NCAA football, particularly Division I-A, is one of
the most competitive collegiate sports. Many coaches have had winning
seasons, but only the greatest are remembered by fans. Bobby Bowden,
forty four years after coaching his first college game and after twenty
nine years with Florida State, is the winningest coach in NCAA history.
His Seminoles were ranked in the Associated Press (AP) Top Five for
fourteen consecutive seasons. His 1999 team was the first ever to go
from opening game to the championship while maintaining their number
one AP ranking the whole time. He is ranked second in most bowl wins.
When he took over in 1976, the Seminoles had won a total of only four
games in three seasons. His career record with the Seminoles, playing
some of the league's toughest teams, is 278-70-4.
Also considered
a NCAA coaching great is Joe Paterno. As he prepares for his fortieth
year with Penn State, he is in second place for all time victories,
only behind Bobby Bowden. He led the Nittany Lions to national
championships in 1982 and 1986 and had five unbeaten/untied seasons.
Oh, and he is the one Bobby Bowden is chasing for all time bowl wins
with a record of 20-10-1.
If NCAA football was a religion in
Alabama, Paul “Bear” Bryant would be their messiah. He led the Crimson
Tide to six national titles between 1961 and 1979. At the time of his
retirement, he was the winningest coach of all time and also held the
record for most bowl wins. Bear was known as a stern, no nonsense
coach. He once suspended his star quarterback, Joe Namath, causing him
to miss the 1964 Sugar Bowl.
But Bowden and Paterno, as great as
they are, may never be able to reach the greatness a certain Norwegian
achieved while coaching America's most famous Irish-Catholic
university. Knute Rockne has been the subject to countless books and
even a movie that featured a former president, Ronald Reagan, as his
most famous player, George Gipp. Even people that don't know much about
football or Notre Dame surely know the line “Win one for the Gipper.”
What Rockne could have accomplished will never be known. He was cut
down in his prime, dying in a plane crash at age 42. But in his short
thirteen years at Notre Dame, he managed to compile a record of
105-12-5, including six national championships. That is the winningest
percentage (.881) of any NCAA football coach ever. He was also created
the unstoppable backfield known as the four horsemen that led the
Fighting Irish to a 28-2 record. He was dearly loved not only by his
players, but fans as well.
Sure, there will be other great
coaches in the future of the NCAA. But no one can ever forget these
great men or their astonishing accomplishments.