting field position is largely controlled by two positions that are also highly underrated…placekicker and punter. Will Spiers knows this well.
“I’m trying to go out there and set up the defense in the best situation possible. Whatever is called upon me, I’m going to do. Hitting one 60+ yards or pinning one inside the 20 is great.”
This season, Spiers has excelled booting the football. He is on pace to shatter his career-best mark of 42.3 yards per punt, which he set last season. He could also set the single-season school record for punting average, which has stood for 30 years courtesy of Chris Gardocki, who punted for an average of 44.5 yards in 1990.
Spiers has already set the record for career starts at punter, besting Cole Chason’s record of 46 from 2003-06. Other records within reach or already broken include career punts (224 by Chason), career punts of 50+ yards (44 by Dale Hatcher from 1981-84), career punts inside the 20 (69 by Hatcher) and career punting yards (8,816 by Kevin Laird from 1995-98).
Spiers was not always a punter. He was a quarterback in high school and now serves as the team’s emergency quarterback, a position that has taken on new meaning in the era of COVID-19. He took reps at Georgia Tech, completing 2-3 passes for 13 yards.
During Trevor Lawrence’s bout with the disease, there was talk amongst fans that Spiers may have to take snaps under center. However, D.J. Uiagalelei filled the role quite well.
Spiers, the son of Bill Spiers and the grandson of Bud Spiers, grew up loving Clemson, attending games since he was 10 years old. Bud led Clemson to its first College World Series as a starting shortstop in 1958, leading the squad in home runs, hits, RBIs, total bases and slugging percentage.
His sons, Bill and Michael, also played baseball for Clemson, the former being a first-team All-American by Sporting News in 1987 and the latter being the MVP of the 1991 ACC Tournament. All three were coached by the legendary Bill Wilhelm.
Spiers’ father spent 13 years in Major League Baseball, the last four of which Will got to see in person as his father played for the Houston Astros.
“One of my first memories is going into the Astros’ clubhouse,” said #48. “I had my little uniform on, trying to look like the team. I would go in there and try to grab some Bazooka bubble gum.”
Will is still an Astro fan to this day. His cousin, Carson, who is Michael’s son, signed with the Cincinnati Reds this offseason after a spectacular career with Clemson as the team’s closer.
Spiers has one more family member with ties to the program. His sister, Ashley, is an administrative assistant in Allen N. Reeves Football Complex.