USA TODAY International Edition

Tide QB Tagovailoa’s younger brother stars at Alabama high school

- USA TODAY George Schroeder

MONTGOMERY, Ala. – He’d driven 90 miles to watch his granddaugh­ter in the band. And he was enjoying a dazzling show.

From a perch high in the old stadium, Winston Massey watched Taulia Tagovailoa throw the football, feathering spirals and firing darts, and declared: “He may be as good as his brother, right now.”

At this point we should mention that Taulia’s older brother is Tua Tagovailoa. And we should note Massey was wearing a crimson trucker’s cap with the phrase: “2nd and 26.”

“It was the last play of the national championsh­ip game,” Massey started to say, but no explanatio­n is necessary.

Tua Tagovailoa’s 41-yard touchdown pass in overtime brought home Alabama’s latest title and propelled him into an offseason quarterbac­k competitio­n that captivates the entire state and perhaps college football. Like many, Massey thinks Tua, a sophomore, will emerge with the job over Jalen Hurts, a junior. Like many, he salivates over the potential.

Alabama with a dynamic talent at the game’s most important position? Saturdays could be spectacula­r.

But on Friday nights this fall, there is salivating for a sensationa­l undercard.

Taulia Tagovailoa, who plans to join Tua at Alabama, threw for 385 yards and four TDs in Thompson High (Alabaster)’s 38-7 win over James Clemens High, a Huntsville-area school (they played in Montgomery as part of the Champions Challenge). He wasn’t satisfied afterward; his father said, “We’ll go back to the drawing board.” But plenty of fans seemed to be.

Rated a four-star recruit by 247Sports, Taulia (5-11) is a little shorter than his brother. Unlike Tua, he isn’t considered a dual-threat quarterbac­k. But his passing skills seem very similar. In Friday’s opener, he prompted cheers from the Thompson fans — but sometimes, the reaction was a collective “oooooooh,” and it was apparent many were watching to see what he would do next.

So what’s it like being Tua’s little brother? “A lot of people ask me that,” Taulia said. “It’s good. It’s a blessing, for sure.”

The family moved from Hawaii to Alabaster, a Birmingham suburb, when Tua enrolled at Alabama, meaning Thompson coach Mark Freeman got a very nice gift dropped in his lap.

“No, the good Lord brought him in,” Freeman said, and there’s a little more to the story.

Galu Tagovailoa, Tua and Taulia’s dad, called Freeman a couple of years earlier to inquire about having his older son enroll at Thompson. Freeman, who’d spent several years working with Jameis Winston in football and baseball, googled Tua and thought, “Son of a gun! I hope we get that guy.” The family remained in Hawaii. Then Galu called again. Taulia arrived. The show started.

As a junior last season, Taulia threw for 3,280 yards as Thompson reached the state semifinals.

An hour or so down the road in Tuscaloosa, Tua waited for his chance, playing in games after they’d already been decided.

But with Alabama trailing Georgia 13-0 at halftime of the College Football Playoff national championsh­ip game, Tua replaced Hurts and jump-started a dormant offense to help the Crimson Tide rally to win in the most dramatic fashion imaginable.

When Tua’s pass dropped into the hands of DeVonta Smith for the TD, Taulia was in the stands. “It was crazy,” he said, adding he jumped into the arms of his sister, Taysia.

“That was a big blessing,” Taulia Tagovailoa said. “We feel like it was God’s plan for our family. Tua trained hard the whole season for that moment and came through with it.”

But the blessing might also have created more of a burden for the younger brother. Taulia would have gotten plenty of attention — a future Alabama quarterbac­k lighting up scoreboard­s in the state. But now?

“Not too many people can say they have a brother that won the natty,” he said. “It’s a good pressure for me. It forces me to get better.”

Said Freeman: “We love Tua and we’re proud of Tua. But we want Lia to make a name for himself, also.”

At least in the state of Alabama, that’s happening.

“He looked like a junior in college,” said Massey, the grandfathe­r with the “2nd and 26” cap, after watching Taulia play for the first time.

For now, Taulia promises to be a Friday night fixation.

 ?? GEORGE SCHROEDER/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? High school quarterbac­k Taulia Tagovailoa plans to follow his brother Tua and enroll at Alabama.
GEORGE SCHROEDER/USA TODAY SPORTS High school quarterbac­k Taulia Tagovailoa plans to follow his brother Tua and enroll at Alabama.

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