Clemson football all-time roster: Coaches, kickers and specialists

See which coaching and special teams legends made the cut in our all-time Clemson football roster.

A program with a long, rich history, Clemson has seen a lot of great teams with a lot of incredible talent over the years as the program has developed into a marquee name in college football.

As our all-time rosters wind down, the final part is a look at the best of the best special teams players and the coaches that have been a part of Clemson football. 

From one of the most exciting special teams players in ACC history in C.J. Spiller to a pair of national championship-winning head coaches, the Tigers have seen incredible success from both the special teams unit and the coaches that helped make the program so special. 

Here’s a look at our choices for the special teams starters and the coaches on Clemson football’s all-time roster.

See Clemson’s all-time offense and all-time defense

Check out our other College Wire all-time lineups: AlabamaArkansasAuburnColoradoFloridaGeorgiaIowaLSUMichiganNebraskaNorth CarolinaOhio StateOklahomaOregonPenn StateRutgersTennesseeTexasTexas A&MUSCWisconsin

Two opinions in particular sold Henry on returning for senior season

K.J. Henry is beginning his fifth year as a member of Clemson’s football program. During that time, he has received two degrees from the school. So when the Tigers’ 2021 season ended, it may have seemed like the perfect time for Clemson’s veteran …

K.J. Henry is beginning his fifth year as a member of Clemson’s football program. During that time, he has received two degrees from the school.

So when the Tigers’ 2021 season ended, it may have seemed like the perfect time for Clemson’s veteran defensive end to take his shot at the NFL. Yet, to hear Henry tell it, that never was much of an option.

A redshirt junior last season, Henry gave Clemson’s defensive line another boost when he decided to put off life after college for another year and return to school for his senior season. Fellow ends Myles Murphy, Xavier Thomas and Justin Mascoll are also back to solidify what should once again be one of college football’s more imposing defensive fronts this fall.

Henry didn’t personally submit any paperwork to the NFL seeking a draft grade before making his decision, though he said he still received some feedback that he’d be taken lower than he wanted to if at all this year. But Henry said that wasn’t his primary motivation for returning to Clemson.

Instead, it was input from Clemson coach Dabo Swinney and former Clemson assistant-turned-administrative staffer Woody McCorvey that sold Henry on the potential benefits of sticking around.

“They’ve seen a lot of players, and their opinions meant a lot to me,” Henry said. “I know they have the best in mind for myself. It was easy toward the end of it to say I want to come back and play here.”

Henry said he was already leaning toward coming back in large part because of a left knee injury he sustained a year ago that forced him to miss the spring. The 6-foot-4, 260-pounder had the best season of his career statistically this past season with 28 tackles, 6.5 tackles for loss and 4.5 sacks despite wearing a knee brace for most of it, but Henry knew he wasn’t playing with the same speed and explosiveness that made him a blue-chip recruit coming out of West Forsyth (North Carolina) High in 2018.

“Checking in with my mental health as far as how this stuff works, it’s kind of hard to accept the fact that when you go through any type of injury, you’re no longer the same person you were,” Henry said. “And that’s something that I was really having to battle with as far as always comparing (myself) to what I was and who I was instead of really accepting where I was now and how I can build on that.”

Henry said Swinney and McCorvey both helped drive that point home, particularly given the flashes Henry showed later in the season. Part of the defensive end rotation throughout, injuries forced Henry into the starting lineup against Florida State, UConn, Wake Forest and South Carolina. He finished with 10 tackles and all but 1.5 of his sacks in those games.

“(Swinney) just felt like I could take another step holistically as a player with being more physical, with making more plays and being more productive,” Henry said. “And what I showed at the end of the season last year, he felt like if I do that for an entire year, it’d be a great thing for me. And I agreed with him.”

As for McCorvey, Henry joked the veteran coach, who’s now serving as Swinney’s chief of staff, is “the real head coach” and someone he has built a strong connection with over the last five years. 

“His opinion definitely meant the world to me,” Henry said.

Henry began on-field preparations for the new season with the rest of his teammates Wednesday when the Tigers held their first practice of the spring. He went through it without any sort of brace on that left knee and no green or yellow jersey, meaning he wasn’t a limited participant in any way.

For Henry, it was a refreshing start to what he hopes will be his most productive season in his final one at Clemson.

“It felt great (Wednesday) to get back out on that knee,” Henry said. “No brace. No restrictions. Nothing. Just flying around.

“Just going to take my time, really focus on my craft and try to maximize all my time here.”

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Returning to Clemson a ‘blessing’ for Eason

Nearly two decades after leaving Clemson, Nick Eason is returning to what he considers family. After his addition to the Tigers’ staff as defensive tackles coach and run-game coordinator became official Friday, Eason released his first public …

Nearly two decades after leaving Clemson, Nick Eason is returning to what he considers family.

After his addition to the Tigers’ staff as defensive tackles coach and run-game coordinator became official Friday, Eason released his first public comments on his return through the athletic department. Eason played for Clemson from 1999-2002, earning all-ACC honors as a senior before being selected in the fourth round of the 2003 NFL Draft by the Denver Broncos.

“To have this opportunity to come back to Clemson is a blessing from God,” Eason said in a statement. “It is a dream for most coaches to have the opportunity to coach at your alma mater, and that is the case for me.

“Clemson is a special place. It has been family to me since I first took a visit as a recruit in 1997. I have continued the relationships I started almost 25 years ago with the fans, the administration and the coaching staff.”

Eason expressed gratitude to Clemson coach Dabo Swinney, who brought him back after all this time. Eason spent 10 seasons in the NFL as a player with four different teams and got his coaching career started with the Cleveland Browns in 2013. He spent this season coaching Auburn’s defensive line.

“I want to thank Coach Swinney for the opportunity to be a part of a program with such a rich tradition, one that has become one of the best in the nation,” Eason said. “I also can’t wait to work with Chief of Staff Woody McCorvey, who I have known and respected for many years.”

Photo courtesy USA Today Sports.

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From relative obscurity to ‘Wes-lichick’, Goodwin’s reputation, role grow at Clemson

Dabo Swinney didn’t know who Wesley Goodwin was back in 2009, but that quickly changed. After filling in as Clemson’s football coach following Tommy Bowden’s midseason firing the year before, Swinney had the interim tag removed heading into the 2009 …

Dabo Swinney didn’t know who Wesley Goodwin was back in 2009, but that quickly changed.

After filling in as Clemson’s football coach following Tommy Bowden’s midseason firing the year before, Swinney had the interim tag removed heading into the 2009 season. One of his first hires was Woody McCorvey, a 30-year coaching veteran and Swinney’s position coach at the University of Alabama who would serve in an off-field role as his chief of football administration. And there was one other person McCorvey thought Swinney should bring in, too.

At the time, McCorvey was fresh off a five-year stint as Sylvester Croom’s offensive coordinator at Mississippi State, where he worked with a young graduate assistant named Wesley Goodwin. McCorvey was adamant about his potential, Swinney recalled.

“If Woody tells you something, you better listen,” Swinney said. “He didn’t tell me anything about anybody other than, ‘Dab, I’ve got one guy, and you’ve got to find a way to bring him.’”

So he did. Goodwin was a defensive graduate assistant that season for Clemson, where he’s been on and off ever since.

“I didn’t know who he was, but when he got here in ‘09 and I got a chance to start watching him, it was like, ‘OK, this kid is pretty special.’ And then he’s just blossomed.”

To the point that Goodwin is now in charge of the Tigers’ defense, replacing perhaps college football’s top defensive coordinator, Brent Venables, who took the head coaching job at Oklahoma earlier this month. Safeties coach Mickey Conn will also serve as co-defensive coordinator, but Swinney said Goodwin is the one who will be calling the defensive plays.

It’s a significant jump in responsibilities for Goodwin, who’s also been an analyst and, most recently, an off-field assistant for the Tigers. In fact, this is Goodwin’s first on-field coaching role, but Swinney and the rest of the program believe he’s more than prepared for it.

“There’s nobody more respected than Wes Goodwin,” Swinney said. “Nobody.”

Goodwin has worked for some of the more recognizable names at the college and professional levels. Those include Ellis Johnson, Mississippi State’s defensive coordinator when Goodwin was on staff there; Tampa Bay Buccaneers coach Bruce Arians; and two different coordinators at Clemson, Venables and Kevin Steele, who was replaced by Venables following the 2011 season.

“Had great relationships with both of those coordinators and learned a ton of ball,” Goodwin said Wednesday in his first public comments since the promotion. “That was very instrumental in my development from a coaching standpoint, just the Xs and Os, the organizational standpoints, the philosophies. Both aggressive mindsets and talking the fight to the offense. From a schematic standpoint, it was unbelievable tutelage during that time.”

Goodwin worked behind the scenes to help both coordinators scout opponents and develop weekly game plans among other tasks. After six seasons at Clemson, Goodwin left in 2015 to be an assistant to Arians, who was the head coach of the Arizona Cardinals at the time. But when Arians stepped down from that job in 2018, Swinney wanted him back.

So Goodwin rejoined Clemson’s staff as an analyst before that season, bringing back what Swinney called a “gifted” mind to the Tigers’ defensive staff meetings. The way Swinney described it, Goodwin has the ability to see something and counter with the right defensive alignment immediately, almost knowing what’s coming based on the offense’s formation and personnel.

“He knows it. If you have a breakdown, he knows it right away,” Swinney said. “He’s just gifted. He’s worked at it. I’ve never been around anybody that’s worked harder to be great at what he does. This guy has prepared for a long time for this opportunity, and it’s going to be fun to watch him be who he is and take the reins.”

Swinney said it’s a “miracle” Goodwin is still at Clemson considering the opportunities he’s had to leave again. Goodwin has gotten offers in recent years to go back to the NFL as a linebackers coach, and Swinney said Venables wanted to take Goodwin with him to Oklahoma. But the plan has always been for Goodwin to take over as the defensive coordinator at Clemson once Venables left to be a head coach, something Swinney said he made Goodwin aware of a couple of years ago.

“That’s the only way I kept him,” Swinney said.

Goodwin, who’s married with children, said he was in no rush to leave Clemson.

“Great advice I learned from an early age: Don’t take a job just to take a job. Be patient and wait for the right opportunities,” Goodwin said. “Clemson is a special place. Obviously I’ve spent 10 years of my life here. Both of my girls were born here. A lot of factors. I’m a very loyal guy, and Coach Swinney has been loyal to me as well throughout my career.”

Now the coach that many inside of the program have nicknamed “Wes-lichick” – likening Goodwin’s football acumen to that of New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick – has seen that patience pay off. He’ll get his first chance to put that display as a play caller Dec. 29 when Clemson caps its season against Iowa State in the Cheez-It Bowl as people start to get more familiar with some version of his name.

“Probably ought to go coach a game or two before we get that (nickname) public,” Swinney said with a smile, “but he’s going to be a great one.”

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