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In a new ranking, college football fans named Dabo Swinney the third most hated head coach. For anyone who has followed him at Clemson, that label will not come as a surprise. At ACC Kickoff, he chose to talk less about the list and more about how he handles love and hate.

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“You get a lot of love, you get a lot of hate in this world, especially this journey that we are on,” Dabo Swinney said in an appearance at ACC Kickoff. “I’ve had enough for a lifetime.”

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He made it clear that public opinion does not set the tone for his life anymore.

“All of that stuff is circumstantial,” he said. “It’s based on: if you do this, then that. If this, then that. Man, if we got that one more yard, they love you, but you came up one yard short, they hate you, and you know that’s all circumstantial.”

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For Swinney, the fix is not trying to win people over. It is holding on to what he says does not change.

“That’s again why I put my life on a foundation of faith because God’s promises, God’s peace and grace, and that never change,” he added. “That’s not circumstantial. So that’s how I live my life.”

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Swinney landed at No. 3 on RotoWire’s list, behind Lane Kiffin and Deion Sanders. The outlet blended social media comments with a nationwide survey to gauge how fans across the country view each coach. RotoWire noted that Clemson’s long run of success brings automatic scrutiny, and Swinney’s blunt views on the transfer portal and NIL make him an easy target. In a sport where perception shapes recruiting and donor support, a “most hated” label is more than noise for a program trying to climb back.

“He’s won big and then sermonizes about how he did it,” RotoWire wrote. “The anti-transfer-portal, anti-NIL stances land as preachy in a sport that has moved on without him. Not every villain is loud.”

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To supporters, he’s defending principles that helped build a championship program. To critics, he’s resisting a sport that has already moved on. That tug-of-war has followed Swinney as the sport has changed fast around him. Players switch schools more often, money plays a bigger role, and plenty of coaches chase quick fixes. 

Swinney has not really taken that path. He still talks about building players over time, earning trust, and creating a strong program instead of patching holes every offseason. He’s made a few adjustments, but the way he sees the game hasn’t really changed. That’s why people have strong opinions, and he’s well aware of that. Trying to win everyone over has never been part of the job in his eyes. His words at ACC Kickoff made one thing clear: the criticism does not move him the way it once might have.

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As Clemson heads into 2026, the question is not whether the noise will stop, but whether his message can steady a program under pressure.

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Khosalu Puro

3,643 Articles

Khosalu Puro is a Primetime College Football Writer at EssentiallySports, keeping a close watch on everything from locker room buzz to end zone drama. Her journalism career began with four relentless years covering regional football circuits, where she honed her eye for team dynamics on the field. At EssentiallySports, she took that foundation national, leading coverage across the college football space. For the past two seasons, she has anchored ES Marquee Saturdays, managing live weekend coverage while sharing her expertise with the team’s emerging writers. She also plays a key role in the CFB Pro Writer Program, a unique initiative connecting editorial storytelling with fan-driven content. Khosalu ensures her experience is passed on to the rest of the team as well.

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Himanga Mahanta

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