Swinney and Conn visit a highly touted 4-star safety in the 2025 class

Dabo Swinney and his coaching staff are out and about on the recruiting trail.

Dabo Swinney and his coaching staff are out and about on the recruiting trail as they look to land some of the top recruits across the country in the upcoming 2025 recruiting class.

The coaching staff has seemingly been everywhere of late, with Swinney and safeties coach Mickey Conn recently paying a visit to one of the best safeties in the 2025 class, four-star Jordan Young. The coaches stopped by Monroe (N.C.) High School, giving the top recruit a personal visit as they pitch themselves and the program.

According to 247Sports rankings, Young is the No.3 safety and the No.29 overall player in the 2025 class. He is an undeniable talent and a player for whom the Tigers are in the hunt.

Making his top 13, Clemson is competing with Alabama, Miami, Tennessee, Penn State, Southern Cal, Texas, LSU, Florida State, NC State, South Carolina, Notre Dame and North Carolina for his commitment.

Why the Palmetto Bowl is ‘personal’ for one Clemson assistant

Plenty of people who grew up in South Carolina or attended one of the state’s two largest universities have their allegiances when it comes to the Palmetto Bowl. But even one Clemson assistant who did neither still feels a certain type of way about …

Plenty of people who grew up in South Carolina or attended one of the state’s two largest universities have their allegiances when it comes to the Palmetto Bowl. But even one Clemson assistant who did neither still feels a certain type of way about the annual matchup between Clemson and South Carolina.

“This game means a lot to the people in this state,” co-defensive coordinator Mickey Conn said. “For me, I take that personal.”

That’s because even before Conn arrived at Clemson in 2016 initially as an off-fielder staffer for Dabo Swinney, he was all too familiar with what it meant to be a part of a heated rivalry. A Georgia native, Conn played at the University of Alabama, where he was a teammate of Swinney’s in the early 1990s.

Conn played in multiple Iron Bowls against the Crimson Tide’s archrival, Auburn. He still vividly remembers Alabama’s win over the Tigers in 1993, one in which the Tide needed a late fourth-down stop on the road to preserve victory after blowing a 21-point lead.

Even years before getting personally involved in that rivalry, Conn said it was an emotional one for him.

“I can remember being a part of the rivalry you’re talking about and crying as a little kid when we didn’t win,” Conn said.

Conn said he knows the feelings Clemson’s program as well as its supporters have in regards to the significance of the Palmetto Bowl are similar. With the same dynamics at play in South Carolina as in Alabama, Conn said he didn’t need to coach at Clemson for the last seven years to figure that out.

“When there’s not a professional team in your state, it’s a serious thing,” Conn said. “That’s how it was with the other rivalry, and that’s how it is with this rivalry. This means everything.”

Conn and the rest of the Tigers will try to stay on the winning side of it when the teams renew their rivalry Saturday at Memorial Stadium. Clemson is looking for its eighth straight win in the series.

“At the end of the day, I want the Clemson fans happy and excited,” Conn said. “We as a defensive staff are going to put everything we can into it to make them happy.”

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Clemson taking hunter’s mentality into Wake Forest

For the better part of a decade, Clemson has been the cream of the crop in the ACC. And when it comes to the Tigers’ run-ins with Wake Forest, those haven’t been much of a contest. Clemson has been the Atlantic Division’s representative in the ACC …

For the better part of a decade, Clemson has been the cream of the crop in the ACC.

And when it comes to the Tigers’ run-ins with Wake Forest, those haven’t been much of a contest.

Clemson has been the Atlantic Division’s representative in the ACC title game eight times in the last 13 years, winning seven of those games and moving on to the College Football Playoff in six of those years. One has to go back even further to find the last time Wake Forest beat Clemson during the Tigers’ recent run of dominance.

It hasn’t happened since 2008, a year before Clemson made its first trip to the ACC championship game under Dabo Swinney. Since then, the Tigers’ average margin of victory against Wake Forest is 27 points. Only once during that time – a 31-28 win in 2011 – has the game been decided by fewer than two possessions.

Yet despite Clemson’s three-touchdown win in last year’s meeting – and Las Vegas having them as a 7-point road favorite this week – the Tigers are taking a hunter’s mentality into Saturday’s renewal of the series at Truist Field (noon, ABC). The way Swinney and his program see it, the Demon Deacons are the team everyone in the division is still chasing after Wake Forest snapped Clemson’s six-year streak of division titles a season ago.

“They hold the belt. Atlantic Division champs,” defensive end K.J. Henry said. “They are the team to beat. If you want to take it from them, it’s going through Winston Salem. That’s for everybody on this side of the conference.”

With veteran quarterback Sam Hartman back leading the offense after undergoing surgery last month to remove a blood clot, Wake Forest certainly has the look of a division contender once again. The Demon Deacons are second in the ACC in scoring at 42 points per game, a point ahead of their pace last season when they finished fourth nationally in that category.

Wake Forest also owns the league’s second-best passing attack at more than 303 yards per game. Hartman has thrown seven touchdowns in the two games he’s played and has one of the ACC’s more difficult matchup problems at his disposal on the outside in 6-foot-5 wideout A.T. Perry, who’s averaging 18.5 yards per reception.

“We respect what they’ve done and the way they’ve built that program, so there’s absolutely no complacency on our part,” co-defensive coordinator Mickey Conn said. “We are full throttle ahead.”

Clemson held Wake Forest to 27 points in last year’s matchup in large part because of the pressure it created up front. The Tigers took Hartman and the Demon Deacons’ other quarterbacks out of their rhythm by getting to them for eight sacks. In all, Clemson racked up 10 tackles for loss in the three-touchdown victory.

Clemson is expected to have star defensive tackle Bryan Bresee (death in family) back for Saturday’s game, but exactly how intact the rest of the Tigers’ ailing defensive front will be remains to be seen. Defensive tackle Tyler Davis (undisclosed injury) has missed the last two games while defensive end Xavier Thomas (foot) has yet to play this season after sustaining his injury during preseason camp. Backup lineman Tre Williams (knee) was also held out.

Defensive backs Andrew Mukuba (elbow), Nate Wiggins (hip flexor) and Sheridan Jones (stinger) also missed part if not all of last week’s game with injuries. While Swinney spoke in generalities this week about the status of his team’s health, he said he’s expecting some of those players to be back this weekend and hopeful on others.

Offensively, D.J. Uiagalelei is taking some early season momentum into the matchup. Clemson’s quarterback has a 65% completion rate – 10 percentage points higher than his percentage from last season – and has accounted for three times as many touchdowns (6) as turnovers (2).

The ground game, led by Will Shipley’s 7 yards per carry, is also coming off its best game after piling up a season-high 280 yards on the ground a week ago. The offense will need more of that against a Wake Forest defense that, with a plus-5 turnover margin to this point, will try to help the Demon Deacons get just their fourth win at home over Clemson since 1993.

What’s happened in the past, though, isn’t the Tigers’ primary concern. While Swinney noted his team can’t win the division in late September, another win over Wake Forest would go a long way toward helping the Tigers regain their perch with games against the likes of N.C. State and Florida State still on the schedule.

“You can stay in control, and we prefer that,” Swinney said.

That puts Clemson’s focus squarely on taking care of business in Winston-Salem this time around.

“There’s no way around it,” Henry said. “Regardless of the success we had with them last year, they were in the ACC championship, not us. And that’s because we didn’t handle our business throughout the year.

“It’s definitely a get-it-back mindset. We’re ready to go up there and wreak havoc. We’re excited, and we’re determined for sure.”

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Clemson giving newly offered DB something to think about

Ahead of its matchup against the Demon Deacons this weekend, Clemson offered a Wake Forest commit on Thursday. Yesterday morning, Khalil Barnes woke up to a missed call from Mickey Conn. Barnes had gone to bed early with his high school team having …

Ahead of its matchup against the Demon Deacons this weekend, Clemson offered a Wake Forest commit on Thursday.

Yesterday morning, Khalil Barnes woke up to a missed call from Mickey Conn. Barnes had gone to bed early with his high school team having an early morning walk-through.

Normally if Clemson’s co-defensive coordinator/safeties coach calls Barnes, he’d give him a heads up. Though, the circumstances were a little bit different in this case.

Conn reaching out to Barnes wasn’t out of the blue as both he and Wesley Goodwin had been in contact with the three-star defensive back out of Bogart (Ga.) North Oconee since the weekend.

Barnes would get in touch with Conn, who was in a meeting, but would later be summoned to his head coach’s office while he was in his second block econ class.

“I got on the phone with Coach Conn,” Barnes said, recalling his conversation in a phone interview with The Clemson Insider. “He asked me how I was, how my family is and he started explaining the traits and attributes that it takes to be a Clemson football player.”

That’s when Conn told Barnes that he matched all of those and would be extending him an official offer.

Barnes immediately called his parents. The second phone call went to Bubba Chandler, a former Clemson commit now in the Pittsburgh Pirates organization, who had been teammates with Barnes at North Oconee.

“It was definitely crazy. I’m blessed,” he said when asked about his reaction to receiving an offer. “I was really happy where I was…I was just kind of in the moment. I was just proud and I knew how hard I had worked for it. It was cool to finally get that one. Coach Conn gave me something to think about, but I just want to focus on helping my team win a state championship.”

Conn brought up a conversation that he had with Barnes and his father back in June. 

In that conversation, which Barnes detailed in an interview with The Clemson Insider, Conn was honest and upfront about Clemson’s intentions. According to Barnes, Conn said that he would totally understand if they both hated him and Clemson, after having not pulled the trigger on an offer at the time.

​​”Just knowing that he remembered that conversation vividly and was able to be a man of his word and produce the offer, it shows what kind of man he is,” Barnes said of Conn.

Barnes, who has been committed to Dave Clawson’s program since June 28, said that Clemson has definitely given him something to think about. Right now, he’s set to be in Winston-Salem this weekend and wants to enjoy and experience the atmosphere as a Wake Forest commit Saturday.

“I’m gonna pray on it and God’s gonna lead me where I need to be,” Barnes said.

Barnes said that he’ll likely discuss taking a game-day visit to Clemson, but whether that’s something that actually takes place is not a question he can definitively answer right now.

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Conn asked about status of Jones’ injury

Clemson co-defensive coordinator Mickey Conn on Monday briefly discussed the status of one of the Tigers’ defensive starters injured during last week’s win over Louisiana Tech Conn was asked about the status of cornerback Sheridan Jones, who was …

Clemson co-defensive coordinator Mickey Conn on Monday briefly discussed the status of one of the Tigers’ defensive starters injured during last week’s win over Louisiana Tech

Conn was asked about the status of cornerback Sheridan Jones, who was banged up early in the game and did not play in the second half. Jones was seen riding a stationary bike on the sideline at one point.

“I do not have an update on Sheridan,” Conn said. “As far as I know, he’s full go and ready to go. But that will be a coach (Dabo) Swinney question.”

Jones, a senior, has six tackles and a pass breakup for the Tigers through the first three games. Swinney will hold his weekly press conference Wednesday ahead of Clemson’s game at No. 21 Wake Forest on Saturday.

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Conn gives update on pair of injured defensive backs

During his media availability Monday, Clemson co-defensive coordinator/safeties coach Mickey Conn gave an update on a couple of injured defensive backs. Conn was asked if he anticipates having sophomore safety Andrew Mukuba and sophomore cornerback …

During his media availability Monday, Clemson co-defensive coordinator/safeties coach Mickey Conn gave an update on a couple of injured defensive backs.

Conn was asked if he anticipates having sophomore safety Andrew Mukuba and sophomore cornerback Nate Wiggins back this weekend for Saturday’s game at Wake Forest.

“We’re hoping. We’re hoping,” Conn said. “I know our doctors and trainers (are doing their best) to get them ready. That’d be a big shot in the arm.”

Head coach Dabo Swinney said following the Louisiana Tech game that Mukuba fell at practice and dislocated his elbow, while Wiggins has a hip flexor.

Wiggins broke up a pass at Georgia Tech, while Mukuba made four tackles in the season opener against the Yellow Jackets and recorded his first career interception on Clemson’s first play of the season from scrimmage. Mukuba added three tackles vs. Furman.

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Nation’s No. 1 LB hears from Clemson, expects to visit next week

The nation’s top-ranked linebacker in the 2024 recruiting class heard from Clemson this week and expects to be back in Tiger Town a week from today. Jefferson (Ga.) five-star Sammy Brown was contacted by multiple members of Clemson’s staff – …

The nation’s top-ranked linebacker in the 2024 recruiting class heard from Clemson this week and expects to be back in Tiger Town a week from today.

Jefferson (Ga.) five-star Sammy Brown was contacted by multiple members of Clemson’s staff – including head coach Dabo Swinney, defensive coordinator/linebackers coach Wes Goodwin and co-defensive coordinator Mickey Conn – on Thursday, Sept. 1, when college coaches across the country could begin actively reaching out to junior prospects in the class of 2024.

“I heard from most of the defensive coaching staff, Coach Goodwin, Coach Conn, etc.,” Brown told The Clemson Insider. “I actually heard from Coach Swinney as well.”

Brown became the first prospect in the 2024 class to receive an offer from Clemson when he picked up the offer while on campus for the program’s underclassmen day March 12. He then returned on April 6 to take in the Tigers’ final spring practice prior to their April 9 spring game, before most recently traveling back to campus for another visit during the Swinney Camp in June.

The 6-foot-2, 227-pound blue-chip recruit told TCI he is planning to visit Clemson again for its first home game of the 2022 season on Saturday, Sept. 10 vs. Furman.

“I think that we’re going to the Furman game next week,” he said. “My parents went to Furman, so kinda lines up.”

The Tigers are one of many prominent suitors for Brown, whose extensive list of more than two dozen offers also includes schools such as Alabama, Auburn, Florida, Georgia, LSU, Notre Dame, Ohio State, Oklahoma and Tennessee, to name some.

Brown said with a laugh that the recruiting process has been “a little crazy” for him since the calendar turned to Sept. 1 and coaches could start directly contacting him.

“But it’s been good to finally be able to talk to these coaches in real time!” he said.

“It definitely makes it a lot easier to be in communication with the coaches,” he added. “I don’t have to call through my dad and what not. I really look forward to talking with all the coaches on a regular basis and building that relationship even further.”

Brown is the No. 2 prospect in the Peach State, No. 1 linebacker nationally and No. 9 overall prospect in the country for the 2024 class, per the 247Sports Composite rankings.

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Coach Speak: Clemson making a move with 4-star Peach State safety

Even before midnight struck on Sept. 1, when college coaches across the country could have direct contact with junior prospects, Clemson coach Dabo Swinney had a scheduled call with a priority safety prospect in the class of 2024. According to Troup …

Even before midnight struck on Sept. 1, when college coaches across the country could have direct contact with junior prospects, Clemson coach Dabo Swinney had a scheduled call with a priority safety prospect in the class of 2024.

According to Troup County (Lagrange, Ga.) head coach Tanner Glisson, Swinney spoke with junior four-star safety Noah Dixon, who Clemson offered back on June 1.

“I just think those guys have definitely shown a very strong interest and he’s been up there before on campus and made relationships with coaches,” Glisson told The Clemson Insider Wednesday. “I think it’s a situation that he sees that fits him really well in what he’s looking for. I think he’s pretty excited about potentially looking at them as being the school that he goes to.”

Glisson thinks that Swinney’s willingness to set up a call with Dixon just hours before Clemson could directly reach out shows just how much of a priority he is to them.

“I think it’s showing a big-time priority,” Glisson said. “I know Coach (Mickey) Conn will be at our game this Friday. Obviously, he can only pick one game to go to pretty much and coming right out of the gate in the contact period, he’s choosing to come to Troup to watch him play. I think that immediately shows that he’s a high priority for (them).”

Dixon will be in attendance for Clemson’s season opener against Georgia Tech on Monday night, but Glisson said that it will be on the Yellow Jackets’ dime. It’s pretty convenient for Dixon with the game being at Mercedes Benz Stadium in Atlanta, as Georgia Tech is another school that’s recruiting Dixon hard.

“It’s kind of a win-win for Georgia Tech and Clemson,” he said.

Dixon will almost certainly get up to Tiger Town for a game day visit at Memorial Stadium this fall. Glisson said that he spoke with Clemson’s co-defensive coordinator/safeties coach on the phone Wednesday and that they’re already looking at some dates to get him up there.

“Absolutely. 100%. He and Noah kind of mesh pretty well,” Glisson said of Conn. “They have similar personalities. They have similar belief systems. I think they mesh really, really good.”

“Noah’s mama was able to go up when he visited up at Clemson,” Glisson added. “I think Coach Conn and Coach Swinney and all those guys made a really good impression on mama. And Coach Hall as well. Lemanski Hall is from Lannett, Alabama, which is only 15 minutes from here. They have tremendous presence where we are.”

Conn, who will be in attendance for Troup County’s game against Callaway High School on Friday, will have a chance to watch Dixon, who is off to a great start to his junior campaign in just his second season of high school football.

“He’s played really well,” Glisson said of Dixon. “We’re off to a 2-0 start. I think the thing about it is, that he has a touchdown pass and a two-point conversion — that he caught playing wide receiver. But, from a defensive standpoint, he’s got several tackles. A lot of teams are just not throwing in his direction. They see him on one side of the field and they choose to go the other way, which is a good thing for us, as far as having somebody who takes away half the field. He’s gotten off to a good start. He’s gotten better and better. The thing is, he has all this year, plus another year. So, we’re looking for big things.”

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Coach Speak: Coach goes in-depth on what Clemson is getting in DB commit

While Robert Billings’ senior season is already underway, The Clemson Insider wanted to get a better feel for the four-star safety out of Alpharetta (Georgia) Milton High and who he is as a person on and off the field. Who better than his head coach …

While Robert Billings’ senior season is already underway, The Clemson Insider wanted to get a better feel for the four-star safety out of Alpharetta (Georgia) Milton High and who he is as a person on and off the field.

Who better than his head coach at Milton, Ben Reaves?

TCI spoke with Reaves in a phone interview over the weekend. He detailed the Clemson class of 2023 commit’s journey to become the player he is up until how he performed in the season opener of his senior campaign against Lipscomb Academy this past Friday.

“He did really well,” Reaves said. “The thing about his senior season — and this just speaks to his character and the character of some other seniors on the team — we’re returning five starters out of 22. And, we got a lot of sophomores starting, several freshmen. The word that kind of circulates around Robert and our team is that this is a rebuilding year. Robert and some other guys have come together and said, ‘Not on my watch. This isn’t a rebuilding year. We’re gonna reload and do what we do. And I’m gonna make sure that happens.’”

Billings is out there playing with a passion and playing with fire. Not only for the Milton football program, but for all the doubters who are skeptical about the Eagles this season.

In Milton’s 17-7 loss to Lipscomb Academy, which is coached by former NFL quarterback Trent Dilfer, Billings accounted for seven solo tackles (one for loss), a pass breakup and went 1-of-1 passing for 15 yards on a trick play.

The Nashville-based school is coming off a state championship and the last time they came to the Peach State, they scored 76 points. While the game could’ve gone either way, the Eagles had a busted coverage due to some miscommunication, which Billings was not involved in, and then they went on to miss two field goals. 

“I was proud of him and the team the other night,” Reaves said. “Like I said, returning five starters — a lot of guys that have never touched the field before were playing the No. 20 team in the nation. We fought with them every single play, tooth and nail…regardless, our team fought every play and they didn’t stop until that clock hit zero and Robert was one one of the main ones leading the charge.”

Reaves continued to speak highly of Billings as a player but also wanted to touch on his character as well.

“Just as a person and a player, he’s just such a good example of what it means to be a Milton Eagle,” Reaves said. “He’s one that’s trusted our process, trusted his coaches. In this day and age, where everybody wants to play varsity as a freshman and wear No. 1 as a freshman and not work your way up the totem pole — he’s the one that trusted us when we asked him to do that. Always remained humble through it. Never questioned anything we were doing as coaches. And he’s one I’ll always use as an example to younger kids of when you trust the guys around you and you buy into what the program has to offer for you, good things will happen.”

Billings is a soft-spoken guy in the hallways of Milton High and off the field, but once he puts the pads on, he hits really loud.

“He’s trying to wreak havoc and take somebody’s head off every time he gets the chance to tackle,” Reaves said. “So, he’s definitely that tone setter on defense that you love to have. It also just makes me feel better knowing that he’s the last line of defense. If something were to break down up front, I know he’ll find a way to keep those guys out of the endzone.”

Billings is super athletic and could be a big-time prospect on both sides of the football. His ball skills, movement and speed are just that good. According to Reaves, Billings could be an “incredible” receiver.

“He’s got great hands,” Reaves said. “Normally at the DB position, they say the difference between a DB and a receiver is that one can catch and one can’t, but he can get up there and snag it.”

That’s exactly what Mickey Conn, Wesley Goodwin and Dabo Swinney saw when they recruited Billings to come to Clemson. Billings announced his verbal pledge to Swinney’s program back on July 31, but had informed Clemson’s coaching staff of his decision during the program’s All-In Cookout a week or so prior.

“He’s gonna be a great fit at Clemson,” Reaves said. “Obviously, we’ve had two other guys (Paul Tchio and Joseph Charleston) that signed there that have since both transferred, which is unfortunate…but just what I know about the family atmosphere, the accountability, the All-In mindset — that’s what Robert is. That’s what he craves to be around and he’s gonna thrive in that environment.”

Looking at Billings’ high school career, he sat on the bench for his first two years. He sat there and put faith in the Milton coaching staff and trusted the process. Reaves thinks he’s gonna be able to rely on those moments when he gets to Clemson and continues to grow and thrive there when he goes from being one of the top safeties in the state to back to being a freshman again at one of the top program’s in the nation.

“I have no doubts he’ll do well there and he’ll be All In,” he added.

Once he does arrive at Clemson, what can Clemson fans expect out of Billings?

“The thing about Rob is once he’s on the field, he’s gonna do something to be noticed,” Reaves said. “It’s not gonna take long for the fanbase to pick him out because he’s a heat-seeking missile where the football is and he’s gonna try to do something to get that entire stadium rocking. So, you got a player that not only has all the attributes that you have to have to go to Clemson, but a player that can bring a lot of energy to the stadium and the fanbase. They’re gonna have a blast watching him and waiting for him to make that next big hit that’s gonna get everybody going.”

Is there anything that Billings’ head coach would like to see the big-time safety prospect improve on before he heads to Clemson?

“I think he’s gonna put in the work,” Reaves said. “He’s gonna continue to get better. Just for his age and where he’s at in his career, he doesn’t have big-time deficiencies. There’s not a ton of stuff that he needs correcting before getting to Clemson. Of course, there’s stuff that he can always improve on and he’ll continue to do that, but I think my main goals are more on the personal level. I feel like he’s given so much to this program that I want to make sure that whenever he leaves this program, he feels like we prepared him to be a good man, prepared him for college and what’s at stake there. And felt like we gave him as much as he’s given us.” 

— Photo for this article courtesy of Robert Billings.

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Clemson safety commit is All In, gives the latest going into senior season

Ahead of his senior campaign at Riverview (Florida) Sumner High, four-star athlete Kylen Webb wants to make an impact, but he also wants to be healthy. Webb, who committed to Clemson on June 8, following the program’s official visit weekend, …

Ahead of his senior campaign at Riverview (Florida) Sumner High, four-star athlete Kylen Webb wants to make an impact, but he also wants to be healthy.

Webb, who committed to Clemson on June 8, following the program’s official visit weekend, detailed his goals and expectations for his senior campaign. He also touched on last month’s All-In Cookout.

“The cookout was great,” Webb told The Clemson Insider in a phone interview over the weekend. “It was good to get back up with my fellow (future) teammates, really just bond together and see the coaches face-to-face in the facility. Just to be back at Clemson was real good. It’s always good to be up there. I really enjoyed (the Cookout). I brought my family up there — they enjoyed it too. But, it was really just life outside of football and enjoying each other’s company.”

Last month, rumors were circulating on multiple University of Miami message boards that Webb would be visiting Coral Gables at the end of July. Webb took the chance to put those rumors to bed, saying that he did not take a trip to Miami. He informed the coach recruiting him there that he was “good” and that he wasn’t looking anywhere else besides Clemson or doing anything under the table for that matter.

Needless to say, Webb is All-In.

He isn’t the only safety in the class of 2023 that is. Alpharetta (Georgia) Milton High four-star Rob Billings joined Webb as the second safety commit in Clemson’s 2023 recruiting class when he verbally pledged to Dabo Swinney’s program on July 31.

“I’m really happy. I had talked to him and he told me at the cookout that he was gonna commit, so I was really excited,” Webb said of Billings. “I was fortunate to be around him on the OV, but I just spent the cookout around him, getting to know him more. I think it’ll be really good to have another safety up there with me to join the family.”

Webb feels like his and Billings’ skill sets complement each other. According to Webb, Mickey Conn has communicated to him that he’ll play both safety positions and use him on blitzes. Clemson’s safeties coach wants to use Webb, a standout athlete, similar to how he uses sophomore safety Andrew Mukuba.

“I think we both bring something to the table at safety,” Webb said. “Each of us is very athletic. I just like how each coach looks at us and knows that will be contributing to the team and that each of us brings something different to the table, but will both bring an impact to the field.”

Before Webb brings an impact on the field in Tiger Town, he has a senior season to finish out at Sumner High. He was unable to participate in his team’s Jamboree this past Friday and will be held out of Sumner’s first game against Valrico (Florida) Bloomingdale High this Friday, Aug. 26.

Webb has a doctor’s appointment in a week and a half to see how his wrist fracture is healing. If everything goes well, he could be back for the second game of the season against Tampa (Florida) Chamberlain High.

Webb has been nursing a wrist injury since Week 8 of last football season, in either November or December of 202. He knew it was fractured, but opted to play the remainder of the season and underwent surgery in January. A screw was placed in Webb’s wrist, but he suffered a scaphoid fracture, so there’s a slow healing process. Webb ended up getting a second surgery two weeks before the start of school. His doctor’s appointment in the near future will determine if his wrist has healed properly.

Right now, Webb’s main goal for his senior season is to maintain a clean bill of health. He knows that will likely ride on if his fracture has properly healed or not. He just wants to stay healthy and keep working until he gets to Clemson.

“Personal goals — the team really depends on me,” Webb said. “It’s been a big difference not having me back there at safety and also on the offensive side of the ball. It’s been a real impact. We lost two games with me not back there. So, when I get back, I want to be the player that the team depends on and make an impact.”

“Team goals, I actually want to go far in the playoffs,” he continued. “Last year, as a second-year school, we went to the second round of the playoff. I want to go for a longer run this year and hopefully, go for a title.”

Webb said that Clemson wants to see him develop more as a player and continue to have an impact, but the main message to him is that his health is of the most importance, as he’ll be an early enrollee and arrive on campus come January 2023.

He’s in contact with Conn and Wesley Goodwin on a pretty frequent basis. Webb said that they texted him on Saturday morning just to check in on him. They text probably two or three times during the week and try to catch up.

Webb will try to travel to Memorial Stadium for two games this fall. He said that he definitely wants to go to a night game and he thinks that he’ll also likely attend the Miami game on Nov. 19, which Conn has talked up how big of a game that’ll be for the Tigers.

— Photo for this article courtesy of @ky_webb_3 on Instagram.

Come out to support Clemson softball at Dear Old Clemson’s second event which is set for August 27 at the Madren Conference Center.  Clemson returns as one of the top teams in the nation and adds some new talent to the mix.  If you sign up for certain club levels you get free access to all Dear Old Clemson events or purchase your tickets today at Dear Old Clemson.