1986 at Wyoming: Three Cowboy QBs combined to throw for 3,481 yards with 30 TD vs 21 INT.[5]
1987 at Washington State: The Cougars had 1,644 yards rushing and scored 14 touchdowns on the ground.[6]
1988 at Washington State: QB Timm Rosenbach threw for 3,097 yards with 24 TD and 11 INT. The Cougar ground game added 2,757 yards rushing and 29 touchdowns.[7]
1989 at Miami: The Hurricane offense averaged 417 yards and 35 points per game and won the National Championship.[8]
1990 at Miami: The Hurricane offense averaged 444 yards and 37 points per game.[9]
1991 at Miami: The Hurricane offense averaged 405 yards and 32 points per game and won the National Championship.[10]
NFL assistant coach
Bratkowski moved to the NFL in
1992 with the
Seattle Seahawks.[11] After three seasons under head coach
Tom Flores, he was promoted to offensive coordinator in
1995 by new head coach Dennis Erickson. When Erickson was fired following the
1998 season, Bratkowski became an assistant coach with the
Pittsburgh Steelers.
In
2001, Bratkowski was offered the job of offensive coordinator with the
Cincinnati Bengals,[12] a position he held for a decade until January 31, 2011, when he was terminated from the Cincinnati Bengals as reported by ESPN news.[13]
Prior to the 2014 season, the Cincinnati Bengals re-hired Bob Bratkowski as an offensive assistant.[16]
In 2016, new
Tennessee Titans head coach
Mike Mularkey coaxed Bratkowski out of retirement to coach wide receivers for the Titans.[17]
Bratkowski went back to retirement at the end of the 2017 season after Mularkey and the Titans mutually agreed to part ways.[18]
Personal life
Bob and his wife, Rebecca, have two children — son Shane and daughter Courtney.