‘Doesn’t Have That Money’ — Clemson’s $57M Dabo Swinney Dilemma Grows Uncomfortable

Following a 2025 campaign that sputtered to a 7-6 finish and a Pinstripe Bowl loss to Penn State, the air around Death Valley has grown thick.  The sentiment and the sense of being stuck are growing steadily around the Clemson Tigers and Dabo Swinney.

Now, it seems that Stewart Mandel of The Athletic has revealed what is making the Tigers and Swinney’s relationship untenable.

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Why Clemson’s Financial Reality Complicates Dabo Swinney’s Future

Mandel appeared on the latest episode of “The Audible” and noted that the divorce many fans are starting to whisper about is currently a financial impossibility.

“I don’t think that’s the case [that he’s fired]. As of last year, he had a $60 million buyout. Clemson doesn’t have that type of money. Um, but it is starting to get uncomfortable,” Mandel said.

Swinney signed a 10-year, $115 million behemoth contract in 2022. In 2026, the price tag to move on from the two-time national champion remains $57 million. So, despite being in an era of skyrocketing NIL demands and facility arms races, even a blue-blood like Clemson cannot simply set $57 million on fire to facilitate a coaching change.

What makes this situation unique, and uniquely painful, is the psychological rift Mandel highlights. Clemson fans aren’t ungrateful. But they are forced to watch the sport evolve while their coach remains a staunch traditionalist.

“I think a lot of Clemson fans are torn between appreciating the unprecedented success he brought them and realizing that, you know, it may be that the time has passed for him. Um, I don’t see him as somebody who would just step aside because in his mind, they’re doing fine, right?” Mandel added.

After a 2025 season where Clemson looked physically outmatched by teams that aggressively supplemented their rosters through the portal, Swinney did finally take 10 transfers entering the 2026 season, including impact safeties Jerome Carter III and Corey Myrick. But the move felt more like a concession than a conviction.

“They had a rough year. You heard him tout all of their accomplishments there. I think he probably is more apt to compare how they’re doing now relative to how they were doing before he got there,” Mandel concluded.

So, the dilemma is that Clemson cannot afford to fire him, and Swinney has no intention of leaving. He is a coach who has earned the right to go out on his own terms, but those terms are increasingly at odds with the reality of modern football.

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