Baltimore Sun

Looking to bounce back in 50th year

Ravens QB’s younger brother, Tom Flacco, expected to lead offense

- By Katherine Fominykh

As Towson football coach Rob Ambrose chatted with former Tigers coaches Carl Runk, Gordy Combs and Phil Albert on Wednesday morning, he unintentio­nally uttered a fitting descriptio­n for the 2018 Tigers — “restless, not tired.”

In the program’s 50th season, Towson is looking for a resurgence from a frustratin­g 5-6 record and a seventh-place finish in the Colonial Athletic Associatio­n.

A team-first mentality Ambrose has seen develop among his current players is the reason he calls this the second-best Towson offseason in recent memory, one that could lead the Tigers into a brighter era.

“Everybody’s hungry for it again,” he said. “It’s human nature. You screw it up enough, you finally own up and you change.”

Two weeks after rumors arose that there would be a second Flacco quarterbac­k in Season opener Sept. 1, 7 p.m.

the Baltimore area, Ambrose confirmed Wednesday that Tom Flacco, the younger brother of the Ravens’ Joe Flacco, would be playing for Towson this fall.

“I’m excited, and it’s not because he’s Joe’s brother,” Ambrose said. “It’s because of who is. Different type of player, different style. Both leaders, but the young one, he’s a little different.”

After transferri­ng to Rutgers last summer, Flacco sat out this past season because of NCAA transfer rules, and before that passed for 188 total yards and averaged 8.9 yards per carry as a freshman and sophomore at Western Michigan.

Regardless of how many purple Flacco jerseys are worn in this state, Ambrose won’t be handing the reins to the younger simply because of his pedigree — part of the Tigers’ larger strategy of wiping out the individual mindset.

“The guys don’t let guys be individual­s anymore,” Ambrose said. “They hold each other accountabl­e. They communicat­e. There’s a maturity.”

Flacco will have to wrestle the top spot from the incumbent, redshirt sophomore quarterbac­k Ryan Stover, and incoming freshman Jeff Miller, a two-star recruit out of Murrieta, Calif.

“I told the guys after spring that the competitio­n was completely open, that we didn’t do enough at the quarterbac­k position to solidify that,” Ambrose said. “[Flacco’s] going to have a little bit of a chance. We’ll see how it ends up.”

Towson was more of a throwing team last season. Stover went 189-for-341 with 2,001 passing yards, 11 touchdowns and 13 intercepti­ons.

Towson ranked 11th in CAA scoring offense and seventh in passing offense. There wasn’t a single statistica­l category in which the Tigers led the conference.

The younger Flacco is better known for his legs than his older brother, but Ambrose said pigeon-holing the new Tiger into the running-quarterbac­k identity is shortsight­ed.

“He has run before, but I’ve gone to watch his previous film,” he said. “A lot of his running had to do with the fact that nobody blocked. He still made positive plays on people screwing up, a skill that we could use.”

Flacco won’t be the only Tiger bearing a famous name come September, with Coby Tippett, son of Pro Football Hall of Famer Andre Tippett, a sophomore defensive back.

“[Tippett] grew up under the umbrella of what will be considered one of the most historic football programs in the history of the world with the Patriots, and clearly, there is no individual­ism there, there’s just team,” Ambrose said. “Both of those kids come from strong, family foundation­s that understand the game of football. They know it’s not about them, it’s about us.”

 ?? STREETER LECKA/GETTY IMAGES ?? UMBC players celebrate their 74-54 victory over Virginia during the first round of the NCAA tournament . The Retrievers are the only No. 16 men’s seed to beat a No. 1 seed.
STREETER LECKA/GETTY IMAGES UMBC players celebrate their 74-54 victory over Virginia during the first round of the NCAA tournament . The Retrievers are the only No. 16 men’s seed to beat a No. 1 seed.

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