The Capital

Phillips still hitting right notes

Onetime band trumpeter not blowing his opportunit­y

- By Daniel Oyefusi

For all the talent the Ravens returned from a record-setting 14-2 regular season, a void was left at right guard when Marshal Yanda retired.

In the team’s season opener last Sunday, it was Tyre Phillips, a third-round pick in April’s draft, who was given the first opportunit­y to replace the future Hall of Famer.

It culminated an uncanny journey that even Phillips didn’t foresee when he was emerging as one of the best offensive linemen in the Southeaste­rn Conference at Mississipp­i State. Or when he spent two years at East Mississipp­i Community College. And certainly not as a freshman at Grenada High School in Mississipp­i, when Phillips spurned a sport thatwasn’t his first love.

“To be honest, I didn’t seemyself here at all,” he said Thursday.

Phillips’ outlook stemmed from an upbringing that initially led him to basketball and music, not football.

The son of a preacher, Phillips grewup in the church, where he learned to play the piano and trumpet. That affinity for music drew him to the marching band in high school, where he played the trumpet. As a freshman, Phillips began playing football, but itwas a hobby, not a passion.

“Obviously I had the size,” he said. “It was more of just knowing how to play football and being an offensive lineman.”

Phillips left the sport shortly before his

sophomore year, but he returned after his junior year at the behest of Mike McGee, Phillips’ high school basketball coach.

McGee saw Phillips’ physique and told him he had a God-given talent he could use on the football fieldwhile maintainin­g his love for music. Two weeks later, McGee died of a heart attack. It was a moment that stuck with Phillips and drove him to recommit himself.

So during his senior year, Phillips played on his high school football team but left his teammates at halftime to join his bandmates in the marching band.

East Mississipp­i Community College football coach Buddy Stephens noticed Phillips with his trumpet as a junior when he visited Grenada for a recruiting trip.

“Hewas as big as a mountain,” Stephens recalled.

But by the time Phillips was a senior, Stephens envisioned a player who could be molded into a college offensive lineman. With a slim resume in football, Phillipswe­nt toEMCC, which in 2015 and 2016 served as the location of “Last Chance U,” the Netflix series that chronicles football players’ journeys at a junior college as many work their way back to Division I programs after missteps.

“Through the course of trying to teach him how to play tackle, you just try to teach him how to make everyone run around the mountain, and learn to use your size until the strength and agility and everything came on,” Stephens told The Baltimore Sun.

Itwas a process for Phillips, who didn’t play much in his first season. That didn’t deter him.

“You saw in the spring and summer between his freshman and sophomore year him doing the little things, doing the extra work that he would need on the field,” Stephens said. “He would stay late, he would be out early. … I think he knew he had talent. He just had to work it and learn howto play the game.”

The returns from Phillips’ attention to detail began to show, Stephens said. He got stronger, reformed his body, and his confidence grew exponentia­lly.

After his second year, Phillips transferre­d to Mississipp­i State, where he

started 13 games as a senior in 2019.

WhentheRav­ens selected Phillips with the No. 106 overall pick, they envisioned him as a guard in their offense, even though Phillips had never played a down in college at the position, aside fromsome time in the Senior Bowl and a few practice repetition­s at Mississipp­i State.

“The biggest thing about Tyre was — and we all saw it; we had an agreement about him as a player— first of all his size, secondly his athleticis­m,” Ravens coach JohnHarbau­gh said Friday. “He can bend and move his feet, he had long arms and a really good punch.”

But the coronaviru­s pandemic upended off season workout programs and canceled rookie minicamps thatwould have eased a rookie into the rigors of an NFL regimen. Veterans such as D.J. Fluker and Ben Powers seemed to have the edge over Phillips as the team entered a truncated training camp period.

Phillips said the Zoom meetings that replaced the offseason program helped him transition to a new position. So did competing against a retooled defensive line with players such as Calais Campbell and Derek Wolfe, a baptism-by-fire approach that tested him but also served as a valuable learning tool.

The wily veterans would school the rookie in team drills and educate him afterward on what they did to gain an advantage.

“To be honest, itwasn’t looking good at first,” Phillips said. “But obviously, it’s just practice. There reallywasn’t a trick to it.

“I feel like we have the best [defensive line] in the NFL, so you’re just going against those guys repetitive­ly and repetitive­ly until it clicked.”

Coaches have raved about Phillips’ versatilit­y and an intellect that has allowed him to play a new position in such a short time. After the Ravens’ seasonopen­ing 38-6 win over the Cleveland Browns, Harbaugh called Phillips’ transition “remarkable” but added that the rookie “has a longway to go.”

As Phillips enters his secondNFLg­ame against the Houston Texans, his former coach still sees a calm that has allowed him to excel to this point.

“He has many more passions and he’s a well-rounded human being,” Stephens said. “He knows his self-worth isn’t in his ability to play a game and I think that’s what makes it so much easier for him.”

 ?? AMY DAVIS/BALTIMORE SUN ?? Ravens guard Tyre Phillips, a third-round draft pick in April, started inWeek 1.
AMY DAVIS/BALTIMORE SUN Ravens guard Tyre Phillips, a third-round draft pick in April, started inWeek 1.
 ?? KARL MERTON FERRON/BALTIMORE SUN ?? Ravens guard Tyre Phillips (74) and wide receiver Miles Boykin (80) make a hole for running back Mark Ingram II during the first quarter of Sunday’s season opener against the Browns.
KARL MERTON FERRON/BALTIMORE SUN Ravens guard Tyre Phillips (74) and wide receiver Miles Boykin (80) make a hole for running back Mark Ingram II during the first quarter of Sunday’s season opener against the Browns.

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