Jeff Bowden Explained

Jeff Bowden
Birth Date:30 December 1959[1]
Birth Place:Morgantown, West Virginia, U.S.
Player Years1:1979–1982
Player Team1:Florida State
Player Positions:Wide receiver
Coach Years1:1983–1984
Coach Team1:Salem (WR)
Coach Years2:1985
Coach Team2:Salem (OC)
Coach Years3:1986
Coach Team3:Florida State (GA)
Coach Years4:1987–1990
Coach Team4:Samford (OC)
Coach Years5:1991–1993
Coach Team5:Southern Miss (WR)
Coach Years6:1994–2000
Coach Team6:Florida State (WR)
Coach Years7:2001–2006
Coach Team7:Florida State (OC)
Coach Years8:2009–2011
Coach Team8:North Alabama (WR)
Coach Years9:2012–2018
Coach Team9:Akron (ST/WR)

Jeff Bowden (; born December 30, 1959) is an American college football coach. He served as the special teams coordinator and the outside wide receivers coach at Akron.[2] Before that he served as the offensive coordinator for the Florida State Seminoles under his father and head coach Bobby Bowden. He resigned from that position on November 14, 2006, following a shutout loss to Wake Forest three days earlier.[3] He has also been a wide receivers coach and coached at Salem College, Samford University and Southern Miss. Bowden played wide receiver at Florida State from 1981 until 1982.[4]

Coaching career

Bowden started to coach immediately after he graduated when he was hired as the wide receivers coach at Salem College (now known as Salem International University) in 1983, where his brother Terry Bowden was the head coach. After two years, he was promoted to the position of offensive coordinator. He then returned to FSU, his alma mater, for a season as a graduate assistant coach. In 1987, he began a four-year stint as offensive coordinator at Samford University, again under big brother and head coach Terry Bowden. Bowden then moved up to the Division I-A level as wide receivers coach at Southern Mississippi for three years before being hired by his father at Florida State in 1994 as wide receivers coach. He was promoted to offensive coordinator in 2001 when Mark Richt departed for the head coaching position at Georgia.

Jeff Bowden's choice as offensive coordinator was often criticized as nepotism (Bowden has worked for his father or brother in 31 of his 34 years as a football coach). The offense struggled during the younger Bowden's career and after years of frustration the Seminoles were shut out at home by Wake Forest. Days later, a deal was struck for Jeff Bowden to step down.[5] As a part of Jeff Bowden's agreement with Florida State and Seminole Boosters, Inc. (the Florida State athletic booster organization), he received an $107,500 annually, or $537,000 total, through August 2012 from the Booster club.[6]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Diginole: FSU's Digital Repository | DigiNole.
  2. Web site: Jeff Bowden joins Terry Bowden's coaching staff | TimesDaily.com | The Times Daily | Florence, AL . https://web.archive.org/web/20090630054657/http://www.timesdaily.com/article/20090131/ARTICLES/901310333?Title=Jeff-Bowden-joins-Terry-Bowden-s-coaching-staff . dead . 2009-06-30 . The Times Daily . 2011-07-14 .
  3. News: Florida State offensive coordinator Bowden resigns . Associated Press . AP . 2006-11-14 . 2006-11-14 .
  4. Web site: Player Bio: Jeff Bowden . Seminoles.com . 2011-07-14 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110807102508/http://www.seminoles.com/sports/m-footbl/mtt/bowden_jeff01.html . 2011-08-07 .
  5. Web site: Embattled Bowden resigns - Orlando Sentinel . Articles.orlandosentinel.com . 2006-11-15 . 2011-07-14.
  6. News: FSU boosters paid Jeff Bowden to quit. NBC Sports.com. Associated Press. 2006-11-15. 2006-11-15. https://web.archive.org/web/20101127011552/http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/15716958. 2010-11-27. dead.