
Ann Bowden - The first lady of football
By Charlie Barnes
Executive Director, Seminole Boosters, Inc.
Ann and Bobby Bowden's endearingly chaotic early life together with six
little ones motoring through the house is a wonderful story.
Bobby was 19 and Ann was 16 when they snuck off in the senior Bowden's car,
across the Georgia line to a justice of the peace on April Fool's Day in
1949. Thus did the Bowden Ship of State set sail. All the passions of youth
billowed those sails with gusty breezes, and while some of the gusts were
sharp, the boat was never really in danger of capsizing.
"There was no divorce in either one of our families," Ann remembers.
"No matter how tough things got - no matter if I locked him out of
the house a couple of nights because he was spending more time with his
buddies talking football than paying attention to me and the kids - we never
considered divorce."
Bobby Bowden locked out of the house? Well, not very often. When they finally
got their own house, Coach would come home and sit and rock the babies and
give them their bottles. After dinner, he did the dishes while Ann finally
got to put her feet up.
Now, nearly fifty years later, Ann laughs: "He and I have been together
just about every day of our lives since I was fifteen...We started going
together when we were kids, and he's still a big kid, going off with his
friends to play games...I joke with my friends now that I've never had an
adult relationship."
Much of this story and more is in the forward of Ben Brown's new book Winning's
Only Part of the Game. Brown wrote St. Bobby & the Barbarians, and while
Winning's a much less ambitious effort, the book is well worth the price
just for Ann's superbly written account of their life.
They are both hard chargers.
His fame masks her intensity and drive, but she has matched him from the
beginning. They went through Howard College together with two babies in
tow. While he quarterbacked the football team, she led the cheerleaders.
When he was president of Pike, she was president of Phi Mu.
Ann Bowden really is the First Lady of College Football. She is the wife
of a great Head Coach, the mother of a great Head Coach, the mother of two
potentially great Head Coaches-to-be. She has a son-in-law on the Auburn
staff who could snag a head coaching job someday. And, she is a high-profile
personality in her own right.
My guess is they'll probably both admit that she's the ambitious one. His
life is football. I don't think he's ever happier than when he's out on
the practice field, wearing his coach's shorts, a hat, shades, and a whistle.
Ann thinks he loved the life so much in Birmingham that he might have stayed
there. "I may have been more ambitious for Bobby than he was,"
she says. She was not enthusiastic about leaving West Virginia.
In 1975, West Virginia was considered a better job than Florida State. But
they had spent a few years in Tallahassee in the early '60s and Coach was
disillusioned with the West Virginia situation. The jump to Tallahassee
was not considered permanent.
But things worked out, happily so. Ann was a leader right away. She was
a founder of the Extra Point Club, the women's group that does so much to
support Seminole athletics. And I'm not at all sure she wasn't the one who
suggested putting spears on the helmets. A few years ago a TV interviewer
asked Coach Bowden who started the Seminole War Chant. He thought about
it for a second, and asked, "Was it my wife?" It wasn't, but he
fairly assumed that Ann had something to do with it.
As they grew together, she lost any resentment about the claim that football
has on his attentions. "I realized we were working for the same
thing,"
she says. Over time, they developed a division of labor. "I tell him
even now," she laughs, "you sit up there in that fancy football
office overlooking the stadium, the king of your domain. But I'm still head
coach of the house."
Ah yes, The House.
Coach and Ann have lived at the same address in Killearn since 1976, when
Coach accepted the FSU job at a princely salary of $37,500.
After the first decade, the money was appreciably better, and Ann campaigned
mightily for a plantation she had picked out. The battle was as hard fought
as any ever was. It was the classic
"Let's-don't-mortgage-our-retirement"
point of view versus the
"I-raised-six-babies-on-the-damp-concrete-floor-of-a-South-Georgia-Juni
or-College-barracks-so-now-let's-finally-get-something-really-nice-before-we
're-too-old-to-enjoy-it"
appeal.
In the end, no plantation. So Ann launched a massive renovation of the existing
house. Bobby just shook his head. "You all say the University Center
is the largest brick construction project in the history of the
southeast...well,
when my house is finished, you all are going to drop to #2."
Many years ago, Ann traveled with us on the Bowden Tour in the spring. Coach
and Ann and I, cruising through the night from town to town in a station
wagon.
Ann would curl up and sleep in the back seat, and one night I noticed him
just looking at her for a long time. Finally, he said, "You know, Ann
is the toughest person, man or woman, I've ever known."
He said it with great affection. I didn't know either of them very well
then, and so I didn't say anything. What I know now is that the two of them
are as much one single entity as it's possible for two to be.
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Walter Jones
Hope surrounds offense's "best athlete"
By Jim Henry The Osceola
The Osceola
Walter Jones is quiet and shy by nature. He loves nothing more than discovering
an isolated fishing hole, away from life's distractions. On the football
field, however, Jones is focused and intense. He listens, learns and
impresses.
Florida State's starter at split tackle, Jones wants to separate fact from
fiction.
"Last year Walter could have easily played, but the coaches selected
to redshirt him," senior tight guard Chad Bates said. "He could
have played last year, no doubt about it. He has the best feet of all of
us. He has quick feet, quick hands, he's pretty smart and he knows where
to go. He picked up the system last year and now knows it even better. He's
the total package, and he's going to be fun to watch."
Coaches and teammates alike sang Jones' praises during that redshirt season
following his arrival from Holmes (Miss.) Community College. He is a unique
package of power and speed and a heralded pass blocker. Recruiting analyst
Max Emfinger called him one of the greatest offensive linemen in JUCO history.
Many FSU types last season whispered that Jones might be better than anyone
on the 'Noles' senior-dominated line. Can't teach quickness, they said.
The fluidness and athletic ability, they added. Such talk continues to filter
through the ranks. Jones, a redshirt junior with two years of eligibility,
had yet to play a down at FSU, but his reputation preceded him.
"He's probably the best athlete that's ever come through here on the
offensive line," FSU offensive line coach Jimmy Heggins said without
hesitation. "I am not saying the best player yet, but the best athlete:
6-5, 300 pounds, 4.9 speed in the 40. You know anybody else like that come
through here?"
Jones believes he was ready to contribute last season despite the wealth
of experience on the offensive line - the unit featured eight lettermen
and proven starters in seniors Clay Shiver, Lewis Tyre and Jesus Hernandez.
On the other hand, Jones says the redshirt season served a purpose.
"I got a chance to learn the system, the coaches and my teammates,"
he said. "There was so much talent on last year's line. I know I could
have played, but the redshirt was a good move. The coaches understand me
­p; they know what I can do and expect."
Jones' goal this spring was to add weight to his 6-5 frame. He added 16
pounds, going from 285 to 301. He clocked a 4.86 40 during spring drills
and figures he hasn't lost a step. Jones' bench press improved from 370
to 455, and his vertical jump was 34 inches, the same as skilled players
like wide receiver Wayne Messam and running backs Rock Preston and Warrick
Dunn.
"The key is, I feel comfortable," Jones said. Last year I felt
like I was lighter than the rest of the guys. I think I can handle it. I
still feel quick."
While the 'Noles' line holds promise and potential, it was considered a
question mark this preseason since there was little experience behind the
first unit. Jones' smile turns into a smirk when critics point to the 'Noles'
offensive line as a potential problem.
"I don't see a weakness in our line," Jones said. "It might
take awhile to start clicking, but that's the nature of the position. We
have to play as one and that takes time."
Jones is a native of Aliceville, Ala., a stone's throw from the University
of Alabama. He's been a life-long fan of the Crimson Tide and had dreams
of playing football in Tuscaloosa. But Alabama didn't recruit him out of
high school.
The Crimson Tide made a strong sales pitch for Jones when he was at Holmes
CC, playing to his heart, and nearly won him.
"It was close, real close," Jones said. "I live 35 minutes
from Alabama, and my mother really wanted me to go there. I had grown up
following them. It went down to the last day (signing period), but I felt
Florida State was the best place for me.
"My mother was disappointed, but Florida State was the one that stuck
with me through junior college. Sometimes I wonder what it would have been
like if I attended Alabama, but I made the right decision. I feel comfortable
here."
With the start of football, Jones doesn't have much time to scout Tally
for lakes and ponds. Fishing will have to wait for the offseason.
"Off the field I am kind of laid back and quiet," he said. "I
don't hang out with all the guys and I like to spend time with my girlfriend.
I went home (during the summer) and did a lot of fishing, too. But now I
don't really have the time. On the field I am more focused and determined
than ever. I know what needs to be done this year."

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