Is Cade Klubnik the next great Clemson QB? - ESPN
CLEMSON, S.C. — Maybe it's the hair. This much, Cade Klubnik is willing to concede. It's neatly trimmed, parted at the side, clean-cut, professional and, yeah, a pretty close resemblance to the cut worn by his coach, Dabo Swinney.
But Swinney isn't stopping with the hair. Klubnik's bone structure, his facial features, the way he carries himself, assured and energetic — it's all downright Dabo-esque, he said. They're cut from the same DNA.
«He could be my son,» Swinney said. «He hates when I tell him that.»
Clemson's sophomore quarterback can argue with the notion he resembles his 53-year-old coach, but spend enough time around the two and the Klubnik-Swinney Venn diagram looks increasingly like a near-perfect circle.
There's the unrelenting optimism. Swinney has a habit of summing up even the most bitter defeats as a chance to learn more about his team and get better, and so it sounded awfully familiar when Klubnik shrugged off the worst throw of his freshman season — an interception against Notre Dame that turned into an Irish touchdown — as something he was thankful happened.
There's the unassuming personality. Swinney carved out his niche in college football by being, for lack of a better word, goofy. He danced awkwardly in the locker room after wins, planned a pizza party for the entire campus upon Clemson's first playoff berth, coined slogans such as «Bring your own guts» after a win against the Irish. Klubnik might not be quite as quotable at this point in his career, but he's certainly not image-conscious either, his high school coach, Todd Dodge, said. Klubnik, like Swinney, was beloved at Westlake High in Austin because of how little they cared about creating a slick image.
«We didn't want cool guys — guys who