The Boston Globe

BC’s Castellano­s has dealt with loss

- By Trevor Hass GLOBE CORRESPOND­ENT

Two days after Christmas in 2021, right before he ventured to college, Thomas Castellano­s tragically lost his oldest brother, Akeem Jones.

Castellano­s, the eighth of 11 children in a single-parent household in Waycross, Ga., tried to forge on, but an unfamiliar feeling of emptiness weighed him down.

“He was like the head of the snake,” Castellano­s said. “It’s almost like the head getting chopped off when he passed away. It weakened me. Mentally, I was confused, and I was lost.”

Castellano­s contemplat­ed quitting football, but the lessons Jones taught him helped him stay afloat. He recalled their frequent 2:30 a.m. phone conversati­ons, and how Jones — a onetime quarterbac­k at Garden City Community College in Kansas — always believed in him even when others didn’t.

He realized he owed it to both of them to follow through on the dream to star at a Power Five school. Now, Castellano­s, a transfer from Central Florida, is delivering on that promise for Boston College. The slippery, scintillat­ing sophomore, who leads all quarterbac­ks in the nation with 628 rushing yards, is the head of the snake for an Eagles team on the rise.

BC (4-3), which welcomes UConn (1-6) to town this Saturday, is playing its best football since the start of the 2021 season. As the Eagles try to avenge last year’s demoralizi­ng 13-3 loss to the Huskies, and make a push in the Atlantic Coast Conference, Castellano­s is at the crux of that resurgence.

“We’re turning this thing around,” Castellano­s said. “Boston is back. Boston College football is back. We’re no longer the laughingst­ock of college football or the ACC. We’re back, and we’re rolling.”

Born in Miami, Castellano­s moved to south Georgia as a toddler. His father died when he was 3. His mother worked as a nurse to ensure her children never missed a meal. He reveres her to this day for her strength and independen­ce.

“I’m very thankful for her,” Castellano­s said. “She’s the reason why I am who I am today.”

Castellano­s was always a big kid, and he started playing right guard around age 5. But when his brother LeDedrick got all the love and glory as a quarterbac­k, Castellano­s yearned for a taste himself.

His talent was obvious, and schools such as Georgia and Miami showed interest when he was in middle school. He dazzled at quarterbac­k and middle linebacker.

He accounted for more than 11,000 yards in high school and received offers from Kansas, Coastal Carolina, and Akron, among others. He toured UCF with Jones, who insisted his baby brother had Alabama talent and reminded him to dream big.

When Jones died, Castellano­s questioned his faith, wondering why God would let this happen.

“I was trying to keep going,” Castellano­s said, “but it was a big struggle.”

Losing his brother helped him realize how fragile and dark life can be. He went to church, found himself, and prayed to his brother, then re-emerged and entered the transfer portal.

Castellano­s, who had seen limited action in five games at UCF, received more than 20 offers. BC coach Jeff Hafley remembers watching film, smiling, and thinking, “Yeah, this kid’s dynamic.”

The 5-foot-10-inch, 196-pound Castellano­s trusted his gut and committed to BC in April 2023. When he arrived on campus, in Boston for the first time, his mind started racing.

“I remember asking myself and questionin­g myself over again,” Castellano­s said. “‘What the hell was I thinking by coming to Boston?’ I never thought of or imagined myself being here. It was kind of crazy for me.

“I’m not going to lie; the first week or two, I cried. I was like, ‘What am I doing here?’ ”

Some days in camp, Castellano­s felt as though quarterbac­k was an open competitio­n. Other days, it seemed Emmett Morehead had locked up the starting job.

His 11-month-old French bulldog, Ghost — whom he endearingl­y refers to as his “son” — helped him through another dark time.

“Dogs always have that thing about them, man,” Castellano­s said. “When they know you’re having a bad day, or you’re sad, they kind of just curl up on you and make you rub on them. They make you feel better.”

He decided to embrace whatever came his way and focus on helping the team however he could, even if a piece of him initially second-guessed his decision.

In the preseason, Castellano­s clairvoyan­tly described himself as a “game-changer” who makes things happen when they’re not supposed to.

“Every now and then,” he said, “I make the crowd go, ‘Ohhh!’ You know what I’m saying? ‘That was crazy. I wasn’t expecting that to happen.’ Wild plays, I feel like I have in my bag.”

In a 27-24 overtime loss against Northern Illinois in the opener, Castellano­s led BC’s fourth-quarter rally from a 21-7 deficit, rushing for a 2-yard TD and throwing a 30-yard scoring strike to Jaden Williams that tied it with 1:44 left in regulation.

He started the next week and hasn’t looked back.

Castellano­s has spearheade­d comeback wins over Virginia (2724), Army (27-24), and Georgia Tech (38-23). The Georgia Tech triumph was particular­ly gratifying, as he pieced together an ACC CoQuarterb­ack of the Week performanc­e in front of more than 100 personal supporters.

“He’s just getting better and better,” Hafley said. “He doesn’t get rattled. The guys believe in him.”

As much as he’s already accomplish­ed, he’s only a sophomore and is still discoverin­g who he is. This BC team is in a similar spot — on the rise and starting to unlock its potential — with Castellano­s as an anchor.

His heart will always ache with his brother gone, but game by game, he’s beginning to rediscover his purpose.

“Now, I’m doing what I dreamed of doing,” Castellano­s said. “Now, I am who I dreamed of being.”

 ?? MIKE STEWART/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? BC quarterbac­k Thomas Castellano­s, who led the Eagles to a 38-23 victory at Georgia Tech Saturday, leads the nation’s QBs with 628 rushing yards.
MIKE STEWART/ASSOCIATED PRESS BC quarterbac­k Thomas Castellano­s, who led the Eagles to a 38-23 victory at Georgia Tech Saturday, leads the nation’s QBs with 628 rushing yards.

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