Clemson Tigers

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Clemson Tigers
University Clemson University
Conference Atlantic Coast Conference
NCAA Division I
Athletics director Terry Don Philips
Location Clemson, SC
Varsity teams 19
Football stadium Memorial Stadium
Basketball arena Littlejohn Coliseum
Mascot The Tiger
Nickname Tigers
Fight song Tiger Rag
Colors Orange and Purple

             

Homepage www.clemsontigers.com

The Clemson Tigers are any team that represents Clemson University as a member of the NCAA's Division I or in the Atlantic Division of the Atlantic Coast Conference.

In 1896, football coach Walter Riggs brought with him from Auburn University the Tiger nickname. The Clemson Tigers field nineteen athletic teams. In men's sports there are: football, basketball, baseball, soccer, tennis, golf, track and field (indoor and outdoor), cross-country, and swimming and diving. For women's sports, there are: basketball, soccer, tennis, volleyball, track and field (indoor and outdoor), cross-country, swimming and diving, and rowing. The South Carolina Gamecocks are Clemson's in-state athletic rival. The two institutions compete against each other in many sports, but the annual football game receives the most attention.

Contents

[edit] Tiger Paw logo

The Tiger Paw logo was introduced at a press conference on July 21, 1970, and was developed by Helen Weaver of Henderson Advertising in Greenville, South Carolina, from a mold of a Bengal Tiger in the St. Louis Zoo. The tell-tale hook at the bottom of the paw is a sign that this is the official licensed trademark for the university[1]. The SC Beta Chapter of the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity also has retained the exclusive rights to paint the logo on many of the highways that lead into Clemson.

[edit] Facilities

The most prominent of Clemson's facilities is Memorial Stadium, Frank Howard Field, and home to the Clemson University men's football team. Memorial Stadium is also known by its nickname, "Death Valley".

The men's and women's basketball teams play at Littlejohn Coliseum, an arena offering over 11,000 seats. The Coliseum also acts as a venue for a variety of campus functions throughout the year including concerts and graduation ceremonies.

Recently renovated Doug Kingsmore Stadium is home to Clemson's men's baseball team. The men's and women's soccer teams play their home games at historic Riggs Field.

Other home venues for these sports are: Walker Golf Course, Hoke Sloan Tennis Center, Jervey Gym, Rock Norman Track Complex, and McHugh Natatorium. Women's rowing holds home events on nearby Lake Hartwell.

[edit] Football

float

The Tigers football program has won 59.0% of its games through the 2006 season, placing it 37th on the all-time winning percentage list. Clemson is also currently the leader among ACC schools for conference championships at 13, having last won a title in 1991.[2] Clemson also won two Southern Conference titles before joining the ACC. The program has participated in 30 bowl games over the years, winning 15. The 1981 squad, led by Head Coach Danny Ford, became the first athletic team in school history to win a national championship. Clemson defeated Nebraska 22-15 in the Orange Bowl in Miami, Florida to win the 1981 NCAA Football National Championship. Stars of the game included Homer Jordan (QB) and Perry Tuttle (WR). Clemson finished the year 12-0 and ranked #1 in the Associated Press and Coaches polls. Some of the most notable coaching names in Clemson football history are John Heisman (also coached at Akron, Auburn, Georgia Tech, Penn, Washington & Jefferson, and Rice; the Heisman Trophy is named after him), Jess Neely, Frank Howard (whom the playing field at Death Valley is named after), and Danny Ford. Tommy Bowden, son of famed Florida State University coach Bobby Bowden, is the current head football coach.

2007 Clemson Tigers football team
2006 Clemson Tigers football team
1998 Clemson Tigers football team
1981 Clemson Tigers football team (National Champions)

Before each home game, the team ends pre-game warm ups and proceeds to the locker room. With 5 minutes to go before game time, 2 buses leave the street behind the West Endzone both full of Clemson football players. The buses pull to a stop at the gate in front of The Hill, and the Tigers gather at the top, where each player proceeds to rub "Howard's Rock" (which is an imported rock from Death Valley, California that was presented to Frank Howard in 1967). While Tiger Rag is played and a cannon sounds, the Tigers run down the hill onto the field in front of over 81,000 screaming fans. This tradition has been dubbed "the most exciting 25 seconds in college football" by sportscaster Brent Musburger[3].

NCAA National Champions 1981
ACC Champions 1956, 1958, 1959, 1965 (t), 1966, 1967, 1978, 1981, 1982, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1991
Southern Conference Champions 1940, 1948
Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association Champions 1900, 1902 (t)
Bowl victories 1940 Cotton Bowl, 1949 Gator Bowl, 1951 Orange Bowl, 1959 Bluebonnet Bowl, 1978 Gator Bowl, 1982 Orange Bowl, 1986 Gator Bowl, 1988 Florida Citrus Bowl, 1989 Citrus Bowl, 1989 Gator Bowl, 1991 Hall of Fame Bowl, 1993 Peach Bowl, 2001 Humanitarian Bowl, 2004 Peach Bowl, 2005 Champs Sports Bowl

[edit] Graduation Rates

Year of Report Graduation Rate, Male Students Graduation Rate, Football 4-Class Average, Male Students 4-Class Average, Football Graduation Success Rate, Football Source
2000 68% 56% 68% 56% [4]
2001 66% 55% 67% 57% [5]
2002 65% 29% 67% 47% [6]
2003 67% 78% 66% 53% [7]
2004 68% 45% 66% 51% [8]
2005 69% 48% 67% 49% 94% [9]
2006 72% 70% 69% 59% 77% [10]
2007 70% 67% 70% 56% 75% [11]
2008 74% 41% 71% 55% 68% [12]

For the graduating classes of 2000-2008, according to statistics reported to the NCAA[13], the graduation rate for male students at Clemson has increased from an average of about 68% in 2000 to about 71% in 2008, while the graduation rate for football student-athletes at Clemson has decreased slightly from an average of about 56% to about 55%. In other words, the gap between football players and other male students has increased from 12% to 16% over the past 9 years.

The four-year average graduating rate for male students at Clemson has stayed steady at an average of about 68%, while the four-year average graduating rate for football student-athletes at Clemson has stayed steady at an average of about 54%.

Beginning in 2005, the NCAA Graduation Success Rate (GSR) was developed in response to complaints from college and university presidents. "The GSR measures graduation rates at Division I institutions and includes students transferring into the institutions. The GSR also allows institutions to subtract student-athletes who leave their institutions prior to graduation as long as they would have been academically eligible to compete had they remained."[14]

The GSR data for the Clemson football team in 2005 was 94%, in 2006 was 77%, in 2007 was 75%, and was 68% in 2008.

[edit] Basketball

The Clemson Men's Basketball team is currently coached by head coach Oliver Purnell. Purnell has guided the Tigers to higher win totals each season that he has been the Tigers head coach. The Tigers were defeated 86-81 by the University of North Carolina in the 2008 Atlantic Coast Conference Championship game on March 16, 2008[15]. Accomplishments include:

NCAA Tournament Appearances 1980, 1987, 1989, 1990*, 1996, 1997, 1998, 2008
NCAA Elite 8 1980
NCAA Sweet 16 1990*, 1997
NIT Appearances 1975, 1979, 1981, 1982, 1985, 1986, 1988, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1999, 2005, 2006, 2007
NIT Runner-Up 1999, 2007
Southern Conference Champions 1939
ACC Regular Season Champions 1990 (not officially recognized by the conference)[16][17]

*vacated by NCAA [18]

The Clemson Women's Basketball team is currently coached by head coach Cristy McKinney. In 2008, the team made it to the ACC tournament, where it defeated N.C. State in the first round, but lost to eventual champion North Carolina in the quarterfinals. Accomplishments include:

NCAA Tournament Appearances 1982, 1988-1994, 1996-2002
NCAA Elite 8 1991
NCAA Sweet 16 1989, 1990, 1999
AIAW Tournament Appearance 1981
WNIT Tournament Appearances 1980, 1984 (3rd Place), 1995, 2004
ACC Champions 1996, 1999
ACC Regular Season Champions 1981

[edit] Baseball

As of 2008, the Tiger baseball team has posted a combined 30 ACC regular season and tournament championships (most in the conference), 34 NCAA Tournament appearances, 16 NCAA Regional Titles, 3 NCAA Super Regional Titles, and 11 College World Series appearances. Much of the baseball program's success occurred under Bill Wilhelm during his 35 seasons as Clemson's head coach. Jack Leggett has been the Tigers' head coach since 1994.

CWS Appearances 1958, 1959, 1976, 1977, 1980, 1991, 1995, 1996, 2000, 2002, 2006
ACC Champions 1954, 1958, 1959, 1967, 1976, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1989, 1991, 1993, 1994, 2006
ACC Regular Season Champions 1973, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1981, 1982, 1984, 1985, 1988, 1991, 1992, 1994, 1995, 2006
ACC Atlantic Division Champions 2006
Southern Conference Champions 1947

*ACC Tournament began in 1973 to determine conference champion

*No conference tournament was held in 1979 due to academic conflict, Clemson awarded title for regular season finish

[edit] Soccer

The men's soccer team was Clemson's second sports program to win a national championship, winning the NCAA Tournament in 1984 and again in 1987.[19][20] In their 26 appearances in the NCAA tournament, the men's soccer team garnered a runner-up finish in 1979 and has appeared in the NCAA Final Four seven times, with the 2005 squad being the most recent team to accomplish that feat.[21] In addition to their NCAA titles, the men's program has won 16 combined ACC regular season and tournament titles, with the last one coming in the 2001 ACC Tournament.[citation needed] The Tigers have known only two coaches in their history: Dr. I.M. Ibrahim (1967-1994, 388-100-31 career record) and Trevor Adair (1995-present, 50-48-10 record at Clemson).

NCAA Champions 1984, 1987
NCAA Runner-up 1979
NCAA Final Four 1973, 1976, 1978, 2005
NCAA Tournament Appearances 1972-1979, 1981-1985, 1987, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1995, 1997, 1998, 2000-2003, 2005, 2006
ACC Champions 1972, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1981, 1982(t), 1985, 1998, 2001
ACC Regular Season Champions 1990, 1993, 1998
Herman Trophy Winners 2 (Bruce Murray - 1987, Wojtek Krakowiak - 1998)

Women's soccer became a varsity sport at Clemson in 1994.

NCAA Tournament Appearances 1994-2007
ACC Regular Season Champions 2000

[edit] Golf

The Tiger golf team have a tradition of being among the best in the ACC and the nation, having won several ACC titles and regularly qualifying for the NCAA Tournament. In 2003, Clemson defeated runner-up Oklahoma State to win its first National Championship in golf and the 4th overall for the school.[citation needed] In addition to that victory, Clemson also won the ACC and NCAA East Regional titles that year, making the Tigers the first program in NCAA history to win its conference, regional, and national championship tournaments in the same year.[citation needed] Clemson also has the most regional titles among NCAA Division I schools, having won 7 since the NCAA adopted the regional tournament format in 1989.[citation needed]

NCAA Team Champions 2003
NCAA Individual Champions 1 (Charles Warren - 1997)
NCAA Team Runner-Up 1998, 2001
NCAA Individual Runner-up 2 (Charles Warren - 1998, Kyle Stanley - 2007)
NCAA Team 3rd Place 1989, 1997, 2002
NCAA East Regional Champions 1993, 1994, 1995, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004
NCAA Individual Regional Champions 2 (Mark Swygert - 1994, D.J. Trahan - 2002)
All-Americans 51
ACC Team Champions 1982, 1987, 1988, 1990(t), 1997, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2004
ACC Individual Champions 7
All-ACC 69

[edit] Other Sports

Men's Track and Field
NCAA Indoor Team Runner-Up 1992, 1993
NCAA Indoor Team 3rd Place 1998(t), 1999
NCAA Individual/Relay Champions 8 (Indoor)

3 (Outdoor)

All-Americans 69 (Indoor)

99 (Outdoor)

NCAA East Region Individual/Relay Champions (Outdoor) 4
NCAA All-East Region (Outdoor) 18
ACC Team Indoor Champions 1987, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002
ACC Team Outdoor Champions 1980, 1982, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1997, 1998, 2000, 2001, 2004
ACC Individual/Relay Champions 112 (Indoor)

178 (Outdoor)

All-ACC 174 (Indoor)

227 (Outdoor)

Women's Track and Field
NCAA Indoor 3rd Place 2001 (t)
NCAA Individual/Relay Champions 5 (Indoor)

2 (Outdoor)

All-Americans 30 (Indoor)

39 (Outdoor)

NCAA All-East Region (Outdoor) 8
ACC Indoor Team Champions 1992
ACC Outdoor Champions 1991, 1999
ACC Individual/Relay Champions 47 (Indoor)

70 (Outdoor)

All-ACC 96 (Indoor)

117 (Outdoor)

Men's Cross-Country
NCAA Region Champions 1983
NCAA Individual Region Champions 4
All-Americans 11
ACC Team Champions 1978, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1987, 1988
ACC Individual Champions 11
All-ACC 35
Women's Cross-Country
NCAA Region Champions 1990
All-Americans 9
ACC Team Champions 1986
ACC Individual Champions 2
All-ACC 22
Men's Tennis
NCAA Tournament Appearances 1979-1989, 1992, 1996-2000, 2003-2007
NCAA Individual Runner-up 1 (Lawson Duncan - 1984)
All-Americans 29
ACC Champions 1969, 1980, 1981, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1997
ACC Regular Season Champions 1969, 1980, 1981, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1997
ACC Single Flight Champions 43
ACC Doubles Flight Champions 25
SIAA Single Flight Champions 1
SIAA Doubles Flight Champions 1
Women's Tennis
NCAA Final Four 2004, 2005
NCAA Tournament Appearances 1982-1984, 1986, 1993, 1994, 1996, 1998, 2000, 2002-2008
AIAW Tournament Appearances 1978, 1980, 1981
NCAA Individual Runner-up 1 (Gigi Fernandez - 1983)
All-Americans 24
ACC Champions 1981, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 2004, 2008
ACC Regular Season Champions 1978, 1979, 1980, 1982, 1983, 1985, 1986, 2004, 2007
ACC Single Flight Champions 40
ACC Doubles Flight Champions 22
Women's Volleyball
ACC Champions 1997, 2007
ACC Regular Season Champions 1999
NCAA Tournament 1993, 1994, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2007
  • ACC Championship decided by tournament until 2004; regular season finish has determined ACC champion since 2005 season
Men's Swimming and Diving
ACC Team Champions 1986
ACC Individual/Relay Champions 47
All-ACC 43
SoCon Champions 1939
Women's Swimming and Diving
ACC Team Champions 1987, 1988, 1989, 1997
ACC Individual/Relay Champions 76
All-ACC 89

The Rugby Club is also very successful, and was founded in 1967.

[edit] Discontinued Sports

Wrestling - discontinued after 1995 due to Title IX

Wrestling Discountinued after 1995 (Title IX)
ACC Regular Season Champions 1991
ACC Individual Champions 28
NCAA Individual Champions Noel Loban (1980)

Sam Henson (1993, 1994)

NCAA All-Americans 8

Boxing - discontinued after 1948 due to violent nature of sport

Boxing Discontinued after 1948 (violent nature of sport)
SoCon Team Champions 1938
Socon Individual Champions 3

[edit] Olympic Medalists

Baseball

  • Mike Milchin (1988, United States, Pitcher, Gold)
  • Kris Benson (1996, United States, Pitcher, Bronze)
  • Billy Koch (1996, United States, Pitcher, Bronze)
  • Matt LeCroy (1996, United States, Pitcher, Bronze)

Swimming

  • Michele Richardson (1984, United States, 800 free, Silver)
  • Mitzi Kremer (1988, United States, 400 free relay, Bronze)

Tennis

  • Gigi Fernandez (1992 and 1996, United States, Doubles, Gold)

Track

  • Desai Williams (1984, Canada, Relay, Bronze)
  • Tony Sharpe (1984, Canada, Relay, Bronze)
  • Mark McCoy (1992, Canada, 110 Hurdles, Gold)
  • Kim Graham (1996, United States, 4x100 Relay, Gold)
  • Carlton Chambers (1996, Canada, 4x100 Relay, Gold)
  • Shawn Crawford (2004, United States, 200m Gold and 4x100 Relay Silver)
  • Michelle Burgher (2004, Jamaica, 4x400 Relay, Bronze)

Wrestling

  • Noel Loban (1984, Great Britain, Bronze)
  • Sam Henson (2000, United States, Silver)

[edit] Carolina-Clemson Rivalry

[edit] Other Rivalries

Clemson's intra-conference football rivalries include Georgia Tech (GT leads 46-24-2), NC State (Clemson leads 48-27-1 in the Textile Bowl), and Florida State (FSU leads 15-6 in what has become known as the Bowden Bowl, which pits father and FSU coach, Bobby Bowden, against son and Clemson coach, Tommy Bowden). Since the Bowden Bowl began, FSU leads 5-4, but Clemson has won 3 straight and 4 of the last 5, including a 27-20 win in Tallahassee in 2006 which broke a 17-year losing streak in Doak Campbell Stadium, and a 24-18 win in Clemson's Death Valley to begin the 2007 season. The 2007 match-up between Clemson and Florida State was predicted to be the #18 game to watch in 2007 by SI.com's "Top 20 Games To Watch In 2007" list. [22]

Clemson has a lesser rivalry with the University of Georgia, born because of the two institutions' close proximity (roughly 90 miles apart). Clemson and Georgia first met in 1897, only the second year the Tigers fielded a football team. The rivalry was at its height in the 1980s, but the two programs have not played each other since 2003. The athletic departments recently added games to be played in 2013 at Clemson and 2014 in Athens. Georgia leads the football series 41-17-4, winning the past five meetings in a row after last losing to the Tigers in 1990.[23]

[edit] Fight Song

Clemson's fight song is the Tiger Rag, the "Song that Shakes the Southland", a variation of the song originally performed by the Original Dixieland Jazz Band. The song is played at all Clemson sporting events, particularly following scores or big plays, and during the "Most Exciting 25 Seconds in College Football". The song has no lyrics save for the spell-out of "Clemson" at the end.

Also Clemson has the cheer "C-L-E-M in Cadence, Count!" which goes: 1-2-3-4 1-2-3-4 C-L-E-M-S-O-N T-I-G-E-R-S Fight Tigers Fight Tigers Fight Fight Fight (originally, "1-2-3-4, 1-2-3-4, C-L-E-M-S-O-N, T-I-G-E-R-S, Fight Tigers, Fight Dammit, Fight, Fight, Fight") which is screamed at all the athletic events. There are two schools of thought on whether there are two fights at the end, or three. Traditionalists only do two, as this was originally a military jody call, a marching chant, but most fans have learned it with three fights. Most of Tiger Band, however, continues to use only two. However, the Clemson University Drumline is against this traditionalist mindset, and therefore uses 3 fights like most fans do.

[edit] National headline

In May 2007, an ESPN report and AP wire article alleged that Clemson requires female athletes on scholarship to sign a document acknowledging that they can lose their scholarships should they become pregnant; critics suggest that this forces pregnant athletes into abortion.[24][25] Clemson University has denied the accuracy of the reports generating the criticism. Specifically, Loreto Jackson, Director of Student-Athlete Performance, states that the university does not have a policy in which grant-in-aid money can be affected by an athlete's pregnancy, and that the university educates athletes that a scholarship will not be taken away because of a pregnancy.[26]

[edit] See also

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ Clemson University : Visual Identity Guidelines : Tiger Paw
  2. ^ ACC College Football Champions, Atlantic Coast Conference
  3. ^ Clemson University : About Clemson : Traditions
  4. ^ 2000 NCAA Report on the Federal Graduation-Rates Data
  5. ^ 2001 NCAA Report on the Federal Graduation-Rates Data for Clemson
  6. ^ 2002 NCAA Report on the Federal Graduation-Rates Data for Clemson
  7. ^ 2003 NCAA Report on the Federal Graduation-Rates Data for Clemson
  8. ^ 2004 NCAA Report on the Federal Graduation-Rates Data for Clemson
  9. ^ 2005 NCAA Report on the Federal Graduation-Rates Data for Clemson
  10. ^ 2006 NCAA Report on the Federal Graduation-Rates Data for Clemson
  11. ^ 2007 NCAA Report on the Federal Graduation-Rates Data for Clemson
  12. ^ 2008 NCAA Report on the Federal Graduation-Rates Data for Clemson
  13. ^ NCAA Report on the Federal Graduation-Rates Data
  14. ^ NCAA Division I Graduation Success Rate
  15. ^ UNC earns a record 17th ACC title in 86-81 win over Clemson
  16. ^ Basketball; Well-Matched Teams To Square Off in East
  17. ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Atlantic_Coast_Conference_men's_basketball_regular_season_champions
  18. ^ NCAA Major Infractions
  19. ^ 1984 National Championship (Soccer)
  20. ^ 1987 National Championship (Soccer)
  21. ^ Tigers Advance to Final Four with 1-0 Win over Creighton
  22. ^ Top 20 Games To Watch In 2007. SI.com. Retrieved on 30 September 2007.
  23. ^ Georgia Game by Game against Opponents
  24. ^ Bluffton Today: Pregnant athletes at Clemson
  25. ^ ESPN.com: Athletes often forced into heartbreaking decisions
  26. ^ Anderson Independent-Mail: Clemson criticizes ESPN story on student-athlete abortions

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ Clemson University : Visual Identity Guidelines : Tiger Paw
  2. ^ ACC College Football Champions, Atlantic Coast Conference
  3. ^ Clemson University : About Clemson : Traditions
  4. ^ 2000 NCAA Report on the Federal Graduation-Rates Data
  5. ^ 2001 NCAA Report on the Federal Graduation-Rates Data for Clemson
  6. ^ 2002 NCAA Report on the Federal Graduation-Rates Data for Clemson
  7. ^ 2003 NCAA Report on the Federal Graduation-Rates Data for Clemson
  8. ^ 2004 NCAA Report on the Federal Graduation-Rates Data for Clemson
  9. ^ 2005 NCAA Report on the Federal Graduation-Rates Data for Clemson
  10. ^ 2006 NCAA Report on the Federal Graduation-Rates Data for Clemson
  11. ^ 2007 NCAA Report on the Federal Graduation-Rates Data for Clemson
  12. ^ 2008 NCAA Report on the Federal Graduation-Rates Data for Clemson
  13. ^ NCAA Report on the Federal Graduation-Rates Data
  14. ^ NCAA Division I Graduation Success Rate
  15. ^ UNC earns a record 17th ACC title in 86-81 win over Clemson
  16. ^ Basketball; Well-Matched Teams To Square Off in East
  17. ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Atlantic_Coast_Conference_men's_basketball_regular_season_champions
  18. ^ NCAA Major Infractions
  19. ^ 1984 National Championship (Soccer)
  20. ^ 1987 National Championship (Soccer)
  21. ^ Tigers Advance to Final Four with 1-0 Win over Creighton
  22. ^ Top 20 Games To Watch In 2007. SI.com. Retrieved on 30 September 2007.
  23. ^ Georgia Game by Game against Opponents
  24. ^ Bluffton Today: Pregnant athletes at Clemson
  25. ^ ESPN.com: Athletes often forced into heartbreaking decisions
  26. ^ Anderson Independent-Mail: Clemson criticizes ESPN story on student-athlete abortions
Languages