Standout NC guard talks Clemson visit, dishes on ‘huge’ offer

Concord (N.C.) Cannon School 2024 three-star combo guard Austin Swartz was on campus and in attendance for Clemson’s 30-20 win over NC State at Memorial Stadium this past Saturday. Catching up with The Clemson Insider on Tuesday night, Swartz said …

Concord (N.C.) Cannon School 2024 three-star combo guard Austin Swartz was on campus and in attendance for Clemson’s 30-20 win over NC State at Memorial Stadium this past Saturday.

Catching up with The Clemson Insider on Tuesday night, Swartz said that he feels like Clemson made a great impression on him and his family and also indicated that he didn’t feel like they could do much better.

“It was good. It was pretty solid,” Swartz said regarding his visit to Clemson over the weekend. “The people were great. Everybody treated me great. I had a great experience. The football game was super cool. I even got to talk to some of the players. It really felt like somewhere I could really be at in a couple of years. I don’t think I’ve ever seen a better atmosphere in my 17 years of living.”

Just under three hours before kickoff, Swartz picked up an offer from the Tigers after having an in-depth conversation with Clemson coach Brad Brownell. Swartz walked us through how he ultimately learned about his offer from the Tigers.

According to Swartz, Brownell told him that not only could he be a huge part of the Clemson basketball program, but the Tigers think he’s a good fit and can bring a lot to the table.

“It was huge,” Swartz said of receiving an offer from Clemson. “Of course, that brings them up a level and may be where I want to go in a year or two. It’s really huge though, for sure.”

Now that he has an offer from Clemson in hand, Swartz said that the Tigers are “definitely at the top” of his recruitment, but he also made sure to clarify that all the schools currently involved in his process are at the same level.

As far as his current recruitment is concerned, Swartz wants to enjoy the process and go through his junior season. He’ll likely render a college decision prior to his senior season, but he still has a ways to go.

Swartz sees himself as a guard that can run the 1 and the 2 while shooting the ball at an efficient rate. He brings a good amount of offense to the table but feels like he’s overall really well-balanced. He said that Clemson assistant coach Sean Dixon likes how he can create offense for not just himself, but for others around him as well. 

He’s a fan of the way Clemson utilizes its guards. The Tigers oftentimes expect a lot from their guards defensively, which tends to give them more freedom on the offensive end.

“I think it’s great,” Swartz said. “They give their guards the ability to make a play. That’s about all you can ask for as a guard is to make a play and the ability to let you do that.”

Is Swartz looking forward to getting back to Clemson soon?

“Oh yeah, for sure,” he said.

Swartz will be taking an unofficial visit to Georgia this weekend, as well as unofficial(s) to Virginia Tech and NC State later this month.

Photo for this article courtesy Austin Swartz.

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Clemson’s family feel resonates with priority recruit during official visit

The Clemson Insider checked in with a priority recruit who was on campus this past weekend. Cumberland (MD.) Bishop Walsh School four-star Mike Williams took an official visit, as he begins to narrow down his recruitment, which has been spearheaded …

The Clemson Insider checked in with a priority recruit who was on campus this past weekend.

Cumberland (MD.) Bishop Walsh School four-star Mike Williams took an official visit, as he begins to narrow down his recruitment, which has been spearheaded by Clemson assistant coach Sean Dixon.

The top-100 national recruit is a combo guard, who can play both ends of the floor. Williams says that he plays defense very well and feels like it’s one of the strong suits of his game.

He went into more detail on his official visit to Clemson in a phone interview with The Clemson Insider earlier this week.

“Man, it was great,” Williams said. “It was a great visit. It was like a family there, honestly. Everyone was very genuine. It was just a great environment to be in.”

“Really just how genuine everyone was,” Williams said when asked what stood out about his official visit. “You know how some people try to put on a facade or something? Trying to be really happy, but they don’t really care about you. When I was down there, it kind of felt like they really did care about me. It was really like a family down there.”

Williams spoke highly of Dixon, who is in his first season as a Clemson assistant. He played at Presbyterian, where he also got his start in coaching. Dixon, a native of Marietta, Georgia, spent the last three seasons as an assistant at Middle Tennessee State.

Before that, Dixon spent five seasons on staff at UNC-Asheville, helping the Bulldogs win the Big South tournament championship in 2016, a share of the regular-season conference title in 2017 and the outright championship in 2018. He also served as Asheville’s recruiting coordinator.

“It’s been great (getting recruited by Dixon),” Williams said. “He’s a very good coach, a very great recruiter as well. He’s a very good guy all around. There’s not much you can really say bad about him.”

What part of Clemson’s recruiting pitch resonated the most with Williams?

“They are really building a relationship,” he said. “When I got down there, I felt like I already knew ‘em, even though I haven’t seen none of the guys and stuff before, like even before I came down there, some of the players were contacting me, making sure I was good and just things like that. It just really feels like a family down there.”

According to Williams, Clemson is looking for him to score the ball, play a little bit of point guard and also lock up on defense, while also having the chance to play alongside Dillon Hunter.

“I feel like I would fit into the system very well,” he said. 

As far as a decision is concerned, Williams would like to have one made before the start of his senior season, but couldn’t give an exact timetable for when that might take place. Clemson was his first official visit and he’s set up additional officials to DePaul, Wake Forest, Syracuse and LSU. He’ll also be taking an unofficial visit to VCU.

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Recent increase in staff investment ‘as important as anything’ for Clemson hoops

With Clemson paying its newest men’s basketball assistants more than $700,000 combined, Brad Brownell said the program is making a financial commitment to his coaching staff that hasn’t always been there. It’s been more than a month since Brownell …

With Clemson paying its newest men’s basketball assistants more than $700,000 combined, Brad Brownell said the program is making a financial commitment to his coaching staff that hasn’t always been there.

It’s been more than a month since Brownell completed his staff with the additions of Billy Donlon and Sean Dixon, who are each on two-year contracts that run through the end of the 2023-24 season. Donlon is set to make $450,000 annually while Dixon’s base salary is $285,000, according to copies of their term sheets obtained by The Clemson Insider.

Dixon, who hails from the metro-Atlanta area, came to Clemson after previous stops as an assistant at Presbyterian, UNC-Asheville, and, most recently, Middle Tennessee State. But Brownell knew it would take more to land Donlon, who had coached under Brownell twice previously at UNC Wilmington and Wright State.

Donlon was the head coach at the University of Kansas City-Missouri the last three seasons before stepping down to take the job at Clemson. Without the kind of salary Clemson was willing to offer Donlon, though, Brownell isn’t convinced another reunion between the two would be happening.

“Billy Donlon was an example of when you had to pay a little more to get a guy of his stature, to get a guy who’s been a head coach,” Brownell said recently during Clemson’s Prowl & Growl tour.

That hasn’t always been the case, Brownell said.

He found himself pursuing Donlon and Dixon after two of his coaches left for other Power Five assistant jobs this offseason. Antonio Reynolds Dean left after five seasons at Clemson to be Mike White’s associate head coach at Georgia while Kareem Richardson’s stay on the Tigers’ bench lasted less than a full calendar year. Richardson will now be coaching against Brownell as part of Kevin Keats’ staff at North Carolina State.

According to the Athens Banner-Herald, Reynolds Dean will make $400,000 in annual compensation at Georgia, a $75,000 bump from his $325,000 base salary at Clemson. Richardson had a salary of $275,000 at Clemson while Dick Bender, the only assistant back from last season’s coaching staff, is making $250,000.

Asked during an offseason press conference about Reynolds Dean’s departure, Brownell said he didn’t know whether or not Reynolds Dean’s decision to leave was financially motivated, though he said he tried to retain Reynolds Dean “as much as you can.” But Brownell suggested that the Tigers’ relatively low salary pool compared to other programs in and around the ACC doesn’t help in those situations.

Total compensation for Clemson’s basketball staff for the 2020-21 season was $3,282,839, which ranked seventh out of the ACC’s eight public institutions, according to Sportico’s real-time database that tracks FBS athletic department’s revenues and expenses. Yet after the Tigers failed to reach the NCAA Tournament this past season with a 17-16 record – Clemson has missed the Big Dance in eight of Brownell’s 11 full seasons at the helm – first-year athletic director Graham Neff made it clear the program wasn’t meeting expectations.

“If you’re going to raise the level of expectations, you’ve got to meet it in every other thing,” Brownell said in April. “Your facilities. Your salaries for your staff. Your salaries for your coaches. … There are a lot of things that go into all of this.”

Brownell got a raise to $2.6 million in total compensation before this past season as part of a contract extension that runs his deal through the end of the 2025-26 season, but that was executed by former athletic director Dan Radakovich. Neff, who served as the supervisor for men’s basketball as part of his previous role as the school’s deputy athletic director, signed off on the higher salaries for Brownell’s newest assistants..

“He’s willing to spend more money on things if we need to spend more money,” Brownell said of Neff. “He’s willing to hire more staff if we need to hire more staff. He’s seen the things that have been done for football and how that’s affected winning, and there comes a point when you’ve got to do the same for other sports if you want to have the same kind of success. I think he stated that’s part of what he wants to do, and I’m excited about that.”

With the increased salary pool for his assistants, Brownell said the program is getting closer to having everything it needs to be more successful on and off the court.

“We’ve lost strength coaches and lost a few people (in the past) who were good when money’s been involved,” Brownell said. “Changes can be hard, especially when you lose somebody that’s good because you’re not always sure if the next hire is going to be as good. It’s a risk.

“You’ve got to spend money for quality people to retain them. I think retention of quality staff is incredibly important. I think that’s as important as anything.”

Brownell comments on new staff additions

GREENWOOD, S.C. – Clemson coach Brad Brownell had the chance to make his first public remarks on the two new assistant hires that the program announced last month. At Wednesday’s Prowl and Growl in Greenwood, The Clemson Insider asked Brownell about …

GREENWOOD, S.C. — Clemson coach Brad Brownell had the chance to make his first public remarks on the two new assistant hires that the program announced last month.

At Wednesday’s Prowl and Growl in Greenwood, The Clemson Insider asked Brownell about the additions of Billy Donlon and Sean Dixon to his coaching staff and what he identified when making those hires. 

“Well, Billy Donlon is an outstanding get for me (as an) associate head coach,” Brownell said Wednesday. “But, a guy who’s been a head coach at two schools and been with me forever. I coached him in college, I’ve known him since he was 18 and he’s just a great basketball coach. He’s going to do an unbelievable job with our perimeter players.”

For Brownell, Donlon is a familiar addition to the Tigers’ bench. A coaching veteran of more than two decades, Donlon had two previous stints working as an assistant under Brownell, first at UNC-Wilmington (2002-06) before following Brownell to Wright State (2006-10). Donlon, who spent three seasons as the head coach at UMKC, took over at Wright State when Brownell was hired at Clemson following the 2009-10 season.

Donlon has also been an assistant at American, Saint Peter’s, Michigan and Northwestern.

“He and I just worked really well together,” Brownell continued. “He was an assistant at Wright State, before that he was an assistant at UNC Wilmington. We’ve had a lot of success together. I think we just fit very well together and he brings a great deal of experience at the level, having been in Northwestern and Michigan.

“I just think he’s a home run hire for us in terms of a guy that fits me, has the experience and has sat in this chair. I think that helps when you have a guy or two on your staff that’s been a head coach and understands a little bit more what the head coach is dealing with.”

As for Dixon, he played at Presbyterian, where he also got his start in coaching. Dixon, a native of Marietta, Georgia, spent the last three seasons as an assistant at Middle Tennessee State.

Before that, Dixon spent five seasons on staff at UNC-Asheville, helping the Bulldogs win the Big South tournament championship in 2016, a share of the regular-season conference title in 2017 and the outright league championship in 2018. He also served as Asheville’s recruiting coordinator.

“Sean Dixon is great,” Brownell said, “a terrific young coach. He was a very good player at Presbyterian. I really respect Sean. He’s a lot like me in that he was a guy who’s just kind of worked his way up through the business, having been a bunch of different places and helping them build a program at UNC-Asheville and really did an excellent job there at Middle Tennessee for (head coach) Nick McDevitt, where those guys have really taken over and had a really good year.

“He’s an outstanding recruiter, with a lot of ties in the Southeast. A good basketball coach and was a very good player. And then, just a really good personality, who I think will fit really well with our players.”

Staff writer Davis Potter contributed to this story.

Brownell comments on addition of newest assistants

Clemson men’s basketball coach Brad Brownell officially got his guys earlier today when the school announced the additions of Billy Donlon and Sean Dixon to his coaching staff. Brownell had been zeroing in on his newest assistant coaches for a …

Clemson men’s basketball coach Brad Brownell officially got his guys earlier today when the school announced the additions of Billy Donlon and Sean Dixon to his coaching staff.

Brownell had been zeroing in on his newest assistant coaches for a while. Donlon and Dixon are replacing Antonio Reynolds Dean and Kareem Richardson, who recently left to join the staffs at Georgia and North Carolina State, respectively.

Brownell made his first public comments on the hires in a news release. This is the third time Brownell has coached with Donlon, who spent the last three seasons as the head coach at the University of Missouri-Kansas City and also previously worked under Brownell during his stops at Wright State and UNC Wilmington.

“I’m extremely fortunate to add someone as talented as Billy to my coaching staff,” Brownell said in a statement. “He and I have had lots of success together dating back to our time at Wright State and UNCW. He has an incredible passion for teaching the game of basketball, and our players will benefit greatly from working with him on and off the court. Because of his time as a head coach at UMKC and Wright State and as an assistant at two Big Ten schools, he will expand our recruiting base nationally.”

Dixon was an assistant at Middle Tennessee State before being hired away by Brownell. A native of Marietta, Georgia, Dixon gives the Tigers a coach that’s familiar with the metro-Atlanta area, a recruiting hotbed. Dixon, who played his college ball at Presbyterian and spent time as an assistant at UNC Asheville, also has ties to the Carolinas.

“Sean is an extremely talented young coach who excels at teaching the game and building relationships with players,” Brownell said. “He holds strong recruiting ties in the Southeast and has done a great job recruiting in this region. He has played a big role in helping head coach Nicholas McDevitt establish winning programs at both UNC Asheville and Middle Tennessee State and has all the tools necessary to become a future head coach in this business.”

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Clemson zeroing in on assistant basketball hires

Brad Brownell is close to filling the vacancies on his coaching staff. Billy Donlon and Sean Dixon are expected to be hired as Clemson’s newest men’s basketball assistants. A source tells The Clemson Insider an official announcement could come in …

Brad Brownell is close to filling the vacancies on his coaching staff.

Billy Donlon and Sean Dixon are expected to be hired as Clemson’s newest men’s basketball assistants. A source tells The Clemson Insider an official announcement could come in the coming days or week.

Brownell has moved quickly since losing a pair of assistant coaches, Antonio Reynolds Dean (Georgia) and Kareem Richardson (North Carolina State), to other high-major programs last week. Donlon on Thursday night stepped down as the head coach at the University of Missouri-Kansas City to “pursue other opportunities,” the school announced.

For Brownell, Donlon would be a familiar addition to the Tigers’ bench. A coaching veteran of more than two decades, Donlon had two previous stints working as an assistant under Brownell, first at UNC-Wilmington (2002-06) before following Brownell to Wright State (2006-10). Donlon, who spent three seasons as the head coach at UMKC, took over at Wright State when Brownell was hired at Clemson following the 2009-10 season.

Donlon has also been an assistant at American, Saint Peter’s, Michigan and Northwestern.

Both coaches bring local ties to the staff. Donlon played his college ball at UNC-Wilmington while Dixon played at Presbyterian, where he also got his start in coaching. Dixon, a native of Marietta, Georgia, spent the last three seasons as an assistant at Middle Tennessee State.

Before that, Dixon spent five seasons on staff at UNC-Asheville, helping the Bulldogs win the Big South tournament championship in 2016, a share of the regular-season conference title in 2017 and the outright league championship in 2018. He also served as Asheville’s recruiting coordinator.

Photo courtesy of the USA Today Sports Network

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