Joe Flacco's famous father
Steve Flacco, and a certain game in 1982
Joe Flacco's famous father
Rich Hofmann, Daily News Sports Columnist
Steve Flacco, Joe’s father, is in the news today, quoted in the New York Times as saying his son is dull. The full quote, in the lead up to the Super Bowl, where Joe’s Baltimore Ravens will play the San Francisco 49ers, went like this:
“Joe is dull. As dull as he is portrayed in the media, he’s that dull. He is dull.”
All of which is fine. And if that’s what people will think about when they think of Steve Flacco and football, that’s OK. But I’ll always think of the day in 1982 when Penn won the Ivy League football title for the first time in 23 years.
Steve was a tailback on that team. I had graduated from Penn 2 years before. I was covering the Eagles then for the Daily News, but the NFL was on strike and I was working on other stuff when I wasn’t writing about labor stuff. So I was at Franklin Field that day, Penn against Harvard, winner takes the title.
Penn had struggled for years, but the Quakers were making a turnaround under second-year coach Jerry Berndt. Harvard, a perennial power, was coached by Joe Restic. It was a cold day, and the press box in Franklin Field was open, and there were about 40,000 people in the stands. So there’s your setup.
The game was an emotional circus. Penn took a 20-0 lead through three quarters, and then Harvard scored three touchdowns in the fourth quarter to take a 21-20 lead. My forever memory is of Frank Dolson, a Penn grad and the longtime Inquirer columnist, pacing endlessly in the press box -- that, and of the despair in the stadium as the victory slipped away.
With 1:28 to go, Harvard kicked off for the final time. Penn had the ball on its 20 -- and then it started. Crazy things happened -- quarterback Gary Vura got knocked out of the final drive for a play, likely concussed, before returning; one Vura completion deflected off of the facemask of one Penn player and into the hands of another.
And then came Steve Flacco. It was about over, and Penn needed at least 10 more yards to make for a realistic field goal try into the wind, and the final pass was a dump off to Flacco, and he managed to get the necessary yardage and, even more important, he managed to get himself out of bounds to stop the clock.
There were 3 seconds left -- and then it really got crazy. The field goal try was from the right hash mark, 38 yards away, and kicker Dave Shulman yanked it wide left. Harvard players and coaches began to celebrate when a certain person in the press box -- OK, it was me -- in a moment of supreme professionalism, stood up and pointed out of the open window and yelled, “There’s a flag!”
The call was roughing the kicker. Restic was apoplectic. With no time on the clock, Shulman made the 27-yarder and Penn won the title. Students tore down the goalposts and threw them into the Schuylkill.
The next day, in a moment that could only happen in the Ivy League, Restic announced, after viewing the film, that he was filing a protest with the Eastern Collegiate Athletic Conference (which supplied the officials) because the Harvard kid who was called for roughing had clearly been blocked into Shulman by a Penn kid -- not to mention that Shulman wasn’t exactly crushed on the play. As a result, Restic said, the only fair thing was for Penn to give back the title and award it to Harvard.
The quote for the ages:
“I think both schools should decide this,” Restic said. “It's not giving up something. It's unveiling the truth. I know an injustice was done. I cannot force them to do anything. In justice's sake, you want people to take a look and decide if it was a justifiable call.
"I would expect Penn to do the same thing we would do (if there was a mistake): Give the ballgame to us. I would not want to take anything we're not entitled to and I feel we're entitled to this one."
And, yes, he was serious.
Needless to say, Penn kept the title. And all of these years later, whenever I hear Steve Flacco’s name, that is what first comes to mind.
zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz Dan in Holmesburg
and what the hell does this story have to do with his dads comments about joe? WTF??? Evil Overlord
That's some father. I hope Joe wins a Supe and shoves it up his dad's rearend! CoettaGarner25
Wow. Tough crowd. rich hofmann
His dad called him dull a few times there. Did Steve ever play in the NFL? Maybe he is jealous? Joe does look like a boring I don't want the spotlight type of guy which isn't a bad thing. Hope the championship stays on the east coast. defroe
His dad called him dull a few times there. Did Steve ever play in the NFL? Maybe he is jealous? Joe does look like a boring I don't want the spotlight type of guy which isn't a bad thing. Hope the championship stays on the east coast. defroe
Joe Flacco is dull. However you probably won't see him making the same mistake that Shady did on his twitter escapade. Sometimes dull is good. watsonmr
Nice bit of history Rich. Ignore the boneheads. I think Steve probably meant dull as a good thing, like he's not gonna be getting in trouble or in anyone's face or be too emotional. andrewc23
Did this article get e-mailed directly to a mental Insitution- and the commenters are all from that Insititution? Manny Trillo
A Superbowl article which doesn't mention Ray Lewis? Is that legal? I hope you don't lose your job, Rich. Nice article BTW. I'm sure Joe Restic never took advantage of a break that went his way, either. Ballgame
When on the field both Steve and Joe Flacco played sports the way I was taught to play - play hard until the game is over, keep your mouth shut, and act lik you've been in the end zone before when you get there.
Good story about a great local family. Dull, hard working, and ultimate competitors who keep their mouths shut while beating you. Th entire Flacco family is a class act.
Someone should write about Joe Flacco's time at Pitt before he transferred. Dave Wannestadt decision to play Tyler Palko ahead of Joe Flacco shows why Dave's not a capable coach without holding onto Jimmy Johnsons coat tails..... Cement51
That roughing the kicker call was the worst call in the history of the Ivy League and in the top 3 in all of collegiate football. The Miracle on 33rd Street was a fraud. Wilhelm Von Humboldt




