Tim Bowens

Timothy L. Bowens (born February 7, 1973) is an athlete and former American football defensive tackle who played 11 seasons for the Miami Dolphins of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football for the University of Mississippi, and was chosen with the 20th pick of the 1994 NFL Draft by the Miami Dolphins.

Tim Bowens
No. 95
Position:Defensive tackle
Personal information
Born: (1973-02-07) February 7, 1973
Okolona, Mississippi
Height:6 ft 4 in (1.93 m)
Weight:325 lb (147 kg)
Career information
High school:Okolona (MS)
College:Ole Miss
NFL Draft:1994 / Round: 1 / Pick: 20
Career history
Career highlights and awards
Career NFL statistics
Tackles:407
Quarterback sacks:22.0
Forced fumbles:9
Interceptions:1
Player stats at NFL.com

The Dolphins were initially criticized for picking Bowens, as he was overweight and had played only nine games in his college career at Mississippi.[1] He had a terrific rookie season in 1994, and Bowens was named 'The NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year' by the Associated Press.[2] He played with the Miami Dolphins for 11 years[3] before he retired after the 2004 NFL season.

High school career

Tim Bowens was born and grew up in Okolona, Mississippi, one of two county seats in rural Chickasaw County. He played football at Okolona High School. He was an All-State pick as a senior and an All-District pick as a junior and senior. As a senior, he led his team to the Class AA semifinals and an 11-2 record. He was also a two-year letter winner in basketball.

gollark: Pacman, a package manager written specifically for Arch Linux, is used to install, remove and update software packages. Arch Linux uses a rolling release model, meaning there are no "major releases" of completely new versions of the system; a regular system update is all that is needed to obtain the latest Arch software; the installation images released every month by the Arch team are simply up-to-date snapshots of the main system components.
gollark: Arch Linux is a Linux distribution created for computers with x86-64 processors. Arch Linux adheres to the KISS principle ("Keep It Simple, Stupid"). The project attempts to have minimal distribution-specific changes, and therefore minimal breakage with updates, and be pragmatic over ideological design choices and focus on customizability rather than user-friendliness.
gollark: By the way, I use Arch.
gollark: As a Linux user, my pH is above 16 so I can obviously open these fine.
gollark: They are, though.

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.