As a sophomore in 1993, he was the snapper for quarterbackCharlie Ward and a member of the Seminoles' Bowl Coalition national championship team that defeated the Nebraska Cornhuskers 18–16 in the Orange Bowl. He received his first All-conference selection, while giving up a half of a
quarterback sack in 700 offensive snaps.[2]
In his junior and senior years, he was awarded the Jacobs Blocking Trophy, presented annually to the best blocker in the ACC.[2] In his last year, he helped the offense averaged 551.5 yards-per-game, ranking third in the nation.
In 2001, he was inducted into the Florida State Athletics Hall of Fame. Bowden called him "the best center that I've coached in 20 years at Florida State."
In 1997, he replaced Donaldson at center and was the only lineman to start every game at the same position.[4] He started the first nine games in 1998, before being limited with a turf toe injury and eventually being replaced in the starting lineup with 31-year-old rookie Mike Kiselak.
On December, 14, 1999, he was signed by the Carolina Panthers to fill the roster spot left open by the injured Nate Newton, but he did not appear in a regular season game.[7] He was released on August 27, 2000.[8]
Personal life
Shiver is currently a high school football head coach for Boca Raton Christian School.[citation needed]
References
^"Clay Shiver bio". databaseFootball.com. September 1, 2001. Archived from the original on March 24, 2012. Retrieved March 15, 2023.
^ ab"FSU Hall of Fame". Seminoles.com. September 1, 2001. Archived from the original on March 3, 2012. Retrieved March 15, 2023.