Smith details ‘incredible opportunity’ to lead Clemson gymnastics

Amy Smith had a good thing going across the country. Previously the head gymnastics coach at Utah State, Smith most recently led the Aggies to consecutive top-25 finishes, the first time the program had accomplished that feat since 1998-99. They …

Amy Smith had a good thing going across the country.

Previously the head gymnastics coach at Utah State, Smith most recently led the Aggies to consecutive top-25 finishes, the first time the program had accomplished that feat since 1998-99. They posted their highest team score ever at an NCAA regional meet earlier this year and won the Mountain Rim Gymnastics Conference championship, the program’s first conference title since 2005.

But Smith said she’s always enjoyed doing things in her career that have never been done before. So a month after Utah State’s 2022 season ended in March, Smith accepted the job at Clemson, which has never competed in the sport. That will start happening during the 2023-24 academic year.

“When this opportunity presented itself and I started to look into it and saw the amazing athletic tradition, the amazing academics and then when I actually got out here and saw the area, I was like, ‘Are you kidding me?’” Smith said. “This is just an incredible opportunity. So I couldn’t pass it up.”

Smith is off and running on her new job. She’s already hired her associate head coach, Erik Lewis, and recently signed six transfers as part of Clemson’s first-ever gymnastics recruiting class, though she didn’t have to look far for any of them. All either coached with or competed for Smith at Utah State this past season.

As for how Smith is trying to sell recruits she’s not so familiar with on a startup program in the future, she said her message is simple.

“You look at this rich athletic tradition, incredible academics and then this beautiful area of South Carolina. And how exciting to make history,” Smith said. “This class that just signed? They’re already making history, and to be able to pave the way and be trailblazers on this, that’s not for everybody. But I’m going to find those kids that that excites them and they want to be a part of this. I literally get chills because I just love the icdea and the concept of that.”

Yet Smith doesn’t believe it’s going to take the Tigers all that long to become competitive thanks to the transfer portal. Having those more experienced gymnasts that followed her from Utah State, she said, should help expedite that process.

“I’ve got a senior, I’ve got a junior, and I’ve got four sophomores, so that really helps my roster in terms of padding it and getting a really nice supporting cast for them to work with,” Smith said. “On top of that, too, what I’m really excited about with them coming is expediting the culture. Those six know exactly what myself and associate head coach Erik Lewis (expect) and what goes and what doesn’t go.”

Smith said she hopes other schools that don’t currently have a gymnastics program follow Clemson’s lead in changing that. 

“It’s so exciting to go to a meet,” Smith said. “It’s not like the Olympics where it’s all quiet. It is loud, it is high-energy, and it is an experience. I’m so excited to bring that to Littlejohn (Coliseum), sell out and get those Clemson fans in there. It’s so different in person to watch it. And the athletes are phenomenal. What they do is just absolutely incredible.”

This Clemson coach is thankful for transfer portal

The NCAA’s one-time transfer rule has brought with it varying opinions from coaches and administrators amid the changing landscape of college athletics, but one coach in charge of starting a program at Clemson is grateful it’s around. College …

The NCAA’s one-time transfer rule has brought with it varying opinions from coaches and administrators amid the changing landscape of college athletics, but one coach in charge of starting a program at Clemson is grateful it’s around.

College sports’ governing body adopted new legislation in April 2021 allowing student-athletes to transfer to another four-year school and be immediately eligible once during their collegiate careers. Previous transfer rules required athletes to sit out a year before being eligible for competition at their new school.

Amy Smith is glad that’s no longer the case. Smith was hired in April as the first-ever coach of Clemson’s women’s gymnastics program, which will begin competing during the 2023-24 academic year. When that time comes, Smith said the transfer rule will help her piece together the kind of roster that can compete immediately.

“I think if this opportunity would have presented itself five years ago, it would’ve been a different story,” Smith recently told The Clemson Insider. “I couldn’t say we’re going to come out of the gates really strong, and I really do feel like we can come out of the gates strong due to the transfer portal.”

Smith has already benefited from the portal by bringing in some gymnasts she’s familiar with. Previously the head coach at Utah State for five seasons, Smith recently inked her inaugural signing class at Clemson, which consisted of six transfers that competed for her last season at USU.

The portal could lead to even more experienced gymnasts who may be searching for a fresh start elsewhere to give Clemson a look. Smith said that’s made her more confident in her program’s potential early as she puts together her first roster.

“Having the foundation of those six (signees), and other programs having teams that have large rosters due to COVID,” Smith said. “That’s kind of a little sliver lining of COVID, too, is kind of seeing really talented gymnasts that aren’t getting to compete on other teams that would come into the portal and be like, ‘Oh man, I could come into Clemson in ‘24 and get out of the gates really strong.’

“Five years ago, the way recruiting was, we were recruiting eighth-graders, so the landscape of coming into this was completely bare. And that’s not the case now.”

Photo courtesy of Clemson Athletics

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Clemson names first gymnastics head coach

Clemson Director of Athletics Graham Neff named Amy Smith Head Coach of the newly-formed women’s gymnastics program on Tuesday. Smith, a UCLA graduate, All-American and National Champion, has spent the past five seasons as the head coach at Utah …

Clemson Director of Athletics Graham Neff named Amy Smith Head Coach of the newly-formed women’s gymnastics program on Tuesday. Smith, a UCLA graduate, All-American and National Champion, has spent the past five seasons as the head coach at Utah State. Smith has more than 20 years of experience coaching collegiate gymnastics, which includes stops at North Carolina, UCLA, Missouri, Florida and Kentucky.

The Aggies have finished in the top 25 in consecutive seasons, the first time the program has accomplished the feat since 1998-99. Her 2022 team finished 23rd nationally, the highest among non-Power Five programs, and ranked 14th nationally on balance beam and 21st in floor exercise. The Aggies set a program record for the highest team score at an NCAA regional meet, and brought a conference title back to Logan, Utah for the first time since 2005.

Prior to her time at Utah State, she spent five seasons at North Carolina as an assistant coach and assistant head coach, which culminated in earning 2017 East Atlantic Gymnastics League Assistant Coach of the Year honors. During her stint at UCLA as an assistant coach, the Bruins had a third consecutive top-three finish at the 2012 NCAA Championships.

Smith was an assistant coach at Missouri from 2007-11 and helped guide the Tigers to their first-ever NCAA Championship appearance in 2010. Smith was a volunteer assistant coach at Florida from 2003-06, where she became an established choreographer, specializing in floor exercise. During her time with the Gators, Smith choreographed routines for six All-Americans. Smith also served as Kentucky’s choreographer from 2003-05.

She earned first-team All-American honors on both vault and floor in 1997, and also captured a Pac-10 Conference title on floor and an NCAA West Regional title on vault on the way to the 1997 Team National Championship. Smith was a team captain in both 1996 and 1997.

Smith started her athletic career at Oklahoma, winning the Big Eight vault title.

Director of Athletics Graham Neff:

“We’re fired up to have Amy Smith lead our women’s gymnastics program. She understands what it takes to win a national championship, and her experience within the ACC, SEC and PAC-12 really stand out. Amy knows college gymnastics inside and out, and has demonstrated the ability to help student-athletes achieve both in and out of the gym. We are attempting to build this program the right way, and Amy and our administration share a vision for how great Clemson Gymnastics can be, and that she can help create a strong culture. We had an unbelievable level of interest in this position and program, and we can’t wait to see Littlejohn packed for our first event in 2024.”

Head Coach Amy Smith:

“This is an absolute dream come true – to have the trust to start a program of this caliber is an absolute honor. I would like to thank President Clements, Graham Neff, Stephanie Ellison Johnson, and everyone who was part of the interview process here at Clemson. Everywhere I turned there was somebody telling me what an incredibly special place this is and everyone I met absolutely backed that up. The sense of family, being “all in,” and absolutely wanting to do this the right way was incredibly apparent and invigorating through the process. I cannot wait to get started building this program – the level of support and the buzz about Clemson Gymnastics is already off the charts and I cannot wait to keep that rolling and build on that momentum. Additionally, it is beyond cool to be a part of the inaugural ACC Gymnastics group – It is so exciting for collegiate gymnastics to bring another Power 5 conference into the mix.”

–Photo and press release courtesy of Clemson Athletics 

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