Obituary – Robert Wayne "Bud" Moore
Wednesday, February 4, 2026

Robert Wayne "Bud" Moore, 86, of Seagrove Beach, FL, passed away at his Bit and Spur farm in Lynnville, TN, just after sunset on February 2, 2026. He was dedicated, working 12-hour days, 7 days a week, for the first 40 years of his adult life. He was extraordinarily generous, gracious, and thoughtful. He was loving and gentle. He lived to serve those with whom he was associated, especially young people. He valued people over material things and did his best to surround himself with great ones. He valued loyalty and integrity from all and reciprocated in turn. He had a sharp intellect and an ability to motivate. He could be hard-nosed and gentle in the same instant. He loved the field, natural beauty, and the countryside. He was fiercely competitive. “Pop-Pop” had a passionate affection for dogs and horses, and he dearly loved his friends and family. He was incredibly fortunate to be associated with many, many tremendous human beings.
Born October 16, 1939, in Jasper, AL, Moore was raised in the community of Bug Tussle and moved with his family to Birmingham at age 10. He attended Lee Grammar School and West End High School, where he excelled in 4 sports, played in the Alabama High School All-Star games in baseball and football, and was voted “Sugar-Coated Dynamite” by his classmates.
Coach Moore enjoyed an outstanding career as a collegiate football player and coach from 1957-78. He played football at the University of Alabama under Coach Paul “Bear” Bryant. A three-year letterman at end and tackle, the 6’4” 187 lb. Moore played in the inaugural Liberty Bowl in 1959 and in the Bluebonnet Bowl in 1960. He also played catcher and 1B for the Crimson Tide baseball team, earning letters in 1959-60 alongside his brother (the late Gordon “Lefty” Moore).
He worked for Coach Bryant as a student assistant during the spring of 1961. After coaching a year at Gadsden High School (where he taught algebra), Moore was named offensive line coach under Charlie Bradshaw at the University of Kentucky. Only 22, Moore tutored All-Americans Sam Ball, Tom Hutchison, and Herschel Turner before being hired as head offensive coach by Coach Gene Stallings at Texas A&M in 1965. While helping the Aggies to the Southwest Conference title in 1967, Moore coached All-American Mo Moorman and SWC Player of the Year Ed Hargett as A&M defeated Alabama and Coach Bryant in the Cotton Bowl.
In 1971, Moore joined Bill Dooley at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He helped lead the Tar Heels to their first outright Atlantic Coast Conference championship by completely rebuilding an offensive line with no returning starters. Incredibly, four UNC offensive linemen were named to the All-ACC first team (including All-American Ron Rusnak) as the Tar Heels earned a Gator Bowl bid against Dooley’s brother, Vince, and Georgia.
Moore was hired by Alabama after the 1971 season and coached for the Crimson Tide from 1972-74, serving as Bryant's first offensive coordinator in 1974. During his tenure, UA lost one regular-season game (the infamous 17-16 loss to Auburn in 1972), played in the Cotton, Sugar, and Orange Bowls, and won 3 consecutive Southeastern Conference championships and the 1973 UPI national title. He coached two Tide All-Americans (Sylvester Croom and Ozzie Newsome) and numerous All-SEC performers, including Wilbur Jackson, Richard Todd, and Johnny “Bull” Davis. Moore recruited the Birmingham area and was always proud of the fact that he recruited 6 players who became senior starters on Alabama’s famed 1978 national championship team.
He served as the head coach at the University of Kansas from 1975 to 1978, compiling a record of 17–27–1. In his first season in 1975, Moore was named Big Eight Coach of the Year and was runner-up to Woody Hayes as the Football Writers Association of America National Coach of the Year. Moore led his team to a 23–3 upset over eventual national champion Oklahoma, breaking the Sooners' 37-game unbeaten streak. He coached Big 8 Player of the Year quarterback Nolan Cromwell. In an era when there were only 10 bowl games, he led the Jayhawks to only the fifth bowl game in KU history (1975 Sun Bowl) and their first back-to-back winning seasons in two decades.
At age 40, Moore left coaching and purchased the Miller beer distributorship in the Florida panhandle. Surrounding himself with top-notch people, as President and principal shareholder, he oversaw Gator Distributors’ development as it became one of the nation’s top-performing beer wholesalers. From its base in Pensacola, Gator was awarded Miller Masters status and earned the highest market share of any Miller distributor in the state for 7 consecutive years.
After 22 years, Moore sold the distributorship. While continuing to invest in various businesses (Dreamland BBQ, Chevrolet, and Nissan dealerships) he focused his interest on Shell Creek Plantation near Catherine, AL. His pride and joy, and at 5000 acres, one of the state’s largest contiguous privately-owned properties, Moore developed Shell Creek into Alabama’s premier quail plantation. One of the few remaining locations in Alabama with coveys of wild birds, it hosted many field trials, including the annual U.S. Open Field Trial Championship.
Always a competitor, Moore raised championship field trial bird dogs. His pointer, Shell Creek Dan, was Purina’s Top Field Trial Bird Dog for 1997-1998, and Shell Creek Coin won the National Free-For-All Championship and the National Championship at Ames Plantation in 2006.
Moore also prominently competed showing horses at the annual Tennessee Walking Horse National Celebration in Shelbyville. He owned multiple World Grand Champions (often shown by his wife and expert horsewoman, Suzanne). He was an avid supporter of mounted fox hunting, and he and Suzanne were actively involved in the Hillsboro Hounds hunt club, often hosting club gatherings.
Moore’s impact on his beloved UA and Crimson Tide athletics extended well beyond his playing and coaching days. With an emphasis on what he called “giving back,” he quietly devoted countless hours, as well as substantial financial resources, wisdom, and experience to the institution and its people. He believed to his core that former student-athletes should do all they can to support Alabama as they develop their post-graduate careers, and along with his close friend and high school and college teammate Bill Battle, he did his humble best to set an example for others to follow.
After Coach Bryant’s passing, Moore helped fund the construction of the UA football building and indoor practice facility (now named for his teammates Mal Moore and Bill Battle, respectively). He advised athletic director Steve Sloan on the creation and inception of the Tide Pride donor program in 1987. He advised President Roger Sayers on the hiring of Hootie Ingram and Gene Stallings. He helped fund the construction and development of the Stallings Center, which became the new home of UA’s RISE program in 1994. One of his proudest achievements was being named the fourth recipient of the Paul W. Bryant Alumni-Athlete Award in 1995. The award is given to a former University of Alabama athlete in recognition of character, contribution to society, professional achievement, and service to fellowman. Beginning in 2002, he served on the Crimson Tradition Fund Executive Committee, helping raise over $100 million for athletic facility upgrades, including the expansion of Bryant-Denny Stadium. He was a longtime member of the University’s President’s Cabinet. He spearheaded the creation of the UA College of Education’s Paul W. Bryant and Mary Harmon Bryant Chair of Excellence in Education, an endowment initially funded solely by Coach Bryant’s former players (formally created in 2013). At the time of his passing, Moore was a Legacy member of UA athletics’ Lifetime Giving Society and continued to serve on the Crimson Tide Foundation board, helping oversee and promote the Crimson Standard (the University’s ongoing $600 million fundraising campaign).
Moore is also a member of the Kansas University Athletics Hall of Fame and in 2019 was inducted into the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame.
He was preceded in death by his mother, Avis Roberts Moore, his father, Marrell Moore, both of Gulf Breeze, FL and his brother Gordon M. Moore of Pensacola. He is survived by his beloved wife, Nancy Suzanne Peters Moore, his adored sister Brenda Moore Day (Gordon) of Huntsville, AL, his dear friend of 70 years and sister-in-law, Janet Alvis Moore, of Pensacola, his son, Matt Moore (Allison) of Birmingham, his daughter, Kimberly Vann of Tuscaloosa, his step-daughter, Kaitlin Kyle Burns of Inlet Beach, FL, and his grandchildren, Matt Moore, Jr. (Eliza) of Colorado Springs, CO, Caroline Moore of Birmingham, Elizabeth Vann of Birmingham, his step-grandchildren Dorothy Dillard Burns and William Loomis Burns V, of Inlet Beach, FL and countless faithful friends, former players, coaches, staff members and business associates.
A service is scheduled for Friday, February 6, at Corinth Church of Christ, 65-93 CR-15 (Country Road 15), Bremen, AL 35033, with visitation in the chapel at 1pm and a service at 2 pm. A private, family burial will immediately follow in the adjacent cemetery. In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to the American Heart Association or the Crimson Tide Foundation in Bud's honor.
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