Read about Bobby Bowden a retired college football coach in his biography which has information about his profile, childhood, life and timeline.
@Sportspersons, Timeline and Facts
Read about Bobby Bowden a retired college football coach in his biography which has information about his profile, childhood, life and timeline.
Bobby Bowden born at
Bowden married his childhood sweetheart Ann Estock, on April 1, 1949. They have six children and 21 grandchildren. Bowden and Ann have been married for 56 years now.
Like Bowden, his sons Tommy and Terry have coached at college level football. Tommy served as the head coach at the Clemson University, whereas Terry was the head coach of the Auburn University’s football team.
The Over the Mountain Touchdown Club of Birmingham, Alabama, named the National Collegiate Coach of the Year Award after him and on March 21, 2010, the award was presented for the first time.
Bobby Bowden was born to Bob Bowden and Sunset Bowden. He was just 13, when he was diagnosed with rheumatic fever and had to spend six months in the hospital.
After being discharged he was not allowed to go anywhere for nearly a year and it was around this time he got used to listening to University of Alabama football on Saturday mornings on the radio and developed an interest in the sport.
He attended the Woodlawn High School and was among one of the best football players in his school. He also played for the University of Alabama as a quarterback.
He graduated in 1953, from the Howard College, present day Samford University.
From 1954 to 1955, Bowden served as the assistant football coach and head track and field coach at the Howard College Birmingham, Alabama.
He then became the Athletic Director and also served as the head football, baseball, and basketball coach for South Georgia College from 1956 to 1958.
After leaving South Georgia College he returned to Howard Collage and stayed there till 1962, before joining the Florida State University as an assistant coach.
He left the Florida State University in 1965 to coach at the West Virginia University and became its head coach in 1969. In 1976, he joined the Florida State University again as the head coach.
He coached the Florida State Seminoles football team for 34 years in which he lost only one season. On December 1, 2009, he announced his retirement from the Florida State University.
From 1987 to 2000, under his coaching the Florida State University’s (FSU) football team finished every season with at least 10 wins and was constantly among top five teams in the Associated Press College Football Poll.
He also holds the NCAA (National Collegiate Athletic Association) record of 11 consecutive bowl victories and 14 straight bowl trips without a loss.
The FSU also won the 1993 and 1999 national championships while Bowden coached them.
His overall record at the FSU is 300-87-4 which includes a 158-27-2 record in Tallahassee, 35-10-1 record at neutral sites and 107-50-1 on an opponent's ground.
For his outstanding achievement as a coach, Bowden received the ‘Amos Alonzo Stagg Coaching Award’ from the ‘United States Sports Academy’.