Can Christian coaches cut it?
Tommy Bowden stepped down this week as head coach of the Clemson University football team. This rare mid-season resignation comes after Bowden’s team did not live up to expectations of a pre-season No. 9 national ranking. For several years Bowden—an outspoken Christian like his father, Florida State head coach Bobby Bowden—has been praised because of his character but ridiculed because he appeared soft, weak, and unable to rouse his players.
Comments like “he’s too nice,” “he doesn’t know how to motivate players,” “he too soft,” etc., were uttered as possible explanations for why team members lost confidence in their coach. Nice guys do not make good coaches some argue. On average, are any Christian coaches considered “tough?”
Bowden’s 10-year tenure ended after he was offered a conditional contract extension last year to keep him from leaving to coach at Arkansas. He had to win the Atlantic Coast Conference title in 2008. After a demoralizing loss to Alabama on national television, and a 3-3 start overall, winning the conference title was unlikely. It was time to for him to go.
Under Bowden, Clemson’s football team was known for having a large percentage of players attending church and Bible studies. That’s great but, at the end of the day, what fans want from a NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision program are wins. I have recently found myself asking, “Can Christian coaches cut it in college football?”
And what do schools want: Christian coaches or winning coaches? When the University of Alabama offered Nick Saban a $4 million annual salary, was it because he would put players in church pews? No. Saban was hired because he wants to win football games. Interestingly, none of my Christian friends who are Alabama fans seem concerned about neither Saban’s faith nor any moral influence he might have on his players. I wonder why?
Phillip Fulmer’s a Christian. The Tennessee Volunteers football team is struggling. Mark Richt’s Georgia Bulldogs was absolutely manhandled and humiliated by Saban’s Alabama team. Are these coaches next on the chopping block?
As a nearly idolatrous college football fan, I have to confess that I was happy to see Bowden go. Even worse, several pastor friends and I have joked we could care less about the faith of the next Clemson head coach. We just want someone who will win games. What’s wrong with us?




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back to top25 Comments to “Can Christian coaches cut it?”
Mark Richt on the chopping block? Are you serious?
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I thought these megachurches were supposed to all be equipping the men to be manly at all their prayer breakfasts and men’s advances. See, Promise Keepers fades out of the picture and Christian men get kicked out of coaches positions! The humanity.
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The high school football team I played on my senior year had a Christian coach. We won the state championship and were national runnersup. Our coach was tough but very fair.
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Its a shame when the faith of any coach, is questioned as to his abilities to lead his team to victory on the field –
Tony Dungy of the Colts won the Super Bowl and has written several books about his faith –
In short just like all aspects of life, Christian coaches succeed and fail in their goals but not their Eternal Life, thats a sure thing and can’t be LOST -
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Bradley
If winning a game in this life means that much to any pastor, his church would be the very last one I would even consider walking through the door.
”What’s wrong with us?”
If you don’t already know, I would look to the Word of God for your answers.
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Bobby Bowden? Give me a break. Florida State has a reputation as a renegade program.
It is very hard if not impossible to be a good Christian man and a successful college coach.
Taking in marginal students, giving them under the table payments, covering up their criminal activity and forgetting about them when their athletic eligibility is over are just some of the problems.
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My father finished his junior college basketball coaching career with a .750+ winning average. He was a generous man to his players in a world where scholarship dollars aren’t available. As I watched him, I observed something very powerful. Players perform out of fear or out of vision. The players under my dad knew what was at stake and worked hard. He had an uncanny way of motivating them to see the big picture and perform.
Other coaches seem to motivate out of fear. They get players to perform because something bad will happen if they don’t. They may work hard on the field or court, but there won’t be much of a team.
I believe a coach who follows Christ and chooses to cast a compelling vision for his/her team can be a champion.
There is so much more to coaching and winning NCAA football games than this simple equation. Recruiting. Good assistant coaches. Injuries. Scouting reports (or lack thereof). Sports medicine. The list goes on and on. Mark Richt said that being a coach of an NCAA team may be more like being a CEO than a coach.
I bet Bowden gets a job as a coordinator somewhere and another team grows off the charts. Perhaps he’s a better coach than he is CEO.
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Are you serious? I am new to this blog, but come on. Why does it matter what is faith is? Their are good christian coaches and there are good non-christian coaches. There are not very successful christian coaches and not very successful non-christian coaches. He knows his reward is not earthly gains, like a national championship, it is the heavenly gains, like the number of athletes he has brought to know Christ, that really matters.
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Wildcat
There are lots of coaches who have little or no faith, that’s their choice.
What is significant is, pastors who would make a remark which Bradley cited: “several pastor friends and I have joked we could care less about the faith of the next Clemson head coach. We just want someone who will win games. What’s wrong with us?”
Pastor’s, if they are real men of God are intent and concerned to lead others to Christ – they CARE, if they don’t they shouldn’t be in the ministry. That doesn’t mean that every coach should be a Christian to coach, what it does mean is the flip worldy attitude of many so called pastor’s, there walk doesn’t match their Sunday talk!
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Victoria
I agree with you. I’m sorry if I didn’t get my point across very well. I was trying to say that it shouldn’t matter what the faith of a coach is, but I know that Terry Bowden believes he has a higher calling than wins and losses. As a former player, I bet most of the players are disappointed not to have their coach and spiritual leader with them anymore.
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Sorry about all wording/spelling – I was trying to do too many things at one time –
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Well said, 47wildcat.
Phil Fulmer??? His team might be struggling right now, but how many years have the Vols done well under his leadership? I wouldn’t put him in the category of being unsuccessful because he’s a Christian. If he is fired because his team is struggling, that is not because he is a Christian, but because coaches are often expected to do miracles and get fired when they can’t.
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Wildcat,
I agree with you, its hard when a team loses a coach they respect and care for. They didn’t win, but one wonders how many souls might not be lost after having such a wonderful man as their coach. Sometimes its not even ‘right now’ these guys might look back on their experience later when their in a tight spot and remember the coach with the answers, the REAL answers to lifes problems – and because of this coach, how many might turn to Christ?
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Fulmer goes if Tenn loses to MSU and Vandy this year. He’s the next to get Croomed.
Bama will fire Saban if he cant beat MSU or Auburn anytime soon.
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Hey Anthony, what’s wrong with you is that you have an idol in your life — college football.
This post is unhealthy. Taking the stance that Christian coaches can’t cut it hurts the body of Christ.
If you’re a Christian, you would do better to build the body of Christ up, rather than tear it down with this kind of post.
Or are you forgetting the sovereignty of God?
Isn’t He in control?
Doesn’t He ordain who wins and who loses?
Doesn’t He know every single player and coach?
Doesn’t He have a plan for each player and coach that He’s working out? Possibly through the wins and losses of this silly game?
Grab onto some good theology and quit beating down the body of Christ!
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Sorry if this one gets repeated, but my posts sometimes get delayed when trying to write here, anyways…
Pete Carrol was the coach of the New England Patriots for 3 years between future hall of fame coaches Bill Parcels and Bill Belichick, both of whom were able to coach the Patriots to the Super Bowl. Carrol had no success in New England and so was let go by ownership. One of the biggest knocks on Carrol was that he was too soft on his players.
After New England, Carrol went on to have great success coaching the USC Trojans. His soft style prevailed in the college ranks thus providing evidence that softer coaches can make a go of it in NCAA football.
Now whether Carrol is a believer or not, I do not know.
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“As a nearly idolatrous college football fan, I have to confess that I was happy to see Bowden go. Even worse, several pastor friends and I have joked we could care less about the faith of the next Clemson head coach. We just want someone who will win games. What’s wrong with us?”
I do not joy in this and it is a good reminder to my own heart, but for you to admit that your love of college football is “nearly idolatrous” is very disconcerting. If your love for God and the way you live your life for God is more time- and mind- consuming than football, then maybe your life testimony is good. But as you mentioned, “even worse, . . . ” by your own admission it is terrible that pastors and you have joked about not caring about the faith of the next Clemson coach.” Is winning everything or almost everything? Why do American men end up thinking such shallow thoughts — even Christians? Do we realize that if we were persecuted for our faith as Christians in China are, we would want Christians everywhere, including Clemson’s coach’s position? That way we would be more concerned about real men living righteous lives and being soul winners, not necessarily just game winners. God, deliver us from not being sold out to You.
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Honeybea
Excellent post!
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Ummm…Victoria, Dav, Honeybea,
I’d like to introduce you to some friends of mine. Their names are Sarcasm and Hyperbole. Don’t worry, they won’t corrupt your morals. Even Jesus and the Apostle Paul were well acquainted with them.
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Umm…NickG, thanks!
Ps. do you recognize it?
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Whew, thanks NickG!! Exactly. I was really getting worried there for a second.
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What are you worried about Bradley? Why don’t don’t you tell us how you feel?
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Originally the reason schools had some sport programs were for the educational benefits they were to teach. Discipline, hard work, fair play, and sportsmanship. They also help develop some community for the male student who has largely been iced (or medicated) out of the classroom. Our culture needs to embrace what it is it be a man once again so that these things do not get insane. Of course the most manly man was Jesus Christ Who went to the cross with words of forgiveness and victory.
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Mark Richt is a God in Georgia, pun intended.
To compare his and Bowden’s accomplishments (as you do when you ask if he’s next on the chopping block) tells me that one or all of the following must be true: A) you’re not really a fan of college football, B) you’re trying to stir the pot, or C) you’re just not intelligent. I’m gonna go ahead and assume B is the likely answer.
Richt has two SEC titles, 5 top-10 finishes in seven seasons, and has built UGA into one of the most reputable programs in the land. Bowden is 0 for his career on each of those fronts.
And frankly, I think you’ll lose most of us when you say Fulmer is a religious/ethical coach. Seriously, get your facts straight, friend.
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Doesn’t He ordain who wins and who loses?
******No, I think this is something He allows us to control.
Very Hyper-Calvinist of you.
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