Throwback Thursday: A look back at the Bowden Bowl

The Clemson-Florida State rivalry is one of the most entertaining in college football and it started with a father and son. 

The Clemson-Florida State rivalry is one of the most entertaining in college football.

And it started with a father and son.

Bobby Bowden started at Florida State in 1976 and rewrote college football history. Most people recognize Bowden’s most prominent rivals as Florida and Miami.

It wasn’t until 1992 that Clemson became a thorn in his butt when the Noles joined the ACC. Clemson was recognized as a basketball then, but the two programs’ first game as conference foes resulted in a 24-20 Florida State victory. Florida State won the next ten matchups.

Things began to change when Tommy Bowden became head coach of Clemson in 1998, paving the way for the first-ever meeting between a father and a son as opposing head coaches in football.

The first game 1999, won by Florida State 17-14, set a new attendance record of 86,200 at Clemson University’s Memorial Stadium. Tommy Bowden’s first victory came on his father’s birthday in 2003, when his Tigers defeated the third-ranked FSU, putting a dent in their chances of winning the national championship.

During the Bowden Bowl era, FSU won five conference championships, two of which were won by teams that Tommy Bowden coached to victory in 2003 and 2005.

The Bowden Bowl series ended when Tommy resigned as head coach six games into the 2008 football season. Bobby Bowden won the overall series with five wins and four losses.

Even though Clemson ended up on the losing end of the Bowden Bowl, the era helped Clemson become a legitimate football school in the ACC and the country.

College football’s highest honor ‘pinnacle of everything’ for Spiller

C.J. Spiller has officially reached college football’s peak. Before he was Clemson’s running backs coach, Spiller excelled at the position during his playing days at the Tigers. Throw in his special teams wizardry, and Spiller was one of the best …

C.J. Spiller has officially reached college football’s peak.

Before he was Clemson’s running backs coach, Spiller excelled at the position during his playing days at the Tigers. Throw in his special teams wizardry, and Spiller was one of the best the sport has ever seen with the ball in his hands.

With his induction into the College Football Hall of Fame, he’s officially recognized as such. Spiller will be enshrined with the rest of the 2020 and 2021 classes during the National Football Foundation Annual Awards Dinner late Tuesday in Las Vegas.

Spiller is one of 13 former players and coaches who are part of the 2021 class. Other notable class members include Tony Romo (Eastern Illinois quarterback), Carson Palmer (Southern Cal Heisman-winning quarterback), Dan Morgan (Miami linebacker), Darren Sproles (Kansas State running back) and Bob Stoops (former Oklahoma coach).

“I think this is at the pinnacle of everything,” Spiller said before the event. “I think everything I set out to do at a young age when I started playing the game of football, this would be right at the top.”

Spiller, who got the nod in just his second year of eligibility, is the eighth inductee in the history of Clemson’s program and the fourth player to earn the distinction. A former blue-chip recruit, he began his collegiate career in 2006 after being recruited out of Lake Butler, Florida, by his position coach turned boss, Dabo Swinney.

The rest is history.

A 5-foot-11, 200-pounder with track speed to boot, Spiller became one of college football’s most dynamic players during his four seasons with the Tigers. He piled up 7,588 career all-purpose yards – still the third-most in FBS history – and returned seven kickoffs for touchdowns, an NCAA record.

His senior season in 2009 was his best. Spiller rushed for 1,212 yards, had 503 yards receiving and returned five kicks (four kickoffs, one punt) for scores, accounting for more than 2,600 all-purpose yards and 22 touchdowns that season. The ACC Player of the Year and a unanimous first-team All-American, he also finished sixth in the Heisman Trophy voting.

Spiller was then taken ninth overall by the Buffalo Bills in the 2010 NFL Draft. He played for five teams over eight NFL seasons before eventually returning to coach at Clemson, where he’s in his second season on Swinney’s staff.

But none of his players will ever wear No. 28 while donning the orange and purple. Spiller’s jersey number has been retired.

“When I was young, I wrote down all of my goals of what I wanted to accomplish as a player going from high school to college into the pros,” Spiller said. “The thing I always wrote down was I always wanted to be known as one of the best to leave each stop I had along the way. And now, to be considered one of the best at Clemson, it means a lot not only to me but my family, my teammates and my university.”

As for why he ultimately decided to play for what were Tommy Bowden’s Tigers at the time when he had his pick of the college litter – beyond wanting to go somewhere that reminded him of his small hometown in Florida – Spiller said it was the people that sold him on Clemson.

“It was the only visit I went on where I called back home and told my mom that I think I could come for three or four years,” Spiller said. “And I had been to some very prestigious institutions on my official visits, but it was something different when I got up to Clemson that made me make that phone call back home and tell her that. And when I got there, they lived up to it.”

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Bart Boatwright’s Photo Gallery: Bowden Ceremony

During Saturday’s game between Clemson and Florida State Bobby Bowden was recognized by the Tigers. Former Clemson head coach Tommy Bowden was back in Death Valley for the ceremony. It was his first trip back to Clemson since he was removed. Check …

During Saturday’s game between Clemson and Florida State Bobby Bowden was recognized by the Tigers.  Former Clemson head coach Tommy Bowden was back in Death Valley for the ceremony.  It was his first trip back to Clemson since he was removed.

Check out some great pictures from the celebration in Bart Boatwright’s Photo Gallery.

Bowden’s return to Clemson feels like 1999

When Tommy Bowden walks on to Frank Howard Field at Memorial Stadium on Saturday, it will feel like it is 1999. “I think the situation I can relate it to mostly was the first time I played Florida State when my father was coaching,” he said. Of …

When Tommy Bowden walks on to Frank Howard Field at Memorial Stadium on Saturday, it will feel like it is 1999.

“I think the situation I can relate it to mostly was the first time I played Florida State when my father was coaching,” he said.

Of course, 1999 was Bowden’s first season as Clemson’s head coach and it was also the first time he played his father, Florida State head coach Bobby Bowden.

“That was the first time a father and son have ever coached against each other. He was undefeated and we were playing at Clemson, national TV and gosh, we had them 14-3 at the half,” Tommy said. “But they kicked the field goal and beat us late. They then went on to win the national championship.

“I think, with the fact Clemson is playing Florida State, they are going to honor my father, I think I will have more of those flashbacks of that particular game and that moment than anything else of being back on the sideline.”

Saturday’s Clemson-Florida State game will be Tommy’s first trip back to Clemson since he and the university parted ways at the midway point of the 2008 season. He will be a part of the in-game festivities as Clemson honors the Hall of Fame career of Bobby Bowden, who passed away prior to the start of the 2021 football season.

Clemson will honor the Bowden family with a video tribute during a first-half timeout.

Tommy coached at Clemson from 1999-2008, posting a 72-45 (.615) mark in his 10 seasons running the program. His 72 wins rank fourth in Clemson history behind Frank Howard (165), Dabo Swinney (144) and Danny Ford (96).

“This really gives us a chance to show appreciation for Tommy Bowden and his family and what he did for Clemson,” Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney said Thursday on Off Campus with Mark Packer on ESPNU Radio. “He may not have won the ACC or won the national championship while he was here, but he left Clemson better than he found it.

“He made Clemson better. There is no doubt. He did a lot of great things, but more importantly, he did things the right way. I would not be here at Clemson if it was not for Tommy Bowden.”

The Tigers never posted a losing mark in Tommy’s 10 seasons as head coach, including eight consecutive winning seasons from 2000-’07. Both of his children, Ryan and Lauren, graduated from Clemson. Ryan occasionally attends a Clemson game or two and he will be in attendance on Saturday with his family, including his son Bobby Bowden.

“I stayed there right at ten years, and I had a really good experience. It did not end the way I wanted. I would have loved to do what Dabo is doing. That is every coach’s goal and dream. Our ambition is to have the success that he is having, but I had enough (success),” Tommy said. “My children had a great experience. They have both been successful professionally. I was really pleased with the quality of education offered and the way they prepared them academically for life in the business world.

“They had a pleasant experience. My wife and I had a pleasant experience. We have really fond memories of the ten years I was there.”

Bobby and Tommy met nine times in college football’s first Father vs. Son coaching matchup. Bobby’s Seminoles won five times to Tommy’s four, but Clemson won four of the final five meetings, including each of the last three Bowden Bowls, as it was affectionately called.

“Initially, it was fun,” Tommy said. “Father vs. Son. It was a close game, and he went on to win the national championship. I figured, ‘I am closing the gap already. I am doing such a great job.’ Then he just embarrassed me the next two or three years. He just beat me really, really bad.”

Tommy finally broke through in 2003, as Clemson upset then No. 3 Florida State 26-10 at Death Valley. He and the Tigers also beat his dad in the 2005, ’06 and ’07 matchups. The 2006 game was Clemson’s first victory in Tallahassee since 1989, as the Tigers stunned a No. 9 Florida State team, 27-20.

Always the jokester, Tommy kept things as light-hearted as he could when trying to explain the uniqueness of going against his father every year.

“It might be best to explain it this way. After I lost the first four, the athletic director calls me and says, ‘We hired you to beat Florida State. If you can’t beat your father, we will find somebody that can.’ That kind of got my attention and of course I won the next four out of five. Then his athletic director called him in and said, ‘Hey, we hired you to beat Clemson. You can’t even beat your son, so we will find someone that can.’ So, they solved that, and they fired us both,” Tommy said while laughing.

But joking aside, Tommy said he is very appreciative of what Clemson is doing to honor his father on Saturday, and he cannot wait to be back at Death Valley to experience it all.

“Dabo and athletic director Dan Radakovich flew down for the funeral and we were standing by my mother, and they were talking to her, which was really nice of them to come down,” Tommy said. “We were talking, the three of us, and Dabo brought it up in front of the athletic director, ‘Man, we sure would like to get you and Linda back and maybe honor your father at the Florida State game.’

“I don’t know if the AD approved of it or not, but he kind of put him on the spot,” Tommy continued while laughing. “So, I figured, that was a nice gesture right there.”

Tommy kept the date open, and Swinney came through like he said he would. And now, Saturday’s game between Clemson and Florida State will seem like it is 1999. At least for Tommy Bowden, anyway.

Clemson welcomes Tommy Bowden back Saturday as they honor Bobby Bowden

Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney said during his radio call-in show Monday evening that Clemson will pay tribute to the late great Bobby Bowden during Saturday’s game against Florida State at Death Valley. Bowden, who was FSU’s head coach from …

Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney said during his radio call-in show Monday evening that Clemson will pay tribute to the late great Bobby Bowden during Saturday’s game against Florida State at Death Valley.

Bowden, who was FSU’s head coach from 1976-2009, passed away in August at the age of 91 after being diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in July.

Swinney also said that Clemson will recognize Tommy Bowden, Clemson’s head coach from 1999-2008.

“We are going to honor coach Bobby Bowden,” Swinney said. “I am excited about that. Tommy Bowden and Linda (Tommy’s wife) are coming in town. It is the first game that he has been to since he left here 13 plus years ago. So, I am excited to be able to recognize him as well and show appreciation for him and what he did at Clemson.”

“I certainly wouldn’t be here if it wasn’t for him,” Swinney continued. “If I wasn’t here, C.J. Spiller wouldn’t be here, and if C.J. Spiller wasn’t here, there are a lot of things that probably wouldn’t have happened around here. I think it is a great opportunity and a great time to not only recognize the contributions of Bobby Bowden to this conference, to this game of football and to the Clemson-Florida State game but also a good time to have coach Tommy Bowden be a part of it.”

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Real reason why Braves’ legend still pulls for the Tigers

ATLANTA – Though he never played football for Clemson, Jeff Francoeur’s roots run deep in the orange clay of Upstate South Carolina. Before he became one of the fan favorites of the Atlanta Braves as a player, and now as a television analyst, …

ATLANTA — Though he never played football for Clemson, Jeff Francoeur’s roots run deep in the orange clay of Upstate South Carolina.

Before he became one of the fan favorites of the Atlanta Braves as a player, and now as a television analyst, Francoeur was a Clemson recruit. And not just any recruit. He was one of the top safety prospects in the country coming out of Parkview High School in 2002.

But now, almost two decades later, Francoeur’s connection to Clemson remains even stronger than it was when he was committed to play for the Tigers before being drafted No. 9 overall by the Braves in the 2002 MLB Draft.

He still has a relationship with former Clemson head coach Tommy Bowden. He is tight with both Dabo Swinney and his brother, Tracy, and one of his closest high school friends is Clemson Deputy Athletic Director, Graham Neff.

“I am happy he is up there, and for me, it is great to have these people that you still know and talk to,” Francoeur said to The Clemson Insider at Truist Park on Saturday.

Years ago, when Dabo Swinney was just beginning his tenure at Clemson, Francoeur would give Swinney and his sons tickets to Braves’ games.

“He is great. Him and his brother, I text Tracy all the time. He is a beauty,” Francoeur said. “They know I love to be a part (of Clemson). I am just a big fan, and it is fun. They enjoy having people support the program that are outside that area. Outside Anderson and Greenville, you know, people around the area.

“So, whenever Dabo comes in recruiting and stuff, every once in a while, he will stop by, go to lunch or do something, so I am always happy for hm. He has done a great job and I love what he stands for up there. So, for me, it is a perfect fit.”

Francoeur says he still talks to Bowden, too. He says they talk quite a bit, and he and his wife usually go out to dinner with the Bowdens at least once a year when they are in Florida.

“I have always stayed in close contact with them. Tommy is awesome, man. Tommy is a lot of the reason why I chose Clemson,” Francoeur said.

Jack Leggett was the other reason. The former Brave said he had a great relationship with Clemson’s former Hall of Fame baseball coach.

His relationship with Bowden crew stronger when he bought a house alongside him in Florida.

“Me and Tommy became next door neighbors down there. So, we always kind of saw each other whenever he would come down for the season,” Francoeur recalled. “Of course, when he resigned and that whole ordeal, we saw him full-time.

“I just became a Clemson fan. I loved the University and everything about it.”

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Swinney on hand for celebration of Bobby Bowden’s life

It was a celebration of a life well lived. That is pretty much the way Dabo Swinney described Saturday’s public funeral service for longtime Florida State head coach Bobby Bowden. Swinney flew down to Tallahassee, Florida to give his condolences to …

It was a celebration of a life well lived.

That is pretty much the way Dabo Swinney described Saturday’s public funeral service for longtime Florida State head coach Bobby Bowden. Swinney flew down to Tallahassee, Florida to give his condolences to Bowden’s Family at the Tucker Civic Center on the campus of Florida State University.

“It was a great day,” Clemson’s head coach said. “What a life well lived. It was great to be able to see all the Bowdens and be able to see so many of those great players that played for Coach Bowden and so many of the great coaches who worked for him.”

Swinney knew Bobby Bowden well. Bowden’s son, Tommy, was Swinney’s position coach in his first year at Alabama and later coached under him at Clemson from 2003-’08 as his wide receivers coach.

The last two years, Terry worked as a voluntary analyst on Swinney’s staff before taking the head coaching job at Louisiana-Monroe University this past January.

Of course, Swinney also had a relationship with Bobby, too. Though he did not play or coach under the Hall of Fame coach, Swinney has said many times Bobby Bowden was an indirect influence on his coaching career and was a Godly man that he admired so greatly.

“It truly was a celebration. They talked about the gospel and that is just the way Coach Bowden would have wanted it,” Swinney said. “It was a special day. A moving day, inspirational and a blessing to have an opportunity to be a part of it.

“Again, to hear so many wonderful messages from his family and his former players and his coaches, as well. It was just a beautiful day.”

After the funeral service, Swinney flew back to Clemson Saturday afternoon, coaching his team in a two-hour scrimmage inside the Poe Indoor Practice Facility.

The Tigers will have picture day on Sunday and will resume camp on Monday.

–Above photo: Tommy Bowden, Bobby Bowden’s son, speaks during a public funeral service held for former Florida State head coach Bobby Bowden at Donald L. Tucker Civic Center on Saturday (Photo courtesy of USA Today)

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Bobby Bowden was genuine, personable as they come, and I should know

The first time I met Bobby Bowden was not in Tallahassee or in Clemson or at an ACC event or press conference. Nope. It was at none of those places. The first time I met the Hall of Fame head coach was in a small South Georgia town called Douglas. I …

The first time I met Bobby Bowden was not in Tallahassee or in Clemson or at an ACC event or press conference.

Nope. It was at none of those places.

The first time I met the Hall of Fame head coach was in a small South Georgia town called Douglas. I was a young sportswriter then that was still wet behind the ears.

This is the first memory that popped in my head this morning when I learned the news that Coach Bowden passed away.

So, how did I come to meet Coach Bowden in Douglas, Georgia? A lot of you don’t know this, but this is the birthplace of Coach Bowden’s career as a Hall of Fame head coach.

Bowden coached at South Georgia College, now known as South Georgia State College, from 1956-’58, including an undefeated championship season in 1958. It was his first championship team.

Every two years, Bowden and his old players got together in South Georgia to reminisce about the undefeated season.

I had the pleasure to cover this event one year, and that is when I first saw how real and genuine Coach Bowden really was. He took the time to sit down and talk to me for more than an hour and then allowed me to hang around and take in the reunion with his former players.

As you can imagine, it was quite an experience for me that left an impression. A few years later, I met Coach Bowden again at an FCA event in Tifton, Georgia. Coach Bowden, as always, was as sharp as a tack. He remembered me and sat down and spoke to me for about an hour. He was throwing out his famous zingers and one-liners that made him so approachable and genuine.

When I started covering Clemson, I got the opportunity to speak to Coach Bowden a lot. He always remembered who I was and genuinely asked how I was doing.

When his son Tommy Bowden was coaching at Clemson, the ACC always had them talk to the writers during their breakout sessions at the same time. They always put on a show, taking friendly jabs at one another from across the room.

Tommy would walk in and would yell to his dad, who was already talking to the writers, “Hey old man! When did you make it up from your nap?”

Bobby would just laugh and say, “I got up early because I knew you would show up late.”

It was always good-old-fashion humor that made for great stories. I got the pleasure to cover five of the Bowden Bowl matchups in the later years, as Tommy won four of those five meetings over his dad.

It was great to observe how close they were and how much respect and love they had for each other. You could tell their relationship was more than just father and son. They were best friends. Tommy is a lot like his dad in so many ways.

This morning we all lost Bobby Bowden, as he went home to be with our Lord and Savior. He finally lost to an opponent he could not beat – pancreatic cancer.

On July 21, Coach Bowden, through Florida State, announced the news he was diagnosed with a terminal medical condition. And though he was staring death right in the face, Coach Bowden was as stern, strong, and genuine to us as he always was.

“I’ve always tried to serve God’s purpose for my life, on and off the field, and I am prepared for what is to come,” Bowden said in the release. “My wife Ann and our family have been life’s greatest blessing. I am at peace.”

And so are we Coach. For you shared some of the best moments of your life with all of us, including going out of your way to make a young sportswriter feel welcomed and a part of something special when you did not have to.

You gave me a memory I will never forget, and for that, I will never forget you. Rest In Peace, Coach.

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