Paid Advertisement

Former Towson football coach Phil Albert dies

8

Paid Advertisement

Podcast Audio Vault

8
8

Paid Advertisement

albert

PRESS RELEASE

TOWSON, Md. – The Towson University department of athletics mourns the passing of longtime Tiger football coach Phil Albert. 

Albert was Towson’s head football coach for 20 years from 1972-91 and is the winningest coach in program history with 117 victories. The three-time Kodak District II Coach of the Year turned Towson into a powerful program, going from a 1-9 team in 1972 to the Tigers’ undefeated 10-0 year in 1974. 

He coached Towson to the 1976 NCAA DIII national championship game and three NCAA DII Tournaments, including the semifinals in 1984.  The Tigers ranked in the top-10 each season from 1983-86, including finishing No. 4 in DII in 1983.  Albert guided the Tigers into the I-AA era before his retirement in 1991. 

“Phil was revered by the players that played for him no matter what decade it was,” said Towson head coach Rob Ambrose. “He wanted to build better men; that was all he was about; football would take care of itself.  He is a pillar of this program and this university.  Who Phil Albert is, was and how he affected our lives resonates through the fabric of this program and will throughout its entirety.  Prayers go out to the Albert family, there is no way this program or this institution will forget Phil Albert.” 

Albert was an assistant for the Tigers from 1969-71, the first three years of the Towson program under head coach Carl Runk, and returned to the sidelines as an offensive coordinator from 2003-08 under head coach Gordy Combs.  Albert had a connection with all other Towson head football coaches, recruiting current coach Rob Ambrose as a player to Towson. 

For his accomplishments, Coach Albert was inducted into the Towson Athletics Hall of Fame in 1994. 

He coached 12 Associated Press All-Americans and eight Kodak All-Americans as well as three future National Football League players.

Along with being a football coach, Albert was a professor here at Towson.  The University of Arizona graduate was also a member of the Cambria County Sports Hall of Fame. 

Share the Post:
8

Paid Advertisement

Right Now in Baltimore

As MLB moves toward inevitable labor war, where do Orioles fit into the battle?

As MLB moves toward inevitable labor war, where do Orioles fit into the battle?

We're all excited about the possibilities of the 2026 MLB season but the clouds of labor war are percolating even in spring training. Luke Jones and Nestor discuss the complicated complications of six decades of Major League Baseball labor history and the bubbling situation for a salary cap. And what will the role of the new Baltimore Orioles ownership be in the looming dogfight?
Profits are up, accountability is down and internal report cards are a no-no for guys like Steve

Profits are up, accountability is down and internal report cards are a no-no for guys like Steve

The NFL continues to rule the sports world even in the slowest of times. Luke Jones and Nestor discuss the NFLPA report cards on franchises and transparency and accountability amongst billionaires who can't even get an Epstein List regular who just hired John Harbaugh to come to light and off their ownership ledgers. We'd ask Steve Bisciotti about it, but of course he's evaporated again for a while...
Orioles' Westburg out through at least April with partially torn elbow ligament

Orioles' Westburg out through at least April with partially torn elbow ligament

Since playing in the 2024 All-Star Game, Jordan Westburg has endured a relentless run of injuries.
8
8
8

Paid Advertisement

Scroll to Top
Verified by MonsterInsights