Clemson Football

Olsen Patt-Henry’s Comeback: From Shoulder Surgery to a Complete Tight End

When Clemson tight end Olsen Patt-Henry stepped onto the field this summer, he brought with him not just anticipation for the season ahead, but also the hard-earned lessons of a grueling recovery and rapid development at his position.
August 6, 2025
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Photo by © Susan Lloyd/Clemson Sports Talk

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When Clemson tight end Olsen Patt-Henry stepped onto the field this summer, he brought with him not just anticipation for the season ahead, but also the hard-earned lessons of a grueling recovery and rapid development at his position.

Patt-Henry missed spring practice after suffering a shoulder injury during Clemson’s playoff game against Texas. “I tore my labrum versus Texas and had to get surgery in January,” he explained. “So I had to miss the whole spring.”

Asked how he’s feeling now, Patt-Henry’s answer was short and sweet: “I’m cleared. I’m ready to go.”

But the road back wasn’t just physical. The absence from spring ball meant missing crucial on-field reps and workouts.

“Just getting better, really. I was locked in mentally, but I missed the physical aspect—mat drills, workouts, running, conditioning. I missed being able to do the physical part of football,” Patt-Henry said. “But as a team, we’re taking it one day at a time and moving forward.”

“I feel like I can do it all, really. Coach (Kyle) Richardson has helped me a lot with blocking. That was a weakness when I first got here, but now I think it’s a strength.”
- Olen Patt-Henry

The injury and his time on the sidelines pushed Patt-Henry to refine his craft, especially as a blocker—an area he admits wasn’t always a strength.

“I feel like I can do it all, really. Coach (Kyle) Richardson has helped me a lot with blocking. That was a weakness when I first got here, but now I think it’s a strength,” Patt-Henry said. “In high school, I didn’t really block much. I mostly ran routes. In college, the guys are bigger and stronger, so I had to learn to do both. Coach Rich really gave me that mindset. It was either learn to block or sit on the bench.”

Name # Height Weight Year Hometown
Josh Sapp 5 6-2 235 *Jr. Greenville, S.C.
Logan Brooking 7 6-4 235 Fr. Bluffton, S.C.
Olsen Patt-Henry 11 6-3 240 Jr. Naples, Fla.
Ian Schieffelin 18 6-7 265 *Sr. (Grad) Grayson, Ga.
Banks Pope 44 6-4 250 *Sr. (Grad) Columbia, S.C.
Charlie Johnson 85 6-4 230 *So. Columbia, S.C.
Christian Bentancur 87 6-4 240 *Fr. Lakemoor, Ill.

Technique, he says, became everything. “Mainly footwork and hat placement—the little things. Coach Rich is really detailed. If you don’t have the right footwork or hand placement, you won’t get the block you want,” he said. “If you just follow his technique and trust it, you’ll get it done.”

Patt-Henry believes his improvement was steady, week after week. “I felt like I got better each week. It wasn’t just about doing it, but understanding why I was doing it—run game, pass game, blocking. Applying the technique to our scheme made it all make sense, and I improved week by week.”

With a healthy shoulder and a new perspective, the junior tight end enters the fall ready to contribute as a more complete player. Patt-Henry is ready, at last, to bring both his physical and mental game back to Clemson’s offense.

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Olsen Patt-Henry’s Comeback: From Shoulder Surgery to a Complete Tight End

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