Sport: Football
Born: November 18, 1963
Town: Elizabeth, New Jersey
Todd Robert Bowles was born November 18, 1963 in Elizabeth, NJ. He grew up playing pickup football games with his friends and two older brothers. Todd played quarterback in these games. Later, for coach Don Somma at Elizabeth High School, he played almost every other position—including tailback, tight end, corner and safety. Todd was recruited by Temple’s Bruce Arians, with whom he would form a championship partnership more than three decades later. By 1984, Todd’s junior year, he was the heart of one of the nation’s best defenses, along with Kevin Ross and Anthony Young. He picked off 7 passes in 41 college games.
Todd went undrafted in 1986 but was invited to camp by several NFL teams, including the Washington Redskins. He won a backup job as a defensive back with the ’Skins and was part of the team that bombed the Broncos in the Super Bowl. Todd moved into the starting lineup as a free safety the following season. He intercepted 13 passes in six seasons with Washington.
Todd signed with the 49ers as a free agent in 1991 and played one season before being released. The Redskins brought him back for two seasons before he called it a career. Todd thought he might be interested in coaching. His defensive backs coach, Emmitt Thomas, advised him to get away from the game for a while—otherwise he would just be coaching the way he played. Todd followed Thomas’s advice and returned to the NFL in 1995 as a scout with the Green Bay Packers.
Todd began his climb up the coaching ladder at Morehouse College and then at Grambling, working alongside former Washington teammate Doug Williams. He joined the coaching staff of the Miami Dolphins in 1998 and was named interim head coach at the end of the 2011 season, after Tony Sparano was fired. The Dolphins went 2–1 to close out the season. The following year, Todd found himself as part of Andy Reid’s staff in Philadelphia. Reid named him defensive coordinator midway through the season.
In 2013, Bruce Arians hired Todd to be his defensive coordinator with the Arizona Cardinals. Todd revamped the defense and helped the club double its victory total from the previous year, winning 10 games. In 2014, the Cardinals went 11–5 and Todd was voted Assistant Coach of the Year in the first year the award was given.
The New York Jets hired Todd to be their head coach in 2015. The team had imploded under Rex Ryan the year before. Under Todd, the defense tightened up and backup quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick had a career year. The Jets won 10 games and narrowly missed the playoffs. In 2016, the law of gravity caught up with New York and the team plummeted to 5–11. Jets fans were calling for Todd’s head, but owner Woody Johnson stuck with him in what was meant to be a rebuilding 2017 campaign.
After dropping their first two games, the Jets rallied under low expectations (some experts picked them to go 2–14) and beat the Dolphins, Jaguars and Browns to stand 3–2 after five games. Three losses followed, but the team was in each game until the final minutes. With their co-tenants, the Giants, suffering through a catastrophic season, Jets fans finished with unexpected bragging rights to New York football in 2017, albeit with a 5–11 record.
The Jets took quarterback Sam Darnold in the first round of the 2018 draft and Todd handed him the reins to the offense. Darnold overcame inexperience and injuries to finish the year well, but the team let too many games slip away, including an epic overtime battle in late December against the Packers. Though highly respected as a coach around the NFL, Todd failed to turn the team around and the defense never developed a big-play personality. The Jets fired Todd after the season and he immediately joined Arians as defensive coordinator with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
Todd focused much of his energy on improving Tampa Bay’s pass defense. The Bucs were 29th in the league in points allowed in 2019 but soared to 8th in 2020. Along with the addition of veteran QB Tom Brady, this transformed the team into Super Bowl contenders. They played solid D in the final month of the season and through three consecutive road playoff wins. Against Pat Mahomes and the Chiefs in Super Bowl LV, Todd devised a game plan to take advantage of injuries to KC’s offensive line and keep Mahomes out of the end zone. It worked to perfection in a 31–9 win.
Following the 2021 season, Arians moved upstairs for the Bucs and Todd was named head coach. With Tom Brady planning to retire and a ton of new faces on the Roster, it looked like Todd had his work cut out for him. But Brady un-retired and helped the team get off to a fast start. A mid-year losing spell put the division title in jeopardy, and raised the possibility of Brady’s first losing season as a starter. The Bucs finished 8–9, but managed to sneak into the playoffs atop a weak NFC South. Their season ended with a 31-14 Wild Card loss to the Cowboys.
With an uncertain quarterback situation headed into 2023, Todd focused on his specialty, defense, and put his money on Baker Mayfield, the NFL’s first overall pick five years earlier. Both plans worked as well as fans could have dreamed. Tampa Bay went 9–8 and won the division with the league’s seventh-best D, and Mayfield revived his flagging career. They played their best when the pressure was on, winning five of their final six games after dropping six of seven.
The rollercoaster ride continued in the playoffs, when the Buccaneers faced the heavily favored Eagles. After scratching out a 16–9 halftime lead, the defense stymied Jalen Hurts & Co. to cruise to a 32–9 victory. Alas, they ran out of steam against the Lions in the Divisional round. After beginning the fourth quarter tied 17–17, the Buccaneers gave up two touchdowns and fell, 31–23.