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FSU's Bowden, Clemson's Swinney moving up in ACC
By PETE IACOBELLI
AP Sports Writer

CLEMSON, S.C.(AP) -- Florida State's Bobby Bowden and Clemson
coach Dabo Swinney have a chance to silence their critics, at
least for a while.

The 79-year-old Bowden can show the game hasn't sped past him
while Swinney, 39, gets to show he isn't in way over his head as
both can take control of the Atlantic Coast Conference's
Atlantic Division when they play Saturday night.

A victory by the Seminoles (4-4, 2-3) and Bowden is back in the
hunt for a league title. A win by the Tigers (5-3, 3-2) and
Swinney's in line to achieve Clemson's first conference
championship since 1991.

"Obviously, this is a big game for everybody, but one of the
things we tell our guys not to get caught up in the hype,"
Swinney said. "This is just the next game for us and certainly
everybody understands the importance. But it's more about focus
and what it takes to win."

Few had been better than that in the ACC and college football
than Bowden's Seminoles. They've won two national titles and 12
ACC championships since joining the league in 1992. But when
Florida State opened 0-3 for the first time in league play, many
including university trustees chairman Jim Smith wondered if it
were time for Bowden - he turns 80 on Sunday - to walk away for
the good of the program.

Swinney, who got to know Bobby when son Tommy Bowden coached
Clemson from 1999 through the middle of 2008, couldn't believe
what he heard.

An Alabama native who railed against Bear Bryant detractors as a
middle schooler, Swinney knew Bowden was as sharp and talented
as ever.

"I can tell you this, Coach Bowden should be allowed to coach as
long as he wants to coach," Swinney said. "Florida State is on
the map because of Bobby Bowden."

Still, the program's decline in recent years - FSU hasn't won 10
games since 2003 - has some backers looking for signs. A big one
came this week when Bowden's trusted defensive coordinator
Mickey Andrews announced his retirement after 26 seasons with
the Seminoles. Would Bowden be next?

"That's a very good question," Bowden said this week. "Because
you'd think there must be something happening. But that has no
bearing on what I'll do."

Swinney hasn't coached nearly as long as Bowden - he hadn't ever
been a coordinator before taking over for Tommy Bowden last
October - but has already endured Internet critics and angry
sports talk callers after Clemson's 2-3 start.

Swinney sounded a lot like his old Clemson boss Tommy when he
insisted the 2-3 Tigers were a play or two away from major
success. During the team's off week, an anonymous blog post
surfaced that detailed an angry shouting match at practice
between Swinney and 30-year-old offensive coordinator Billy
Napier.

Both coaches said the harsh words were blown out of proportion.
However, the confrontation has apparently lit a fire under the
Tigers, who haven't lost since.

Clemson routed then ACC Atlantic leader Wake Forest 38-3 and
gained some national credibility with a 40-37 overtime victory
at then-eighth-ranked Miami, Swinney's first victory over a Top
25 opponent.

"Tommy kind of raised Dabo, I think, as an assistant" at Alabama
and at Clemson, Bobby Bowden said with a bit of pride. "And I
think Dabo has gone a great job."

It doesn't hurt to have one of the ACC's most dynamic players on
your side. Clemson star C.J. Spiller set a school record and ran
his way into the Heisman Trophy race with 310 all-purpose yards
in the Tigers' overtime victory at Miami two games ago. He had
only 27 yards last week against Football Championship
Subdivision opponent Coastal Carolina, Swinney resting his
do-everything star in the 49-3 win.

"We kind of like where we're at," Spiller said. "We're starting
to play with confidence on both sides of the ball."

So are the Seminoles, at least on offense. Florida State
quarterback Christian Ponder vowed to play despite the bruised
ribs suffered in a 45-42 win over North Carolina State last
week. Ponder leads the ACC with 306.6 yards passing a game. He's
thrown 13 touchdowns passes and just three interceptions.

Clemson, though, allows the fewest points in the league and
features safety DeAndre McDaniel, who's from Tallahassee -
Swinney first met Bobby Bowden on a recruiting trip with Tommy
for McDaniel - and is tied for the FBS lead with 7
interceptions.

Swinney understands what he and the Tigers are up against. But
since joining Clemson as an assistant in 2003, the Tigers are
4-2 against Florida State.

"But we've got plenty of respect for these guys," Swinney said.
Bobby Bowden has "done a great job with that program and have
earned all the respect."