USC Gamecocks Football

ACC, ESPN asked Clemson to move football game against South Carolina to Black Friday

Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney and South Carolina Head Coach Shane Beamer talk before the game at Williams Brice Stadium in Columbia, South Carolina Saturday, November 27, 2021.
Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney and South Carolina Head Coach Shane Beamer talk before the game at Williams Brice Stadium in Columbia, South Carolina Saturday, November 27, 2021. Ken Ruinard / staff / USA TODAY NETWORK

ESPN and the Atlantic Coast Conference tried to move the annual South Carolina-Clemson football game up a day, according to court filings made Monday as part of Clemson’s lawsuit against the ACC.

David Hood of TigerNet.com was the first to report the news.

The TV network and the league asked Clemson to move its annual rivalry game from Saturday, Nov. 30, to Black Friday, Nov. 29, the day after Thanksgiving. Clemson declined the offer. The game would have been played in prime time.

According to Exhibit A in the filing, which was submitted by Clemson, the ACC offered “concessions to induce Clemson to make the change.” One of the concessions included South Carolina to reciprocate the move in the future.

The game, which has traditionally been played sometime in November since 1960, remains scheduled for Saturday, Nov. 30.

The last time the game wasn’t played in November was in 1959, when it was held Oct. 22.

The ACC wasn’t pleased with Clemson’s decision to decline the move, as evidenced by an email exchange between the league’s senior associate commissioner, Michael Strickland, and Clemson athletic director Graham Neff. The email pointed out that other schools in the conference had moved games to Friday after Thanksgiving, including Georgia Tech-Georgia, Florida State-Florida, North Carolina-Notre Dame, Virginia-Virginia Tech and North Carolina-NC State.

“As has been indicated to you during this process, the Conference Office is disappointed in Clemson University’s lack of cooperation on this matter,” Strickland wrote. “As all ACC members know, it is incumbent upon the ACC and its institutions to work in good faith with ESPN on football scheduling issues. This cooperation maximizes the value of our relationship with our media partner and strengthens our collective future. Clemson’s decision not to do so in this instance is harmful toward that goal.”

In addition to moving Clemson’s game against South Carolina, the ACC wanted the Tigers’ Nov. 23 game against The Citadel to be moved to a noon start, Clemson’s 2027 Labor Day game against N.C. State to be moved to Clemson, and a limit of two ACC road games to be played in prime time.

Clemson’s legal battle against the ACC continued Tuesday with a hearing in a Mecklenburg County Courthouse in Charlotte.

In that hearing, a North Carolina judge heard arguments on Clemson’s motions to dismiss and stay (essentially pause) the ACC’s countersuit against Clemson.

On March 19, Clemson took the historic and dramatic step of suing the ACC over its strict “grant of rights” agreement and an “exorbitant” exit fee. For Clemson, a founding member of the ACC that has competed in the conference for 71 years, it was a clear indication the school wants a new, more financially lucrative conference for its powerful football program and the rest of its sports. Florida State also is suing the league.

The Tigers are specifically taking aim at the ACC’s grant of rights, a legal document that binds them to the conference through 2036.

The ACC counter-sued Clemson one day later.

There’s a July 12 hearing for the original lawsuit, where a Pickens County judge will hear the ACC’s motions to dismiss and stay Clemson’s lawsuit in South Carolina.

This story was originally published July 2, 2024 at 10:46 AM.

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Lou Bezjak
The State
Lou Bezjak is the High School Sports Prep Coordinator for The (Columbia) State and (Hilton Head) Island Packet. He previously worked at the Florence Morning News and had covered high school sports in South Carolina since 2002. Lou is a two-time South Carolina Sports Writer of the Year by the National Sports Media Association. Support my work with a digital subscription
Chapel Fowler
The State
Chapel Fowler, the NSMA’s 2024 South Carolina Sportswriter of the Year, has covered Clemson football and other topics for The State since summer 2022. His work’s also been honored by the Associated Press Sports Editors, the South Carolina Press Association and the North Carolina Press Association. He’s a Denver, N.C., native, a UNC-Chapel Hill alum and a pickup basketball enthusiast. Support my work with a digital subscription
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