The Clemson Tigers capped a disappointing 2025 season with an ugly 22-10 loss to the Penn State Nittany Lions in the Pinstripe Bowl, raising fresh doubts over the program’s direction under longtime head coach Dabo Swinney.
Clemson (7-6) looked ill-prepared for the power conference tilt, a game started by senior quarterback Cade Klubnik. Penn State (7-6), which fired former head coach James Franklin earlier this season, put together a much more impressive and complete performance under interim coach Terry Smith.
The Nittany Lions out-gained the Tigers 397-236. Their defense had two more sacks and three more pass breakups than Clemson’s in 11 fewer plays.
Lackluster effort ends Clemson’s season on sour note
Clemson, the Associated Press preseason No. 4 team in the country, had more three-and-outs (three) than scoring drives (two) against Penn State, which similarly underperformed expectations after entering the season ranked No. 2.
Unlike the Nittany Lions, the Tigers are content on maintaining the status quo, with Swinney set to return for a 19th season in 2026. But with diminishing returns since winning two CFP national titles in a three-year span from 2016-18, Saturday’s dreadful bowl performance reinforces the notion that the program’s best years under Swinney are behind it.
Clemson ranks No. 19 nationally in 2026 recruiting with no incoming five-stars in the class (h/t 247Sports). With Swinney’s reluctance to embrace the transfer portal, the Tigers will be at a disadvantage as the rest of the ACC stacks up for a championship run in the wide-open conference this offseason.
The program has a lot of ground to cover to return to prominence, and that appears less likely to happen with Swinney as head coach after this season. His decision to hire Garrett Riley in 2023 to innovate Clemson’s backward-thinking offense has failed, with the Tigers ranking outside the top 50 in FBS in scoring offense in two of his three seasons as offensive coordinator. The defense, a top-five unit at the team’s peak under Swinney, has merely been okay, another emblem of the diminishing standards in recent seasons.
Saturday’s loss should be a wake-up call to Clemson that the current order of operations isn’t conducive to a winning environment. Swinney’s championships from nearly a decade ago can only afford him so much goodwill. At a certain point, he must prove he can still win consistently. That time is rapidly approaching, if it isn’t already here.

















