College football lost an icon on Sunday when former Florida State coach Bobby Bowden died at 91. The stories flowed in vast and plentiful for a man who was beloved, colorful and one of the most successful the sport has ever seen.
Yes, he "only" won two national championships. There are a handful of coaches who rung up more than that. But by one metric, Bobby Bowden stands alone among the fraternity of legendary college football coaches.
From 1987 to 2000, his Seminoles finished in The Associated Press' top five every season. No one comes even close to that type of sustained success. At 14 straight years with a top-five team, Bowden doesn't just stand alone, he laps the field.
Here’s another way to put Bowden’s run in perspective: Alabama’s Bear Bryant, universally considered one of the sport’s top coaches, had 12 top-five finishes spread over his 23 years in Tuscaloosa. He never had more than three straight. Neither did Woody Hayes, Bo Schembechler, Urban Meyer, Jimmy Johnson, Joe Paterno and a host of other greats.
MORE: Tributes from Deion Sanders, more, pour in after Bowden dies at 91
Here’s the list of coaches with at least four consecutive top-five finishes in the AP Poll era:
Name | College | Streak | Years |
Bobby Bowden | Florida State | 14 | 1987-2000 |
Pete Carroll | USC | 7 | 2002-09 |
Bud Wilkinson | Oklahoma | 7 | 1952-58 |
Dabo Swinney | Clemson | 6 | 2015-20* |
Nick Saban | Alabama | 5 | 2014-18 |
Ara Parseghian | Notre Dame | 5 | 1966-70 |
Steve Spurrier | Florida | 4 | 1995-98 |
Dennis Erickson | Miami | 4 | 1989-92 |
Barry Switzer | Oklahoma | 4 | 1973-76 |
Darrell Royal | Texas | 4 | 1961-64 |
Frank Leahy | Notre Dame | 4 | 1946-49 |
* Active
Clemson’s Dabo Swinney is in position for his seventh straight top-five finish this year, which would put him halfway up Mount Bowden and would tie Pete Carroll’s remarkable run at USC. And the Tigers have shown no signs of slowing down, either on the recruiting trail or on the field, so maybe Swinney will match the heights of the Florida State legend.
But for now, Bowden’s run stands alone.