TALLAHASSEE — Bobby Bowden has said he doesn’t want a farewell tour, that when he decides to leave Florida State, whenever it might be, “I’d want to make it as brief as I could and get out of town.”
Bowden (left) is preparing for his 34th season at FSU and it figures that either this season or the next will be his last. At least, that’s the thought given the university’s coach-in-waiting arrangement with Seminoles’ offensive coordinator Jimbo Fisher, whom FSU will owe $5 million if he’s not the head coach by January 2011.
Despite the contract — and the logic that comes with it — Bowden has refused to define his exit.
“Because it’s just going to mean,” he said, “[that] every time you play a ballgame, somebody is going to say, ‘Well, this is the last time he’s going to play in this stadium. This is the last time he’s going to play in that stadium. And so I won’t say.
“People are going to put together what they want to, but I won’t say.”
Even so, Bowden’s activities during the past week might have represented the beginnings of the exact kind of farewell tour he so desperately wants to avoid. He began last week with a trip to Florence, Ala., where he joined sons Tommy, Terry and Jeff for a “Day with the Bowdens” fundraising event at North Alabama. There, Terry is attempting to rekindle his coaching career.
Then, on Wednesday, Bowden returned to Tallahassee to be roasted at a $125-per-ticket event put on by the Tallahassee Quarterback Club. The guest list was impressive: Tom Osborne, the former Nebraska coach, and Burt Reynolds; Heisman Trophy quarterback Chris Weinke and FSU legend Ron Simmons; Georgia Coach Mark Richt, among others.
And the implication was clear: They’d all gathered not so much to share a laugh at Bowden’s expense — as is supposed to be the goal of a roast — but instead to pay tribute to a man who in all likelihood will retire at some point during the next 18 months.
Both events — North Alabama’s Bowden Day and the roast — were supposed to be more celebratory than serious. Yet hanging over Bowden at both were reminders of the possibility that he might lose 14 games from his career record because of a cheating scandal in which he played no role.
During a news conference with all four Bowden men at North Alabama, the first question was for the eldest Bowden and, not surprisingly, it focused on Florida State’s ongoing NCAA appeal, which is attempting to preserve Bowden’s victories and those from nine other sports during the 2006 and ’07 seasons.
Later, Bowden, 79, spent another half-hour answering questions, most about his record and his ongoing competition with Penn State’s Joe Paterno, who holds a one-victory lead (383-382) over Bowden in the race to retire the most victorious coach in major-college football history.
The academic fraud scandal was less a focus at the roast, but the contrast of that event to current events was clear: All the luminaries — from Reynolds, the movie star, to Richt, the former FSU offensive coordinator — had gathered to celebrate Bowden amid one of the most difficult times of his career.
Lou Holtz, Bowden’s longtime friend, taped a video tribute for the roast and he threw a “Free Shoes University” joke in there about FSU’s Foot Locker scandal from the 1990s. Others picked on Bowden’s age, or his tendency to substitute someone’s first name with “buddy.”
Yet no one found any humor in the academic fraud scandal, and no one joked about it. Weinke, who helped lead the ‘Noles to the 1999 national championship, was the only one who even alluded to it when he said, “It doesn’t matter what the NCAA says. To me, Coach Bowden will always be the winningest coach in college football.”
People clapped for that, and they later stood and cheered — more than 600 of them in a packed banquet hall — for Bowden. He said during his appearance at North Alabama that his retirement wouldn’t be hastened if the NCAA’s decision to vacate victories is eventually upheld.
And the week before that, sitting behind his desk in his office, Bowden said what he liked most about his Seminoles now is that he thinks they have a chance to resemble some of his teams of old.
“If they all stay healthy, this could be a pretty doggone good ballclub,” Bowden said. “Then, the next year, you’ve got ‘em all back.”
That “next year,” as Bowden put it, in 2010, FSU would figure to have a senior quarterback in Christian Ponder, a veteran offensive line that could return every starter for the second consecutive season and a defense that could have the potential to be the Seminoles’ nastiest in years.
Bowden wouldn’t say it, of course, but it seems he might have reason to stick around until then, to make one last run at a championship and to try and put a perfect ending on the farewell tour he wants no part of.
Andrew Carter’s Chopping Block blog can be read at OrlandoSentinel.com/choppingblock and he can be reached at acarterb@orlandosentinel.com.
Copyright © 2009, Orlando Sentinel
By Andrew Carter Sentinel Staff Writer
10:48 PM EDT, July 18, 2009