As a youngster Tim Bourret chose not to play for the Northwest Catholic High School football team in West Hartford, Conn., because its Saturday afternoon games would prevent him from listening to Notre Dame’s on the radio with his father.
Notre Dame Football was far better for his choice.
Bourret is a football savant of sorts, a walking Wikipedia with a rare if not unique connection to Saturday’s game in Death Valley. A graduate of the University of Notre Dame, he has been a member of the sports information department at Clemson University for 37 years, currently serving as assistant athletic director for football communications.
For reporters and broadcasters covering Clemson he is a treasure both for his seemingly encyclopedic recall of facts and history of both schools’ football programs and as a gracious and accommodating host to media from across the country, a friend to some among the biggest names in the business.
Further defining him is an uncanny ability to mine threads of gold that enrich the tapestry of a game, almost like a leprechaun dropping nuggets into a pot of gold. For example: Notre Dame’s first appearance at Clemson was Oct. 3, 1977 – 1,977 weeks ago.
Bourret takes pride in discovering those gems, as much as he does the ability to recall the date and score of a particular game or the season rushing records for either team or that 36 players off the two rosters in 1977 went on to play in the NFL and win 14 Super Bowl rings.
Often, the ability to uncover those nuggets is the result of knowing where to look for them. As for his vast mental catalog, there’s no mystical reason. Part of it is quite simple.
“I’ve edited every Clemson press guide for 38 years. And I’ve got every Notre Dame press guide going back to 1964,” he said. “When I was eight years old I would get the books and read them, read the records.”

Clemson’s longtime SID Tim Bourret, right, grew up listening to Notre Dame football on the radio with his father, left. (Photo from twitter, above photo USA Today).
In 1967 he also began a subscription to receive copies of Notre Dame’s weekly game notes.
The first vivid memory of his life bore a mystical tie to Notre Dame, so Bourret believes there really wasn’t a choice. Following his father as a student at Notre Dame, he discovered his calling and during three years with the sports information department he lived out a dream by immersing himself in Notre Dame’s statistics, history and minutiae.
By happenstance he was assigned to the official party for the first football game between the two schools. Bourret remembered sitting next to sports information director Roger Valdiserri as the bus pulled up to Memorial Stadium two hours before kickoff. The Hill was already filled with Clemson fans.
“What are we doing here?” Irish sports information director Roger Valdiserri wondered aloud, anticipating an ambush. Two years later when the teams played again in South Bend, Ind., Bourret would be at the game as a member of the Clemson sports information office.
Following a tip from a friend in North Carolina, Bourret came to work for Bob Bradley the summer of 1978 and here he has remained. Bourret succeeded Bradley as sports information director in 1989, but he nearly left in 1983 after accepting an offer from the University of Pittsburgh. Bourret fell ill, however, and lost 25 pounds. His father suggested he probably didn’t want to leave Clemson.
“You know, I think you’re right,” he said. “I called Pitt and told them I wasn’t coming.”
Bradley bought him the largest box of grits he could find. “He said welcome back. You are now Southerner.”
Valdiserri and Bradley emphasized the need to maintaining credibility with the media and that the personal approach to promoting the program or a particular athlete was more effective than the blanket approach.
“And if you don’t have an All-American, don’t try to make one up,” Bourret said.

Tim Bourret, left, talks to former Clemson basketball player Grayson Marshall during a recent basketball reunion. Bourret has helped call Clemson basketball games for the last 35 years. (photo courtesy of ClemsonTigers.com)
In addition to oversight of media relations and sports information, his career at Clemson included duties as the color voice of men’s basketball for 35 years and chairman of the Clemson Ring of Honor committee. His career has overlapped all four of Clemson’s national championships: football (1981), golf (2003) and men’s soccer (1984 and 1987).
In November 2007 the Clemson Alumni Association named him an honorary alumnus.
Notre Dame remains dear to him, and he follows the team faithfully. A close friend insists Bourret eats only a bowl of cereal after a Notre Dame loss as if he’s serving penance. Bourret laughs.
His father graduated from Notre Dame in 1948. The football team lost only two games while he was a student, so he eagerly passed the legend to his son introducing him to Saturday afternoons by the radio and the TV replay with Lindsey Nelson and Paul Hornung on Sunday after church.
During a summer vacation in 1966 the family stopped by Notre Dame’s football offices, and the secretary allowed 10-year-old Tim to sit in Coach Ara Parseghian’s chair. Bourret believes even with all that tangible influence, destiny put him at Notre Dame. He attended a few games when the Irish came East including a couple against Navy in Philadelphia, but he didn’t see a home game until 1972 during a visit his senior year of high school.
There are indelible moments in our lives, and Bourret believes the most vivid first memory set his course. Returning from church one day with his parents when he was 3½, Bourret coaxed his father to let him join a friend at play.
“I got out of the car and ran in front of the car. A guy was passing, never saw me and hit me. I went like 25-feet in the air,” he said. “The accident happened in front of the home of a guy named John “Clipper” Smith who was the captain of Notre Dame’s 1927 team under (Knute) Rockne. He had a brother who was a priest who happened to be looking out the window when I got hit by that car.”
The priest came out of the house and offered a blessing.
“I remember waking up and feeling okay,” Bourret said, however he was taken to a hospital where he remained for two days. “I had nothing wrong with me.
“From that day, I’ve always felt a little bit of destiny.”
People have been asking for months which team he’ll “root” for Saturday night. First, rooting isn’t permitted in the Clemson press box, so everything will be internalized.
Bourret has known Dabo Swinney and every member of the team since they arrived on campus, so there’s a natural affinity.
“I don’t know the guys who play for Notre Dame, I don’t know Coach (Brian) Kelly,” he said. “Coach Swinney and I have a close relationship.
“I look at it this way. I’ll pull for Clemson, but I won’t pull against Notre Dame.”