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Clemson Football

Tommy Bowden on Swinney Passing his father Bobby Bowden: 'I think it's only fitting'

October 10, 2024
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Last Saturday night at Doak Campbell Stadium, Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney stood on the same field where 16 years earlier, as an interim head coach with just a single win to his name, he took on Bobby Bowden’s Florida State Seminoles. This time, however, it was Swinney, now a two-time national champion, who etched his name into history by surpassing Bowden for the most wins in ACC history with 174.

The significance of the moment could not have been lost on Swinney, as he stood on Bobby Bowden Field, breaking the record held by the legendary coach whose son, Tommy Bowden, had given him his wide receiver coaching job at Clemson back in 2003.

The irony of Swinney's rise to coaching prominence is palpable. Had Tommy Bowden not brought him to Clemson as a wide receivers coach, the program’s trajectory might look very different today. Speaking on SiriusXM, former Clemson radio host Roy Philpott reflected on a powerful moment between the Swinney and Bobby Bowden back in 2008.

"In 2008 at Doak Campbell Stadium, Clemson comes down to Florida State. Dabo is the interim head coach, and he had probably been the interim for two weeks," Philpott said. "They're a heavy underdog at Florida State and I'm standing at midfield as Bobby Bowden and Dabo kind of meet and embrace. Bobby Bowden walks up to him and says, ‘Hey, I just want you to know, you're the one that we wanted to get the job,’ and he meant it."

That moment of passing the torch from the elder Bowden to Swinney was not lost on the young coach, who would go on to build a dynasty of his own at Clemson. "It stuck with Coach Swinney," Philpott added. "He's talked about Bobby Bowden as his mentor."

For Tommy Bowden, the connection between his father and Swinney goes beyond the sidelines as he told ClemsonSportsTalk.com last Friday.

“It is kind of ironic because my father was a strong Christian guy, tried to do things the right way, and was a really good coach,” Bowden said. "If you were to pick a guy to break his record... my father, if he were alive, he'd say, 'Okay, let me pick one guy to break it,' that's the guy he would pick. It's kind of ironic that they're very similar in that regard."

Swinney, for his part, was reflective after the game, expressing his admiration for Bobby Bowden, who was also a two-time national championship-winning head coach.

“I'm just blessed, and I’m very honored. I don’t want to downplay it," Swinney said. "I honestly think Coach Bowden's probably smiling. Somebody’s got to break it, and somebody will break this record one of these days."

Swinney went on to emphasize that his career milestones were never personal goals, much like the elder Bowden.

“All I can tell you is that’s never been a goal of mine. I mean, I'm honored and blessed, but it’s not ever anything I’ve dreamed about or cared about doing,” Swinney admitted. “If Coach Bowden was here right now, he'd tell you the same thing—those things happen because you’ve got great players, great coaches, and kids that buy in.”

Swinney’s humility was also evident as he reflected on the ascension from interim status 16 years ago to becoming the ACC’s winningest coach.

“I came down here with one win and had to meet Bobby Bowden at midfield. I’ll never forget that,” Swinney recalled. “Never in my imagination would I think 16 years later we’d be sitting here having this conversation.”

Yet, for Swinney, surpassing Bowden is less about personal achievement and more about the legacy of impact. “Ain’t nobody better than Bobby Bowden,” he said. “If I could just have half the impact on my players' lives that Bobby Bowden had in his, then I would have lived a good life purpose.”

The humility and faith that Bowden and Swinney share only makes this moment more fitting. As Tommy Bowden said, "To have somebody like [Swinney] break his record, I think it's only fitting.” In a sense, Swinney’s accomplishment is the continuation of a legacy that transcends wins and losses, embodying the values that Bobby Bowden upheld both on and off the field.

Swinney may now sit atop the ACC's all-time wins list, but his reverence for the man he passed speaks to something greater than football: the power of mentorship, faith, and a life dedicated to shaping young men. And in that way, as Swinney acknowledged, his journey is far from over.


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Tommy Bowden on Swinney Passing his father Bobby Bowden: 'I think it's only fitting'

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