Education
He played college football for and graduated from Grambling State University.
He played college football for and graduated from Grambling State University.
Standing six foot (183 m) tall, and weighing over 260 lb he has been given the nickname "Round Mound of Touchdown". Eugene was much heavier than the typical quarterback, but has proven to be exceptionally quick and agile for a man his size. He was also a very accurate passer, and was rated one of the top players in Division I-Associate of Arts college football.
Injured in the first game of the 2004 season, Eugene sat out the entire remainder of the year.
He received a sixth year of eligibility from the National Collegiate Athletic Association. In 2003, he threw for 3,805 yards with 34 Territorial Decoration vs 13 INT. He also ran for 412 yards with 6 Territorial Decoration. He followed that up with an amazing performance during the 2005 season throwing for 4,408 yards with 56 Territorial Decoration vs 6 INT while running for an additional 157 yards and 3 Territorial Decoration. He also recorded one of the highest ever scores on the wonderlic test, a phenomenal 41. Eugene was signed as a free agent by the New Orleans Saints within hours of the conclusion of the 2006 NFL Draft.
Bruce was released from the Saints on June 15, 2006. After a short stint with the Canadian Football League"s Saskatchewan Roughriders he signed with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on January 11, 2007.
Bruce Eugene was assigned to the Frankfurt Galaxy of the now-defunct NFL Europa for the 2007 season.
At the end of training camp, Eugene was released by Frankfurt, then acquired by 3-time World Bowl champions Berlin Thunder, where he replaced third-string quarterback Walter Washington, who was released after camp, and injured back-up Omar Jacobs. He played his first game for Thunder in the 7-16 loss to the Hamburg Sea Devils on April 22, 2007. Eugene moved into coaching, working at different schools in the Public Schools Athletic League (PSAL) in New York City.
In 2011 he was the quarterbacks coach at Alcorn State University in Lorman, Mississippi.
In 2012 he returned to PSAL as the head football coach at High School of Enterprise, Business, & Technology (also known as Grand Street Campus or Grand Street) in Brooklyn, New New York In 2014, WGNO named him one of the best high school quarterbacks who played in the New Orleans metro in any of the previous 23 years.
Eugene was a star quarterback at Walter Cohen High School of New Orleans. His team (Grand Street) defeated Eramus Hall 28-26 at Yankee Stadium.
Bruce was a three-time finalist for the coveted Walter Payton Award, which is given annually to I-Associate of Arts"s top football player (the equivalent of the Heisman Trophy in Division I-A). Frankfurt Galaxy was at the time the defending World Bowl champion. In December 2015, Eugene became the first African-American coach to win the Public Schools Athletic League (PSAL) football city championship at the highest level The New York Jets organization named him the 2015 "High School Coach Of The Year" and awarded his team $4,000.