Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Faith, family and football key

Bobby Bowden helped players not just on the field, but in life as well

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TALLAHASSE­E, Fla. — Bobby Bowden lived life with three guiding principles: Faith,family and football.

The longtime college football coach may have been knownacros­s the country for winning two national championsh­ips and 377 games, including 314 of them at Florida State from 1976-2009. But the eulogies delivered for him Saturday focused almost entirely on how his faith led him in life as well as how much he valued his family — and that included his thousandso­f players.

More than 300 players and coaches were among the crowd of about 2,500 who returned to Donald L. Tucker Center to remember Bowden, who died a week ago of pancreatic­cancer. He was 91.

The two-hour service included sons Tommy and Terry Bowden as well as daughter Ginger Bowden Madden. Longtime Florida State assistants Mark Richt and Mickey Andrews also spoke as well as players Bobby Butler, Charlie Ward, Warrick Dunn and Derrick Brooks.

“Coach Bowden saw something in me that no one else saw,” said Dunn, who played at Florida State from 1993-96. “He believed in me and that’s a powerful thing for an 18-year-old that is just trying to figure out life. Coach was the kind of man that used his faith and wisdomto shape boys into men.”

Dunn reflected on the lessons Bowden handed down when he needed to be a father figure for his younger siblings after his mother, Betty Smothers, died in Baton Rouge,La.

Dunn also said Bowden promised him a chance to play running back when every other coach wanted him tobe a defensive back.

He had three 1,000-yard seasons at Florida State and went on to play in the NFL from 1997-2008. Dunn also notedthat three of his players — Derrick Brooks, Anquan Boldin and himself — won the Walter Payton Man of the Year award for community service.

“He showed up for me at one of the most difficult times in my life and I’m forever grateful for that,” Dunn said. “But I wouldn’t be here today ifit weren’t for coach.”

It was another one-on-one meeting in Bowden’s office that shaped Brooks’ life. It wasn’t because of how he was performing on the field as a freshman but instead in the classroom. Brooks got a

C in a biology class after never receiving a C in high school. Bowden circled the transcript and challenged him.

“Little did I know Coach Bowden had my mom on speakerpho­ne,” Brooks recalled to laughter from the crowd. His mom chewed him out on the phone and threatened to come to Tallahasse­e. Bowden insisted he had it covered.

“From that moment there, it just made me fall in love with him because he made that commitment to my parents,sitting in our front room in Pensacola, Fla., that he would not let me do anything below my potential,” Brooks said.

“It had nothing to do with what I was doing on the football field. It was all about what I was doing in the classroom. And I’m glad to tell you that my mom only came here forgames.”

Former Florida State coach Jimbo Fisher, now at Texas A&M, Clemson coach Dabo Swinney and South Florida coach Jeff Scott were among the current head coachesat the service.

“He’s one of a kind,” Fisher said. “How many times in the world can you say this about a man: Every time you talk to him, you learn something and you laughed. And you knew what he stood for with his relationsh­ipwith God and where he’s at. He was the epitome of the example of what a coach should be, a mentor, a guy of leadership.”

Bowden’s players have told stories throughout the week of what he meant to them.

“The things I learned from him I’m instilling now,” said Mississipp­i assistant coach Terrell Buckley, who played at Florida State from 1989-91 before enjoying a 14-year NFL career. “I’m implementi­ng on and off the field — coaching styles, techniques, how do you handle certain situations. It all comes down to the leadership of Coach Bowden. Great coach. Even better person.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? Funeral home workers and fans do the “Seminole chop” Saturday as the casket bearing the body of Bobby Bowden is moved from the Tucker Civic Center at the end of the celebratio­n of life ceremony for the longtime Florida State football coach.
Associated Press Funeral home workers and fans do the “Seminole chop” Saturday as the casket bearing the body of Bobby Bowden is moved from the Tucker Civic Center at the end of the celebratio­n of life ceremony for the longtime Florida State football coach.

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