Clemson University is a public US university located in Clemson, South Carolina. The university was founded in 1889 as Clemson Agricultural College of South Carolina by Thomas Green Clemson, the current denomination has been in use since 1964.
The Tigers, which are part of NCAA Division I, are affiliated with the Atlantic Coast Conference. American football, soccer and baseball are the major sports, home games are played at Memorial Stadium and indoors at Littlejohn Coliseum.
In 2020, university officials decided to dissolve its Men’s Track and Field and Cross Country teams at the end of the academic year. Despite pressure from student activists, the university did not reverse its decision until a class-action Title IX lawsuit was formed.
Following pressure from state officials, the university reversed its decision on April 22, 2021. Men’s sports include baseball, basketball, cross country, football, golf, soccer, tennis, and track & field; while women’s sports include basketball, cross country, golf, rowing, soccer, diving, tennis, track & field, softball, and volleyball.
Clemson men’s tennis 2023 schedule
Clemson men’s tennis announced the schedule for 2023 thanks to the Head Coach Robbie Weiss. Tigers bring back a solid group of eight returners and welcome five-star recruit Ethan Silva to the squad.
As Clemens reported in their site, they will begin conference play on March 3 and 5 against NC State and Wake Forest, respectively, at Duckworth Family Tennis Facility. The Tigers will hit the road to compete against Boston College, Miami, Florida State, Virginia and Virginia Tech.
Clemson will additionally play host to Georgia Tech, Duke, North Carolina, Notre Dame and Louisville. Tigers will take on non-conference foes in Furman, Wofford, ETSU, Citadel, South Alabama, Liberty, VCU, FAU and UNC Wilmington, The schedule includes two home doubleheaders, 12 ACC matchups and 12 non-conference matches, including in-state rival, South Carolina and Big Ten members Nebraska and Northwestern.
The schedule includes two home doubleheaders, 12 ACC matchups and 12 non-conference matches, including in-state rival, South Carolina and Big Ten members Nebraska and Northwestern.