Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Sport
Bill Plaschke

Los Angeles Times Bill Plaschke column

Jan. 11--In a sport of bullies, he was known for being bullied.

On a team that is unbeaten, he was known as the biggest loser.

Yet, when Alabama plays Clemson on Monday night in a College Football Playoff national championship battle filled with powerful linemen and skilled runners, this defenseless punter should be known as the toughest.

His name is Andy Teasdall and he plays for Clemson, and he was recently involved in two disparate plays that cut into the complicated heart of college football.

He was the player who was publicly grabbed and harangued last month by Coach Dabo Swinney in a nationally scorned sideline tantrum after he unilaterally tried and failed on a fake punt attempt during Clemson's Atlantic Coast Conference championship victory over North Carolina.

Yet, he's also the player who, in the next game, when Swinney actually asked him for a fake punt, pulled it off brilliantly in a drive that led to a victory over Oklahoma in a national semifinal game.

From embarrassed to embraced, from ripped to revered, from boss' target to teacher's pet, Teasdall has traveled a crazy journey in a strikingly short time. It is a trip taken often by marginal unpaid athletes at the mercy of angry millionaire coaches, yet it is one that Teasdall has handled with uncommon dignity and grace.

While Monday's title game will showcase the stars and the confetti and all the glory of big-time college football. Teasdall, 22, is a reminder of the strength found in the majority of players who live on the other side.

He made the team from a tryout. He has had a scholarship for only one season. He will earn no money off Monday's billion-dollar game. He has no voice, yet through his quiet resilience, he has spoken loudly.

"It's been a crazy journey, from walk-on to the national championship game," Teasdall said at Saturday's media day. "I'm so lucky, all I ever wanted to do was play college sports, didn't know or care what sport, just wanted to play something."

The former high school lacrosse star from Winston-Salem, N.C., is the kind of kid who feels blessed, not entitled, to play college football. He is the kind of kid who has a much smaller margin for error because of his precarious position on the team. He is the kind of kid who coaches always seem to be scolding.

This dynamic was taken to a new and nauseating level last month in the ACC title game against North Carolina. Late in the second quarter, on fourth and 15 from the Clemson 30, with the Tigers leading, 14-9, Teasdall took the snap and, instead of punting, inexplicably tried to run for a first down. He gained only four yards. The Tigers gave the ball to the Tar Heels and the game's momentum immediately changed.

"It was a reaction play, I rolled to the right and everyone else was running right, so I ran to the left," said Teasdall, a redshirt junior. "I made a mistake. When it happened I was just kind of like, 'Why did I do that?' "

When Teasdall reached the sidelines, Swinney, whose national perception had been one of a loose and lovable leader, quickly turned nasty. With the nation watching, Swinney screamed at Teasdall, grabbed his shirt and screamed some more, then followed him to the bench and kept screaming at him.

All the while, Teasdall said nothing, did nothing, simply sat down and stared straight ahead while his coach raged. Yet inside, he admitted, it was tearing him up.

"After the play, I'm sitting on the sideline, and a camera is right in my face, and I'm thinking, 'Oh my gosh, please don't be filming this live," Teasdall said.

After the game, which Clemson won, 45-37, Swinney continued to drag his punter under the bus. In words that coaches would never use on their star quarterbacks or defensive linemen, he continued to try to embarrass the punter.

"That was no fake punt, that was Teasdall kind of losing his mind," Swinney said after the game, the coach pulling down $3.3 million piling on the unpaid student-athlete. "I mean, like, he went crazy on me. ... I don't have an answer for it."

This weekend the narrative continued, Teasdall showing calm maturity and the coach continuing to act childish.

"I've been yelled at before, this just happened to be on national television," Teasdall said while repeatedly offering unconditional support of the coach. "People thought maybe he went a little overboard, but it's football, it's a tough sport, and I wasn't in a position to talk back."

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.