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Hall of Famers. A Heisman winner. An MMA fighter. Tuberville is not the only sports politician

Hall of Famers. A Heisman winner. An MMA fighter. Tuberville is not the only sports politician
BETTER AGAIN. AND THE PERSON HE BEAT DURING THE ELECTION FOR HIS SENATE SEAT WAS FORMER SENATOR DOUG JONES. WE HAD A CHANCE TO HEAR FROM HIS FORMER POLITICAL OPPONENT TONIGHT. AND 米兰体育 13 JARVIS ROBERTSON. HE HAD A PRETTY INTERESTING REACTION TO THE NEWS. WELL, HE DID. SENATOR DOUG JONES WAS PRETTY FIRED UP WHEN DISCUSSING SENATOR TOMMY TUBERVILLE ANNOUNCEMENT FOR THE RUN FOR GOVERNOR. NOW, HE DOESN鈥橳 BELIEVE THAT IT IS THE BEST INTEREST FOR THE PEOPLE OF OUR STATE. PURE EGO. I MEAN, LOOK, HE HAS A FAILED US SENATOR, FORMER U.S. SENATOR DOUG JONES DIDN鈥橳 HOLD BACK ON HIS THOUGHTS ON CURRENT SENATOR TOMMY TUBERVILLE ANNOUNCING HIS PLAN TO RUN FOR GOVERNOR OF ALABAMA, SAYING HE鈥橲 NOTHING BUT AN EMBARRASSMENT TO THE STATE. YOU CAN鈥橳 POINT TO A SINGLE THING THAT HE鈥橲 DONE AS A US SENATOR. AND SO WHY NOT MOVE TO SOMEWHERE ELSE WHEN YOU KNOW THAT YOU鈥橰E YOU鈥橵E NOT DONE A VERY GOOD JOB? THERE HAS BEEN SPECULATION ON WHETHER OR NOT TUBERVILLE IS QUALIFIED TO HOLD THE STATE鈥橲 HIGHEST OFFICE BECAUSE OF WHERE HE MAY OR MAY NOT LIVE. ALL THE EVIDENCE INDICATES THAT HE HAS NOT LIVED IN ALABAMA FOR THE REQUISITE PERIOD OF TIME. HE REFUSES TO TURN OVER TAX RETURNS TO SHOW THAT HE HAS. DOES THE REPUBLICAN PARTY CLEAR THE FIELD FOR SOMEONE WHO IS SO CLEARLY NOT ELIGIBLE TO BE GOVERNOR OF THE STATE? UNDER OUR CONSTITUTION, EVEN IF IT IS A LEGAL PROBLEM, DOES IT GET PURSUED? AND SO I KNOW HE, SENATOR TUBERVILLE, HAS FELT PRETTY CONFIDENT THAT THIS WOULD NOT BE AN ISSUE THAT WOULD KEEP HIM FROM BEING ABLE TO RUN. AND PERHAPS HE鈥橲 RIGHT. POLITICAL ANALYST DOCTOR MARISSA GRAYSON SAYS WITH LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR WILL AINSWORTH AND AGRICULTURE AND INDUSTRIES COMMISSIONER RICK PATE BOTH DECIDING NOT TO RUN. THIS ESSENTIALLY CLEARS THE WAY FOR HIM TO SAIL TO THE TOP OF A REPUBLICAN TICKET. HE HAS THE SUPPORT OF PRESIDENT TRUMP AND HAS REALLY UNIFIED WITH THE BASE IN ALABAMA THAT HAS BEEN SUPPORTIVE OF PRESIDENT TRUMP. EVEN THEN, JONES BELIEVES THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP AND TUBERVILLE WILL BE ON FULL DISPLAY THROUGHOUT THE CAMPAIGN TRAIL. I ALSO THINK HE鈥橲 RIDING A NAME RECOGNITION THAT HE HAS AS A FORMER AUBURN FOOTBALL COACH. NOW, WE ALSO TRIED TO FIND OUT IF DOUG JONES WOULD BE THROWING HIS NAME IN THE RING FOR THE GUBERNATORIAL RACE. HE LAUGHED AND SAID THAT THERE鈥橲 A LOT OF ENTHUSIASM IN THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY, BUT HE PLANS TO STAY IN THE FIGHT.
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Updated: 4:09 PM CDT May 28, 2025
Editorial Standards 鈸�
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Hall of Famers. A Heisman winner. An MMA fighter. Tuberville is not the only sports politician
AP logo
Updated: 4:09 PM CDT May 28, 2025
Editorial Standards 鈸�
Sen. Tommy Tuberville wants to become the next Alabama governor. But his new campaign paraphernalia recognizes his old job: coach.鈥淵鈥檃ll see the name on the hat,鈥� Tuberville told supporters this week at Byron鈥檚 Smokehouse, his favorite barbecue joint when he was the head football coach at Auburn University. 鈥淭hey鈥檝e called me 鈥榗oach鈥� for four-and-a-half years in D.C.,鈥� the senator continued. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e gonna call me 鈥榗oach鈥� here as governor.鈥滻t was the same aw-shucks manner the 70-year-old Republican wielded over a long career of glad-handing boosters, fans and players. It鈥檚 also a deliberate branding tactic that demonstrates how figures like Tuberville transition from athletics to politics.Michael Giardina, a Florida State University professor and expert on sports in American culture, called sports 鈥渃onnective tissue that runs throughout the country, binding together disparate groups.鈥漇o, he said, it is not a surprise when politicians embrace sports figures as validators or when coaches and athletes themselves run for office. Giardina noted, however, that sports fame does not ensure electoral success.鈥淚t鈥檚 gives them a leg up,鈥� he said, not unlike actors, businesspeople or other celebrities 鈥� President Donald Trump included.Here鈥檚 a look at Tuberville and other sports figures-turned-politicians.For Tuberville, football meant skipping the usual political rungsTuberville coached at Auburn from 1999-2008. After ending his career at Cincinnati in 2016, Tuberville told friends in Alabama that he might run for governor in 2018.His plan was stymied, though, when a term-limited governor resigned, elevating then-Lt. Gov. Kay Ivey and setting her up to run. Tuberville shifted his attention to the Senate, where he campaigned as a staunch Trump ally in 2020 and cruised to victory.The mere fact he could start his career toggling so easily between top statewide offices reflects the familiarity Alabamians had with the former Auburn coach.鈥淚鈥檝e been in every high school in the state,鈥� he said Tuesday.Now, Ivey is term-limited and Tuberville has returned to his original pursuit.Tuberville has played up his football days the whole way. His official Senate portrait shows him with a football and he鈥檚 free with the football metaphors. 鈥淚鈥檓 a recruiter,鈥� he said Tuesday, promising to bring new jobs to the state.Gerald Ford brought his football loyalties to the Oval OfficeMany U.S. presidents leverage sports on the job. Barack Obama played pickup basketball with NBA stars. Ronald Reagan enjoyed being called 鈥淭he Gipper鈥� after his role in a 1940 football movie. Trump attends many events 鈥� NASCAR, mixed martial arts fights and the Super Bowl.But the most accomplished Oval Office athlete was Ford, the 38th president, who played football at the University of Michigan from 1932-34. The Wolverines won national championships in 1932 and 1933, with Ford as a center and linebacker. In 1934, he was voted team MVP.Ford had NFL offers but opted for law school at Yale, where he doubled as a football assistant coach.As president from 1974-77, Ford often asked the Marine Band to play Michigan鈥檚 fight song, 鈥淗ail to the Victors,鈥� instead of 鈥淗ail to the Chief.鈥滷ord鈥檚 moderate-to-liberal politics were on display in his playing days. Willis Ward, the second Black player at Michigan, was Ford鈥檚 closest teammate. During the 1934 season, Georgia Tech officials told Michigan the Yellow Jackets would not take the field in Ann Arbor if Ward played. Michigan decided to sit its leading scorer. Ford protested by refusing to play. He relented only when Ward urged him not to sit out.Michigan won 9-2, its only win of the season.Tom Osborne and Herschel Walker: Even legends don鈥檛 always winOsborne was a Nebraska hero, winning three national championships as head football coach for the University of Nebraska Cornhuskers. He retired after winning the 1997 crown and launched a congressional campaign three years later in the district where he鈥檇 grown up. Osborne coasted in 2000, 2002 and 2004.The 2006 governor鈥檚 race was different. He entered as the presumed favorite against Gov. Dave Heineman, who took office in 2005 after his predecessor resigned. But Heineman, who鈥檇 won statewide elections previously as treasurer and lieutenant governor, overtook Osborne鈥檚 advantage around Omaha and Lincoln to hold on to the office.Like Osborne, Walker was a homegrown football hero. A generational talent at running back, he carried the University of Georgia Bulldogs to the 1980 national championship and won the 1982 Heisman Trophy before a successful professional career 鈥� during which he became friends with Trump.Walker ran for U.S. Senate in 2022 with Trump鈥檚 backing and the Bulldogs鈥� red and black as campaign colors. He broadcast ads of his endorsement from his UGA coach, Vince Dooley, a beloved Georgian. Walker outpaced GOP rivals with more conventional political resumes, but questions about his business interests and personal life proved fatal to his campaign.鈥淰oters ultimately have to assess these former sports figures as political figures,鈥� said Giardina.Jim Bunning and Bill Bradley: Hall of Famers as longtime lawmakersNot all athlete-politicians embrace the 鈥渏ock鈥� image.Bill Bradley is in the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame. He was also a U.S. senator and Democratic presidential contender. Certainly, his career for the NBA鈥檚 New York Knicks helped when he won a New Jersey Senate seat in 1978, a year after his basketball retirement. But in Washington, Bradley established himself as a serious policy maker, including as a forceful advocate for universal health insurance. He ran for president in 2000, running to then-Vice President Al Gore鈥檚 left in the primaries.Jim Bunning pitched his way into the Baseball Hall of Fame for the Detroit Tigers, Philadelphia Phillies and others, and helped solidify the Major League Baseball鈥檚 players鈥� union.After baseball, Bunning returned to his native Kentucky and, unlike many sports stars who enter politics, started at the bottom: He became a city councilman, then a state senator. He won the Republican nomination for governor in 1983 but lost in November. In 1986, he was elected to Congress, serving six terms before a promotion to the U.S. Senate, where he served 12 years.Bunning was outspoken in urging congressional investigations into steroid use in professional baseball.Sharice Davids played up her MMA experienceDavids, a Kansas congresswoman, competed as an amateur and professional MMA fighter and played up the experience in her 2018 House campaign.鈥淭his is a tough place to be a woman. I鈥檝e been put down, and pushed aside, knocked out. Truth is, I鈥檝e had to fight my whole life ... but I didn鈥檛 let anything get in my way,鈥� she said in one ad showing her training in the gym.Men dominate the ranks of U.S. politicians from the sports world. But Giardina, the Florida State University professor, said that is shifting, especially with the rise of team leagues like the WNBA.鈥淎s women鈥檚 professional sports continue to grow in popularity, the likelihood that former athletes will run for political office and win necessarily increases, given that they will have had a more prominent platform,鈥� Giardina said.Stars like the WNBA鈥檚 Caitlin Clark, whose college career at Iowa propelled her to the national stage, and Olympian swimmer Katie Ledecky, he said, 鈥渁re completely normalized鈥� for younger sports fans who, in turn, will help shape future electorates.鈥淐ould we see Sen. Caitlin Clark from Iowa or Indiana鈥� where she plays professionally, Giardina asked. 鈥淚t鈥檚 certainly possible.鈥�

Sen. Tommy Tuberville wants to become the next Alabama governor. But his new campaign paraphernalia recognizes his old job: coach.

鈥淵鈥檃ll see the name on the hat,鈥� Tuberville told supporters this week at Byron鈥檚 Smokehouse, his favorite barbecue joint when he was the head football coach at Auburn University. 鈥淭hey鈥檝e called me 鈥榗oach鈥� for four-and-a-half years in D.C.,鈥� the senator continued. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e gonna call me 鈥榗oach鈥� here as governor.鈥�

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Ball caps for U.S. Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., seen on a table as he speaks about plans to run for the governor of Alabama in 2026, Tuesday May 27, 2025 at Byron&apos&#x3B;s Smokehouse in Auburn, Ala. (AP Photo/ John David Mercer)
APJohn David Mercer

It was the same aw-shucks manner the 70-year-old Republican wielded over a long career of glad-handing boosters, fans and players. It鈥檚 also a deliberate branding tactic that demonstrates how figures like Tuberville transition from athletics to politics.

Michael Giardina, a Florida State University professor and expert on sports in American culture, called sports 鈥渃onnective tissue that runs throughout the country, binding together disparate groups.鈥�

So, he said, it is not a surprise when politicians embrace sports figures as validators or when coaches and athletes themselves run for office. Giardina noted, however, that sports fame does not ensure electoral success.

鈥淚t鈥檚 gives them a leg up,鈥� he said, not unlike actors, businesspeople or other celebrities 鈥� President included.

Here鈥檚 a look at Tuberville and other sports figures-turned-politicians.

At left, Auburn coach Tommy Tuberville watches during practice in Auburn, Ala., Aug. 6, 2008 and at right, Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., arrives for votes at the Capitol in Washington, March 28, 2023. (AP Photo/File
AP
At left, Auburn coach Tommy Tuberville watches during practice in Auburn, Ala., Aug. 6, 2008 and at right, Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., arrives for votes at the Capitol in Washington, March 28, 2023. (AP Photo/File

For Tuberville, football meant skipping the usual political rungs

Tuberville coached at Auburn from 1999-2008. After ending his career at Cincinnati in 2016, Tuberville told friends in Alabama that he might run for governor in 2018.

His plan was stymied, though, when a term-limited governor resigned, elevating then-Lt. Gov. Kay Ivey and setting her up to run. Tuberville shifted his attention to the Senate, where he campaigned as a staunch Trump ally in 2020 and cruised to victory.

The mere fact he could start his career toggling so easily between top statewide offices reflects the familiarity Alabamians had with the former Auburn coach.

鈥淚鈥檝e been in every high school in the state,鈥� he said Tuesday.

Now, Ivey is term-limited and Tuberville has returned to his original pursuit.

Tuberville has played up his football days the whole way. His official Senate portrait shows him with a football and he鈥檚 free with the football metaphors. 鈥淚鈥檓 a recruiter,鈥� he said Tuesday, promising to bring new jobs to the state.

At left, Gerald Ford is shown as he appeared at center for the University of Michigan in 1934 and as President Gerald Ford as he pardoned former President Richard Nixon from the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Sept. 8, 1974. (AP Photo/File)
AP
At left, Gerald Ford is shown as he appeared at center for the University of Michigan in 1934 and as President Gerald Ford as he pardoned former President Richard Nixon from the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Sept. 8, 1974. (AP Photo/File)

Gerald Ford brought his football loyalties to the Oval Office

Many U.S. presidents leverage sports on the job. Barack Obama played pickup basketball with NBA stars. Ronald Reagan enjoyed being called 鈥淭he Gipper鈥� after his role in a 1940 football movie. Trump attends many events 鈥� NASCAR, mixed martial arts fights and the Super Bowl.

But the most accomplished Oval Office athlete was Ford, the 38th president, who played football at the University of Michigan from 1932-34. The Wolverines won national championships in 1932 and 1933, with Ford as a center and linebacker. In 1934, he was voted team MVP.

Ford had NFL offers but opted for law school at Yale, where he doubled as a football assistant coach.

As president from 1974-77, Ford often asked the Marine Band to play Michigan鈥檚 fight song, 鈥淗ail to the Victors,鈥� instead of 鈥淗ail to the Chief.鈥�

Ford鈥檚 moderate-to-liberal politics were on display in his playing days. Willis Ward, the second Black player at Michigan, was Ford鈥檚 closest teammate. During the 1934 season, Georgia Tech officials told Michigan the Yellow Jackets would not take the field in Ann Arbor if Ward played. Michigan decided to sit its leading scorer. Ford protested by refusing to play. He relented only when Ward urged him not to sit out.

Michigan won 9-2, its only win of the season.

At left, Nebraska players carry coach Tom Osborne off the field after the Huskers defeated Miami 24-17 in the Orange Bowl in Miami, Jan. 1, 1995, and at right, Osborne speaks during a Republican gubernatorial debate March 19, 2006, in Omaha, Neb. (AP Photo/File)
AP
At left, Nebraska players carry coach Tom Osborne off the field after the Huskers defeated Miami 24-17 in the Orange Bowl in Miami, Jan. 1, 1995, and at right, Osborne speaks during a Republican gubernatorial debate March 19, 2006, in Omaha, Neb. (AP Photo/File)

Tom Osborne and Herschel Walker: Even legends don鈥檛 always win

Osborne was a Nebraska hero, winning three national championships as head football coach for the University of Nebraska Cornhuskers. He retired after winning the 1997 crown and launched a congressional campaign three years later in the district where he鈥檇 grown up. Osborne coasted in 2000, 2002 and 2004.

The 2006 governor鈥檚 race was different. He entered as the presumed favorite against Gov. Dave Heineman, who took office in 2005 after his predecessor resigned. But Heineman, who鈥檇 won statewide elections previously as treasurer and lieutenant governor, overtook Osborne鈥檚 advantage around Omaha and Lincoln to hold on to the office.

Like Osborne, Walker was a homegrown football hero. A generational talent at running back, he carried the University of Georgia Bulldogs to the 1980 national championship and won the 1982 Heisman Trophy before a successful professional career 鈥� during which he became friends with Trump.

At left, Heisman Trophy winner Herschel Walker attends an award banquet Dec. 9, 1982, in New York, and at right speaks during a campaign rally for Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump, Nov. 3, 2024, in Macon, Ga. (AP Photo/File)
AP
At left, Heisman Trophy winner Herschel Walker attends an award banquet Dec. 9, 1982, in New York, and at right speaks during a campaign rally for Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump, Nov. 3, 2024, in Macon, Ga. (AP Photo/File)

Walker ran for U.S. Senate in 2022 with Trump鈥檚 backing and the Bulldogs鈥� red and black as campaign colors. He broadcast ads of his endorsement from his UGA coach, Vince Dooley, a beloved Georgian. Walker outpaced GOP rivals with more conventional political resumes, but questions about his business interests and personal life proved fatal to his campaign.

鈥淰oters ultimately have to assess these former sports figures as political figures,鈥� said Giardina.

Jim Bunning and Bill Bradley: Hall of Famers as longtime lawmakers

Not all athlete-politicians embrace the 鈥渏ock鈥� image.

Bill Bradley is in the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame. He was also a U.S. senator and Democratic presidential contender. Certainly, his career for the NBA鈥檚 New York Knicks helped when he won a New Jersey Senate seat in 1978, a year after his basketball retirement. But in Washington, Bradley established himself as a serious policy maker, including as a forceful advocate for universal health insurance. He ran for president in 2000, running to then-Vice President Al Gore鈥檚 left in the primaries.

Jim Bunning pitched his way into the Baseball Hall of Fame for the Detroit Tigers, Philadelphia Phillies and others, and helped solidify the Major League Baseball鈥檚 players鈥� union.

After baseball, Bunning returned to his native Kentucky and, unlike many sports stars who enter politics, started at the bottom: He became a city councilman, then a state senator. He won the Republican nomination for governor in 1983 but lost in November. In 1986, he was elected to Congress, serving six terms before a promotion to the U.S. Senate, where he served 12 years.

Bunning was outspoken in urging congressional investigations into steroid use in professional baseball.

FILE - Rep. Sharice Davids, D-Kan., talks to supporters after defeating Republican candidate Amanda Adkins for Kansas' 3rd Congressional District seat Nov. 8, 2022, in Overland Park, Kan. (AP Photo/Ed Zurga, File)
APEd Zurga
Rep. Sharice Davids, D-Kan., talks to supporters after defeating Republican candidate Amanda Adkins for Kansas’ 3rd Congressional District seat Nov. 8, 2022, in Overland Park, Kan. (AP Photo/Ed Zurga, File)

Sharice Davids played up her MMA experience

Davids, a Kansas congresswoman, competed as an amateur and professional MMA fighter and played up the experience in her 2018 House campaign.

鈥淭his is a tough place to be a woman. I鈥檝e been put down, and pushed aside, knocked out. Truth is, I鈥檝e had to fight my whole life ... but I didn鈥檛 let anything get in my way,鈥� she said in one ad showing her training in the gym.

Men dominate the ranks of U.S. politicians from the sports world. But Giardina, the Florida State University professor, said that is shifting, especially with the rise of team leagues like the WNBA.

鈥淎s women鈥檚 professional sports continue to grow in popularity, the likelihood that former athletes will run for political office and win necessarily increases, given that they will have had a more prominent platform,鈥� Giardina said.

Stars like the WNBA鈥檚 Caitlin Clark, whose college career at Iowa propelled her to the national stage, and Olympian swimmer Katie Ledecky, he said, 鈥渁re completely normalized鈥� for younger sports fans who, in turn, will help shape future electorates.

鈥淐ould we see Sen. Caitlin Clark from Iowa or Indiana鈥� where she plays professionally, Giardina asked. 鈥淚t鈥檚 certainly possible.鈥�