Terry Bowden

Terry Bowden
Sport(s) Football
Current position
Title Head coach
Team Akron
Conference MAC
Record 24–37
Biographical details
Born (1956-02-25) February 25, 1956
Douglas, Georgia
Playing career
1977–1978 West Virginia
Position(s) Running back
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1982 Florida State (GA)
1983–1985 Salem
1986 Akron (QB)
1987–1992 Samford
1993–1998 Auburn
2009–2011 North Alabama
2012–present Akron
Head coaching record
Overall 164–99–2
Bowls 3–1
Tournaments 2–2 (NCAA D-IAA playoffs)
2–2 (NCAA D-II playoffs)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
2 WVIAC (1984–1985)
1 SEC Western Division Title (1997)
1 Gulf South (2009)
Awards
Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year (1993)
George Munger Award (1993)
Paul "Bear" Bryant Award (1993)
Sporting News College Football COY (1993)
Walter Camp Coach of the Year (1993)
SEC Coach of the Year (1993)

Terry Wilson Bowden (born February 24, 1956) is the head football coach at the University of Akron. Bowden was previously head coach at Salem University (1983–1985), Samford University (1987–1992), Auburn University (1993–1998), and the University of North Alabama (2009–2011). Bowden is a son of former Florida State University head football coach Bobby Bowden and a brother of Tommy Bowden, former head football coach at Clemson University, and Jeff Bowden, the former offensive coordinator at Florida State who serves as Terry's special teams coordinator at Akron.

Education

Bowden attended and played football for West Virginia University, where he was a member of Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity, and graduated magna cum laude with a degree in accounting. His father, Bobby Bowden, was the Mountaineers' head coach until 1975, and Bowden lettered twice as a running back for his father's successor, Frank Cignetti, Sr. [1][2] In addition to his post-graduate work at Oxford University in England, Bowden also received his Juris Doctor degree from Florida State University College of Law.

Career

Terry Bowden began his coaching career as a graduate assistant at Florida State before becoming the nation's youngest head coach at age 26 when he accepted the position at Salem College in 1983. While at Salem, he won two West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference titles. In 1986, Bowden left to be an assistant coach at The University of Akron for Gerry Faust. In 1987, Bowden became the head coach at Samford University, a school where his father played and coached. At Samford, Bowden directed the program's move from Division III football to Division I-AA scholarship football. In 1991, Bowden's Samford team reached the I-AA semifinals.[3]

Auburn University

In 1992, Bowden was hired to succeed Pat Dye as the head football coach at Auburn University. Bowden's hiring occurred while the program faced NCAA sanctions, which included scholarship reductions, a one-year television ban, and a two-year postseason ban.

During his first year at Auburn, Bowden led the Tigers to a perfect 11–0 season, becoming the first coach to go undefeated in his debut season at a Division I school. In 1994, Auburn finished 9–1–1, establishing the longest winning streak in school history at 20 games.

In 1997, Auburn reached the SEC Championship Game, where they held as much as a 20–7 lead, but lost, giving up a fourth quarter 73-yard touchdown pass by Peyton Manning of the Tennessee Volunteers.

In 1998, Bowden's fate at Auburn changed as he faced criticism for recruiting woes, off-the-field issues that resulted in player discipline, and in his relationships with Auburn administrators, including board of trustees member Bobby Lowder. These issues, combined with a string of player injuries, led to a disastrous start of the 1998 season. After starting with a 1–5 record, Bowden resigned as head coach the night before Auburn played against Louisiana Tech.[4] In conversations with athletic director David Housel, Bowden was given no assurances he would have a chance to remedy the situation for the next season, and that he believed his termination was imminent.[5] The team was coached for the remainder of the season by Bill Oliver. According to a July 25, 2013 article in The Auburn Villager newspaper, a novel titled "The Legend's Son" is a thinly disguised satire of Bowden's rise and fall at Auburn.

Broadcasting career

After resigning at Auburn, Bowden accepted a role as a studio analyst and color commentator for ABC Sports' college football coverage where he often referred to his father Bobby Bowden as "Daddy". He was also an exclusive college football columnist for Yahoo! Sports. For a period, Bowden also hosted a sports talk radio show in the Orlando, Florida area. In 2006, Bowden became the expert analyst for Westwood One radio network's College Football National Game of Week.[6] He also co-hosted "The Coaches Show" on Sirius Satellite Radio with Jack Arute and worked several times a month as a motivational speaker.

In a July 30, 2007 column, writing a few weeks before the 2007 college football season, Bowden said he was eager to go back to coaching for the 2008 football season.[7] In December 2007, the coaching job at his alma mater West Virginia opened up: Rich Rodriguez left to be Michigan's coach. Bowden issued a statement which read in part, "Coming home to West Virginia would obviously be the dream job for me."[2] However, West Virginia offered the job to one of Rodriguez's assistants, Bill Stewart, who was the interim head coach when the Mountaineers upset the Oklahoma Sooners in the 2008 Fiesta Bowl. In late 2007, Bowden interviewed for the head coaching job at Georgia Tech, which ultimately went to Paul Johnson.

Bowden returned to the broadcasting booth for the 2008 season. At the end of the year, Bowden took the head coach position at a Division II school, North Alabama.

North Alabama

On December 31, 2008 it was announced that he would be the next head football coach at the University of North Alabama in Florence.[8] He was officially introduced as the head football coach at the University Center on January 1, 2009.[9] Bowden was tapped to replace Mark Hudspeth, who left after directing the Lions to a 66–21 record and a third berth in seven years in the national playoff semifinals to become the passing game coordinator at Mississippi State University under new head coach Dan Mullen. During Bowden's tenure at North Alabama he guided the Lions to three appearances in the NCAA Division II Playoffs.

Akron

On December 22, 2011, it was announced Bowden would be hired as the next head football coach at the University of Akron, and he was formally introduced on December 28, 2011.[10] He replaced Rob Ianello as the Zips' head coach, who was fired on November 26 after compiling a 2–22 record in two seasons.[10] In his first year, Bowden duplicated Ianello's 1–11 record from 2011.

On September 14, 2013, Bowden led Akron against the Michigan in Ann Arbor and came within a few yards of defeating the Wolverines. The Zips lost, 28–24, after an incomplete pass from the Wolverines' three-yard line on the final play of the game went out of the back of the end zone. Akron led at various points during the game: 10–7 in the third quarter after a 28-yard passing touchdown from Kyle Pohl to Zach D'Orazio; and 24–21 in the fourth quarter after a one-yard pass from Pohl to Tyrell Goodman.[11] Bowden's 2013 team showed improvement, compiling a 5–7 record on the season[12] and snapping the nation's longest road losing streak (28) with a 24–17 victory against the Miami RedHawks.[13] For the signs of improvement shown by the Zips, Akron extended Bowden's contract by two years through 2017.[14] Bowden led the Zips to an 8-5 season in 2015, his first winning season as Akron's coach. He also got Akron their first ever bowl game victory against Utah State in the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl.

Coaching tree

While at Salem and Samford, Bowden coached quarterback Jimbo Fisher to an NCAA Division III National Player of the Year award.[15] Fisher later became quarterbacks coach for Bowden at Auburn, and after years as the offensive coordinator for Florida State, Fisher succeeded Bowden's father as head coach. Two quarterbacks from Bowden's time at Auburn have been successful in their coaching careers. Patrick Nix has been the offensive coordinator for Georgia Tech and the Miami Hurricanes. Dameyune Craig was the quarterbacks coach and recruiting coordinator at Florida State under Fisher. Craig is currently the wide receiver's coach for LSU.

Head coaching record

Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs Coaches# AP°
Salem Tigers (West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference) (1983–1985)
1983 Salem 3–7 2–6 T–7th
1984 Salem 8–3 7–1 T–1st
1985 Salem 8–3 6–1 1st
Salem: 19–13 15–8
Samford Bulldogs (NCAA Division III independent) (1987–1988)
1987 Samford 9–1
1988 Samford 5–6
Samford Bulldogs (NCAA Division I-AA independent) (1989–1992)
1989 Samford 4–7
1990 Samford 6–4–1
1991 Samford 12–2 L NCAA Division I-AA Semifinal
1992 Samford 9–3 L NCAA Division I-AA First Round
Samford: 45–23–1
Auburn Tigers (Southeastern Conference) (1993–1998)
1993 Auburn 11–0 8–0 1st (Western) 4
1994 Auburn 9–1–1 6–1–1 2nd (Western) 9
1995 Auburn 8–4 5–3 2nd (Western) L Outback 21 22
1996 Auburn 8–4 4–4 3rd (Western) W Independence 25 24
1997 Auburn 10–3 6–2 T–1st (Western) W Peach 11 11
1998 Auburn 1–5[n 1] 1–4[n 1] 6th (Western)
Auburn: 47–17–1 30–14–1 ‡ Ineligible for SEC title, bowl game and Coaches' Poll
North Alabama Lions (Gulf South Conference) (2009–2011)
2009 North Alabama 11–2 7–1 1st L NCAA Division II Quarterfinal
2010 North Alabama 9–4 5–3 T–4th L NCAA Division II Second Round
2011 North Alabama 9–3 2–2 T–2nd L NCAA Division II Second Round
North Alabama: 29–9 14–6
Akron Zips (Mid-American Conference) (2012–present)
2012 Akron 1–11 0–8 7th (East)
2013 Akron 5–7 4–4 T–3rd (East)
2014 Akron 5–7 3–5 4th (East)
2015 Akron 8–5 5–3 T–2nd (East) W Famous Idaho Potato
2016 Akron 5–7 3–5 T–3rd (East)
Akron: 24–37 15–25
Total: 164–99–2
      National championship         Conference title         Conference division title
#Rankings from final Coaches Poll.
°Rankings from final AP Poll.

Notes

  1. 1 2 Bowden resigned after six games. Bill Oliver was appointed interim head coach and led Auburn for the remaining five games of the season.

References

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