Punting competition a balancing act for Potter

The tattoo serves as a constant reminder of where B.T. Potter ultimately wants to take his career. Running down the inside of the left calf of Clemson’s veteran specialist are the words “Don’t let your dreams die.” Potter said he often gets …

The tattoo serves as a constant reminder of where B.T. Potter ultimately wants to take his career.

Running down the inside of the left calf of Clemson’s veteran specialist are the words “Don’t let your dreams die.” Potter said he often gets questions about the location of the tattoo considered he’s a right-leg kicker, but there’s a specific reason for the placement.

“If I got it on my right leg, it would read up instead of reading down, so I figured I’d get it there (on my left leg),” Potter said. “Just a reminder to myself that things might get tough, but I’ve always had this dream since I was kid.”

That dream is the NFL, which Potter could have a crack at next year once his fifth and final season at Clemson comes to an end. The Tigers’ kicker opted to put those aspirations off one more year to return to Clemson, where his second senior season could come with more responsibilities now that he finds himself also competing to handle the punting duties.

For Potter, it’s making for a balancing act between the future and present.

On one hand, adding more versatility to his game could make him a more appealing specialist at the next level. NFL teams rarely spend draft picks on kickers and punters, so combining the two would maximize the chances of Potter’s dream being realized. He used former Texas kicker Cameron Dicker as an example. Dicker, who spent most of his career with the Longhorns as a placekicker, signed with the Los Angeles Rams as a punter after going undrafted this spring.

Dicker was cut by the Rams earlier this week, but being able to do both got Dicker’s foot – er, leg – in the door.

“It’s pretty cool to see (punting) is what got him to the league and helped him get a spot on the team,” Potter said. “It’s pretty important.”

But Potter also wants to maintain his status as one of the ACC’s top placekickers. A Lou Groza Award semifinalist in 2020, Potter is coming off his best season as a Tiger last year after converting a career-high 80.8% of his field goals. It earned his second-team all-ACC honors.

Potter was thrust into the punting competition during the spring following Will Spiers’ departure. He also handles kickoffs, so Potter said the spring game was the first time he had done all three in a game since his prep days at South Pointe High School.

“And I was like, ‘Man, my leg. I’ve really got to take care of it,’” Potter said. “I can’t kick into the net as much if I do all three during the game. I really have to think about preparing. You’ve got to know if this is a punting situation or a field-goal situation and just knowing the difference in the swings and how to switch between the two.”

Assistant coach Mike Reed, in his first year coordinating the special teams, said it’s been important to keep Potter on a pitch count during preseason camp in order to keep his leg fresh, which has also given the coaching staff more opportunities to evaluate the other two candidates for the punter job, Aidan Swanson and true freshman Jack Smith.

Potter will handle all three if that’s the way things play out. Ideally, though, Potter acknowledged it would be better if one of them won that job.

“That would be great,” Potter said. “I love to compete, but at the end of the day, I think that would help my leg stay fresh.”

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Reed asked how confident he’d be in Clemson’s punters, if the season kicked off tomorrow

The first day of fall camp was a rough one in Clemson’s competition to replace Will Spiers as its next full-time punter, with redshirt junior Aidan Swanson, senior B.T. Potter and true freshman Jack Smith struggling during punting drills and head …

The first day of fall camp was a rough one in Clemson’s competition to replace Will Spiers as its next full-time punter, with redshirt junior Aidan Swanson, senior B.T. Potter and true freshman Jack Smith struggling during punting drills and head coach Dabo Swinney calling it maybe “the worst punting drill I’ve ever seen in my life.”

However, while the punters received mixed reviews through the first week of preseason camp, their response since that first practice has been much more positive and Swinney said the group bounced back with solid performances the next two days.

Swinney had his highest praise for the group’s performance following Clemson’s fifth practice on Aug. 10, saying that day “was incredible” and the Tigers “went from no contest to now we’ve got a three-horse race” between Swanson, Potter and Smith, who “won the day” that day and “was just bombing it” according to Swinney.

With all that said, how confident would Clemson special teams coordinator Mike Reed feel about his punters if the season kicked off tomorrow?

Reed was asked that question Tuesday evening while meeting with reporters.

“Well, right now, until game week, it’s going to be a competition,” he said. “I don’t want anybody to get into a situation where they’re comfortable. So, right down to the last bit is when we’ll make that decision.”

Swinney has bragged on Swanson in particular, saying recently that “he has been awesome,” and Reed was asked if he’s seen good things from Swanson as well.

Swanson said his goal is to average at least 40 yards per punt. He’s punted eight times for Clemson for an average of 38.1 yards to this point, but the lefty showed what he’s truly capable of during the spring game when he averaged 45.5 yards on six punts.

“He’s had a heck of a camp,” Reed said. “The young man’s come out here and he’s really matured and he’s put in the work and it shows, and it’s good. It’s his time. It’s time to produce.”

Another candidate turns punting competition into ‘three-horse race’

As Clemson continues to search for the answer to its most pressing positional question, head coach Dabo Swinney indicated another viable candidate has entered the mix as Will Spiers’ potential successor. The punters have received mixed reviews …

As Clemson continues to search for the answer to its most pressing positional question, head coach Dabo Swinney indicated another viable candidate has entered the mix as Will Spiers’ potential successor.

The punters have received mixed reviews through the first week of preseason camp. Swinney was critical of the first day of competition at the position, calling the Tigers’ first practice perhaps “the worst punt drill I’ve ever seen in my life.” But Swinney said the group, led by Aidan Swanson and B.T. Potter, bounced back with solid performances the next two days.

Swinney had his highest praise for the group’s performance following the Tigers’ fifth practice Wednesday. True freshman Jack Smith was the standout, giving Swinney and special-teams coach Mike Reed something to think about.

“Today was incredible,” Swinney said. “We went from no contest to now we’ve got a three-horse race. And I love it,” Swinney said. “Jack Smith won the day today. He was just bombing it. He looked like the guy we brought in here that won the scholarship.”

Swinney said Swanson and Potter have also been more consistent since that opening practice.

“Aidan has been awesome,” Swinney said. “He’s had two good day in a row, and B.T. is just steady. So I’m pretty encouraged with what I’ve seen.”

It’s a positive development at the position that Swinney has the most concern about with a little more than three weeks left before the Tigers’ Labor Day opener against Georgia Tech.

Dear Old Clemson has added to the store posters signed by all 20 members of Clemson’s 2022 football class.

Now there is a new way you can support Clemson student-athletes. Purchase collectibles from Dear Old Clemson and the proceeds with go to support Clemson student-athletes. Visit Dear Old Clemson to find out how you can help!

The Newcomer Files: Jack Smith

Clemson signed 21 players as part of its 2022 recruiting class, some of whom still have yet to make it to campus. Nine signees went through spring practice as early enrollees while the rest, including transfer Hunter Johnson, will arrive on campus …

Clemson signed 21 players as part of its 2022 recruiting class, some of whom still have yet to make it to campus.

Nine signees went through spring practice as early enrollees while the rest, including transfer Hunter Johnson, will arrive on campus this summer. The Clemson Insider is taking a closer look at each newcomer and the likelihood of him contributing immediately this fall based on development and positional need.

Next up is Jack Smith.

Position: Punter

Height: 6-foot-5

Weight: 225 pounds

Ranking: 3 stars (247Sports Composite)

Previous school: Saraland (Alabama) High

Early enrollee? Yes

The skinny: Smith played multiple positions in high school, including quarterback and tight end. But Smith’s primary contributions came as a four-year punter for Saraland. Ranked the nation’s fifth-best punter by Kohl’s Kicking in the 2022 recruiting cycle, Smith is one of two specialists that signed with the Tigers in the class. He averaged 38 yards per punt as a senior.

Clemson has an immediate need at the position with Will Spiers having exhausted his eligibility after last season, but the Tigers are looking at either Aidan Swanson or veteran placekicker B.T. Potter, who did both this spring, to be Spiers’ replacement. Clemson coach Dabo Swinney didn’t mention Smith when discussing the punting competition this spring, an indication the true freshman could be headed for a redshirt season.

Potter putting his best foot forward … as a punter

B.T. Potter is preparing for his final season at Clemson, one in which pulling double duty isn’t out of the question for the Tigers’ fifth-year specialist. Potter has been one of the ACC’s top placekickers for the last couple of seasons. He had the …

B.T. Potter is preparing for his final season at Clemson, one in which pulling double duty isn’t out of the question for the Tigers’ fifth-year specialist.

Potter has been one of the ACC’s top placekickers for the last couple of seasons. He had the best season of his career to this point this past season, connecting on a career-high 80.8% of his field goals (minimum 21 attempts).

But Clemson needs a new punter with Will Spiers having exhausted his eligibility. Junior Aidan Swanson has been biding his time behind Spiers during his four years with the Tigers, but Potter has also taken on punting duties this spring.

Clemson’s last two practices were moved indoors because of inclement weather, so Clemson coach Dabo Swinney said he’s eager to get his punters back outdoors to further properly evaluate them when the Tigers’ spring season continues Friday. But Swinney said his veteran kicker has stood out with his punting so far this spring.

“B.T. has been amazing with his kicks,” Swinney said. “Amazing with how he’s hitting the ball right now. Really proud of him, but he’s punting the ball very well. That’s been kind of a pleasant surprise this spring.”

Swinney said Swanson is also doing “a nice job” while true freshman Jack Smith has joined the punting competition as a mid-year enrollee. Swinney said he would ideally like to have different specialists handling the kicking and punting, but he said Potter hasn’t had any issues handling both this spring. Consistency, Swinney said, is the only requirement for the job.

“I just want the best buy,” Swinney said. “Whoever gets the results.”

He’s never punted in a game for Clemson, but if Potter were to win the job, it wouldn’t be the first time a Tigers specialist handled both. Perhaps nobody did it better than former All-American Chris Gardocki, who became the first player in NCAA history to finish in the top 10 nationally in placekicking and punting in the same season twice.

Potter is throwing his leg in the ring.

“He’s trying to be Gardocki I guess,” Swinney said. “He wants to compete, and he’s been really good.”

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3 pressing offseason questions for Clemson’s special teams

With the offseason a couple of weeks old now, The Clemson Insider is pondering some of the most pressing on-field questions for Clemson’s football program as the Tigers wipe the slate clean and start fresh in 2022. Clemson is coming off yet another …

With the offseason a couple of weeks old now, The Clemson Insider is pondering some of the most pressing on-field questions for Clemson’s football program as the Tigers wipe the slate clean and start fresh in 2022.

Clemson is coming off yet another 10-win season, but there’s still some uncertainty and room for improvement in all facets of the Tigers’ game heading into Dabo Swinney’s 14th season at the helm. After probing the offense and defense, here are some inquiries for the special teams.

Who’s the next punter?

The special teams unit got a major lift when veteran placekicker B.T. Potter decided to return for a sixth season, but Will Spiers is leaving after five years with program, meaning Clemson will be breaking in a new punter next season.

Who will that be?

Aidan Swanson is the betting favorite. The third-year sophomore has gotten some limited game reps during his time with the Tigers. He punted three times this season and is averaging 38.1 yards on eight punts so far in his career.

Clemson will need Swanson to take another step in his development is he’s going to be the guy, but newcomer Jack Smith could also get a look. A member of the Tigers’ 2022 recruiting class, Smith is coming to Clemson from Saraland (Alabama) High, where he was a four-year starter at punter and impressive enough for the Tigers to bring him in as a scholarship player.

Smith was ranked the nation’s No. 5 punter by Kohl’s Kicking.

Can the punt return game be improved?

Senior receiver Will Brown did his primary job filling in as the Tigers’ punt returner in the second half of the season by securing each catch and avoiding any muffs. But Clemson didn’t get much more than that.

Brown averaged just 2.1 yards on the 12 punts he got a chance to return as Clemson averaged just 4.4 yards per punt return as a team — 5 yards fewer than was it averaged in that department a season ago.

Of course, Brown, whose longest return went for 17 yards, stepped into that role for an injured Will Taylor, who provided the punt return game with a spark before tearing his ACL in the fifth game of the season against Boston College. Taylor averaged 10.7 yards per return and nearly made a house call against South Carolina State, breaking off a 51-yarder in that game, easily the Tigers’ longest punt return of the season.

But will Clemson keep Taylor as its primary punt returner coming off knee reconstruction surgery? Or might the Tigers opt for someone else — running back Will Shipley, perhaps? — in that role moving forward?

Whichever direction the Tigers decide to go here, they could use a little more after the catch.

Can Will Shipley become the next dual-role standout?

Speaking of Shipley, he didn’t just excel as a running back in Year 1 for the Tigers.

Yes, the former five-star signee stepped in and became Clemson’s leading rusher by the end of his freshman season, but he was also the primary return man on kickoffs. Shipley was pretty good at it, too, averaging 27.1 yards on his 14 kickoff returns.

About the only thing the speedy Shipley didn’t do was return one for a touchdown, though he came close against Louisville with a 75-yarder in that game. Shipley could be the latest running back at Clemson to double as a major threat in the return game, too.

Travis Etienne also returned kicks during his record-setting career. Of course, Shipley’s position coach, College Football Hall of Famer C.J. Spiller, is the poster boy for mastering both roles at Clemson, setting the record at the time (which he still shares) for the most kickoff returns for touchdowns in NCAA history when he played.

Fellow running back Kobe Pace also dropped deep on kickoffs and returned four of them this season. But if this season was any indication, Shipley is emerging as the Tigers’ next big-play weapon in that role.

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