šŸˆ FSU icon Bobby Bowden greater than Bama legends Nick Saban and Bear Bryant

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FSU icon Bobby Bowden greater than Bama legends Nick Saban and Bear Bryant

Whoever writes the headlines for The Orlando Sentinel's web edition should see a traffic spike today.

Columnist Mike Bianchi's latest piece is sure to ruffle some feathers in Alabama after he makes the claim that the former face of Florida State football should be ranked above the Crimson Tide's legendary duo in the pantheon of coaches.

"In my mind, Saban has easily eclipsed the Bear, but not as the greatest college football coach of all-time," Bianchi writes. "Call me a State of Florida homer if you want, but I still maintain Bobby Bowden is the greatest college football coach to ever prowl the sidelines. Granted, Bear has six national titles, Saban has five and Bowden only has two. But Bowden has more overall victories and did something Bryant, Saban and Joe Paterno never did.

"He created something where there was nothing. He didn't just put Florida State on the map, he drew the dad-gum map."

That's the gist of Bianchi's reasoning for placing Bowden above Saban and the Bear. Alabama had a name before Bryant, he says, but Tallahassee wasn’t yet established as a premiere football town in the South nor did the university have resources allocated to football the way Bryant had in Tuscaloosa.

He seems hung up on the fact that Alabama's lopsided talent differential paved the way for Bryant while Bowden didn't have that luxury.

"There weren't scholarship limitations and billion-dollar TV deals that evened the playing field," Bianchi writes.

He goes on to say "national titles shouldn't be the ultimate measure of greatness" when in fact, in every major sport, the total number of championships is often the single-most determining factor separating the elite.

Alabama fans will likely agree to disagree with this opinion.
 
Yeah, program control was not there. By that measure, Howard schnellinburger (sp?), is the best ever, because Miami has smoked Florida State with National Championships. Wow, took me two seconds to blow that article out of the water. Much like Paterno, Bowdon was a pawn for years as their job was just to walk the sideline.
 
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After three years of Ears Whitworth, Alabama football was the equivalent of smoking ruins when Bryant arrived in 1958. If there was so much talent on hand then, why was the quick kick a staple of Alabama's game plan for his first three years as HC. Alabama became a talent laden team because of hard work recruiting by Bryant and his staff.

I admire what Coach Bowden did in his career at FSU, but it wasn't as if he took a program with UAB status and put it on top. Fred Biletnikof, for one, is an FSU alum, and he was there in the late sixties.
 
To each their own... Bowden can certainly be considered one of the greatest for what he accomplished at FSU... there is no doubting that. I think you start to split hairs when you try to compare one to another. If those readers want to think that way, it is fine by me... it has no real relevance.
 
Bianchi has had a hardon for Saban ever since he left Miami to come to BAMA. No surprise that he would take a shot to discredit what Saban has accomplished.

I had a friend who lived a few doors down from Bianchi until he passed in 2008. His hard-on was rooted in his love for Don Shula's kid. My friend used to send pizza to the coaching staff when Shula was there and Bianchi pitched in more than a few times on those orders.

What we saw was Bianchi reacting to the move which ended up hitting so close to home in a lot of ways.

That's how I've seen this ...
 
I had a friend who lived a few doors down from Bianchi until he passed in 2008. His hard-on was rooted in his love for Don Shula's kid. My friend used to send pizza to the coaching staff when Shula was there and Bianchi pitched in more than a few times on those orders.

What we saw was Bianchi reacting to the move which ended up hitting so close to home in a lot of ways.

That's how I've seen this ...
Miami sportswriters have several reasons to hate Bama. The two greatest coaches to ever walk the sideline, they both preferred Tuscaloosa to Miami. Also, maybe the two greatest players to ever come out of Miami, both ended up in Tuscaloosa, Thomas and Cooper.

As for Bowden, I would put him at the top of the second tier, along with Spurrier, Meyer and Redacted. Top tier is Saban/Bryant, then Wilkinson, Royal, Neyland, Hayes, Schembechler, McKay, some nameless ND coaches.
 
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As for Bowden, I would put him at the top of the second tier, along with Spurrier and Redacted.
Redacted. Paterno? If so ... :clap:

The jury is still out with Spurrier in my mind. When I think about him I still am left shaking my head ...

Today I'm muttering, "he quit when DuBose kicked his ass ... I shoulda seen it comin'."
 
Redacted. Paterno? If so ... :clap:

The jury is still out with Spurrier in my mind. When I think about him I still am left shaking my head ...

Today I'm muttering, "he quit when DuBose kicked his ass ... I shoulda seen it comin'."
Yep, that is who I meant. I used to have so much respect for the guy, now I hate him.
 
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