Hybrid Tennessee TE attracting interest from Clemson

The Clemson Insider recently spoke with a fast-rising tight end prospect that’s spoken with Clemson tight ends coach/passing game coordinator a few times now, as well as having some members of Clemson’s coaching staff follow him on Twitter over the …

The Clemson Insider recently spoke with a fast-rising tight end prospect that’s spoken with Clemson tight ends coach/passing game coordinator a few times now, as well as having some members of Clemson’s coaching staff follow him on Twitter over the past couple of weeks.

Richardson followed Blackman (Murfreesboro, TN.) three-star tight end Ben Marshall on Twitter over a month ago and reached out to him shortly thereafter.

“He’s just been keeping in touch with me, asking me how I’m doing, invited me to camp this summer and he just invited me to the spring game,” Marshall said. “I haven’t talked to him on the phone at all, but he’s talked to my coach and been texting me a little bit, but I feel like he really wants me to go up to camp, so we can work together. He seems like a really nice guy and that he kind of wants me.”

Right now, Marshall — a 6-foot-5, 220-pound junior in the 2023 class — doesn’t have anything scheduled for next weekend, so he’s aiming to try and make it to Memorial Stadium for Clemson’s annual spring game on Saturday, April 9.

Even if he doesn’t make it to campus for the spring game, Marshall indicated that he will “for sure” be participating in the Dabo Swinney Camp this summer and have the chance to be coached up by Richardson.

What does it mean for the Volunteer State native to be receiving interest from Clemson?

“Clemson for years now has been a big-time school,” he said, “they won multiple national championships. And I’ve also looked it up and they don’t offer too many guys. They offer the guys they think will make them better and help them get to a national championship. I looked it up on 247 and they’ve only offered (three) tight ends. So, the fact that he’s talking to me is a really big interest to me.”

The Tigers have only dispensed offers to a trio of tight ends — Duce Robinson, Jaxon Howard and Reid Mikeska — in the 2023 class.

With Marshall potentially being a future recipient of a coveted Clemson offer, we wanted to find out more about his game,

“I would say I’m more of a hybrid tight end,” Marshall said. “I’ll go out, I’ll run routes and I can catch the ball, but also get down on the line and I’ll block. I think I’m a guy who can really make plays for anyone and make a play anytime.”

Marshall started to receive attention from college programs around the country after they got a hold of junior year film. While he picked up offers from Eastern Kentucky and Memphis in October 2021, he has since added offers from schools like Ole Miss, N.C. State, Liberty, Coastal Carolina, Indiana, Vanderbilt, Pitt and West Virginia, to name a few.

He hardly had any film during his sophomore year, so this past season is when he finally broke out. Marshall recorded around 850 receiving yards and 10 touchdowns across his junior campaign.

“I’d say hard work always pays off and I feel like once I started to get all those offers it was overwhelming,” Marshall said, “but as time has gone by, I’ve gotten used to it and I try not to let it stress me out as much and just do what’s best for me.”

— Photo for this article courtesy of Ben Marshall

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Tigers’ passing game looks to regain confidence

After not living up to expectations last season, Clemson’s passing attack is looking to regain its confidence.

In a season full of inconsistency, injuries and question marks, the Tigers’ offense failed to deliver to its preseason expectations.

Now, after throwing for 191.2 passing yards per game last season, Clemson’s passing attack is looking toward reviving itself in the fall.

“We got to get some confidence in the passing game too, and we lost our confidence last year,” Clemson passing game coordinator Kyle Richardson said on Wednesday. “Once we lost it, it was hard to get it back, so we’ve made some tweaks.”

Richardson, who is taking over for Brandon Streeter as the team’s passing game coordinator, said the Tigers need to get back to the basics and put the ball in the playmakers’ hands.

Whether it be freshman wide receiver Adam Randall, sophomore Beaux Collins or running back Will Shipley, Clemson’s offense has the weapons to establish a revitalized passing attack.

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After nearly splitting, Richardson back coaching at Clemson with a pressing task

Kyle Richardson’s patience was wearing thin. Before becoming Clemson’s tight ends coach late last year, Richardson spent six years in an off-field role on Dabo Swinney’s staff. His heart, though, was on it. A decade ago, Richardson was in the midst …

Kyle Richardson’s patience was wearing thin.

Before becoming Clemson’s tight ends coach late last year, Richardson spent six years in an off-field role on Dabo Swinney’s staff. His heart, though, was on it.

A decade ago, Richardson was in the midst of building an in-state prep power at Northwestern High, overseeing a program that won a pair Class 4A-Division II state titles during his five-year tenure. The latter of the two, which doubled as Richardson’s final game as the Trojans’ head coach, came via a 50-point thrashing of Lexington inside South Carolina’s Williams-Brice Stadium to cap the 2015 season.

“I love high school football and love coaching high school football,” Richardson said. “It truly was a passion of mine and still is.”

An opportunity to join Clemson’s staff following that season was one Richardson considered too good to pass up. His support staff roles with the Tigers have included director of player development and senior offensive assistant, but Richardson got the coaching itch again in December. And he was ready to scratch it.

“I was done not coaching, and I was done not making an impact on these kids,” said Richardson, who’s also had a cup of coffee as an assistant coach at Southeastern Louisiana. “I was ready to go get it done back at the high school level.”

Without getting into specifics, Richardson said there was one in-state head coaching job in particular that he had his eye on. He told his wife it was one he wanted to pursue if it came open, which happened in early December.

That was around the same time Virginia was courting Tony Elliott, then Clemson’s offensive coordinator. A day or two later, Richardson said, the Cavaliers made Elliott’s hire as their head coach official. Richardson got a call soon thereafter from Swinney, who moved him on the field to coach tight ends, the position Elliott had been responsible for.

The rest is history.

“To me, that was kind of a God wink,” Richardson said.

Richardson smiled as he thought about the way things have panned out, including his recent back surgery that kept him from immediately getting back on the field following his promotion. It required a few more weeks of patience, but he felt good enough by the end of December to join the team at the Cheez-It Bowl in Orlando to start his new gig, which he’s gotten more familiar with this spring.

It also includes the responsibilities of passing-game coordinator, perhaps the most intriguing new title for Richardson given his background and the way things went in that department for Clemson a season ago. The Tigers were far from the explosive unit many had grown accustomed to seeing from the offense in recent years, particularly through the air. Clemson finished 103rd nationally in passing yards and 112th in completion percentage while tying Duke for the third-fewest pass plays of at least 20 yards in the ACC.

Richardson is tasked with helping turn that around.

“He’s been a coordinator. He’s called plays. He’s coached college ball,” Swinney said. “He’s just got a good perspective. He’s always been involved, but now he’s just in a little bit more of a leadership position. That’s been fun.”

Richardson is known for creating prolific passing attacks, something he did at Northwestern as a coordinator before taking over as the head coach. There, he helped tutor some of the top quarterbacks to ever play for the Trojans, including former Power Five signal callers Justin Worley (Tennessee) and Mason Rudolph (Oklahoma State), who’s now in the NFL with the Pittsburgh Steelers. Each threw more than 60 touchdown passes during their senior seasons.

Swinney and Richardson both described the changes being implemented into Clemson’s offense this spring as tweaks rather than revamping the passing game. Richardson said a full cast of characters, which the Tigers didn’t have last season with injuries piling up at receiver and along the offensive line, would help, too.

But Richardson and new offensive coordinator Brandon Streeter have introduced some new passing concepts, though that doesn’t necessarily mean the playbook is getting thicker. In fact, less could be more as the coaches work to build confidence back in quarterback D.J. Uiagalelei and his receivers.

“We lost our confidence last year, and once we lost it, it was hard to get it back,” Richardson said. “I think the biggest thing is me and Streeter sitting down together and kind of talking about, all right, where do we want to go in the future with this? We don’t want to throw it all out the window, but the flip side of it is where do we want to go and grow this thing?

“I think the biggest thing is let’s get back to the basics, where the basics were we put the ball in playmakers’ hands in space and they went and made plays in the passing game. The second thing was maybe we need to simplify some things. Maybe some things have kind of stacked on top of each other year after year after year, and then all of a sudden simple concepts become complex concepts.”

Richardson acknowledged the running game and its extensions will need to help out if Clemson is going to maximize what it wants to do through the air. Like any offense, the Tigers’ goal is consistency regardless of how they choose to attack.

“I’ve got the pass-game coordinator title, but that means nothing,” Richardson said. “It really doesn’t because the pass game means nothing if you don’t have the run game. And the run game is not much if you don’t have a pass game, and if you don’t have that screen game to keep that defense from pinning their ears back and keeping them honest, it’s not going to be a consistent offense. And at the end of the day, that’s what you’re looking for.”

Eleven spring practices in, Richardson said it’s a work in progress, and not just for the players. Strange as it may sound, he’s still getting used to being back in his comfort zone.

“For me to be able to get back on the field and to be a part of coaching a position, have position meetings and have a position, it’s been a lot different,” Richardson said. “You don’t forget how to coach, but you’ve got to kind of get back on the bike and start pedaling and get used to some things.”

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Defense ‘set the tone’ in Clemson’s second spring scrimmage

Clemson had its second scrimmage of the spring Wednesday with the Tigers’ defense producing most of the highlights. “I thought the defense set the tone today,” Clemson coach Dabo Swinney said. Specifically, Swinney said the secondary came up with a …

Clemson had its second scrimmage of the spring Wednesday with the Tigers’ defense producing most of the highlights.

“I thought the defense set the tone today,” Clemson coach Dabo Swinney said.

Specifically, Swinney said the secondary came up with a couple of turnovers despite being down in numbers because of injuries. Cornerback Fred Davis, who’s been limited for most of the spring, has been back at full speed this week, but Sheridan Jones (groin) and true freshman Jeadyn Lukus (shoulder surgery) both missed the scrimmage, leaving Clemson with three available scholarship corners for the time being (Malcolm Greene is out this spring recovering from shoulder surgery).

But the Tigers’ defensive backs still came up with some interceptions, Swinney said.

“They got their hands on the ball, and we have not intercepted the ball really all spring,” Swinney said. “We’ve had some takeaways on some turnovers, but today they had two picks. That was really good to see.”

Though Swinney didn’t reveal who threw the interceptions, the turnovers came early during the closed scrimmage inside Memorial Stadium. But Swinney said the offense picked it up after a slow start, particularly quarterbacks D.J. Uiagalelei and Cade Klubnik.

“He was like 12 of 20 or something like that, but he had a couple of balls we should have made (plays on),” Swinney said of Uiagalelei. “But he manages things well. He really understands.”

Said passing-game coordinator Kyle Richardson, “They’ve had some really good days, and they’ve had some days where we’ve got to go fix some stuff. The great thing about both of those guys is they just come to work every day.”

The offense also played without a handful of linemen who are dealing with mononucleosis, including right tackle Walker Parks. Swinney said Mitchell Mayes slid back over from guard to take most of the reps in Parks’ place. Receiver Beaux Collins was also held out of the scrimmage after tweaking a hamstring during spring break, Swinney said.

“We’re just thin in some areas, so it is what it is there,” he said. “Just trying to evaluate the guys that we need to evaluate and not getting frustrated with a walk-on linebacker playing corner.”

Swinney said the Tigers also mixed in some situational work, including goal-line scenarios and two-minute drills.

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4-star TE: Clemson ‘everything I thought it was going to be and more’

The Clemson Insider caught up with an elite North Carolina-based tight end, who was on campus two weekends ago. Charlotte (N.C.) Catholic four-star Jack Larsen – a 6-foot-3, 220-pound sophomore in the class of 2024 – was at Clemson for an unofficial …

The Clemson Insider caught up with an elite North Carolina-based tight end, who was on campus two weekends ago.

Charlotte (N.C.) Catholic four-star Jack Larsen — a  6-foot-3, 220-pound sophomore in the class of 2024 – was at Clemson for an unofficial visit on Saturday, March 12

“It was awesome,” Larsen said. “I had a blast. The coaches were awesome. This was my first time there and unsurprisingly so, it was awesome. It was everything I thought it was going to be and more.”

What did Larsen hear from Kyle Richardson, while he was on campus?

“He’s gonna keep recruiting me and keep coming down to my school,” Larsen said. “I think I’m gonna make it up there in the summer, probably end up camping there, but I’ll definitely be back there in the summer. He was talking about next time I come up, really honing in on how the tight end is used in the offense and stuff like that. First time down, just checking out everything and seeing everything for the first time.”

This wasn’t Larsen’s first time meeting Clemson’s tight ends coach and passing game coordinator. As TCI previously reported, Richardson stopped by Charlotte Catholic at the end of the live period in January to check in on Larsen, who is one of the program’s highly touted prospects.

However, this time around allowed him to spend an extended period of time with Richardson. Larsen indicated that his favorite part of his visit was getting a chance to meet with Richardson in a one-on-one setting for the first time and getting to talk to him outside of phone calls.

“He’s a great individual, a great person,” Larsen said of Richardson. “It was cool to talk some football with him, but also just talk about life and stuff that’s going on. He’s just a great guy and a great coach.”

Larsen believes there’s something to be said about how Clemson prioritizes relationships before it pulls the trigger on an offer.

“I’m definitely gonna keep going back up there as much as I can and definitely go there in the summer and see what happens,” he said.

— Photo courtesy of Jack Larsen

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Clemson visit ‘definitely’ exceeded expectations of newly offered Texas TE

An elite tight end prospect from Texas visited Clemson for the first time this past Saturday and came away from the visit very impressed and with an offer in hand. Bridgeland High School (Cypress, Texas) four-star Reid Mikeska was among the recruits …

An elite tight end prospect from Texas visited Clemson for the first time this past Saturday and came away from the visit very impressed and with an offer in hand.

Bridgeland High School (Cypress, Texas) four-star Reid Mikeska was among the recruits on campus for the Tigers’ “spring elite day” — their second junior day of the year.

“It was great,” Mikeska told The Clemson Insider regarding his weekend trip to Clemson. “I loved it and had a great time. It was amazing and definitely exceeded my expectations.”

Mikeska went up to Clemson this past weekend — not knowing if we would get an offer or not — because as he understands it, getting an offer from the Tigers is very rare and they take their time with the whole recruiting process.

He went through the whole junior day festivities and at the very end, Dabo Swinney took Mikeska into his office and offered him in person. He couldn’t remember his exact reaction, but Mikeska recalls himself spacing out.

“It was incredible,” he said of receiving an offer from Clemson’s head coach. “It didn’t even feel real. It was surreal and it’s probably one of the coolest moments of my life. It meant a lot to me and my family for him to do that because it was late at night and it was on his time, so it was really cool.”

Mikeska only got to see about 30 minutes of practice, but from what he saw, he was impressed with the individual drills that Clemson’s tight ends participated in. He was also impressed with how Kyle Richardson coached his position group and how the practice itself was scheduled.

While he had previously developed a relationship with Richardson, this was Mikeska’s first time meeting Clemson’s tight ends coach in person.

“He seemed like a great coach, who has good relationships with his players,” he said of Richardson. “He’s even better in person and he’s a great guy with great energy. You can tell that he cares about his players and the relationships with his players.”

The favorite part of his visit to campus was, of course, getting the offer, but Mikeska also loved touring the athletic facilities and meeting all the coaches, including Swinney.

Mikeska, a top Texas tight end recruit, was born in the Carolinas and has a cousin that goes to Clemson. Needless to say, this past weekend’s visit left him concluding that Clemson is probably the most family-oriented team he’s been around.

“Coach Swinney takes care of his players,” he said, “even long after football.”

Now that Mikeska has the offer he was working towards, where do the Tigers currently stand in his recruitment?

“Easily one of my type schools, for sure,” Mikeska said. “They definitely helped themselves with this visit. They were already one of my top schools without offering me and I saw the campus and they offered. So, that moves them up even higher.

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Clemson starting to show interest in fast-rising Carolinas tight end

Kyle Richardson reached out to a North Carolina-based tight end over a week ago. Since then, Clemson’s tight ends coach has kept in constant contact with Jayvontay Conner and is looking to get the three-star out of East Forsyth (Kernersville, N.C.) …

Kyle Richardson reached out to a North Carolina-based tight end over a week ago.

Since then, Clemson’s tight ends coach has kept in constant contact with Jayvontay Conner and is looking to get the three-star out of East Forsyth (Kernersville, N.C.) on campus sooner than later.

Up until recently, Conner played his high school ball at Opelika (Ala.) High School, but has since moved to the Tar Heel State.

“From Clemson, I’ve been hearing a few things,” Conner told The Clemson Insider. “(Coach Richardson) wants me to come on campus and camp for them. I’m gonna look into that and everything. We talked and he liked my film and he texted me and we’ve been texting back and forth.”

This spring, Conner only plans on visiting schools that he has an offer from. Hence, why he may wait until the summertime to pay Richardson and Clemson a visit.

Conner — a 6-4, 230-pound junior — has started to see his recruitment take off over the last couple of weeks. Since the start of February, he’s earned offers from Coastal Carolina, App State, Southern Miss, Tulane, Charlotte, Alabama A&M, Oklahoma State, UCF, USF, James Madison, Tennessee State, Duke, South Alabama, Vanderbilt, Memphis, Georgia Southern, Louisville, West Virginia, Marshall, Minnesota, Toledo and Pitt.

He opened his recruitment back up in January after he decommitted from Alabama State. In a matter of a month, Conner has become one of the fastest-rising tight end prospects in the nation, which has allowed him to earn some attention as of late from the Tigers.

“It means a lot,” he said of hearing from a school like Clemson. “It really shows me that a lot of my hard work is paying off. Even the offers I’m getting is showing me that my hard work is paying off and everything. I’m very excited about it. I’m just very blessed to be in the position that I’m in right now.”

Obviously, Conner would love to have a Clemson offer in hand, but he’s appreciative of Richardson wanting to get to know him first, so they can further build up their relationship with one another.

“I respect the fact that he wants to get to know me,” Conner added. “That just really shows that they’re just not offering everybody. They’re really taking time and putting thought into it.”

What does Richardson like about Conner’s game?

“Basically, he was just telling me that he wanted me to come camp, so he could work for me and everything,” Conner said. “Just basically meet the staff and just hang out with him throughout the day.”

As for Conner and his game, he describes himself as a really big target on the field with a big catch radius. He catches just about everything that comes his way and he loves the blocking part of the tight end position.

Conner said that a lot of people like to compare him to former University of Florida standout and current Atlanta Falcons tight end Kyle Pitts. It’s because of his size and the fact that he also has a wide receiver skillset too. He also doesn’t want you to forget that blocking is a very critical aspect of his game.

As he prepares for his senior season, Conner has been doing some heavy weightlifting. At the end of his junior season, he weighed 220-pounds. Now, he’s up to 230, as he looks to maintain the same speed or even get faster.

“I’m just trying to become the best player that I can,” he said.

Conner is a natural-born leader. He plans on being the leader that everyone needs, so he can help East Forsyth earn a ring in his final season of high school football. He wants to be the best player and best leader on the field, which he indicated is the mindset for his upcoming senior season.

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As passing-game coordinator, Richardson working to help ‘put the best plan together’

Kyle Richardson suddenly finds himself near the forefront. One of Clemson’s new on-field assistants, Richardson spent the last six years working quietly in the background as a support staffer and senior offensive assistant with the program. Now, …

Kyle Richardson suddenly finds himself near the forefront.

One of Clemson’s new on-field assistants, Richardson spent the last six years working quietly in the background as a support staffer and senior offensive assistant with the program. Now, with Tony Elliott off to Virginia, he’ll coach Clemson’s tight ends.

But that’s not all.

Clemson coach Dabo Swinney promoted Brandon Streeter to be Elliott’s successor as the Tigers’ offensive coordinator. Streeter will continue coaching quarterbacks, but the passing-game coordinator role he also held previously has been passed to Richardson, who oversaw some of South Carolina’s most prolific high school offenses during a highly successful five-year tenure as the head coach at Rock Hill’s Northwestern High before joining Clemson’s staff in 2016.

“Obviously my background is an offensive background, and it’s a passing background being at Northwestern and having those quarterbacks we had and the receivers we had,” Richardson said earlier this month during Clemson’s national signing day radio show. “We kind of threw it around. And Coach (Swinney) knows that, and that’s kind of where that came from.” 

As Clemson’s passing-game coordinator, Richardson has no small task in trying to rejuvenate an offense that was statistically as subdued as any the Tigers have had under Swinney.

With a first-year starting quarterback in D.J. Uiagalelei, Clemson ranked 103rd nationally this past season in passing (191.2 yards per game) and matched Boston College and Syracuse for the fewest plays of 20 yards or more in the ACC. Uiagalelei finished with the second-lowest completion rate of any starter in the league (55.6%), and no receiver had more than three touchdown receptions.

Star receiver Justyn Ross is off to the NFL while Frank Ladson Jr.(Miami) and Ajou Ajou (South Florida) have transferred, but there’s still talent on the roster out wide. Joseph Ngata and E.J. Williams should be back to full strength as early as this spring after dealing with injuries late last season. Beaux Collins is also returning after ending up with the second-most receptions on the team as a true freshman. Dacari Collins and Troy Stellato are other youngsters the coaching staff is high on at the position.

Richardson is familiar with the Tigers’ personnel, which includes Davis Allen, Clemson’s third-leading receiver last season as a tight end. He’s also familiar with Streeter having worked behind the scenes with him for the last six years, which Richardson said will help moving forward.

“We’ve got a great working relationship,” Richardson said. “The good thing about it is that he was the passing-game coordinator. So now him stepping into the offensive-coordinator role and me being the passing-game coordinator, I can look at him and go, ‘All right, what did you do? What did you like and what did you not like about the role you had as passing-game coordinator?’ And then we can kind of build off of that.

“I’ve got to support Streeter, and I’ve got to be there for what he needs because he’s the offensive coordinator. And then my job is to make sure I’m there, I’m giving him ideas and I’m bringing stuff to the table.” 

Richardson said he’ll be working closely with Streeter and Swinney to come up with an air attack that everyone is on board with. That begins in earnest next week when Clemson begins spring practice.

“At the end of the day, whatever we’re going as a group, that’s what we’ve go to go out and do,” Richardson said. “Whether it’s my passing game or whether it’s Streeter’s or whether it’s Coach’s, whatever it is, we’ve got to put the best plan together. Then all of us have got to be on the same page to teach it and then for those (players) to go execute it.”

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Richardson dishes on unconventional start to on-field coaching transition

Kyle Richardson was going to get a delayed start to his first on-field coaching job at Clemson. At least that was the plan. After former offensive coordinator Tony Elliott took the head coaching job at Virginia in early December, Richardson was …

Kyle Richardson was going to get a delayed start to his first on-field coaching job at Clemson.

At least that was the plan.

After former offensive coordinator Tony Elliott took the head coaching job at Virginia in early December, Richardson was promoted to coach the Tigers’ tight ends, a position Elliott coached. Richardson had held multiple off-field titles during his first six seasons on Dabo Swinney’s staff, including senior offensive assistant and director of player development.

There was just one problem: Richardson was fresh off corrective back surgery at the time, an operation that kept him from sitting “for a long time,” he said.

“The timing of it was terrible,” Richardson recently recalled during Clemson’s national signing day radio show. “It was probably Week 4 or Week 5 (of the season), and the doctor said, ‘You need back surgery.’ I was like, ‘I need an option B because I’ve got to get through the season.’ I went through the season, and it was terrible. By the South Carolina game, I was barely walking.”

After finishing the regular season 9-3 with a runner-up finish to Wake Forest in the ACC’s Atlantic Division, Clemson earned a berth to the Cheez-It Bowl in late December. Richardson wasn’t going to be able to coach in his first game in his new position as he recovered.

Or so he thought.

Swinney promoted Thomas Austin, then an off-field staffer, to be the interim tight ends coach in Richardson’s absence, but Austin contracted COVID-19 during the team’s bowl preparations in Orlando, the site of the game. 

“Thomas has got to go home, and we go to about option D at that point,” Richardson said.

Richardson was just a fews weeks into his recovery at the time, but he said Clemson had just one practice left before the game. So he talked to his doctor and Swinney about scratching the original plan and coaching in the bowl game with certain stipulations.

“The biggest thing with my doctor was you can’t put yourself in position to be bumped into,” Richardson said. “At that point, I was under about a six-week deal of no bending, lifting, twisting, those types of things. I called him, and I was like, ‘If I just stay in the press box and just stay out of trouble, can I just go ahead and take over this job now?’ And he was like, ‘Do the press box and stay off the sidelines.’ At that point, I talked to coach (Swinney), and that’s kind of what we did.”

Richardson said it’s the first time he’s ever coached from a press box in his 21-year coaching career, which includes a successful stint as a South Carolina high school coach. He spent five seasons as the head coach at Northwestern (Rock Hill) High, leading the program to two state championships before taking his first job at Clemson in 2016.

More than two months removed from the operation, Richardson has made significant progress in his recovery. To the point that he anticipates being able to coach his position group like normal once spring practices begin next month.

“I can sit now, and I feel good,” he said. “I’m excited not only to take over this new position but have no back pain.”

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4-star Carolinas TE ‘honored’ to receive interest from Clemson

Clemson has begun to show interest in one of the nation’s top tight end prospects, who hails from the Tar Heel State. Kyle Richardson stopped by Charlotte (N.C.) Catholic at the end of January to check in on the program’s highly touted prospects: …

Clemson has begun to show interest in one of the nation’s top tight end prospects, who hails from the Tar Heel State. Kyle Richardson stopped by Charlotte (N.C.) Catholic at the end of January to check in on the program’s highly touted prospects: Jack Larsen.

Larsen — a 6-foot-3, 220-pound sophomore — ranks as the No. 2 tight end the No. 47 overall prospect in the country for the class of 2024 according to the 247Sports Composite rankings,

This was Larsen’s first contact with Clemson’s tight ends coach and passing game coordinator. Though, it wasn’t his first time speaking with a member of the Tigers’ coaching staff.

This past season, when Charlotte Catholic played Blessed Trinity (Roswell, Ga.), which is home to 2023 four-star running back Justice Haynes Clemson running backs coach C.J. Spiller was in attendance and exchanged pleasantries with Larsen.

“It’s awesome,” Larsen told The Clemson Insider regarding the Tigers’ interest in him. “That type of winning program to have interest in me is definitely big. I’m honored.”

While he’s only 2.5 hours down the road in Charlotte, Larsen hasn’t been to Clemson just yet. He’s looking to change that this coming spring and summer, though.

“I’m thinking about getting down for spring practice this spring to just come down and visit,” Larsen said. “And then I‘ll probably end up camping this summer down there as well.”

During the live period in January, Larsen made visits to UNCC, South Carolina and N.C. State. He’s hoping to visit Clemson this spring, but beyond that, he indicated that he needs to start mapping out his summer plans.

He currently holds offers from South Carolina, N.C. State, North Carolina, Duke, Florida, Virginia Tech, UNCC, Maryland, Arkansas, UConn, Louisville and West Virginia.

As far as his playstyle is concerned, Larsen predicates his game on his route running ability. He’s almost a flex between a wide receiver and a tight end, just with his ability to find space in the open field.

“I’m a great route runner,” he said when asked to describe himself as a player. “I can put my hand down in the dirt and block. I can get open and find the holes in the field and get the ball and make plays.”

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