Clemsonâs Dabo Swinney is one of college footballâs biggest advocates for the NCAA permitting a spring scrimmage against another team.
Weâve always endorsed the idea for three reasons: It would further enhance the enormous popularity of college football, it would give players and fans something to look forward to during the middle of the offseason, and most importantly it would generate much-needed revenue for college athletic departments struggling in the tough economy. Or proceeds could be donated to charity.
Clemson's Dabo Swinney a spring football game vs. another team: "Personally, I think it would be a good thing for college football to do. College football takes in a lot of money. I think it would be an opportunity to give something back to your school or a charity." (AP)
âI donât know if it will ever happen but itâs fun to think about,â Swinney told the AJC.
Itâs an idea that has been kicked around before. Here are the basics of Daboâs proposal: College football teams have the option of a spring game against themselves or another team. If you play another team, it must be both an out-of-conference team but also one within a reasonable driving distance. The coaches will agree upon the rules of the scrimmage in advance.
âPersonally, I think it would be a good thing for college football to do,â Swinney said. âCollege football takes in a lot of money. I think it would be an opportunity to give something back to your school or a charity.
âThe other side of it is this: Weâre already doing it in basketball. Our basketball teams play other teams but itâs closed, so nobody knows about it. For example, Clemson plays Georgia in basketball every year. But itâs a closed scrimmage. You know, nobody can be in there except the two teams. If they didnât want to do any type of public thing, I wouldnât have a problem with having a closed football scrimmage where nobody could be there but the staffs of both teams.â
Weâre going to have to interrupt Dabo there. Weâd like an open scrimmage in front of the general public and âŠ. for the best of spring matchups â national TV. Why? $$$
âThe good thing about doing something like this is that in the spring time, you donât have your whole team there. Like last spring, for example, we were missing 31 guys for spring ball. So we were very, very thin. This year, we have more bodies on hand. But still, every time you practice against each other in a scrimmage, youâre 100-percent invested with your personnel, as opposed to if you go and scrimmage somebody else. Youâre scrimmaging their defense, while your defense is on the sidelines. When your offense is out there, your defense is on the sidelines. Youâre not 100-percent vested with whatâs going on. I just think thereâs something good with that.
âPlus I think a scrimmage would be a great way to further teach our guys and prepare them for the season ⊠to be able to implement your schemes against another opponent, and it could be against anybody. Obviously, I donât think you should do it against a team in your conference. But anybody else ⊠maybe the NCAA could put stipulations like itâs got to be a team within a 100 or 200 miles or something like that. Most everybody could find somebody to scrimmage against.
âI think it would be fun. I think the players would enjoy it. I think the fans would enjoy it. But thatâs just one guyâs opinion.â
Clemson's coach thinks a spring scrimmage vs. UGA would "fill it up" with stadium attendance (AJC)
Clemson has its annual spring game vs. Clemson on April 14, and expects a crowd of more than 30,000 fans. What if that scrimmage was against the SEC East champions located only 75 miles away? âIf it was Georgia, weâd certainly fill it up,â Swinney said. âIt would be like that for Clemson and a Georgia, or whomever it may be, in a scrimmage situation. It would probably be like that at many other spring scrimmages between teams in the Southeast region.â
What are the negatives? We canât think of many. Some may say injuries. But this is college football, not rec football. If you ever go to a spring game (remember to drink a lot of caffeine to keep yourself awake), you will notice that teammates go just as hard against each other as they do against opponents during the regular season. Theyâre battling for jobs, and every practice snap is an audition for somebody.
We asked some other coaches what they thought about the idea:
What would have to happen next for spring scrimmages to become a reality? âAny NCAA member school or conference can propose a rule change or update,â according to NCAA spokesperson Christopher Radford, who also provided us with a long list of bylaws that prevent it from happening right now.
Weâve always endorsed the idea for three reasons: It would further enhance the enormous popularity of college football, it would give players and fans something to look forward to during the middle of the offseason, and most importantly it would generate much-needed revenue for college athletic departments struggling in the tough economy. Or proceeds could be donated to charity.
- UGA vs. Clemson.
- Texas A&M vs. Texas
- Georgia Tech vs. Alabama
- Oklahoma vs. Nebraska
- Tennessee vs. Virginia Tech
- Penn State vs. Pittsburgh
- Auburn vs. FSU
âI donât know if it will ever happen but itâs fun to think about,â Swinney told the AJC.
Itâs an idea that has been kicked around before. Here are the basics of Daboâs proposal: College football teams have the option of a spring game against themselves or another team. If you play another team, it must be both an out-of-conference team but also one within a reasonable driving distance. The coaches will agree upon the rules of the scrimmage in advance.
âPersonally, I think it would be a good thing for college football to do,â Swinney said. âCollege football takes in a lot of money. I think it would be an opportunity to give something back to your school or a charity.
âThe other side of it is this: Weâre already doing it in basketball. Our basketball teams play other teams but itâs closed, so nobody knows about it. For example, Clemson plays Georgia in basketball every year. But itâs a closed scrimmage. You know, nobody can be in there except the two teams. If they didnât want to do any type of public thing, I wouldnât have a problem with having a closed football scrimmage where nobody could be there but the staffs of both teams.â
Weâre going to have to interrupt Dabo there. Weâd like an open scrimmage in front of the general public and âŠ. for the best of spring matchups â national TV. Why? $$$
âThe good thing about doing something like this is that in the spring time, you donât have your whole team there. Like last spring, for example, we were missing 31 guys for spring ball. So we were very, very thin. This year, we have more bodies on hand. But still, every time you practice against each other in a scrimmage, youâre 100-percent invested with your personnel, as opposed to if you go and scrimmage somebody else. Youâre scrimmaging their defense, while your defense is on the sidelines. When your offense is out there, your defense is on the sidelines. Youâre not 100-percent vested with whatâs going on. I just think thereâs something good with that.
âPlus I think a scrimmage would be a great way to further teach our guys and prepare them for the season ⊠to be able to implement your schemes against another opponent, and it could be against anybody. Obviously, I donât think you should do it against a team in your conference. But anybody else ⊠maybe the NCAA could put stipulations like itâs got to be a team within a 100 or 200 miles or something like that. Most everybody could find somebody to scrimmage against.
âI think it would be fun. I think the players would enjoy it. I think the fans would enjoy it. But thatâs just one guyâs opinion.â
Clemson has its annual spring game vs. Clemson on April 14, and expects a crowd of more than 30,000 fans. What if that scrimmage was against the SEC East champions located only 75 miles away? âIf it was Georgia, weâd certainly fill it up,â Swinney said. âIt would be like that for Clemson and a Georgia, or whomever it may be, in a scrimmage situation. It would probably be like that at many other spring scrimmages between teams in the Southeast region.â
What are the negatives? We canât think of many. Some may say injuries. But this is college football, not rec football. If you ever go to a spring game (remember to drink a lot of caffeine to keep yourself awake), you will notice that teammates go just as hard against each other as they do against opponents during the regular season. Theyâre battling for jobs, and every practice snap is an audition for somebody.
We asked some other coaches what they thought about the idea:
- North Carolinaâs Larry Fedora: âI think that would be great. I think you would get a pretty good idea on where your team is at that time. Putting on spring games against yourself is difficult just because of the amount of kids you have on scholarship that time of year ⊠with your seniors gone and your freshmen not being there yet ⊠plus you have other players out for the spring with injuries. All of that really makes it difficult to do an intra-squad scrimmage. So I think you could benefit from something like a scrimmage opponent in a lot of ways.â AJC Dream Matchup: North Carolina vs. South Carolina
- Georgia Techâs Paul Johnson: âOff the cuff, it sounds like it might be a good idea but I really havenât thought much about it ⊠It can get old practicing against yourself. Anytime you can play or scrimmage against somebody else, it would be good. The NFL certainly does it in training camp. Basketball plays an exhibition before their season.â
- Texas A&Mâs Kevin Sumlin: âDabo wants a jamboree? Why not? I donât know. Thatâs a different deal. I think itâs different when youâre in the first year of your program like I am and you need every practice you can get ⊠put it that way. If you ask me a couple of years from now, I might think differently.â AJC Dream Matchup: Texas A&M vs. Texas. âThere wouldnât be anything scrimmage-like if we played them. That would be a real game.â
- Kentuckyâs Joker Phillips: âA lot of teams use their spring practices and spring game to get their team better with fundamentals. I would be opposed to playing another vicious game and losing a kid for the rest of the season.â AJC Dream Matchup: Kentucky vs. Louisville. âSee what I mean? Itâs going to be vicious if weâre scrimmaging Louisville.â
- Virginiaâs Mike London: âI know Dabo personally. Itâs an innovative idea, particularly when you look at conference realignment and television money. Playing against another team than yourself in the spring may bring in revenue to go toward other sports, non-scholarship sports, or other entities around the university ⊠I imagine there would be some support for that idea if people really started talking seriously about it.â AJC Dream Matchup: Virginia vs. West Virginia
What would have to happen next for spring scrimmages to become a reality? âAny NCAA member school or conference can propose a rule change or update,â according to NCAA spokesperson Christopher Radford, who also provided us with a long list of bylaws that prevent it from happening right now.
