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'An amazing, amazing thing': Bowles, 59, earns college degree - ESPN

TAMPA, Fla. — Tampa Bay Buccaneers coach Todd Bowles fulfilled a promise made to his late mother, Joan, that he would earn his college degree, walking across the stage at Mount St. Mary's University Saturday 37 years after leaving school to enter the NFL.

Bowles missed the second day of Buccaneers rookie camp to attend the ceremony in Emmitsburg, Maryland, where he addressed the graduating class and earned a standing ovation from the students and faculty. Bowles earned a Bachelor of Science degree in youth and community development.

«This is an amazing, amazing thing for me to be in a class with you,» he told the students. «I'm more nervous now than I ever was speaking in a locker room at halftime.»

Bowles left Temple University in 1986 to enter the NFL, signing with Washington as an undrafted free agent and winning Super Bowl XXII his second season. He would play in the NFL for eight seasons before joining the Green Bay Packers' player personnel staff from 1995 to 1996, and then beginning his coaching career at Moorehouse in 1997.

He has coached at the NFL level since 2000, serving as head coach of the New York Jets from 2015 to 2018, winning a Super Bowl with the Buccaneers in 2020 as defensive coordinator, and being named head coach of the team after Bruce Arians' retirement in 2022, leading the Bucs to an NFC South title.

«I didn't get my degree, and my mother never said anything,» Bowles told the audience. «She just went with it. And she let me go ahead and live my life. And she passed in 2009, and the only thing she asked me was to make sure I got my degree.

»I stuck with it, and here I am at 59. You're never too old to stop learning. You stop learning and you get old. You get old when you stop learning. So I say

Read more on espn.com