Skip navigation

Namath back at Alabama to receive degree

'Broadway Joe' earns bachelor of arts 42 years after leaving school for AFL

Joe Namath
Porfirio Solorzano / AP
Joe Namath answers questions Friday about his pending graduation at the University of Alabama. Namath will graduate from Alabama on Saturday, more than four decades after finishing his college career.
Video
  Namath makes the grade
Dec. 16: Hall of fame quarterback Joe Namath graduates from Alabama, 40 years after playing there.

NBC Sports

Video: Football from NBC Sports
Stanford ready for Notre Dame
Nov. 25: Stanford head coach Jim Harbaugh previews what his team needs to do to beat the Irish for the first time since 2001.

Special feature
Florida International v Florida
Predictions 101
Tebow, No. 1 Florida won't flop against Florida State

NBCSports.com

Slideshow
LSU v Alabama
  College cheer
Check out some of the college football cheerleaders from across the country.
updated 5:13 p.m. ET Dec. 14, 2007

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - Broadway Joe was back on campus, finally getting a diploma to go with his football accolades.

Joe Namath, who won a national championship with the Crimson Tide in 1964 but quit school before going on to become a pro football great, returned to the University of Alabama on Friday to pick up the degree he earned 42 years later.

Namath completed a 30-hour program over the last five years to earn bachelor of arts degree in interdisciplinary studies. Bum knees aside, Namath will be one of 900 graduates to walk across the stage at Coleman Coliseum during commencement Saturday morning.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

“It was fun, but it was hard,” Namath, 64, said at a news conference. “I had a very difficult time getting myself to sit down and spend the time (studying)”

Some university workers had an equally tough time keeping their mind on education when Namath was around.

Harriett Cabell Walker, one of Namath’s academic advisers, said female staff members went gah-gah the first time the old ball player walked into the office. And why not? Namath is still royalty in Alabama.

“I had to say, ‘Treat him like any other student.’ But everybody was asking him for pictures,” she said.

Originally from Pennsylvania, Namath came to Alabama to play for coach Paul “Bear” Bryant. He left Tuscaloosa early for New York, where he won the Jets’ starting quarterback job in his first season and was the AFL rookie of the year in 1965.

Known for his electric smile and shaggy hair, Namath opened a bar in Manhattan and delivered on his guaranteed win over the heavily favored Colts in the 1969 title game. That victory, as much as anything, cemented his reputation as a magician on the field.

After all that and more, Namath said he always regretted not finishing his degree, particularly because of a promise to his mother.

“It was a hole in my being, an empty spot, because I did tell someone I would finish,” he said.

Yet it was something else that finally pushed Namath back to school. His daughter Jessica, who also attended Alabama, mentioned a few years ago that she would be the first person in the family to earn a degree.

“That started the process of investigating how I would finish,” said Namath.

Namath enrolled in Alabama’s external degree program and began reading and writing papers at his own pace. He credited academic advisers and friends, including old teammates, with pushing him to finish the work.

Namath had a reputation for partying when he was in school the first time, and he readily admits he didn’t have much of a passion for learning. “I was focused on athletics, outdoors, sports,” he said.

Slide show
Image: Ding Jianjun
  Week in Sports Pictures
Pain on the skating rink, flying high on the hardwood, upsets on the football field, and more.

more photos

Despite that, Walker said she was surprised to see Namath’s original grade transcripts when he first enrolled in the program.

“He did much better than I had expected,” she said. “I had heard all these things about him, but he’s a smart man.”

Namath said his grades were “certainly acceptable” the second time around, but he didn’t elaborate.

“I felt good about it. If I took the courses again I’d do better,” he said.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Sponsored links