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Time was right for Bowden, Clemson

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Tags: ACC Now | Clemson

Less than 11 months ago, I ran into Clemson athletics director Terry Don Phillips in the hallway of the ACC headquarters hotel before the conference football championship game in Jacksonville, Fla.
Phillips seemed excited about the direction of Clemson’s football program under Tommy Bowden, who was about to get a contract extension. Phillips said recruiting was going well and was pleased that the Tigers seemed to have two excellent quarterbacks in their program in Cullen Harper and Willy Korn.
But when Clemson flopped this season, Phillips was left with little choice on what to do with Bowden. It’s his 10th season, and the Tigers still haven’t won an ACC title under Bowden.
Despite Bowden’s recruiting success, a 7-2 record against rival South Carolina and significant facilities improvements, Clemson hasn’t come close to challenging for a national championship. And the specter of the 1981 national championship season loomed heavier over Bowden with each passing year.
In many respects, it’s a shame. I found Bowden to be a decent guy when I was covering the team for The State Newspaper in Columbia from 1999 to 2003.
We had disagreements, most notably when he threatened to stop taking my calls after I wrote something he didn’t like in the 2000 preseason. But he also took the time to call and congratulate me following the births of both my children after teasing me for missing post-practice interviews to attend Lamaze class with my wife.
During one remarkable week, he gave me access to his pre-game meeting with then-offensive coordinator Brad Scott as they prepared to play Louisiana Tech. They laid out their entire game plan, right down to which hash mark they wanted to start their first play from on offense, so I could write about how much their play calling resembled their script.
There aren’t many coaches who would bother to do that with members of the media, but Bowden understood the importance of openness in getting information on his team to the public.
Bowden, of course, is set for life financially because of his buyout and the handsome compensation he commanded over 10 years at Clemson. In this troubled economy, we should save our sympathy for the unemployed who can’t put food on the table and retirees whose investments have tanked.
But Tommy Bowden will be missed, even though the time was right for him to part ways with Clemson.

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Agreed

I'd like to say that I agree wholeheartedly with everything you said, Ken. There are a few things that I'd like to add, also. First, Bowden is, by all accounts, a kind and decent man, the type of man who mothers entrusted to take care of their children for four years at a time. Secondly, he was instrumental in the advancement of the facilities, including the WestZone Project, which helped bring the Clemson athletic dept. as a whole up a few notches. Finally, Coach Bowden will have left Clemson football in much, much better shape than it was when he arrived. I know a lot of my friends don't have a lot of positives to say right now, but I'm a bit more objective. I do remember the Tommy West years, and I certainly am appreciative that Clemson is in a better place now. From at least one Tiger grad, thanks coach, good luck, and God bless.

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About the blogger

Ken Tysiac has covered the ACC for The Charlotte Observer since 2003, and spent the previous eight years covering Clemson for the Anderson Independent-Mail and then The State in South Carolina. He grew up in Rochester, N.Y., and is a graduate of the University of Notre Dame.

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