URI Football’s Cole Brockwell is a Throwback Following in His Father’s Footsteps

The linebacker is starting for the first time and playing like his dad Mark, who starred for the Rams’ heralded 1984 team that won the Yankee Conference

Cole Brockwell starts at linebacker for the University of Rhode Island Rams.
Cole Brockwell starts at linebacker for the University of Rhode Island Rams.
URI Athletics/Connor Caldon
Share
Cole Brockwell starts at linebacker for the University of Rhode Island Rams.
Cole Brockwell starts at linebacker for the University of Rhode Island Rams.
URI Athletics/Connor Caldon
URI Football’s Cole Brockwell is a Throwback Following in His Father’s Footsteps
Copy

University of Rhode Island linebacker Cole Brockwell is a throwback to a time when college football players spent their first two years learning and hoping to get on the field, their third season playing on special teams and perhaps as a backup, and their fourth, finally, as a starter.

But Brockwell is also a product of his time. He is in his sixth year with the Rams — thank you, redshirt and COVID bonus years. He already has a degree in finance and is finishing a three-semester MBA program.

Best of all, he is starting for the first time and playing like one of the best linebackers in the nation, which he is — second in the Coastal Athletic Association and 12th in the Football Championship Subdivision with 66 total tackles, 30 solo, and 9.4 tackles per game.

Cole is a throwback in another sense. He wears the same number, 39, plays the same position, is about the same size — 6 feet, 228 pounds — and is a team leader as his father Mark Brockwell was for the 1984 Yankee Conference champion Rams.

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

The nonprofit has been operating at the former St. Joseph’s Hospital facility for the past two years.
Newport-based musician and educator Chase Ceglie blends his Berklee-honed skills, love of songwriting, and a teacher’s mindset to help students — and himself — find rhythm through routine
Trump administration’s new policies for HUD, Health and Human Services grants cause ‘immediate harm,’ lawyer argues
Despite the closure of roughly 70 beds, Butler Hospital president and chief operating officer Mary Marran says her facility continues to provide quality psychiatric services to its patients
The proposed service reductions would affect 58 bus routes in total, eliminating 17 of those routes entirely
Unionized staff at Women & Infants Hospital accuse Care New England of retaliation, illegal tactics, and contract violations as tensions rise alongside the state’s longest hospital strike at Butler