Game14 - Sheraton Hawaii Bowl.qxp
Transcription
Game14 - Sheraton Hawaii Bowl.qxp
15 NOTES ON ALL-AMERICAN COLT BRENNAN… 1. Broke the NCAA record for most TD passes in two seasons (now has 88) and is one TD pass shy of the NCAA single-season mark of 54 set by Houston’s David Klingler in 1990. Klingler also held the two-season record of 83. 2. Has completed 72.1 percent of his pass attempts in 2006, tops in the nation. 3. Posts the highest pass efficiency rating in the nation (182.8) and could break the NCAA single-season record of 183.3 set by Shaun King of Tulane in 1998. 4. Leads the nation in six statistical categories, including Total Offense (410.8), Touchdown Passes (53), Passing Efficiency (182.8), Points Responsible For (26.8), Completion Percentage (72.14%) and Total Passing Yards (4,990). 5. Has broken 11 school records including: Consecutive Pass Attempts Without an Interception (182), Most Pass Completions in a Season (373), Consecutive 200-Yard Passing Games in a Career (24), Most TD Passes in a Season (53), Consecutive Games Throwing a TD in a Career (25), Most Passing Yards in a Season (4,990), Total Offense Yards in a Season (5,341), Points Responsible For in a Season (348), Touchdowns Responsible For in a Season (58), Consecutive 200-Yard (passing) Games in a Season (13), and Consecutive Games Throwing a TD Pass in a Season (13). 6. Has thrown for more than 300 yards and five touchdowns in seven games this season. 7. Posted pass efficiency ratings above 200 in four games in 2006, including a career-high 243.0 at Utah State (Nov. 4). 8. Is the team’s second leading rusher with 351 yards and five touchdowns. 9. Three-time 2006 WAC Offensive Player of the Week, Walter Camp Offensive National Player of the Week (Nov. 4), USA Today National Player of the Week (Nov. 7). 10. Has played only seven complete games (sat out 4th quarter in six games in 2006). 11. Named 2006 WAC Offensive Player of the Year. 12. Is the school’s first quarterback to earn All-America status since 1978 (second-team Walter Camp, third-team Associated Press). 13. Has helped Hawai’i to its first Associated Press Top 25 ranking since 1993. 14. Finished sixth in the Heisman Trophy voting and was one of three finalists for the Davey O’Brien Award. 15. Helped Hawai’i to a school-record nine-game win streak. 2006 SEASON STATISTICS Passing TAKE A GOOD LOOK AT THE COMPETITION Player, School Passing Rushing Completions: 373 Colt Brennan, Hawai’i 373-517-4,990 (53 TD, 11 INT) 79-351-5 Attempts: 517 Troy Smith, Ohio State 199-297-2,507 (30 TD, 5 INT) 62-312-1 Yards: 4,990 Brady Quinn, Notre Dame 274-432-3,278 (35 TD, 5 INT) 79-(65)-2 Touchdowns: 53 Graham Harrell, Texas Tech 376-562-4,110 (36 TD, 10 INT) 27-(-60)-1 Interceptions: 11 Erik Ainge, Tennessee 208-311-2,722 (19 TD, 8 INT) 24 (-88)-1 Efficiency: 182.80 John David Booty, USC 242-391-2,956 (25 TD, 9 INT) 29-(-49)-1 Yards Per Game: 383.8 Rushing “Hey mainland. If you’ve been sleeping on Colt Brennan this is your Attempts: 79 wake up call buddy boy. The Hawai’i quarterback is unbelievable. The Yards: 351 numbers for this guy are just astonishing.” - Scot Van Pelt (ESPN Touchdowns: 5 Sportscenter) Yards Per Carry: 4.4 Yards Per Game: 27.0 “I’ve watched Hawai’i junior quarterback Colt Brennan play several times this season. I’m finally convinced that he is not a system quarter- NCAA STATISTICS back. He doesn’t make many mistakes. He’s a winner. He throws TD Total Offense: FIRST (410.8) passes like I throw away column rough drafts. Brennan has pinpoint Passing Efficiency: FIRST (182.8) accuracy with the arm to make all of the big throws. I cannot stress how Points Responsible For: FIRST (26.8) accurate his arm is.” - Keenan Davis (NFL.com) Completion Percentage: FIRST (72.14%) Passing Yards Per Game: SECOND (383.85) “I don’t remember playing against a quarterback as hot as that. Their Passing: THIRD (28.89 Comp/Game) quarterback, Brennan, is the key to their offense. He’s played outstanding every game. He was phenomenal against us, the best quarter- Total Passing Yards: FIRST (4,990) back performance we’ve ever faced.” - Pat Hill (Fresno State Head Touchdowns Passes: FIRST (53) Coach) 2006 SCHEDULE & RESULTS Date Sept. 2 Sept. 16 Sept. 23 Sept. 30 Oct. 7 Oct. 14 Oct. 21 Oct. 28 Nov. 4 Nov. 11 Nov. 18 Nov. 25 Dec. 2 Dec. 24 Opponent at Alabama UNLV at Boise State * EASTERN ILLINOIS NEVADA * at Fresno State * at New Mexico State * IDAHO * at Utah State * LOUISIANA TECH * SAN JOSE STATE * PURDUE OREGON STATE ARIZONA STATE (Sheraton Hawai’i Bowl) Re l e a s e d : D e c e m b e r 14 , 2 0 0 6 Time L, 17-25 W, 42-13 L, 34-41 W, 44-9 W, 41-34 W, 68-37 W, 49-30 W, 68-10 W, 63-10 W, 61-17 W, 54-17 W, 42-35 L, 32-35 3:05 PM BOLD CAPS = Home games played at Aloha Stadium * = denotes WAC game All times local to site GAME 14 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL SUNDAY, DEC. 24, 2006 ALOHA STADIUM (50,000) HONOLULU 3:05 P.M. ARIZONA STATE (7-5) VS. HAWAI’I (10-3) TELEVISION Live nationwide on ESPN with Mark Jones (play-by-play), David Norrie (analyst) and Heather Cox (sideline). RADIO Live on ESPN 1420 with Bobby Curran (play-by-play), Robert Kekaula (color), and John Veneri (sideline). Don Robbs hosts the “Warrior Warm-up” beginning at 2:00 p.m., and also the halftime show. Neighbor island simulcasts can be heard live on KAOI on Maui/Kona, KPUA in Hilo and KQNG on Kauai. AUDIO WEBCAST Live on the web at espn1420am.com TICKETS Tickets for the Sheraton Hawai’i Bowl are on sale online at SheratonHawaiiBowl.com, or by calling 548-BOWL (2695), between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, or at the Stan Sheriff Center Box Office, Aloha Stadium Box Office, UH Campus Center Box Office, RainBowtique at Ward Centre, and Windward Community College’s OCET Office during normal business hours. Convenience fees may apply. Prices range from $10 to $45. GOIN’ BOWLIN’ Hawai’i won its seventh game of the season Nov. 4 at Utah State, and accepted the on-the-spot invitation to the Sheraton Hawai’i Bowl. It is Hawai’i’s fourth bowl game in the last five years. Of the seven bowl games in school history, five have come under the direction of current skipper June Jones. Jones has posted a 3-1 record in bowl games. Former Hawai’i head coach Bob Wagner led the Warriors to the other two bowl games which include the 1989 Jeep Eagle Aloha Bowl (33-13 loss vs. Michigan State), and the 1992 Thrifty Car Rental Holiday Bowl (27-17 win vs. Illinois). Hawai’i has won two of the last four Sheraton Hawai’i Bowls, with wins over Houston in 2003 (54-48 in 3OT), and UAB in 2004 (59-40). The Warriors fell to Tulane in 2002 (2836). BOWL WEEK SCHEDULE 18 MONDAY Practice 7am-9am Team to Hawaiian Waters Adventure Park (CLOSED TO MEDIA) 19 TUESDAY 20 WEDNESDAY 21 THURSDAY 22 FRIDAY Practice 7am-9am Practice 7am-9am Practice 7am-9am Practice 7am-9am Press Conference 11am (Sheraton Waikiki - 2nd Floor) Team to Pearl Harbor (CLOSED TO MEDIA) (last day for player interviews) Hilo Hattie Shopping/NOH Foods Luncheon 12:30pm Outback Steakhouse Barefoot Pep Rally 6pm (Waikiki Beach) Heineken Beach Party Barbeque 6pm (Sheraton Waikiki) 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 1 Paradise Yellow Pages Kickoff Dinner 6pm (Sheraton Waikiki) 23 SATURDAY Shriner’s Hospital Visit 9:15am Outback Steakhouse Luncheon 11:30am 24 SUNDAY Arizona State vs. Hawai‘i Aloha Stadium 3:05pm Practice 4-5:30pm (CLOSED TO MEDIA) SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL MEDIA OPPORTUNITIES SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL PRESS CONFERENCE Tuesday, Dec. 19 at 11:00 a.m. Sheraton Waikiki Hotel (2nd Floor) OUTBACK STEAKHOUSE BAREFOOT PEP RALLY Tuesday, Dec. 19 at 6:00 p.m. Waikiki Beach HEINEKEN BEACH PARTY BARBEQUE Thursday, Dec. 21 at approx. 6:00 p.m. Sheraton Waikiki Hotel (2nd Floor) PARADISE PAGES KICKOFF DINNER Friday, Dec. 22 at approx. 6:00 p.m. Sheraton Waikiki Hotel (Ground Floor) POST-GAME PRESS CONFERENCE Head coach June Jones and selected players will be available at the Aloha Stadium Hospitality Room approximately 10 minutes after the post-game trophy presentation on the field. The media will NOT be allowed to conduct interviews with players and/or coaches at any time on the field. The Hawai’i locker room will be open to the media after the press conference concludes. SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL MEDIA & INFORMATION CENTER The Sheraton Hawai’i Bowl will host a Media and Information Center beginning Monday, Dec. 18 through Wednesday, Dec. 20. The center will be located at the Sheraton Waikiki Hotel (2nd floor) in the Kohala/Kona Room. Fax machines, copiers, and high speed internet lines will all be available for media use only. Hours of operation: Monday, Dec. 18, 11 a.m. - 3 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 19, 11 a.m. - 3 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 20, 11 a.m. - 3 p.m. ALOHA STADIUM INFORMATION PARKING GATES Parking lot gates at Aloha Stadium will open at 10 a.m. Parking is $5. Alternate parking is available at Leeward Community College (free with a $2 charge of shuttle service, and at Kam Drive-In for $5 and free shuttle service. All shuttle service operation runs from 3:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. and approximately one hour after the game ends. Parking is also available at Radford High School for $3 with no available shuttle service. No tailgating is allowed at alternate parking sites. STADIUM GATES Stadium gates will open at 12 p.m. STADIUM SECURITY Security measures are in effect. Only fanny packs, purses, backpacks and handbags will be allowed into the stadium (subject to check). There will be no illegal contraband, weapons, fireworks, coolers, cans bottles, air horns, noisemakers, cans and bottles, umbrellas, outside food and/or beverages allowed inside the stadium gates. TRAFFIC ADVISORY ESPN 1420 will provide traffic advisories and updates. 13 WARRIORS ON ALL-WAC TEAMS Warrior head coach June Jones and quarterback Colt Brennan highlighted the all-WAC team announced Dec. 4, 2006. Jones earned his second WAC Coach of the Year honor since winning the award in 1999, while Brennan became the school’s first Offensive Player of the Year. Besides Brennan, four other Warriors were named to the first team all-WAC on offense - wide receiver Davone Bess, offensive linemen Tala Esera and Samson Satele, and running back Nate Ilaoa. Bess, who recorded more than 1,000 receiving yards for the second straight season, made 50 catches for 666 yards and 12 touchdowns in eight WAC games. He started all 13 games and hauled in 91 receptions for a total of 1,155 yards and 14 scores. Ilaoa rushed for 893 yards and 13 touchdowns, and caught 63 passes for 671 yards and five scores. Offensive lineman Satele and Esera were named to two of the five spots. Satele is on the list for the fourth straight year. He is named to the first team for the second straight year after a second-team pick his first two seasons. Esera, who was a secondteam selection a year ago, graced the first team for the first time in his career. UH placed three players on the first team defense - defensive ends Ikaika AlamaFrancis and Melila Purcell, and safety Leonard Peters. Alama-Francis and Purcell were second-team picks in 2005, while Peters is on the list for the first time in his career. Alama-Francis made 36 stops on the season, including nine tackles-for-loss (-50 yards), three sacks (-27), and recorded 14 quarterback hurries. Purcell finished with 54 tackles, 13.5 tackles-for-loss (-37), 7.5 sacks (-29), and 12 quarterback hurries. Peters was third on the team with 68 tackles. He picked off three passes and returned two for touchdowns. He also added two tackles-for-loss (-10), seven pass break ups, one quarterback hurry, and forced one fumble. Ross Dickerson, who was awarded the team’s Alec Waterhouse Most Valuable Player Trophy at the team banquet, was named first-team all-WAC special teams player. The senior returned 23 kickoffs for 603 yards for a 26.2 average, including a 100-yard touchdown return. He also started at wide receiver where he made 54 catches for 726 yards and seven scores. Hawai’i also placed four players on the all-WAC second team. Junior wide receiver Jason Rivers and senior offensive lineman Dane Uperesa were named on the offensive team, while junior nose tackle Michael Lafaele and sophomore linebacker Adam Leonard were selected to the defense. The Warriors had 13 players named to either the first or second team, the most by any conference school. 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 2 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL THE COACHES Hawai’i head coach June Jones is 63-40 in in his eighth season at the Warrior helm. Jones took over the Warrior program after 11 years coaching in the NFL, including head coaching stints at Atlanta (1994-96) and San Diego (1998). This is his first collegiate head coaching post. Arizona State head coach Dirk Koetter is in his fifth and final season at the helm of the Sun Devil program and owns a 40-33 record. He has led Arizona State to four bowl games in five seasons. Koetter served as head coach at Boise State from 1998-2000 before arriving in Tempe. Koetter will be succeeded by Dennis Erickson who was named ASU’s new head coach earlier this month. Jones’ Record at Aloha Stadium in Road Games in WAC Games in WAC Home Games in WAC Road Games vs. Koetter vs. Arizona State 63-40 48-20 15-20 39-24 25-9 15-15 1-0 0-0 JONES CHASING “W” Warrior head coach June Jones tied the modern era record for most wins on Nov. 25 against Purdue. He now has 63 career wins at UH, sharing the mark with former UH coach Dick Tomey (1977-86) who compiled a 63-46-3 record in 10 seasons. Otto Klum is the school’s all-time winningest coach, posting an 84-51-7 mark from 1921-39. TEAM CAPTAINS Center Samson Satele safety Leonard Peters, and defensive end Ikaika Alama-Francis serve as Warrior captains. Satele, the team’s most talented offensive lineman, started every game of his career (52), mostly at guard, but has moved to center in 2006 and has the ability to play any position up front. Peters is serving his second term as team captain after filling the role in 2005. The sixth-year senior enjoyed his only injury-free season in 2004, when he managed to start all 13 games and led the team with 120 total tackles. Alama-Francis, a converted basketball player, led all defensive linemen with 49 tackles in 2005. The Warriors also choose game captains each week: at Alabama - RB Nate Ilaoa, DB Desmond Thomas UNLV - OL Hercules Satele, WR Ross Dickerson at Boise State - DB Desmond Thomas, WR Ryan GriceMullen Eastern Illinois - OL Tala Esera, LB Rustin Saole Nevada - RB Reagan Mauia, DB Michael Malala at Fresno State - RB Nate Ilaoa, NT Michael Lafaele, DB Guyton Galdeira at NMSU - RB Nate Ilaoa, LB Solomon Elimimian Idaho - OL John Estes, DL Melila Purcell, WR Ross Dickerson at Utah State - OL Dane Uperesa, SS Jacob Patek, CB C.J. Hawthorne Louisiana Tech - RB Nate Ilaoa, OL Tala Esera SJSU - OL Tala Esera, LB Adam Leonard Purdue - RB Nate Ilaoa, DL Melila Purcell Oregon State - OL Hercules Satele, DL Michael Lafaele, PK Dan Kelly 15 NOTES ON ALL-AMERICAN COLT BRENNAN… 1. Broke the NCAA record for most TD passes in two seasons (now has 88) and is one TD pass shy of the NCAA single-season mark of 54 set by Houston’s David Klingler in 1990. Klingler also held the two-season record of 83. 2. Has completed 72.1 percent of his pass attempts in 2006, tops in the nation. 3. Posts the highest pass efficiency rating in the nation (182.8) and could break the NCAA single-season record of 183.3 set by Shaun King of Tulane in 1998. 4. Leads the nation in six statistical categories, including Total Offense (410.8), Touchdown Passes (53), Passing Efficiency (182.8), Points Responsible For (26.8), Completion Percentage (72.14%) and Total Passing Yards (4,990). 5. Has broken 11 school records including: Consecutive Pass Attempts Without an Interception (182), Most Pass Completions in a Season (373), Consecutive 200-Yard Passing Games in a Career (24), Most TD Passes in a Season (53), Consecutive Games Throwing a TD in a Career (25), Most Passing Yards in a Season (4,990), Total Offense Yards in a Season (5,341), Points Responsible For in a Season (348), Touchdowns Responsible For in a Season (58), Consecutive 200-Yard (passing) Games in a Season (13), and Consecutive Games Throwing a TD Pass in a Season (13). 6. Has thrown for more than 300 yards and five touchdowns in seven games this season. 7. Posted pass efficiency ratings above 200 in four games in 2006, including a career-high 243.0 at Utah State (Nov. 4). 8. Is the team’s second leading rusher with 351 yards and five touchdowns. 9. Three-time 2006 WAC Offensive Player of the Week, Walter Camp Offensive National Player of the Week (Nov. 4), USA Today National Player of the Week (Nov. 7). 10. Has played only seven complete games (sat out 4th quarter in six games in 2006). 11. Named 2006 WAC Offensive Player of the Year. 12. Is the school’s first quarterback to earn All-America status since 1978 (second-team Walter Camp, third-team Associated Press). 13. Has helped Hawai’i to its first Associated Press Top 25 ranking since 1993. 14. Finished sixth in the Heisman Trophy voting and was one of three finalists for the Davey O’Brien Award. 15. Helped Hawai’i to a school-record nine-game win streak. TAKE A GOOD LOOK AT THE COMPETITION Player, School Colt Brennan, Hawai’i Troy Smith, Ohio State Brady Quinn, Notre Dame Graham Harrell, Texas Tech Erik Ainge, Tennessee John David Booty, USC Passing 373-517-4,990 (53 TD, 11 INT) 199-297-2,507 (30 TD, 5 INT) 274-432-3,278 (35 TD, 5 INT) 376-562-4,110 (36 TD, 10 INT) 208-311-2,722 (19 TD, 8 INT) 242-391-2,956 (25 TD, 9 INT) 2006 SEASON STATISTICS Passing Completions: 373 Attempts: 517 Yards: 4,990 Touchdowns: 53 Interceptions: 11 Efficiency: 182.80 Yards Per Game: 383.8 Rushing Attempts: 79 Yards: 351 Touchdowns: 5 Yards Per Carry: 4.4 Yards Per Game: 27.0 Rushing 79-351-5 62-312-1 79-(65)-2 27-(-60)-1 24 (-88)-1 29-(-49)-1 NCAA STATISTICS Total Offense: FIRST (410.8) Passing Efficiency: FIRST (182.8) Points Responsible For: FIRST (26.8) Completion Percentage: FIRST (72.14%) Passing Yards Per Game: SECOND (383.85) Passing: THIRD (28.89 Comp/Game) Total Passing Yards: FIRST (4,990) Touchdown Passes: FIRST (53) “Hey mainland. If you’ve been sleeping on Colt Brennan this is your wake up call buddy boy. The Hawai’i quarterback is unbelievable. The numbers for this guy are just astonishing.” - Scot Van Pelt (ESPN Sportscenter) “I’ve watched Hawai’i junior quarterback Colt Brennan play several times this season. I’m finally convinced that he is not a system quarterback. He doesn’t make many mistakes. He’s a winner. He throws TD passes like I throw away column rough drafts. Brennan has pinpoint accuracy with the arm to make all of the big throws. I cannot stress how accurate his arm is.” - Keenan Davis (NFL.com) “I don’t remember playing against a quarterback as hot as that. Their quarterback, Brennan, is the key to their offense. He’s played outstanding every game. He was phenomenal against us, the best quarterback performance we’ve ever faced.” - Pat Hill (Fresno State Head Coach) 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 3 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL QUICK FACTS STATISTICAL LEADERS HAWAI’I ARIZONA STATE LOCATION Honolulu, HI Tempe, AZ FOUNDED 1907 1885 ENROLLMENT 20,307 51,612 COLORS Green, Black, White, Silver Accent Maroon & Gold NICKNAME Warriors Sun Devils CONFERENCE Western Athletic Conference Pacific-10 STADIUM (CAP.) Aloha Stadium (50,000) Sun Devil Stadium (71,806) SURFACE FieldTurf Natural Grass 2005 OVERALL RECORD 5-7 7-5 2005 CONF. RECORD (PLACE) 4-4 (5th) 4-4 (T4th) SCHEDULE COMPARISON DATE Aug. 31 Sept. 2 Sept. 9 Sept. 16 Sept. 23 Sept. 30 Oct. 7 Oct. 14 Oct. 21 Oct. 28 Nov. 4 Nov. 11 Nov. 18 Nov. 25 Dec. 2 Dec. 24 HAWAI’I (10-3) at Alabama (L, 17-25) BYE UNLV (W, 42-13) at Boise State * (L, 34-41) EASTERN ILLINOIS (W, 44-9) NEVADA * (W, 41-34) at Fresno State * (W, 68-37) at New Mexico State * (W, 49-30) IDAHO * (W, 68-10) at Utah State * (W, 63-10) LOUISIANA TECH * (W, 61-17) SAN JOSE STATE * (W, 54-17) PURDUE (W, 42-35) OREGON STATE (L, 32-35) ARIZONA STATE ARIZONA STATE (7-5) NORTHERN ARIZONA (W, 35-14) NEVADA (W, 52-21) at Colorado (W, 21-3) at No. 21 California * (L, 21-49) NO. 12 OREGON * (L, 13-48) BYE at No. 3 USC * (L, 21-28) STANFORD * (W, 38-3) at Washington * (W, 26-23 OT) at Oregon State * (L, 10-44) WASHINGTON STATE * (W, 47-14) UCLA * (L, 12-24) at Arizona * (W, 28-14) vs. Hawai’i * denotes league game G 12 13 Passing Colt Brennan Tyler Graunke G Cmp 13 373 7 32 Receiving Davone Bess Jason Rivers G 13 13 Att Yds YPG 113 893 74.4 79 351 27.0 YPA 7.9 4.4 TD 13 5 Lg 38 30 Int Yds 11 4,990 0 501 TD 53 4 Lg 63 62 No Yds YPG YPR 91 1,155 88.8 12.7 58 870 66.9 15.0 TD 14 8 Lg 49 62 Att 517 43 All-Purp. Yards G Rush Nate Ilaoa 12 893 Ross Dickerson 13 13 Defense G Adam Leonard 13 Solomon Elimimian 12 ARIZONA STATE Rushing G Ryan Torain 12 Keegan Herring 12 Rec 781 726 UT 59 45 AT TT 49 108 36 81 Att Yds YPG 205 1069 89.1 91 540 45.0 G 12 12 No 49 15 ARIZONA STATE 27.0 (42nd) 167.2 (33rd) 198.2 (59th) 365.3 (43rd) 231 104 110 17 23.8 (68th) 116.6 (36th) 181.9 (34th) 298.5 (27th) - 0.08 (67th) 14-180 51-2080-40.8 98-803 (116th) 18-9 30:59 (32nd) 59-157-38% (66th) 6-18-33% (97th) Defense Josh Barrett Beau Manutai G 12 12 UT 51 38 KOR IR Total Avg 0 0 1,674 139.5 603 0 1,342 103.2 TFL 3.5-9 2.0-5 Sck 1.0-2 0.0-0 YPA 5.2 5.9 TD 6 6 Lg 40 65 Int Yds 14 2332 0 46 TD 21 0 Lg 62 27 Yds YPG YPR 481 40.1 9.8 246 20.5 16.4 TD 4 2 Lg 23 50 Passing G Cmp Att Rudy Carpenter 12 171 306 Danny Sullivan 6 6 15 Receiving Zach Miller Michael Jones PR 0 0 All-Purp. Yards G Rush Rec PR Ryan Torain 12 1069 177 0 Terry Richardson 6 0 113 210 COMPARING THE NUMBERS CATEGORY HAWAI’I Scoring Avg. 47.3 (1st) Rushing Avg. 117.7 (86th) Passing Avg. 432.2 (1st) Total Offense Avg. 549.9 (1st) First Downs 352 First Downs Rushing 79 First Downs Passing 255 First Downs Penalty 18 Avg. Points Allowed 24.1 (70th) Avg. Rushing Yds. Allowed 131.2 (53rd) Avg. Passing Yds. Allowed 245.6 (109th) Avg. Total Offense Yds. Allowed 376.8 (93rd) Turnover Margin 0.08 (52nd) Interceptions -Yds. 14-290 Punts-Yds.-Average 16-6-2-37.6 Penalties-Yards 93-826 (103th) Fumbles-Lost 26-15 Average Time of Poss. 28:40 (97th) 3rd Down Conv. (Pct.) 71=123 -58% (1st) 4th Down Conv. (Pct.) 8-20-40% (86th) HAWAI’I Rushing Nate Ilaoa Colt Brennan AT 23 21 Int 1-5 0-0 KOR IR Total Avg 0 0 1246 103.8 302 0 625 104.2 TT TFL 74 7.5-17 60 5.5-13 Sck 1.0-2 1.0-3 Int 2-40 0-0 THE SERIES The Christmas Eve game will mark the seventh meeting between Hawai’i and Arizona State. The Sun Devils lead the series 5-1, winning the first five meetings before the Warriors posted a 29-17 win in the last meeting in 1979. The last five meetings have taken place in Honolulu, but only one at Aloha Stadium in 1979. Series Shorts First Meeting: Sept. 18, 1954 Last Meeting: Dec. 1, 1979 Longest UH Win Streak: 1 Longest ASU Win Streak: 5 Largest UH Win Margin: 12 Largest ASU Win Margin: 40 Smallest UH Win Margin: 12 Smallest ASU Win Margin: 8 Shutouts: None Series History Date 9/18/54 12/2/55 9/20/58 12/4/59 12/7/74 12/1/79 Score *ASU 28, UH 14 ASU 39, UH 6 ASU 46, UH 6 ASU 14, UH 6 ASU 26, UH 3 UH 29, ASU 17 W 0 0 0 0 0 1 L 1 2 3 4 5 5 T 0 0 0 0 0 0 Pct .000 .000 .000 .000 .000 .167 * denotes away game Note: Parenthesis denote NCAA rankings 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 4 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL A LITTLE BIT “NASTI” Running back Nate Ilaoa, known as “Nasti” by his team- WAC STANDINGS (Dec 4, 2006) WAC W Boise State 8 Hawai’i 7 Nevada 5 San Jose State 5 Fresno State 4 Idaho 3 New Mexico State 2 Louisiana Tech 1 Utah State 1 L 0 1 3 3 4 5 6 7 7 Pct. 1.000 .875 .625 .625 .500 .375 .250 .125 .125 All W L Pct. 12 0 1.000 10 3 .769 8 4 .667 8 4 .667 4 8 .333 4 8 .333 4 8 .333 3 10 .231 1 11 .083 Hm 6-0 7-1 5-1 6-1 3-3 2-3 3-4 3-2 1-4 Rd Neu 6-0 0-0 3-2 0-0 3-3 0-0 2-3 0-0 1-5 0-0 2-5 0-0 1-4 0-0 1-7 0-0 0-7 0-0 Stk W12 L1 L1 W2 L1 L5 W2 L4 L6 WAC BOWL SCHEDULE Saturday, Dec. 23 (New Mexico Bowl) San Jose State at New Mexico, 2:30 p.m. (ESPN) Sunday, Dec. 24 (Sheraton Hawai’i Bowl) Hawai’i vs. Arizona State, 3:00 p.m. (ESPN) Sunday, Dec. 31 (MPC Computers Bowl) Nevada vs. Miami-Fla., 5:30 p.m. (ESPN) Monday, Jan. 1 (Tostitos Fiesta Bowl) No. 9 Boise State vs. No. 7 Oklahoma, 6:30 p.m. (Fox) UH WAC PLAYER-OF-THE-WEEK HONORS IN 2006 Sept. 18 Oct. 9 Oct. 16 Oct. 23 Oct. 30 Nov. 6 Nov. 20 Offense: RB Nate Ilaoa Offense: QB Colt Brennan Offense: QB Colt Brennan Defense: DE Melila Purcell Special Teams: KOR Ross Dickerson Special Teams: KOR Ross Dickerson Offense: QB Colt Brennan Defense: DE Melila Purcell WARRIORS ON ALL-WAC TEAMS IN 2006 Offense WR Davone Bess, first team, Jason Rivers, second team, QB Colt Brennan, first team, RB Nate Ilaoa, first team, OL Samson Satele, first team, Tala Esera, first team, Dane Uperesa, second team, ST Ross Dickerson, first team Defense DL Ikaika Alama-Francis, first team, DL Melila Purcell, first team, DL Michael Lafaele, second team, LB Adam Leonard, second team, DB Leonard Peters, first team Offensive Player of the Year: QB Colt Brennan Coach of the Year: June Jones mates, is living up to his nickname after gaining 211 all-purpose yards in the win over Purdue (Nov. 25). Ilaoa, a native of Stafford, Va., who also scored two touchdowns against the Boilermakers, has gained more than 200 all-purpose yards three times this season: vs. Nevada (219) and at Utah State (210). The sixth-year senior leads the Warriors in rushing with 113 carries for 893 yards and 13 touchdowns and ranks fifth in the WAC (46th nationally) averaging 74.4 rushing yards per game. His 893 rushing yards and 13 touchdowns are the most of any UH rusher in the June Jones era. He is averaging 7.9 yards per carry and is also second on the team with 63 receptions for 781 yards and five touchdowns. He ranks seventh in the WAC (56th nationally) in receiving yards per game (65.1), and fifth in the WAC and 30th nationally in receptions per game (5.25). He has rushed for more than 100 yards five times in his career, three times this season, including a career-high 159 against Purdue. Ilaoa also leads the team and ranks fifth in the league (12th nationally) averaging 139.5 all-purpose yards per game. GO BIG “D” The Warrior defense has been often overshadowed by the high-pow- ered Warrior offense. The defense has allowed a mere 79 points and forced 11 turnovers (5 FF, 6 INT) which led to eight touchdowns in the last five games. Coordinator Jerry Glanville’s group has allowed 13-or-less points in four games this season, including a season-low nine against Eastern Illinois (Sept. 30), and 10 against Idaho (Oct. 28) and Utah State (Nov. 4). The Warrior defense ranks 53rd nationally in rushing defense (131.2), 70th in scoring defense (24.1), 93rd in total defense (376.8), and 109th in passing defense (245.6). THE BESS IS YET TO COME Warrior receiver Davone Bess ranks fifth in the nation in receptions per game (7.00), second in the WAC. Bess, a native of Oakland, Calif., led all receivers with 10 catches against Nevada (Oct. 7), and has led all Warriors in receiving yards in the last four straight games. He leads the Warriors with 91 grabs for 1,155 yards and 14 touchdowns. Bess reached the century mark seven times as a true freshman in 2005 and five times this season. He has also recorded 10 or more receptions three times this season and three times in 2005. The sophomore ranks second in the WAC and 14th nationally averaging 88.8 receiving yards per game. Bess surpassed the 1,000yard mark for the second straight season after posting 1,124 in 2005. He tied his touchdown mark of 14, an NCAA record, set as a true freshman last season. BESS/GRICE-MULLEN IN NCAA RECORD BOOK Warrior receivers Davone Bess and Ryan Grice-Mullen are both listed in the 2006 NCAA Record Book after tying the national record for two players on the same team each gaining 1,000 yards receiving. On the list of 21 tandems, which dates back to 1988, Bess and Grice-Mullen is the only pair of freshman receivers to accomplish the feat. Bess also tied the school record for most passes caught by a freshman with 14 in 2005. Two other receivers tied with Bess include Jabar Gaffney (Florida, 2000) and Mike Williams (USC, 2002). THE INSIDERS - ADAM LEONARD & SOLOMON ELIMIMIAN Inside linebackers Adam Leonard and Solomon Elimimian sit atop the Warrior chart in total tackles with a combined 189 this season. Leonard, a highly touted recruit coming out of Rainier High School in Seattle, Wash., in 2005, has made a significant impact on the Warrior defense. The true sophomore, who refused to redshirt after suffering a season-ending knee injury while a senior at Rainier, played in eight games and made nine tackles last season, still recovering from surgery. This season, Leonard is at full strength and has led the team in tackles seven times this season, and currently has a team-high 108 tackles, averaging 8.3 per game, fifth in the WAC and 49th nationally. Leonard also has one sack (-2), 3.5 tackles-for-loss (-9), eight PBUs, three quarterback hurries, a forced fumble, and four fumble recoveries this season. At New Mexico State (Oct. 21), Leonard scored his first career touchdown, on a 20-yard fumble return. Leonard also recorded his first career interception, which halted the potential game-tying drive against Purdue (Nov. 25). Elimimian has led the Warriors in total tackles in two of his last three games, and four times this season. The Los Angeles, Calif., native propelled his way into the second spot, with 81 tackles on the season, after sitting out one game. The super sophomore has also recorded two tackles-for-loss (-5), one PBU, two quarterback hurries, a fumble recovery and a forced fumble this season. 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 5 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL CAREER WATCH PASSING No Player 1. Timmy Chang, 2000-04 2. Colt Brennan, 20053. Dan Robinson, 1997-99 4. Garret Gabriel, 1987-90 5. Raphel Cherry, 1981-84 HOME VS. ROAD The Warriors have enjoyed unparalleled success while playing in G Yards 53 17,072* 25 9,291 25 6,038 34 5,631 37 5,046 To Tie 7,781 G Yards 53 16,910 25 9,799 34 6,181 45 6,032 37 5,944 To Tie 7,111 * indicates NCAA record TOTAL OFFENSE No Player 1. Timmy Chang, 2000-04 2. Colt Brennan, 20053. Garret Gabriel, 1987-90 4. Michael Carter, 1990-93 5. Raphel Cherry, 1981-84 RECEIVING YARDS G No Player 1. Ashley Lelie, 1999-2001 36 2. Chad Owens, 2001-04 44 3. Justin Colbert, 1999-2002 45 4. Walter Murray, 1982-85 45 5. Jason Rivers, 2003-04, 2006- 37 6. Davone Bess, 200525 7. Britton Komine, 2001-04 41 8. Chris Roscoe, 1987-89 34 9. Channon Harris, 1999-2001 36 10. Craig Stutzmann, 1998-2001 46 11. Ryan Grice-Mullen, 200521 12. Dwight Carter, 1998-99 24 13. Dane McArthur, 1987-90 44 14. Jeremiah Cockheran, 2002-03 24 15. Darrick Branch, 1989-92 47 16. Ross Dickerson, 200346 Yards 3,341 3,031 2,905 2,865 2,294 2,279 2,276 2,265 2,186 2,025 1,887 1,820 1,784 1,728 1,614 1,569 To Tie 1,047 737 611 571 KICKOFF RETURN No Player 1. Matt Harding, 1992-95 2. Larry Khan-Smith, 1987-90 3. Chad Owens, 2001-04 4. Ross Dickerson, 20035. Jamal Garland, 1999-2000 Yards 1,911 1,658 1,354 1,310 1,268 To Tie 601 348 44 G 48 41 44 34 22 the friendly confines of Aloha Stadium, especially under the direction of current head coach June Jones. The Warriors have posted a 47-20 record (70%) of all games played at Aloha Stadium in Jones’ seven-plus seasons, opposed to an 26-46 (36%) home record in the seven previous seasons before Jones’ arrival. Jones and the Warriors were almost perfect twice, posting 7-1 and 8-1 records in 2003 and 2004 respectively. In 2004, the Warriors posted the best record (8-1) and winning percentage (.889) under Jones. Only once in UH football history did the Warriors go undefeated at home, posting a 8-0 record in 1992 under head coach Bob Wagner. Jones has also posted a 15-20 (43%) road record, opposed to a 4-24 (14%) mark in road games from 1992-98. The Warriors are currently 7-1 in home games this season. June Jones (seven seasons at UH) Home Year Record Pct. PF PA 1999 6-4* .600 254 287 2000 3-5 .375 226 236 2001 7-2 .778 389 244 2002 7-2* .778 344 241 2003 7-1* .875 345 231 2004 8-1* .889 401 268 2005 3-4 .429 243 264 2006 7-1 .875 384 170 7+ seasons 47-20 .701 2586 1941 Road Record Pct. PF PA 3-0 1.000 117 62 0-4 .000 68 163 2-1 .667 94 74 3-2 .600 158 148 2-4 .333 141 196 0-4 .000 66 231 2-3 .500 125 164 3-2 .000 114 976 15-20 .429 981 1144 Previous seven seasons at UH Home Year Record Pct. PF PA 1992 8-0 1.000 305 165 1993 6-6 .500 310 182 1994 3-8-1 .273 185 180 1995 4-8 .333 204 228 1996 2-10 .167 146 257 1997 3-9 .250 159 165 1998 0-12 .000 90 276 7 seasons 26-46 .361 1399 1453 Record 2-2 0-4 1-3 1-4 0-4 0-4 0-4 4-24 Road Pct. PF PA .500 89 118 .000 83 175 .250 75 93 .200 81 173 .000 15 176 .000 32 143 .000 59 146 .143 434 1024 * includes bowl game JONES AND THE DRAFT A total of 11 players have been drafted by NFL teams in the June Jones era. In the five seasons before Jones’ arrival, five Warriors were drafted by NFL teams. The Warriors currently have 10 players in the NFL, including: Jacksonville Jaguars: OL Vince Manuwai (2003-3rd Round); WR/RS Chad Owens (2005-6th Round) Atlanta Falcons: OL Kynan Forney (2001-7th Round); WR Ashley Lelie (2002-1st Round) Green Bay Packers: OL Adrian Klemm (2000-2nd Round-New England) San Francisco 49ers: DL Isaak Sopoaga (2004-4th Round); LB Jeff Ulbrich (2000-3rd Round) St. Louis Rams: LB Pisa Tinoisamoa (2000-4th Round) Tennessee Titans: DE Travis LaBoy (2004-2nd Round) Dallas Cowboys: P Mat McBriar (2002-free agent) 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 6 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL ASSOCIATED PRESS TOP 25 POLL WEEK 15 Rk 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. School (1st Place Votes) Record Ohio State (65) 12-0 Florida 12-1 Michigan 11-1 LSU 10-2 Louisville 11-1 Wisconsin 11-1 Oklahoma 11-2 USC 10-2 Boise State 12-0 Auburn 10-2 Notre Dame 10-2 Arkansas 10-3 West Virginia 10-2 Virginia Tech 10-2 Wake Forest 11-2 Rutgers 10-2 Tennessee 9-3 Texas 9-3 Brigham Young 10-2 California 9-3 Texas A&M 9-3 Nebraska 9-4 Boston College 9-3 Oregon State 9-4 TCU 10-2 Points 1625 1529 1526 1365 1333 1255 1232 1182 1097 1020 939 867 865 798 766 631 576 564 436 390 379 193 179 112 80 Last Week 1 4 3 5 6 7 8 2 10 11 12 8 15 14 16 13 17 17 20 21 22 19 25 NR NR OTHERS RECEIVING VOTES Georgia 57, Georgia Tech 53, Hawaii 25, Houston 21, Penn State 9, South Florida 6, Maryland 6, Navy 4, South Carolina 3, UCLA 2. FUTURE SCHEDULES Hawai’i has managed to get some of the top teams in the country on its non-conference schedule in upcoming seasons. This season, the Warriors opened the season at Alabama and play non-conference home games against UNLV and Purdue. Hawai’i travels to UNLV in 2007, a city where the Warriors have a large following, and host Michigan State on Nov. 24. And, for the first time in UH football history, the Warriors meet Florida at “The Swamp” to open the 2008 season. 2007 Sept. 15 at UNLV Nov. 24 MICHIGAN STATE 2008 Aug. 30 at Florida Nov. 29 WASHINGTON STATE FUTURE SCHEDULES 2009 Sept. 5 NAVY Sept. 12 at Washington State Sept. 19 at UNLV Nov. 28 WISCONSIN 2010 Sept. 4 USC Sept. 25 UNLV 2011 Sept. 24 at UNLV Nov. 26 WASHINGTON STATE WARRIORS GET VOTES For the first time since January 1993, Hawai’i broke into the Associated Press Top 25 Poll, landing at No. 25 on Nov. 19 (89 points), and moved up a spot to No. 24 on Nov. 26. After five straight weeks of receiving votes, Hawai’i finally broke into the Top 25 in the USA Today Coaches Top 25 Poll. It is the first time since the Warriors appeared in the coaches poll since November 26, 2002 (No. 23). LARGEST CROWD ROAD CROWD AT BRYANT-DENNY STADIUM The Warriors’ season opening game at Alabama’s Bryant-Denny Stadium on Sept. 2, a sellout crowd of 92,128, marked the largest road crowd in Warrior football history and the largest crowd to attend a college football game in the state of Alabama. USA TODAY COACHES TOP 25 POLL WEEK 15 Rk 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 25. School (1st Place Votes) Record Ohio State (62) 12-0 Florida 12-1 Michigan 11-1 LSU 10-2 Wisconsin 11-1 Louisville 11-1 USC 10-2 Oklahoma 11-2 Boise State 12-0 Auburn 10-2 Notre Dame 10-2 West Virginia 10-2 Arkansas 10-3 Virginia Tech 10-2 Wake Forest 11-2 Texas 9-3 Rutgers 10-2 Tennessee 9-3 California 9-3 Brigham Young 10-2 Texas A&M 9-3 Nebraska 9-4 Boston College 9-3 TCU 10-2 Oregon State 9-4 Georgia Tech 9-4 Points 1550 1470 1444 1299 1263 1223 1173 1115 1053 1000 923 800 798 781 745 582 567 500 436 369 303 242 175 95 72 72 Last Week 1 4 3 5 6 7 2 10 9 11 12 15 8 14 16 17 13 19 20 21 24 18 25 NR NR 22 OTHERS RECEIVING VOTES Houston 40, Hawaii 22, Georgia 12, Clemson 11, Penn State 10, South Carolina 2, Navy 2, Maryland 1. THE RUN-AND-SHOOT Warrior head coach June Jones has enjoyed much success with the Run-and-Shoot offense while at Hawai‘i. The Warrior passing offense has led the WAC and finished in the Top 5 nationally each of the seven years under Jones. Against Army in 2003, the Warrior offense amassed a school-record 741 yards and tied the school record for passing yards in a game with 543. Year 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 Pass Off. 432.2 384.2 333.1 384.4 387.9 381.3 322.9 338.6 WAC/National 1st/1st 1st/2nd 1st/3rd 1st/2nd 1st/1st 1st/2nd 1st/4th 1st/2nd Total Off. 549.9 476.2 430.0 488.1 500.8 462.7 396.7 434.5 WAC/National 1st/1st 1st/11th 2nd/20th 1st/6th 2nd/3rd 2nd/7th 4th/40th 2nd/17th In addition, Warrior quarterback Timmy Chang broke the NCAA career passing record (held by Brigham Young’s Ty Detmer) by throwing for 17,072 yards from 2000-04. 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 7 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL THE WARRIORS WHEN ... At Home On The Road When Scoring First When Opponents Score First When Scoring 20+ Points When Opponent Scores 20+ Points When Leading at Halftime When Tied at Halftime When Trailing at Halftime When Leading After Three Quarters When Trailing After Three Quarters When Tied After Three Quarters When Rushing for 100+ Yards When Rushing for 200+ Yards When Opponent Rushes for 100+ Yards When Passing for 300+ Yards When Opponent Passes for 300+ Yards With More Turnovers Than Opponent With Less Turnovers Than Opponent When Turnover Margin is Even In Day Games In Night Games On Artificial Turf On Natural Grass With Fewer Penalties (Yards) With More Penalties (Yards) With Even Penalties (Yards) In Games Played in September In Games Played in October In Games Played in November In Games Played in December Against Ranked Opponents (AP Poll only) In Bowl Games 2005 3-4 2-3 4-2 1-5 5-3 4-7 5-1 0-0 0-6 5-1 0-6 0-0 2-3 1-0 4-7 5-5 2-2 1-5 3-2 1-0 1-5 4-2 4-5 1-2 1-3 4-4 0-0 1-2 2-3 1-2 1-0 0-3 0-0 2006 7-1 3-2 8-1 2-2 9-2 4-3 10-0 0-1 0-2 10-0 0-3 0-0 6-1 2-0 6-2 9-3 4-0 1-3 5-0 4-0 2-0 8-3 7-2 3-1 4-2 6-1 0-0 2-2 4-0 4-0 0-1 0-1 0-0 PRONUNCIATION GUIDE Under Jones 48-20 14-20 36-19 26-20 59-22 37-39 50-6 2-4 8-30 49-6 9-34 1-0 34-10 3-0 44-38 52-36 18-4 19-20 31-8 12-4 15-13 47-28 50-32 11-8 25-21 34-18 2-0 10-15 22-12 21-9 6-4 2-8 4-1 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 8 No 4 6 7 9 10 11 12 13 18 20 21 25 27 34 35 39 41 43 45 49 50 51 52 53 54 59 60 64 65 67 68 70 72 73 74 78 87 91 92 93 94 96 97 98 Name Ilaoa, Nate Graunke, Tyler Bess, Davone Keomaka, Ryan Paepule, Timo Funaki, Inoke Noa, Karl Satele, Brashton Galdeira, Guyton Malala, Michael Anderson, Jazen Milne, Kurt Peoples, Khevin Mauia, Reagan Monteilh, Keao Seti, Siave Elimimian, Solomon Kalilimoku, Brad Laumoli, Jason Lene, Jared Letuli, Laupepa Tuioti-Mariner, Lafu Saole, Rustin Soares, Blaze Purcell, Amani Kiesel-Kauhane, R.J. Kaonohi, Marques Satele, Samson Satele, Hercules Lafaele, Michael LaCount, Kahai Esera, Tala Uperesa, Dane Sauafea, Larry Ieru, Raphael Steinhoff, Keoni Jackson, Marquez Alama-Francis, Ikaika Savaiigaea, Rocky Watson, Keala Veikune, David Laeli, Fale Fruean, Renolds Purcell, Melila Pronunciation (ee-LAW-wuh) (grawn-kee) (da-VONN) (kay-ow-MAH-kah) (pah-ay-POO-lay z TEE-mow) (ee-NO-kay z foo-NAH-kee) (noah) (sah-TELL-ay) (gaul-DARE-uh) (ma-LAW-la) (JAY-zen) (miln) (kevin) (maw-EE-ah) (mon-tay z kay-ow) (SEH-tea z see-AW-vay) (el-li-MIM-me-an) (kah-lee-lee-MOW-koo) (lah-oo-MOW-lee) (LEN-ay) (lay-TWO-lee z law-PEH-pah) (TWO-ee-ow-tee z LAH-foo) (sah-OW-lay) (sore-ez) (ah-MAH-nee) (KEE-sel z cow-HAW-nay) (kah-oh-NO-hee) (sah-TELL-ay) (sah-TELL-ay) (LAH-fah-EL-ay) (kah-HIGH) (es-SEH-rah) (OOH-per-res-uh) (saw-ah-FAY-uh) (ee-EH-roo) (KAY-ow-knee) (mar-QWEZ) (ee-KY-kah) (sah-VAH-ee-NY-ah) (kay-ALL-uh) (vay-KOO-nay) (lah-EL-lee z FAH-lay) (FRU-an) (meh-LEE-lah) SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL RUNNING BACK SPECIALISTS 4 Nate Ilaoa (5-9, 254, Sr) Stafford, VA 34 Reagan Mauia (6-0, 296, Sr) Stockton, CA PUNT 25 Kurt Milne (6-0, 205, Sr, Roswell, GA) PK 86 Dan Kelly (6-3, 202, So, Temecula, CA) 40 Briton Forester (5-9, 171, Fr, San Diego, CA) PR 7 Davone Bess (5-10, 195, So, Oakland, CA) 38 Myron Newberry (5-8, 164, Jr, Denton, TX) KOR 89 Malcolm Lane (6-1, 181, Fr, Ft. Lauderdale, FL) 82 Ross Dickerson (5-10, 198, Sr, Waipahu, O’ahu) LS 57 Jake Ingram (6-4, 268, So, Mililani,O’ahu) HOLD 11 Inoke Funaki (5-11, 195, Fr, La’ie, O’ahu) SS 57 Jake Ingram (6-4, 268, So, Mililani,O’ahu) OFFENSE QUARTERBACK 15 X RECEIVER 7 84 Jason Rivers (6-2, 192, Jr) Waipahu, O’ahu 88 Chad Mock (6-0, 177, Sr) Honolulu, O’ahu 5 Colt Brennan (6-3, 196, Jr) Irvine, CA 6 Tyler Graunke (6-0, 202, So) Tucson, AZ H SLOT Davone Bess (5-10, 195, So) Oakland, CA Michael Washington (5-7, 165, So) Aliquippa, PA RIGHT TACKLE RIGHT GUARD Dane Uperesa (6-4, 310, Sr) Hau’ula, O’ahu 62 Keith Ah-Soon (6-1, 294, So) Pago Pago, Am. Samoa John Estes (6-2, 290, Fr) Stockton, CA 73 Larry Sauafea (6-2, 313, Jr) Pago Pago, Am. Samoa 72 58 55 END 77 Dexter Davis (6-2, 243, Fr) Phoeniz, AZ 57 Tranell Morant (6-5, 280, Jr) Miami, FL 64 CENTER Y SLOT LEFT GUARD TACKLE 70 Tala Esera (6-4, 308, Sr) Hau’ula, O’ahu 78 Keoni Steinhoff (6-3, 269, So) Ewa Beach, O’ahu TACKLE 50 END Kyle Caldwell (6-3, 272, Sr) Scottsdale, AZ 85 Kellen Mills (6-3, 246, Jr) Mesa, AZ Jordan Hill (6-2, 301, Sr) Pocatello, ID 90 David Smith (6-3, 275, So) Chandler, AZ SAM LINEBACKER MIKE LINEBACKER WILL LINEBACKER Gerald Munns (6-3, 238, Fr) Queen Creek, AZ 25 Mike Nixon (6-2, 226, Fr) Phoenix, AZ Beau Manutai (6-1, 253, Sr) Rialto, CA 29 Robert James (5-11, 229, Jr) Glendale, AZ Derron Ware (6-4, 217, Sr) Los Angeles, CA 44 Travis Goethel (6-2, 229, Fr) Vista, CA 47 18 51 CORNERBACK CORNERBACK Rudy Burgess (5-10, 180, Jr) Edwards, CA Keno Walter-White (5-11, 179, Sr) San Diego, CA Juston Tryon (5-9, 182, Jr) Palmdale, CA 9 Littrele Jones (5-9, 178, Jr) San Fernando, CA 3 6 Ian Sample (5-10, 196, Sr) Washington Township, NJ 89 Malcolm Lane (56-1, 181, Fr) Ft. Lauderdale, FL LEFT TACKLE Hercules Satele (6-2, 288, Jr) Long Beach, CA 77 Aaron Kia (6-4, 283, Fr)) Torrance, CA 1 Z RECEIVER 3 Ryan Grice-Mullen (5-1, 179, So) Rialto, CA 82 Ross Dickerson (5-10, 198, Sr) Waipahu, O’ahu 65 Samson Satele (6-3, 298, Sr) Kane’ohe, O’ahu 60 Marques Kaonohi (6-1, 273, Sr) Waimanalo, O’ahu Michael Marquardt (6-4, 289, Jr) Vista, CA 91 Will Kofe (6-2, 291, Jr) Long Beach, CA 1 4 19 SAFETY Josh Barrett (6-2, 227, Jr) Reno, NV 2 Ryan McFoy (6-1, 194, Fr) Chino, CA 5 DEFENSE 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 9 SAFETY Zach Catanese (6-2, 230, Sr) Redding, CA 7 Jeremy Payton (6-1, 204, So) Covina, CA SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL SPECIALISTS PK P LSN KOR PR HOLD 13 Z RIGHT GUARD 63 Julius Orieukwu (6-7, 318, Jr) Houston, TX 75 Richard Tuitu’u (6-5, 346, Fr) Gilbert, AZ 98 END WILL LB 41 Micah Lau (5-9, 218, Jr) Mililani, O’ahu Gerard Lewis (5-9, 168, Jr) Houston, TX 9 Ryan Keomaka (5-10, 173, Jr) Fountain Valley, CA LEFT GUARD 62 Robert Gustavis (6-4, 308, Jr) Torrance, CA 67 Shawn Lauvao (6-3, 276, So) Honolulu, O’ahu 91 Brandon Rodd (6-4, 301, Jr) ‘Aiea, O’ahu 79 Julius Orieukwu (6-7, 318, Jr) Houston, TX END Ikaika Alama-Francis (6-6, 285, Sr) Kane’ohe, O’ahu 97 Renolds Fruean (6-4, 276, Sr) Kapolei, O’ahu 44 MAC LB 8 Adam Leonard (6-0, 236, So) Seattle, WA 10 Timo Paepule (6-2, 255, Jr) Kane’ohe, O’ahu STUB LB Tyson Kafentzis (6-1, 230, So) Richland, WA 53 Blaze Soares (6-1, 224, Fr) Kane’ohe, O’ahu STRONG SAFETY 31 FREE SAFETY 42 Leonard Peters (6-1, 211, Sr) La’ie, O’ahu 30 Dane Porlas (5-10, 179, So) San Diego, CA LEFT TACKLE 73 Michael Lafaele (6-0, 302, Jr) Honolulu, O’ahu 99 Lawrence Wilson (6-1,291, Sr) Honolulu, O’ahu BUCK LB X Mike Jones (6-3, 208, So) Sugar Land, TX 9 Brandon Smith (6-1, 188, Fr) Bakersfield, CA 67 Solomon Elimimian (6-0, 224, So) Los Angeles, CA 28 Erik Pedersen (6-0, 197, Fr) Rancho Palos Verdes, CA C.J. Allen-Jones (6-1, 224, So) Aberdeen, MD CORNERBACK 1 NOSE TACKLE 26 33 CENTER Mike Pollak (6-4, 305, Jr) Tempe, AZ 56 Thomas Altieri (6-2, 281, Fr) Vista, CA Melila Purcell (6-5, 276, Sr) Pago Pago, Amer. Samoa 94 David Veikune (6-3, 258, So) Wahiawa, O’ahu OFFENSE Rudy Carpenter (6-2, 207, So) Westlake, CA 15 Danny Sullivan (6-4, 200, Fr) Los Gatos, CA 76 Paul Fanaika (6-6, 355, So) Millbrae, CA 67 Shawn Lauvao (6-3, 276, So) Honolulu, O’ahu Ryan Torain (6-0, 216, Jr) Shawnee Mission, KS 24 Keegan Herring (5-10, 186, So) Peoria, AZ 36 Shaun DeWitty (6-2, 215, So) Colorado Springs, CO 12 Zach Miller (6-5, 259, Jr) Phoeniz, AZ 80 Dane Guthrie (6-3, 253, So) Miami, FL RIGHT TACKLE 26 QUARTERBACK 86 79 TAILBACK Brent Miller (6-5, 238, Jr) Phoenix, AZ 81 Tyrice Thompson (6-5, 226, Jr) Phoeniz, AZ TIGHT END Chris McGaha (6-1, 184, Fr) Phoeniz, AZ 6 Kyle Williams (5-10, 179, Fr) Scottsdale, AZ 23 87 Jesse Ainsworth (6-3, 216, Sr, Thousand Oaks, CA) Thomas Weber (6-0, 195, Fr, Downey, CA) Jonathan Johnson (6-1, 205, Jr, Simi Valley, CA) Jesse Ainsworth (6-3, 216, Sr, Thousand Oaks, CA) Jason Burke (6-2, 268, Sr, Glendale, AZ) Jason Perkins (6-1, 232, So, Glendale, AZ) Kyle Williams (5-10, 179, Fr, Scottsdale, AZ) Rudy Burgess (5-10, 180, Jr, Edwards, CA) Kyle Williams (5-10, 179, Fr, Scottsdale, AZ) Chris McGaha (6-1, 184, Fr, Phoeniz, AZ) Rudy Carpenter (6-2, 207, So, Westlake, CA) Mike Jones (6-3, 208, So, Sugar Land, TX) 20 38 35 20 43 53 6 3 6 13 12 1 H BACK DEFENSE 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 10 Jacob Patek (6-0, 202, Jr) Victoria, TX 20 Michael Malala (6-2, 209, Sr) Honolulu, O’ahu CORNERBACK 38 Myron Newberry (5-8, 164, Jr) Denton, TX 34 A.J. Martinez (5-10, 179, Jr) Fountain Valley, CA SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL THE LAST TIME ... A game ended in a tie… Nov. 26, 1994, 32-32 (Missouri) UH won at home… Nov. 25, 2006, 42-35 (Purdue) UH won a WAC game at home… Nov. 18, 2006, 54-17 (SJSU) UH won a non-conference game at home… Nov. 25, 2006, 42-35 (Purdue) UH won a Division I-A non-conference game at home… Nov. 25, 2006, 42-35 (Purdue) UH won on the road… Nov. 4, 2006, 63-10 (Utah State) UH won a WAC game on the road… Nov. 4, 2006, 63-10 (Utah State) UH won a non-conference game on the road… Sept. 30, 1995, 58-30 (UNLV) UH did not score a touchdown… Oct. 29, 2004 at Boise State (3-69) UH did not score a touchdown in a half… Sept. 2, 2006 at Alabama (1st) UH beat a ranked team… Dec. 8, 2001, 72-45 (BYU, 10th) A shutout was recorded… UH: at Idaho (24-0), Sept. 24, 2005 OPP: SMU (0-28), Oct. 3, 1998 UH won an overtime game… Dec. 25, 2003, 54-48, vs. Houston (3 OT) A kickoff was returned for a TD… UH: Ross Dickerson vs. Idaho, 100 yards, Oct. 28, 2006 OPP: Gerard Lawson (Oregon State), 100 yards, Dec. 2, 2006 A team rushed for less than 100 yards in a game… UH: 86 at Utah State, Nov. 4, 2006 OPP: 71 by Oregon State, Dec. 2, 2006 A punt was returned for a TD… UH: Chad Owens vs. UAB, 59 yards, Dec. 24, 2004 OPP: Quinton Jones (Boise State), 92 yards, Oct. 1, 2005 Two teams rushed for less than 100 yards in a game… UH: 41 at Idaho, Sept. 24, 2005 OPP: 41 by Idaho, Nov. 24, 2005 A player returned two kicks for a TD… UH: Chad Owens vs. BYU (PR-74, KOR 100), Dec. 8, 2001 OPP: Never A punt was blocked… UH: C.J. Allen-Jones (vs. Nevada), Oct. 7, 2006 OPP: T.J. Jones (Northwestern), Nov. 27, 2004 A blocked punt was returned for a TD… UH: Keith Bhonapha (at SMU), Oct. 6, 2001 OPP: T.J. Jones (Northwestern), Nov. 27, 2004 A field goal was blocked… UH: Leonard Peters at La Tech, Oct. 18, 2003 OPP: Joe Garcia (Nevada), Oct. 7, 2006 A PAT was blocked… UH: Desmond Thomas vs. UNLV, Sept. 16, 2006 OPP: Jason Shirley (Fresno State), Oct. 14, 2006 UH lost an overtime game… Sept. 4, 2004, 28-35, vs. Florida Atlantic (1 OT) An interception was returned for a TD… UH: Ryan Keomaka vs. Idaho, 29 yards, Oct. 28, 2006 OPP: Marty Tadman (Boise State), 40 yards, Oct. 1, 2005 A player scored three or more TDs in a game… UH: Nate Ilaoa, 3, at Utah State, Nov. 4, 2006 OPP: Wendell Mathis, 3, (Fresno State), Oct. 29, 2005 A fumble was returned for a touchdown… UH: Adam Leonard at NMSU, 20 yards, Oct. 21, 2006 OPP: Terry Holley (Rice), 0 yards, Sept. 27, 2003 A player scored four or more TDs in a game… UH: Ryan Grice-Mullen, 4, vs. New Mexico State, Oct. 15, 2005 OPP: Jared Zabransky, 4, (Boise State), Oct. 29, 2004 A safety was recorded… UH: Oregon State, Dec. 2, 2006 OPP: at Alabama, Sept. 2, 2006 A player scored five or more TDs in a game… UH: Chad Owens, 5, vs. Northwestern, Nov. 27, 2004 OPP: Marshall Faulk (San Diego State), Oct. 5, 1991 A player scored on a 2-point conversion… UH: Ryan Grice-Mullen from Colt Brennan vs. Purdue, Nov. 25, 2006 OPP: Orlando Scandrick (defensive PAT return), Boise State, Sept. 23, 2006 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE A team rushed for 300 or more yards in a game… UH: 350 vs. UNLV, Oct. 19, 1996 OPP: 327 at Louisiana Tech, Oct. 8, 2005 A team rushed for 400 or more yards in a game… UH: 436 at UNLV, Sept. 30, 1995 OPP: 503 at Fresno State, Nov. 12, 2004 A team passed for 400 or more yards in a game… UH: 401 vs. Oregon State, Dec. 2, 2006 OPP: 421 by San Diego State, Dec. 3, 2005 A team passed for 500 or more yards in a game… UH: 506 vs. La Tech, Nov. 11, 2006 OPP: 507 by San Diego State, Dec. 7, 2002 A pass was completed for 50 yards or more… UH: Colt Brennan to Ryan GriceMullen (60 yards), at Utah State, Nov. 4, 2006 OPP: Matt Moore to Sammie Stroughter (Oregon State), 80 yards, Dec. 2, 2006 A team rushed for 500 or more yards in a game… UH: Never OPP: 503 at Fresno State, Nov. 12, 2004 A player passed for 300 or more yards in a game… UH: Colt Brennan vs. Oregon State, 401 yards, Dec. 2, 2006 OPP: Chase Holbrook (NMSU), 323 yards, Oct. 21, 2006 A player rushed for more than 50 yards on a carry… UH: Nate Ilaoa (53) vs. Utah State, Nov. 12, 2005 OPP: Vincent Webb (Eastern Illinois), 69 yards, Sept. 30, 2006 A player passed for 400 or more yards in a game… UH: Colt Brennan vs. Oregon State, 401 yards, Dec. 2, 2006 OPP: Kevin O’Connell (San Diego State), 421 yards, Dec. 3, 2005 A player rushed for 100 yards or more in a game… UH: Nate Ilaoa (159) vs. Purdue, Nov. 25, 2006 OPP: Yvenson Bernard (Oregon State), 108 yards, Dec. 2, 2006 A player passed for 500 or more yards in a game… UH: Colt Brennan vs. New Mexico State, 515 yards, Oct. 15, 2005 OPP: Jeff Graham (Long Beach State), 519 yards, Oct. 29, 1988 Two players rushed for 100 yards or more in a game… UH: Johnny Macon (141) and Brett Washington (106) vs. Fresno State, Nov. 4, 1995 OPP: Bryson Sumlin (Fresno State), 220 yards; Wendell Mathis (Fresno State), 176 yards, Nov. 12, 2004 A team had 500 or more yards of total offense… UH: 504 vs. Oregon State, Dec. 2, 2006 OPP: 515 by Boise State, Sept. 23, 2006 A player rushed for 200 yards or more in a game… UH: Michael Carter at Wyoming, 214 yards, Aug. 31, 1991 OPP: Wendell Mathis (Fresno State), 229 yards, Oct. 29, 2005 A player rushed for 300 yards or more in a game… UH: Never OPP: Ron Dayne (Wisconsin), 339 yards, Nov. 30, 1996 A team passed for less than 100 yards in a game… UH: 33 at UTEP, Oct. 31, 1998 OPP: 57 by Eastern Illinois, Sept. 30, 2004 11 A team had 600 or more yards of total offense… UH: 653 vs. Purdue, Nov. 25, 2006 OPP: 679 by Fresno State, Nov. 12, 2004 Two teams combined for 1,000 or more yards of total offense… UH (653) vs. Purdue (472), 1,125 yards, Nov. 25, 2006 Two teams combined for 1,200 or more yards of total offense… UH (638) at La. Tech (623) (1,261 yards), Oct. 18, 2003 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL No 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 9 10 11 11 12 12 13 14 15 15 16 17 18 19 19 20 21 22 23 23 24 25 25 26 27 28 29 29 30 31 33 34 34 35 36 37 38 39 39 40 41 42 43 44 44 45 45 46 47 48 Name Grice-Mullen, Ryan Ferguson, Jason Sample, Ian Ilaoa, Nate Washington, Michael Graunke, Tyler Bess, Davone Kafentzis, Tyson Taylor, Rick Keomaka, Ryan Paepule, Timo Funaki, Inoke Fergerstrom, Victor Brogan, William Noa, Karl Satele, Brashton Alexander, Kirk Brennan, Colt Aufai, Josh Davis, JoPierre Thomas, Desmond Galdeira, Guyton Rego, Jayson Hawthorne, C.J. Malala, Michael Anderson, Jazen Rego, Jayson Chopp, Alonzo Lewis, Gerard Patton, Kenny Milne, Kurt Perry, Ryan Lau, Micah Peoples, Khevin Pedersen, Erik Hollaway, Kenji Jones, Keenan Porlas, Dane Patek, Jacob Allen-Jones, C.J. Mauia, Reagan Martinez, A.J. Monteilh, Keao Salas, Greg Berry, Josh Newberry, Myron Seti, Siave Noa, Waikoloa Forester, Briton Elimimian, Solomon Peters, Leonard Kalilimoku, Brad Weisbarth, Gabriel Leonard, Adam Laumoli, Jason Smith, Spencer Clore, Victor Rice, Joshua Farmer, David Pos WR WR WR RB WR QB WR LB WR DB LB QB LB QB DL LB DB QB DB DB DB DB RB DB DB RB RB RB DB DB P DB LB RB DB P/WR DB DB DB LB RB DB DB WR DB DB RB DB KS LB DB DB RB LB RB DB DL LB RB No Name Pos Ht Wt Cl Exp Hometown/Last School 62 91 14 33 79 21 15 85 56 37 7 15 12 23 46 16 82 41 70 55 48 83 11 2 40 97 11 18 63 6 1 19 29 74 4 57 87 69 29 8 43 60 86 9 77 59 68 96 67 89 26 45 49 44 50 23 81 58 80 OL DL DB LB OL RB DB WR OL DB WR QB QB RB DL DB WR LB OL OL RB WR LB WR KS DL QB DB OL QB WR DB P/WR OL RB DL WR OL DB LB DB OL PK/P DB OL LB DL DL DL WR LB RB LB LB DL DB WR OL WR 294 285 201 224 255 221 190 183 376 193 195 196 198 245 225 199 198 224 308 290 231 188 218 170 171 276 195 163 296 202 179 161 184 340 254 268 148 297 183 230 213 273 202 173 283 222 299 285 302 181 218 284 222 236 287 168 202 261 200 Ah-Soon, Keith Alama-Francis, Ikaika Alexander, Kirk Allen-Jones, C.J. Allen-Jones, Cameron Anderson, Jazen Aufai, Josh Bain, Aaron Bannigan, Kavan Berry, Josh Bess, Davone Brennan, Colt Brogan, William Chopp, Alonzo Clore, Victor Davis, JoPierre Dickerson, Ross Elimimian, Solomon Esera, Tala Estes, John Farmer, David Farney, Mitch Fergerstrom, Victor Ferguson, Jason Forester, Briton Fruean, Renolds Funaki, Inoke Galdeira, Guyton Ginlack, Brysen Graunke, Tyler Grice-Mullen, Ryan Hawthorne, C.J. Hollaway, Kenji Ieru, Raphael Ilaoa, Nate Ingram, Jake Jackson, Marquez Johnson, Daniel Jones, Keenan Kafentzis, Tyson Kalilimoku, Brad Kaonohi, Marques Kelly, Dan Keomaka, Ryan Kia, Aaron Kiesel-Kauhane, R.J. LaCount, Kahai Laeli, Fale Lafaele, Michael Lane, Malcolm Lau, Micah Laumoli, Jason Lene, Jared Leonard, Adam Letuli, Laupepa Lewis, Gerard Linkner, Dylan Lipp, Joey Mahaley, Antwan 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 12 6-1 6-6 6-2 6-1 6-2 5-10 5-10 5-9 6-6 5-11 5-10 6-3 6-1 6-0 6-2 6-0 5-10 6-0 6-4 6-2 6-0 5-11 6-2 5-5 5-9 6-4 5-11 5-7 6-1 6-0 5-11 5-11 5-9 6-3 5-9 6-4 5-8 6-4 5-11 6-1 5-10 6-1 6-3 5-10 6-4 5-11 6-2 6-2 6-0 6-1 5-9 5-11 6-3 6-0 6-3 5-9 6-0 6-3 6-4 So Sr So So So Jr Fr So Jr Fr So Jr Fr Jr Fr Fr Sr So Sr Fr So Fr Sr Jr Fr Sr Fr So Fr So So Jr Fr Fr Sr So Fr Fr Jr So Jr Sr So Jr Fr Fr Sr So Jr Fr Jr Jr Fr So Fr Jr So Fr Fr 1L 3L 1L 1L 1L JC RS 1L HS HS 1L 1L HS 1L HS HS 3L 1L 3L RS 1L HS 2L 2L HS 1L RS 1L HS 1L 1L JC HS RS 2L 1L RS RS JC 1L 2L 3L 1L 2L RS RS 3L 1L 2L HS 2L JC HS 1L RS JC 1L HS RS Pago Pago, American Samoa/Tafuna HS Kane‘ohe, O‘ahu/Kalaheo HS Altadena, CA/Pasadena HS Aberdeen, MD/Aberdeen HS Aberdeen, MD/Marshall University Woodland Hills, CA/Moorpark College Stanwood, WA/Stanwood HS ‘Aiea, O‘ahu/St. Louis School Wahiawa, O’ahu/Leilehua HS Sparks, NV/Spanish Springs HS Oakland, CA/Skyline HS Irvine, CA/Saddleback CC Ponte Vedra Beach, FL/Canyon HS Hearne, TX/Hearne HS Kane‘ohe, O‘ahu/Castle HS San Francisco, CA/Balboa HS Waipahu, O‘ahu/St. Louis School Los Angeles, CA/Crenshaw HS Hau‘ula, O‘ahu/Kahuku HS Stockton, CA/St. Mary’s HS Santa Cruz, CA/Aptos HS Phoenix, AZ/Shadow Mountain HS Kamuela, Hawai'i‘i/Hawai'i‘i Preparatory Academy Los Angeles, CA/Fairfax HS San Diego, CA/La Costa Canyon HS Kapolei, O‘ahu/Washington State University La‘ie, O‘ahu/Kahuku HS Wahiawa, O‘ahu/Kamehameha Schools Kailua, O‘ahu/Kahuku HS Tucson, AZ/Salpoint Catholic HS Rialto, CA/Rialto HS Gulf Port, MS/Mississippi Gulf Coast College Enola, PA/East Pennsboro HS Honolulu, O‘ahu/McKinley HS Stafford, VA/North Stafford HS Mililani, O‘ahu/Mililani HS Snellville, GA/East Hall HS Issaquah, WA/Skyline HS Harbor City, CA/Compton College Richland, WA/Richland HS Honolulu, O‘ahu/Roosevelt HS Waimanalo, O‘ahu/Kailua HS Temecula, CA/Linfield Christian HS Honolulu, O’ahu/Roosevelt HS Mililani, O‘ahu/Mililani HS ‘Aiea, O‘ahu/Aiea HS Kailua, O‘ahu/Kailua HS Honolulu, O‘ahu/St. Louis School Honolulu, O‘ahu/Farrington HS Ft. Lauderdale, FL/Hanau American HS (Germany) Honolulu, O‘ahu/Kamehameha Schools Pago Pago, American Samoa/Yuba College Altus, OK/Altus HS Seattle, WA/Rainier Beach HS Torrance, CA/North Torrance HS Houston, TX/Tyler JC Kailua, O‘ahu/Kailua HS Chino, CA/Chino HS Carson, CA/Carson HS SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL No Name Pos Ht Wt Cl Exp Hometown/Last School 20 34 34 76 25 88 35 38 12 39 10 31 24 28 27 25 42 30 54 90 98 22 47 84 56 36 3 52 13 65 64 73 92 39 95 45 53 78 9 66 17 51 72 94 5 93 44 99 DB DB RB OL P WR DB DB DL DB LB DB DB DB RB DB DB DB LB DL DL RB LB WR DL WR WR LB LB OL OL OL DL RB LB DB LB OL WR OL DB OL OL DL WR DL RB DL 209 179 296 280 205 177 181 164 238 202 255 202 188 197 202 175 211 179 257 240 276 214 206 192 250 186 196 239 243 288 298 313 321 281 208 185 224 269 169 340 171 279 310 258 165 328 203 291 Malala, Michael Martinez, A.J. Mauia, Reagan McKay, Nathan Milne, Kurt Mock, Chad Monteilh, Keao Newberry, Myron Noa, Karl Noa, Waikoloa Paepule, Timo Patek, Jacob Patton, Kenny Pedersen, Erik Peoples, Khevin Perry, Ryan Peters, Leonard Porlas, Dane Purcell, Amani Purcell, Elliot Purcell, Melila Rego, Jayson Rice, Joshua Rivers, Jason Russell, Nathan Salas, Greg Sample, Ian Saole, Rustin Satele, Brashton Satele, Hercules Satele, Samson Sauafea, Larry Savaiigaea, Rocky Seti, Siave Siaki, Sebastian Smith, Spencer Soares, Blaze Steinhoff, Keoni Taylor, Rick Thomas, Adrian Thomas, Desmond Tuioti-Mariner, Lafu Uperesa, Dane Veikune, David Washington, Michael Watson, Keala Weisbarth, Gabriel Wilson, Lawrence 6-2 5-10 6-0 6-2 6-0 6-0 5-11 5-8 6-4 6-1 6-2 6-0 6-0 6-0 5-11 5-9 6-1 5-10 6-3 6-3 6-5 5-9 5-11 6-2 6-2 6-1 5-10 5-11 6-2 6-2 6-3 6-2 6-3 6-0 6-2 5-11 6-1 6-3 5-9 6-5 6-3 6-0 6-4 6-3 5-7 6-3 5-10 6-1 Sr Jr Sr Fr Sr Sr Jr Jr Jr Jr Jr Jr Sr Fr So So Sr So Jr Fr Sr Fr Fr Jr So Fr Sr Jr Fr Jr Sr Jr Fr Jr Fr Fr Fr So Fr Fr So So Sr So So So Fr Sr 1L 1L 1L RS 3L 1L 2L JC 2L JC 2L JC 3L RS 1L TR 3L 1L TR HS 3L RS RS 2L JC HS 1L 2L RS 2L 3L 1L RS RS HS HS HS RS HS HS 1L 1L 3L JC 1L 1L HS 1L Honolulu, O‘ahu/UH Hilo Fountain Valley, CA/Edison HS Stockton, CA/San Joaquin Delta College Lake Oswego, OR/Lake Oswego HS Roswell, GA/Centennial HS Honolulu, O‘ahu/Avila College Honolulu, O’ahu/St. Louis School Denton, TX/Trinity College Wai‘anae, O‘ahu/Kamehameha Schools Honolulu, O’ahu/Golden West JC Kane‘ohe, O‘ahu/St. Louis School Victoria, TX/Blinn JC Altadena, CA/St. Francis HS Rancho Palos Verdes, CA/Peninsula HS Tampa, FL/Blake HS Charlotte, NC/Sacramento State La‘ie, O‘ahu/Kahuku HS San Diego, CA/University of San Diego HS Pago Pago, American Samoa/Penn State Univ. Ewa Beach, O’ahu/St. Louis School Pago Pago, American Samoa/Leone HS Wailuku, Maui/Kamehameha Schools Las Vegas, NV/Coronado HS Waipahu, O‘ahu/St. Louis School Wai’anae, O’ahu/West Hills JC Chino, CA/Chino HS Washington Township, NJ/Bergen College Waipahu, O‘ahu/Waipahu HS Mililani, O‘ahu/Word of Life Academy Long Beach, CA/Long Beach Poly HS Kane‘ohe, O‘ahu/Kailua HS Pago Pago, American Samoa/Samoana HS Ewa Beach, O‘ahu/Aiea HS Long Beach, CA/West Los Angeles College Mesa, AZ/Mesa HS Marietta, GA/Kell HS Kane’ohe, O’ahu/Castle HS Ewa Beach, O‘ahu/Damien HS Ponte Vedra Beach, FL/Nease HS Bangor, NSW, Australia/Gymea Tech HS Vallejo, CA/Vallejo HS Corona, CA/Corona HS Hau‘ula, O‘ahu/Punahou School Wahiawa, O’ahu/Fresno CC Aliquippa, PA/Aliquippa HS Nanakuli, O‘ahu/Nanakuli HS San Mateo, CA/Burlingame HS Honolulu, O‘ahu/Dixie JC 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 13 No 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 56 57 58 59 60 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 72 73 74 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 Name Lene, Jared Letuli, Laupepa Tuioti-Mariner, Lafu Saole, Rustin Soares, Blaze Purcell, Amani Estes, John Bannigan, Kavan Russell, Nathaniel Ingram, Jake Lipp, Joey Kiesel-Kauhane, R.J. Kaonohi, Marques Ah-Soon, Keith Ginlack, Brysen Satele, Samson Satele, Hercules Thomas, Adrian Lafaele, Michael LaCount, Kahai Johnson, Daniel Esera, Tala Uperesa, Dane Sauafea, Larry Ieru, Raphael McKay, Nathan Kia, Aaron Steinhoff, Keoni Allen-Jones, Cameron Mahaley, Antwan Linkner, Dylan Dickerson, Ross Farney, Mitch Rivers, Jason Bain, Aaron Kelly, Dan Jackson, Marquez Mock, Chad Lane, Malcolm Purcell, Elliot Alama-Francis, Ikaika Savaiigaea, Rocky Watson, Keala Veikune, David Siaki, Sebastian Laeli, Fale Fruean, Renolds Purcell, Melila Wilson, Lawrence Pos LB DL OL LB LB LB OL OL DL DL OL LB OL OL OL OL OL OL DL DL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL WR WR WR WR WR WR PK/P WR WR WR DL DL DL DL DL LB DL DL DL DL SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL GAME 2 • SEPT. 16, 2006 ALOHA STADIUM (32,008) GAME 1 • SEPT. 2, 2006 BRYANT-DENNY STADIUM (92,138) Hawai’i Alabama 1 3 3 2 0 12 3 7 7 4 7 3 OT - Final 17 25 1 0 14 UNLV Hawai’i TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – It was a night of missed opportunities for the Warrior football team, Sept. 2, before a sold-out crowd of 92,138 at the newly renovated Bryant-Denny Stadium. Three Warrior turnovers (2 fumbles, 1 interception) amounted to zero points for Alabama, but the Tide managed to score 12 points in the second quarter and stole close to 12 minutes off the third quarter clock to win its 200th game in the facility. The teams traded field goals on game-opening drives before Alabama got in the end zone first when fullback Tim Castille scored on a 3-yard run around the left side. Hawai’i was trapped at their own 1-yard line when Warrior punter Kurt Milne fumbled the snap paving the way for Alabama’s Roy Upchurch to recover the ball in the end zone for an apparent touchdown, but the call was overturned on an instant replay review, awarding the Tide with a safety, to take a 12-3 lead. Alabama took a 22-3 lead coming out of the locker room when John Parker Wilson hit Keith Brown for a 35-yard touchdown. Hawai’i responded with quarterback Colt Brennan, leading the Warriors down to the Alabama 9-yard line, but the drive came to a screeching halt when running back Reagan Mauia, in for starter Nate Ilaoa, fumbled at the 4-yard line. Mauia came back on the ensuing possession, taking a shovel pass from Brennan and scampered 16 yards for the first Warrior touchdown of the season. Alabama managed a field goal to take a 25-10 lead with 14:42 left to play. Brennan got the Warriors moving midway through the fourth quarter, with a 31-yard touchdown strike to Ryan Grice-Mullen, cutting the lead to eight, at 2517. Hawai’i got the ball back at its own 25-yard line with 2:04 remaining. Brennan completed six of his next seven passes to get the Warriors to the Alabama 26-yard line and took three shots at th end zone, but was intercepted on the final play of the game. Scoring Summary UH 1 11:31 Dan Kelly 42 FG UA 1 7:18 Leigh Tiffin 31 FG UA 2 14:30 Tim Castille 3 run (Leigh Tiffin kick) UA 2 5:13 Team safety UA 2 1:19 Leigh Tiffin 23 FG UA 3 11:15 Keith Brown 35 pass from John Parker Wilson (Leigh Tiffin kick) UH 3 4:59 Reagan Mauia 16 pass from Colt Brennan (Dan Kelly kick) UA 4 14:42 Leigh Tiffin 27 FG UH 4 7:04 Ryan Grice-Mullen 31 pass from Colt Brennan (Dan Kelly kick) 2 0 14 3 7 14 4 6 0 OT - Final 13 42 HONOLULU – Hawai’i gained 583 yards of total offense on the legs of running back Nate Ilaoa and the hands of Davone Bess and Ryan Grice-Mullen to beat UNLV, 42-13, Sept. 16 at Aloha Stadium. Ilaoa rushed for 104 yards and two touchdowns on nine carries, averaging a whopping 11.6 yards per carry, while Bess caught for 124 yards and a score and Grice-Mullen added 111 yards and a touchdown. It was Ilaoa’s second 100-yard game in thrree outings after finishing the 2005 season with a career-high 151 rushing yards against San Diego State. But the story of the night belonged to the Warrior defense, which held UNLV scoreless until the 3:51 mark in the third quarter, and to 271 yards of total offense. Warrior defenders got to UNLV quarterback Rocky Hinds three times, hurried him eight, and added an interception, which was returned for a touchdown. Hawai’i jumped out to a 14-0 lead, scoring on its first two possessions of the game. Warrior quarterback Colt Brennan completed 12-of-15 passes for 121 yards and two touchdowns in the first quarter. The junior also rushed for a 1-yard score and ended the first half 18-of27 for 229 yards and two scores. Ilaoa, who finished the first half with 74 yards on six attempts, scored his first touchdown of the night on an 8-yard run to give the Warriors a 28-0 lead at the break. After holding the Rebels to three rushing yards and 112 total yards in the first half, the Warrior defense began the second half in the same fashion. Safety Leonard Peters picked UNLV quarterback Rocky Hinds and dashed 33 yards for a touchdown, giving Hawai’i a 35-0 lead. After forcing UNLV to punt, Brennan went to work, orchestrating a 96yard drive on 12 plays, capped by a 7-yard touchdown run by Ilaoa, Hawai’i’s final touchdown of the game before calling in the second team. Scoring Summary UH 1 12:55 Ryan Grice-Mullen 7 pass from Colt Brennan (Dan Kelly kick) UH 1 7:20 Davone Bess 7 pass from Colt Brennan (Dan Kelly kick) UH UH UH UH UNLV UNLV 2 10:34 Nate Ilaoa 8 run (Dan Kelly kick) 2 5:58 Colt Brennan 1 run (Dan Kelly kick) 3 14:31 Leonard Peters 33 interception return (Dan Kelly kick) 3 6:57 Nate Ilaoa 7 run (Dan Kelly kick) 3 3:51 David Peeples 1 run (Ben Jaekle kick) 4 2:34 Rodelin Anthony 15 pass from Shaen Steichen (Ben Jaekle kick blocked) Team Statistics Rebels Warriors First Downs __________________________18 __________________30 Total Net Yards ________________________271 __________________583 Rushing (Att-Yards) __________________28-73 ______________31-236 Passing (C-A-I-Yards) ____________18-47-1-232 __________33-45-2-369 Sacks Against-Yards __________________3-25 ________________2-10 Punting ______________________5-192-38.4 ____________3-112-37.3 Fumbles-Lost ________________________0-0 __________________2-2 Penalties-Yards ______________________1-15 ________________11-92 Time of Possession __________________28:04 ________________31:56 Team Statistics Warriors Crimson Tide First Downs ____________________________18 __________________20 Total Net Yards ________________________372 __________________378 Rushing (Att-Yards) __________________15-22 ________________36-125 Passing (C-A-I-Yards) ____________30-44-1-250____________16-29-0-253 Sacks Against-Yards ____________________3-21 __________________1-2 Punting ______________________3-106-35.3 ____________4-159-39.8 Fumbles-Lost __________________________4-2 __________________1-0 Penalties-Yards ______________________11-82 __________________5-34 Time of Possession ____________________24:16 ________________35:44 Individual Leaders Rushing (Att-Yards-TD) – UNLV: David Peeples (13-39-1). Hawai’i: Nate Ilaoa Individual Leaders (9-104-2). Rushing (Att-Yards-TD) – Hawai’i: Nate Ilaoa (4-27-0). UA: Jimmy Johns (8-58- Passing (Cmp-Yards-TD) – UNLV: Rocky Hinds (13-166-0). Hawai’i: Colt Brennan Passing (Cmp-Yards-TD) – Hawai’i: Colt Brennan (30-350-2). UA: John Parker Receiving (Rec-Yards-TD) – UNLV: Casey Flair (4-87-0). Hawai’i: Davone Bess (24-296-2). 0). Wilson (16-253-1). Receiving (Rec-Yards-TD) – Hawai’i: Ryan Grice-Mullen (6-109-1), Davone Bess (8-74-0). UA: Keith Brown (6-132-1). Punting (Att-Yards-Avg) – Hawai’i: Kurt Milne (3-106-35.3. UA: P.J. Fitzgerald (4- 159-39.8). Sacks By (No-Yards) – Hawai’i: Adam Leonard (1.0-2). UA: Terrance Jones (1.0- 12), Zach Schreiber (1.0-5), Prince Hall (1.0-4), Ezekial Knight (1.0-3), Marcus Carter (1.0-1). Leading Tacklers – Hawai’i: Adam Leonard (6-5-11), Leonard Peters (6-4-10), Jacob Patek (5-5-10). UA: Juwan Simpson (3-6-9). 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE (10-124-1), Ryan Grice-Mullen (7-111-1). Punting (Att-Yards-Avg) – UNLV: Kip Facer (5-192-38.4). Hawai’i: Kurt Milne (3112-37.3). Sacks By (No-Yards) – UNLV: Beau Bell (1-6), Jason Beauchamp (1-4). Hawai’i: Amani Purcell (1-12), David Veikune (1-8), Brad Kalilimoku (1-5). Leading Tacklers – UNLV: Jason Beauchamp (8-1-9) Hawai’i: Brad Kalilimoku (4-4-8). 14 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL GAME 4 • SEPT. 30, 2006 ALOHA STADIUM (29,358) GAME 3 • SEPT. 23, 2006 BRONCO STADIUM (30,642) Hawai’i Boise State 1 0 15 2 14 12 3 7 7 4 13 7 OT - Final 34 41 1 6 21 Eastern Illinois Hawai’i 2 3 13 3 0 7 4 0 3 OT - Final 9 44 BOISE, Idaho – Warrior quarterback Colt Brennan passed for 388 (25-of-36) yards and five touchdowns but it wasn’t enough as Boise State held-off Hawai’i, 41-34, in a Western Athletic Conference game Sept. 23 at Bronco Stadium. A sold-out crowd of 30,642 saw Boise State running back Ian Johnson rush for 178 yards and two touchdowns and the Broncos take advantage of three Hawai’i turnovers, two in the first half, to win their 26th straight WAC home game. Four Warrior miscues, a bad snap on a field goal try, a muffed snap on a PAT attempt that resulted in a defensive two-point conversion for Boise State, an interception on a tipped ball which resulted in a Boise State field goal, and a fumble that resulted in a Boise State touchdown, cost the Warriors a chance at winning it’s first WAC game of the season. Boise State jumped out to a 15-0 lead in the first quarter before Hawai’i got on the board when Brennan hit Jason Rivers on an inside screen for a 26-yard score. After trading touchdowns in the second quarter, the Warrior offense had another opportunity to score with the ball at the Boise State 41-yard line with 3:30 left on the first half clock. But Brennan’s pass was tipped and intercepted, allowing the Broncos to sneak in a 32-yard field goal, and take 27-14 lead, just before the break. Boise State took a 34-14 lead right out of the locker room when Johnson ran it in from eight yards out. Four plays later, Brennan hit Bess for a 15-yard touchdown to make it 34-21. The Warrior defense caught its first break when cornerback Kenny Patton intercepted Zabransky in the end zone. The turnover sparked the Warrior offense as Brennan tossed a 14-yard touchdown pass to Bess on fourth down, cutting the Bronco lead to seven, at 34-27. The Warriors got the ball back with 12:28 left to play, but a fumble allowed Boise State to take a 41-27 lead and consume 4:22 off the clock. HONOLULU – The University of Hawai’i Warrior football team gained 571 yards of total offense to win its second game of the season, 44-9, over Eastern Illinois Sept. 30 at Aloha Stadium. Warrior quarterback Colt Brennan threw for a season-high 409 yards, 369 in the first half, and five touchdowns in less than three quarters of action. Hawai’i’s first three drives ended with touchdown passes from Brennan to Ian Sample (29 yards), Ross Dickerson (16 yards), and Nate Ilaoa (4 yards) respectively. Eastern Illinois, playing without head coach Bob Spoo who is recovering from surgery, managed to sneak into the end zone on a 9-yard run by Norris Smith, but the night belonged to the Warriors. Brennan spread the wealth, tossing touchdown strikes to Sample and Chad Mock before leaving the game in the third quarter. Sample led all receivers with a career-high 122 yards and two touchdowns on six receptions, including a 43-yarder, the longest touchdown catch so far this season. Junior receiver Jason Rivers added six catches for 106 yards, his first 100-yard game of the season. Back up quarterback Inoke Funaki saw his first legitimate action of his young career and finished the game with 120 yards on 5-of-10 passing. The Warrior defense held the Panthers to 291 total yards, 234 on the ground. EIU running back Vincent Webb gained 117 yards and moved up to the fourth spot on the school’s career rushing list. Warrior linebacker Adam Leonard led all tacklers with 10 (9 solo), while the Warrior secondary recorded three interceptions, including one by safety Leonard Peters, his second in four games. Scoring Summary BSU 1 12:35 Ian Johnson 3 run (Anthony Montgomery kick) BSU 1 9:16 Legedu Naanee 6 pass from Jared Zabransky (Kyle Stringer rush) UH 2 13:41 Jason Rivers 26 pass from Colt Brennan (Kurt Milne rush fumbled) BSU 2 13:41 Orlando Scandrick PAT return BSU 2 8:09 Derek Schouman 23 pass from Jared Zabransky (Anthony Montgomery kick) UH 2 5:52 Jason Rivers 11 pass from Colt Brennan (Davone Bess pass from Colt Brennan) BSU 2 0:13 Anthony Montgomery 32 FG BSU 3 11:42 Ian Johnson 8 run (Anthony Montgomery kick) UH 3 9:54 Davone Bess 18 pass from Colt Brennan (Dan Kelly kick) EIU UH EIU UH UH UH UH UH BSU UH 4 4 4 13:50 Davone Bess 14 pass from Colt Brennan (Dan Kelly pass failed) 5:55 Derek Schouman 18 pass from Jared Zabransky (Anthony Montgomery kick) 2:59 Jason Rivers 8 pass from Colt Brennan (Dan Kelly kick) Team Statistics Warriors Broncos First Downs ____________________________24 __________________26 Total Net Yards ________________________476 __________________515 Rushing (Att-Yards) __________________18-88 ________________44-242 Passing (C-A-I-Yards) ____________25-37-1-388____________17-29-1-273 Sacks Against-Yards ____________________2-4 __________________1-9 Punting ________________________2-83-41.5 ____________4-180-45.0 Fumbles-Lost __________________________2-2 __________________1-0 Penalties-Yards ______________________4-23 __________________9-90 Time of Possession ____________________24:58 ________________35:02 Individual Leaders Rushing (Att-Yards-TD) – Hawai’i: Nate Ilaoa (12-68-0). BSU: Ian Johnson (29- 178-2). Passing (Cmp-Yards-TD) – Hawai’i: Colt Brennan (25-388-5). BSU: Jared Zabransky (17-273-3). Scoring Summary UH 1 12:48 Ian Sample 29 pass from Colt Brennan (Dan Kelly kick) UH 1 8:51 Ross Dickerson 16 pass from Colt Brennan (Dan Kelly kick) 1 6:31 1 2:03 2 8:25 2 5:51 2 2:39 3 6:35 4 14:13 Norris Smith 9 run (Zach Yates kick failed) Nate Ilaoa 4 pass from Colt Brennan (Dan Kelly kick) Zach Yates 43 FG Ian Sample 43 pass from Colt Brennan (Team kick blocked) Chad Mock 18 pass from Colt Brennan (Dan Kelly kick) Nate Ilaoa 1 run (Dan Kelly kick) Dan Kelly 35 FG Team Statistics Panthers First Downs __________________________16 Total Net Yards________________________291 Rushing (Att-Yards) ________________40-234 Passing (C-A-I-Yards) ______________8-21-3-57 Sacks Against-Yards ____________________1-9 Punting ______________________5-193-38.6 Fumbles-Lost ________________________1-0 Penalties-Yards ______________________3-25 Time of Possession __________________32:35 Warriors __________________26 __________________571 ________________17-42 __________35-51-1-529 ________________2-19 ______________0-0-0.0 __________________2-1 ________________5-60 ________________27:25 Individual Leaders Rushing (Att-Yards-TD) – EIU: Vincent Webb (11-117-0). Hawai’i: Nate Ilaoa (9- 46-1). Passing (Cmp-Yards-TD) – EIU: Cole Stinson (6-42-0). Hawai’i: Colt Brennan (30-409-5). Receiving (Rec-Yards-TD) – EIU: Brian Berdis (3-28-0). Hawai’i: Ian Sample (6- 122-2), Jason Rivers (6-106-0). Punting (Att-Yards-Avg) – EIU: Zach Yates (5-193-38.6). Hawai’i: None. Sacks By (No-Yards) – EIU: Seymour Loftman (1-10), Tristan Burge (1-9). Hawai’i: Melila Purcell (1-9). Leading Tacklers – EIU: Donald Thomas (7-1-8). Hawai’i: Adam Leonard (9-110). Receiving (Rec-Yards-TD) – Hawai’i: Davone Bess (6-104-2), Nate Ilaoa (4-96-0), Jason Rivers (6-81-3). BSU: Drisan James (5-66-0), Legedu Naanee (3-66-1). Punting (Att-Yards-Avg) – Hawai’i: Kurt Milne (2-83-41.5). BSU: Kyle Stringer (4- 180-45.0). Sacks By (No-Yards) – Hawai’i: Michael Lafaele (1.0-9). BSU: Nick Schlekeway (1.0-2), Colt Brooks (1.0-2). Leading Tacklers – Hawai’i: Leonard Peters (6-7-13). BSU: Korey Hall (5-7-12). 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 15 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL GAME 5 • OCT. 7, 2006 ALOHA STADIUM (33,761) 1 7 10 Nevada Hawai’i GAME 6 • OCT. 14, 2006 BULLDOG STADIUM (39,122) 2 14 21 3 0 3 4 13 7 OT - Final 34 41 Hawai’i Fresno State HONOLULU – Warrior running back Nate Ilaoa gained 219 all-purpose yards (151 rushing, 68 receiving) and the Warrior defense forced two turnovers and made key stops, including a goal line stand at the end, to help Hawai’i win its first Western Athletic Conference game, 31-34, against Nevada Oct. 7 at Aloha Stadium. The game featured a little bit of everything. There were back-to-back fumbles, instant replay reviews and reversals, personal fouls, a blocked punt, a blocked field goal, you name it. Hawai’i racked up 579 yards of total offense, quarterback Colt Brennan threw for 419 yards and four touchdowns (36 of 47) and also ran for a score, while Davone Bess (10-139) and Ian Sample (5-107) combined for 15 catches for 246 yards and three touchdowns. But it was the Warrior defense that saved the offense for a change. The Warriors, ahead 41-21 with 11:45 left to play, allowed the Wolf Pack back in the game. After Nevada back up quarterback Travis Moore rallied the Wolf Pack, orchestrating a 86-yard drive capped by a 5-yard touchdown strike to tight end Anthony Pudewell, the Warriors had the ball deep in their own territory. And then disaster struck as Brennan fumbled at his own 3-yard line. A goal line stand by the Warrior defense kept the Wolf Pack from stealing the win. Warrior safety Leonard Peters stuffed Nevada running back Luke Lippencott on first-and-goal. Moore then threw three incompletions, the last one fourth-and-goal, which was broken up by Peters, allowing Hawai’i to run out the 1:47 remaining on the clock to preserve the win. A key stop also came when Nevada, trailing 34-21 early in the fourth quarter, drove the ball to midfield and decided to go for it on 4th-and-5. Warrior middle linebacker Adam Leonard, who had already forced and recovered a fumble earlier in the game, stuffed Lippencott at the line of scrimmage. Scoring Summary UH 1 10:38 Dan Kelly 35 FG UN 1 6:36 Jack Darlington 19 pass from Jeff Rowe (Brett Jaekle kick) UH UH UH UN UH UN UH UH UN UN 1 1:10 Ian Sample 17 pass from Colt Brennan (Dan Kelly kick) 2 14:19 Ian Sample 63 pass from Colt Brennan (Dan Kelly kick) 2 8:29 Davone Bess 9 pass from Colt Brennan (Dan Kelly kick) 2 5:44 Brandon Fragger 3 run (Brett Jaekle kick) 2 1:48 Ross Dickerson 3 pass from Colt Brennan (Dan Kelly kick) 2 0:10 Mike McCoy 3 pass from Jeff Rowe (Brett Jaekle kick) 3 7:49 Dan Kelly 25 FG 4 11:45 Colt Brennan 6 run (Dan Kelly kick) 4 9:08 Anthony Pudewell 13 pass from Travis Moore (Brett Jaekle kick) 4 3:57 Anthony Pudewell 5 pass from Travis Moore (Brett Jaekle kick failed) Team Statistics Wolf Pack Warriors First Downs __________________________25 __________________28 Total Net Yards ________________________472 __________________579 Rushing (Att-Yards) ________________25-108 ______________24-160 Passing (C-A-I-Yards)____________26-36-0-364 __________36-47-0-419 Sacks Against-Yards ____________________1-8 ________________3-12 Punting ______________________3-93-31.0 ____________1-41-41.0 Fumbles-Lost ________________________2-2 __________________2-2 Penalties-Yards ______________________4-25 ______________12-109 Time of Possession __________________26:02 ________________33:58 1 21 7 2 21 10 3 20 6 4 6 14 OT - Final 68 37 FRESNO, Calif. – Warrior quarterback Colt Brennan threw for 409 yards and five touchdowns (32 of 39) while rushing for an additional 43 yards to help Hawai’i defeat Fresno State, 68-37, Oct. 14 at Bulldog Stadium. The win was the first on the road against the Bulldogs since the 2000 season. It was the most points scored on the road in UH football history, and the most points ever scored against the Bulldogs on their home field. Fresno State jumped out to a 7-0 lead, when Bulldog quarterback Tom Brandstater hit tight end Bear Pascoe for a 75-yard touchdown. But that was all she wrote for the Bulldogs. Hawai’i scored 28 unanswered points, two off Bulldogs fumbles, to take a 28-7 lead early in the second quarter and never look back. The Bulldogs got in the end zone when back up quarterback Sean Norton came off the bench throwing a 20-yard strike to Pascoe to make it 28-14. But the Warrior defense forced its third turnover of the half, when safety Leonard Peters intercepted Norton and dashed 54-yards to the "house." A 28-yard field goal by Bulldog kicker Clint Stitser made it 42-17 at the break. Norton hit Marlon Moore for a 75-yard touchdown on the opening play of the second half to make it 42-23, but that was as close at the Bulldogs got. Brennan threw his next three touchdown passes, two to slot receiver Davone Bess, and another to Ross Dickerson before leaving the game in the third quarter. The Warrior defense held Fresno State to 64 rushing yards through three quarters of play. Scoring Summary FSU 1 12:28 Bear Pascoe 75 pass from Tom Brandstater (Clint Stitser kick) UH 1 9:39 Nate Ilaoa 1 run (Dan Kelly kick) UH 1 5:11 Ian sample 47 pass from Colt Brennan (Dan Kelly kick) UH 1 1:46 Nate Ilaoa 5 run (Dan Kelly kick) UH 2 13:11 Ian Sample 2 pass from Colt Brennan (Dan Kelly kick) FSU 2 6:56 Bear Pascoe 20 pass from Sean Norton (Clint Stitser kick) UH 2 3:38 Nate Ilaoa 20 run (Dan Kelly kick) UH 2 1:37 Leonard Peters 54 interception return (Dan Kelly kick) FSU 2 0:00 Clint Stitser 28 FG FSU UH UH UH FSU UH FSU 3 3 3 3 14:21 Marlon Moore 75 pass from Sean Norton (Clint Stitser kick) 12:13 Davone Bess 20 pass from Colt Brennan (Dan Kelly kick) 7:26 Davone Bess 2 pass from Colt Brennan (Dan Kelly kick blocked) 0:41 Ross Dickerson 35 pass from Colt Brennan (Dan Kelly kick) 4 11:22 Lonyae Miller 4 run (Clint Stitser kick) 4 7:38 Jason Rivers 1 pass from Tyler Graunke (Dan Kelly kick blocked) 4 2:26 Isaac Kinter 8 pass from Sean Norton (Clint Stitser kick) Team Statistics Warriors Bulldogs First Downs ____________________________30 __________________22 Total Net Yards ________________________570 __________________487 Rushing (Att-Yards) __________________18-100 ________________41-183 Passing (C-A-I-Yards) ____________37-44-0-470____________18-29-1-304 Sacks Against-Yards ____________________1-3 __________________1-8 Punting ________________________2-90-45.0 ____________3-116-38.7 Fumbles-Lost __________________________1-0 __________________3-2 Penalties-Yards ______________________4-31 __________________6-53 Time of Possession ____________________29:18 ________________30:42 Individual Leaders Rushing (Att-Yards-TD) – Hawai’i: Colt Brennan (7-43-0), Nate Ilaoa (6-34-3). Individual Leaders FSU: Lonyae Miller (16-113-1). Rushing (Att-Yards-TD) – UN: Brandon Fragger (10-54-1). Hawai’i: Nate Ilaoa Passing (Cmp-Yards-TD) – Hawai’i: Colt Brennan (32-409-5). FSU: Sean Norton Passing (Cmp-Yards-TD) – UN: Jeff Rowe (20-243-2). Hawai’i: Colt Brennan (36- Receiving (Rec-Yards-TD) – Hawai’i: Ross Dickerson (10-115-1), Ian Sample (6- Receiving (Rec-Yards-TD) – UN: Jack Darlington (8-135-1). Hawai’i: Davone Punting (Att-Yards-Avg) – Hawai’i: Kurt Milne (2-90-45.0). FSU: Kyle Zimmerman (14-151-0). 419-4). 83-2), Davone Bess (8-70-2). FSU: Marlon Moore (3-100-1). Bess (10-139-1), Ian Sample (5-107-2). Punting (Att-Yards-Avg) – UN: Zachary Whited (2-60-30.0). Hawai’i: Kurt Milne (1-41-41.0). Sacks By (No-Yards) – UN: Jonathon Amaya (1-4), Jason DeMars (1-4). Hawai’i: Karl Noa (1-8). Leading Tacklers – UN: Ezra Butler (8-0-8). Hawai’i: Adam Leonard (8-1-9). 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE (14-225-3). (3-116-38.7). Sacks By (No-Yards) – Hawai’i: Brad Kalilimoku (1.0-8). FSU: Jason Roberts (1.0-3). Leading Tacklers – Hawai’i: Solomon Elimimian (4-3-7), Leonard Peters (4-2-6). FSU: Josh Sherley (5-1-6). 16 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL GAME 7 • OCT. 21, 2006 AGGIE MEMORIAL STADIUM (17,318) 1 14 14 Hawai’i New Mexico State 2 14 3 3 0 7 4 21 6 OT - Final 49 30 LAS CRUCES, N.M. – The Warriors scored 21 unanswered points in the fourth quarter to run away from New Mexico State, 49-30, in a Western Athletic Conference game Oct. 21 at Aggie Memorial Stadium. Warrior quarterback Colt Brennan passed for 330 yards (22 of 31) and five touchdowns, two to Ross Dickerson (6 receptions, 125 yards) in the win. Brennan extended his pass attempts to 120 straight without an interception. Dickerson finished the game with 283 all-purpose yards. The Warrior defense sparked the offense when defensive end Melila Purcell sacked Aggie quarterback Chase Holbrook, forcing a fumble scooped up by linebacker Adam Leonard who returned it 20 yards for a touchdown to give the Warriors a 42-21 lead with 8:57 left to play. On the Aggie’s next possession, the Warrior defense recovered another fumble, this time on a bad snap. Two plays later, Hawai’i extended its lead to 49-24 when Brennan hit Dickerson for a 36-yard score. Purcell finished with a career-high eight tackles, including three sacks. Solomon Elimimian led all tacklers with a career-high 14 tackles. Linebacker Adam Leonard recorded a career-high 11 tackles, while cornerback Myron Newberry, making his first career start, added a career-high 10 stops. Scoring Summary UH 1 10:39 Nate Ilaoa 4 run (Dan Kelly kick failed) UH 1 6:17 Ross Dickerson 34 pass from Colt Brennan (Davone Bess pass from Colt Brennan) NMSU 1 NMSU 1 0:35 Chris Nwoko 3 run (Ryan Bowling kick) 0:01 Chris Williams 27 pass from Chase Holbrook (Ryan Bowling kick) UH NMSU UH NMSU 2 13:24 Davone Bess 16 pass from Colt Brennan (Dan Kelly kick) 2 8:56 Ryan Bowling 25 FG 2 3:41 Ian Sample 25 pass from Colt Brennan (Dan Kelly kick) 3 12:39 Chris Williams 61 pass from Chase Holbrook (Ryan Bowling kick) UH 4 12:27 Jason Rivers 13 pass from Colt Brennan (Dan Kelly kick) UH 4 UH 4 NMSU 4 11:11 Adam Leonard 20 fumble recovery (Dan Kelly kick) 7:58 Ross Dickerson 36 pass from Colt Brennan (Dan Kelly kick) 4:25 A.J. Harris 13 pass from Chase Holbrook (Chris Nwoko rush failed) Team Statistics Warriors Aggies First Downs __________________________26 __________________28 Total Net Yards________________________508 __________________448 Rushing (Att-Yards) ________________33-155 ______________30-118 Passing (C-A-I-Yards)____________23-34-0-353 __________32-46-1-330 Sacks Against-Yards ____________________1-1 __________________4-6 Punting ________________________0-0-0.0 ____________1-56-56.0 Fumbles-Lost ________________________1-1 __________________3-2 Penalties-Yards ______________________9-82 ________________4-40 Time of Possession __________________29:56 ________________30:04 Individual Leaders Rushing (Att-Yards-TD) – Hawai’i: Nate Ilaoa (18-94-1). NMSU: Chris Nwoko (12-59-1). Passing (Cmp-Yards-TD) – Hawai’i: Colt Brennan (22-330-5). NMSU: Chase Holbrook (31-323-3). Receiving (Rec-Yards-TD) – Hawai’i: Ross Dickerson (6-125-2). NMSU: Chris Williams (7-160-2). Punting (Att-Yards-Avg) – Hawai’i: None. NMSU: Jared Kaufman (1-56-56.0). Sacks By (No-Yards) – Hawai’i: Melila Purcell (3.0-3), Renolds Fruean (1.0-3). NMSU: Nathan Nuttal (1.0-1). Leading Tacklers – Hawai’i: Solomon Elimimian (2-12-14), Adam Leonard (4-7- 11), Myron Newberry (4-6-10). NMSU: Nathan Nuttal (2-10-12). 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE GAME 8 • OCT. 28, 2006 ALOHA STADIUM (34,051) 1 7 14 Idaho Hawai’i 2 3 21 3 0 13 4 0 20 OT - Final 10 68 HONOLULU – Ross Dickerson took the opening kickoff 100-yards to the “house” to set the tone for Homecoming 2006 as Hawai’i routed Idaho, 68-10, before a crowd of 34,051, Oct. 28, at Aloha Stadium. Hawai’i (6-2, 4-1 WAC) quarterback Colt Brennan completed 31-of-38 pass attempts for 333 yards and five touchdowns about three quarters of work. He also led the Warriors with 63 rushing yards. Brennan passed for 201 yards and three touchdowns, and added 57 rushing yards in the first half. The junior tossed touchdown strikes to Jason Rivers, Davone Bess, and running back Nate Ilaoa to help the Warriors take a 35-10 lead at the break. The Warrior defense forced Idaho quarterback Steven Wichman to fumble in the third quarter. Safety Jacob Patek jarred the ball loose as Wichman scrambled towards first down yardage. Linebacker Micah Lau recovered the ball, and four plays later, Brennan his Ian Sample for an 11-yard touchdown to put Hawai’i ahead, 48-10, in the third quarter. Defensive coordinator Jerry Glanville’s defense allowed just 10 points in the first half, and shut out the Vandals, allowing just 133 yards of total offense in the second half. Dickerson finished the game with two catches for 57 yards. His kickoff return was his second career 100-yard return, after doing the same on the opening kickoff against Appalachian State in 2003. Scoring Summary UH 1 14:42 Ross Dickerson 100 kickoff return (Briton Forester kick) UH 1 6:26 Jason Rivers 10 pass from Colt Brennan (Briton Forester kick) UI UH UI UH UH UH UH UH UH UH 1 2:34 Wendell Octave 2 pass from Steve Wichman (Tino Amancio kick) 2 14:08 Davone Bess 2 pass from Colt Brennan (Briton Forester kick) 2 10:45 Tino Amancio 26 FG 2 5:46 Nate Ilaoa 1 run (Briton Forester kick) 2 0:21 Nate Ilaoa 18 pass from Colt Brennan (Briton Forester kick) 3 11:30 Ryan Grice-Mullen 34 pass from Colt Brennan (Briton Forester kick failed) 3 4:20 Ian Sample 11 pass from Colt Brennan (Briton Forester kick) 4 12:31 Ryan Grice-Mullen 18 pass from Tyler Graunke (Briton Forester kick) 4 7:27 Tyler Graunke 5 run (Briton Forester kick) 4 1:46 Ryan Keomaka 29 interception return (Briton Forester kick) Team Statistics Vandals First Downs __________________________19 Total Net Yards________________________334 Rushing (Att-Yards)__________________31-141 Passing (C-A-I-Yards) ____________14-37-1-193 Sacks Against-Yards ____________________0-0 Punting ______________________7-247-35.3 Fumbles-Lost ________________________1-1 Penalties-Yards ______________________5-55 Time of Possession __________________29:37 Warriors __________________29 __________________575 ________________15-78 __________40-51-0-497 __________________1-1 ____________1-46-46.0 __________________1-1 ________________5-38 ________________30:23 Individual Leaders Rushing (Att-Yards-TD) – UI: Brian Flowers (9-37-0). Hawai’i: Colt Brennan (5- 63-0). Passing (Cmp-Yards-TD) – UI: Steve Wichman (13-192-1). Hawai’i: Colt Brennan (31-333-5). Receiving (Rec-Yards-TD) – UI: Luke Smith-Anderson (5-88-0). Hawai’i: Jason Rivers (6-108-1), Ian Sample (8-90-1). Punting (Att-Yards-Avg) – UI: T.J. Conley (7-247-35.3). Hawai’i: Kurt Milne (146-46.0). Sacks By (No-Yards) – UI: Brandon Ogletree (1-1). Hawai’i: None. Leading Tacklers – UI: David Vobora (9-0-9). Hawai’i: Adam Leonard (5-2-7). 17 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL GAME 9 • NOV. 4, 2006 ROMNEY STADIUM (10,291) Hawai’i Utah State 1 14 3 GAME 10 • NOV. 11, 2006 ALOHA STADIUM (32,083) 2 14 0 3 21 7 4 14 0 OT - Final 63 10 Louisiana Tech Hawai’i LOGAN, Utah – Warrior quarterback Colt Brennan broke two schools records and passed for 413 yards (18 of 29) and a season-high six touchdowns to lead Hawai’i over Utah State, 63-10, in a Western Athletic Conference game, Nov. 4, at Romney Stadium. After the game, the Warriors became the first team in the nation to accept an invitation to play in a bowl game, as Sheraton Hawai’i Bowl officials were on hand for the invite. Brennan broke the school record for most touchdown passes in a season (38) set by Timmy Chang in 2004. Brennan now has 39, and is chasing the NCAA record of 54 set by Houston’s David Klingler in 1990. Brennan also broke the school record for pass attempts without an interception with 182, breaking the record also set by Chang (178) in 2004. Running back Nate Ilaoa led the team in both rushing and receiving, going for 55 yards on the ground and a career-high 155 yards receiving with three total touchdowns (one rushing, two receiving). Ryan Grice-Mullen added four catches for 135 yards and two touchdowns. Hawai’i took a 21-3 lead in the second quarter when Brennan hit Ilaoa on a shovel pass who dashed 60 yards untouched into the end zone. Ilaoa gained 125 yards (53 rushing, 72 receiving) and scored twice in the first half. A 35-yard touchdown strike from Brennan to Jason Rivers made it 28-3 at the break. Utah State put together an 80-yard scoring drive fresh out of the locker room. Antraun McDaniel took it in from a yard out for Utah State’s only touchdown of the game. But the Warrior offense could not be stopped. Two plays later, Brennan hit Davone Bess for a 7-yard touchdown to take a commanding 42-10 lead. Scoring Summary UH 1 13:27 Ryan Grice-Mullen 29 pass from Colt Brennan (Dan Kelly kick) USU 1 9:26 Bryan Shields 46 FG UH 1 6:09 Nate Ilaoa 13 pass from Colt Brennan (Dan Kelly kick) UH 2 10:12 Nate Ilaoa 60 pass from Colt Brennan (Dan Kelly kick) UH 2 5:15 Jason Rivers 35 pass from Colt Brennan (Dan Kelly kick) USU 3 12:28 Antuan McDaniel 1 run (Bryan Shields kick) UH 3 11:26 Davone Bess 12 pass from Colt Brennan (Dan Kelly kick) UH 3 7:45 Ryan Grice-Mullen 18 pass from Colt Brennan (Dan Kelly kick) UH 3 0:00 Nate Ilaoa 3 run (Dan Kelly kick) UH UH 2 7 17 3 0 28 4 7 7 OT - Final 17 61 HONOLULU – Heisman hopeful quarterback Colt Brennan threw for 406 yards (27 of 40) and four touchdowns in his usual three quarters of work to help Hawai’i to its seventh straight win, 61-17, over Western Athletic Conference foe Louisiana Tech Nov. 11 at Aloha Stadium. The Hawai’i offense racked up a season-high 618 total yards, without starting running back Nate Ilaoa who took the night off to rest a nagging injury. Warrior receivers Davone Bess and Jason Rivers both finished with more than 100 receiving yards. Bess led all receivers with seven catches for 143 yards and two touchdowns, while Rivers hauled in four passes for 113 yards and a touchdown. But the Warrior defense commanded respect, holding its opponent to less than 20 points for the third straight week, recording a season-high five sacks, and forcing two turnovers, both interceptions, to spark a 28-point third quarter. Louisiana Tech enjoyed a 10-9 lead early in the second quarter, but not for long. Hawai’i scored the next 17 straight points to take a 26-10 lead at the break, and then erupted for 28 points in the third quarter, the most this season, to build an insurmountable 54-10 lead heading into the fourth quarter. Scoring Summary LTU 1 12:56 Danny Horwedel 30 FG UH 1 10:10 Reagan Mauia 1 run (Briton Forester kick failed) UH 1 4:52 Dan Kelly 39 FG LTU 2 14:54 Dennis Morris 43 pass from Zac Champion (Danny Horwedel kick) UH 2 13:35 Chad Mock 18 pass from Colt Brennan (Briton Forester kick) UH 2 5:33 Ross Dickerson 13 pass from Colt Brennan (Briton Forester kick) UH 2 0:00 Dan Kelly 24 FG UH 3 12:08 Colt Brennan 1 run (Briton Forester kick) UH 3 10:27 Davone Bess 19 pass from Colt Brennan (Briton Forester kick) UH 3 6:53 Ian Sample 3 pass from Colt Brennan (Briton Forester kick) UH 3 3:02 Reagan Mauia 3 run (Briton Forester kick) UH 4 7:35 Davone Bess 32 pass from Tyler Graunke (Briton Forester kick) LTU 4 0:17 Bryan Carroll 41 pass from Michael Mosley (Danny Horwedel kick) Team Statistics Bulldogs Warriors First Downs __________________________21 __________________27 Total Net Yards________________________360 __________________618 Rushing (Att-Yards) ________________41-135________________12-112 Passing (C-A-I-Yards) ____________17-38-2-225 __________30-44-1-406 Sacks Against-Yards __________________5-49 __________________0-0 Punting5-210-42.0 ________________0-0-0.0 Fumbles-Lost ________________________2-0 __________________3-1 Penalties-Yards ______________________6-65 ________________7-57 Time of Possession __________________38:22 ________________21:38 4 12:03 Jason Rivers 1 pass from Tyler Graunke (Dan Kelly kick) 4 6:29 David Farmer 4 run (Dan Kelly kick) Team Statistics Warriors Aggies First Downs __________________________22 __________________18 Total Net Yards ________________________572 __________________362 Rushing (Att-Yards) __________________13-86 ______________42-137 Passing (C-A-I-Yards)____________23-38-1-486 __________17-31-1-225 Sacks Against-Yards ____________________0-0 __________________1-8 Punting ______________________3-107-35.7 ____________6-248-41.3 Fumbles-Lost ________________________0-0 __________________4-3 Penalties-Yards ______________________6-50 ________________11-93 Time of Possession __________________23:15 ________________36:45 Individual Leaders Individual Leaders Rushing (Att-Yards-TD) – Hawai’i: Nate Ilaoa (6-55-1). USU: Riley Nelson (15- 65-0). Passing (Cmp-Yards-TD) – Hawai’i: Colt Brennan (18-413-6). USU: Riley Nelson (17-225-0). Receiving (Rec-Yards-TD) – Hawai’i: Nate Ilaoa (6-155-2), Ryan Grice-Mullen (4-135-2). USU: Kevin Robinson (5-84-0). Punting (Att-Yards-Avg) – Hawai’i: Kurt Milne (3-107-35.7). USU: Leon Jackson (6-248-41.3). Sacks By (No-Yards) – Hawai’i: Ikaika Alama-Francis (1.0-8). USU: None. Leading Tacklers – Hawai’i: Adam Leonard (3-8-11). USU: Devon Hall (2-3-5). 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 1 3 9 Rushing (Att-Yards-TD) - LTU: Patrick Jackson (13-94-0). Hawai’i: Colt Brennan (6-60-1). Passing (Cmp-Yards-TD) - LTU: Zac Champion (12-135-1). Hawai’i: Colt Brennan (27-406-4). Receiving (Rec-Yards-TD) - LTU: Bryan Carroll (4-81-1). Hawai’i: Davone Bess (7-143-2), Jason Rivers (4-113-0). Punting (Att-Yards-Avg) - LTU: Chris Keagle (5-210-42.0). Hawai’i: None. Sacks By (No-Yards) - LTU: None. Hawai’i: Blaze Soares (1-13), Josh Rice (113), Ikaika Alama-Francis (1-11), Melila Purcell (1-8), David Veikune (1-4). Leading Tacklers - LTU: Marquis Spurgon (5-1-6). Hawai’i: Adam Leonard (5-16). 18 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL GAME 11 • NOV. 18, 2006 ALOHA STADIUM (33,622) San Jose State Hawai’i 1 0 10 GAME 12 • NOV. 25, 2006 ALOHA STADIUM (47,825) 2 10 10 3 7 14 4 0 20 OT - Final 17 54 HONOLULU – Warrior quarterback Colt Brennan passed for 402 yards (28 of 39) and five touchdowns, while running back Nate Ilaoa added 166 all-purpose yards (100 rushing, 66 receiving) and two touchdowns to help Hawai’i defeat San Jose State, 54-17, Nov. 18 at Aloha Stadium. The Warrior offense racked up 568 yards, but it was the defense, which held San Jose State, the nation’s 10th-best rushing offense, to 82 yards on the ground, and a season-low 192 total yards. Hawai’i jumped out to a 13-0 lead before San Jose State took advantage of a fumbled punt and scored its first touchdown on James T. Callier’s 1-yard run midway through the second quarter. The Warrior defense held the Spartans to 67 first-half yards. Brennan scrambled for an 8-yard touchdown to help the Warriors take a 20-10 halftime lead. The teams traded touchdowns to open the second half before Davone Bess caught a deflected pass from Brennan to help the Warriors take a 34-17 lead late in the third quarter. Brennan then orchestrated a 90-yard drive, capped by a 9-yard touchdown pass to Bess. A Spartan fumble gave Hawai’i the ball back, but Brennan threw an interception on the next play to negate the turnover. But it was another night of hard-hitting Warrior defense as linebacker Blaze Soares jarred the ball from Spartan quarterback Adam Trafalis to give Hawai’i the ball back, again, at the Spartan 19-yard line. And the Warrior offense did the rest, scoring in one play, a 19-yard touchdown toss from Brennan to Ryan Grice-Mullen, to put the game out of reach at 47-17. Scoring Summary UH 1 9:21 Dan Kelly 39 FG UH 1 6:13 Chad Mock 36 pass from Colt Brennan (Briton Forester kick) UH 2 13:28 Dan Kelly 29 FG SJSU 2 8:32 James T. Callier 1 run (Jared Strubeck kick) UH 2 4:59 Colt Brennan 8 run (Briton Forester kick) SJSU 2 0:04 Jared Strubeck 37 FG UH 3 11:42 Nate Ilaoa 4 run (Briton Forester kick) SJSU 3 7:24 James T. Callier 1 run (Jared Strubeck kick) UH 3 3:11 Davone Bess 5 pass from Colt Brennan (Briton Forester kick) UH 4 12:42 Davone Bess 9 pass from Colt Brennan (Briton Forester kick) UH 4 10:14 Ryan Grice-Mullen 19 pass from Colt Brennan (Briton Forester kick) UH 4 7:10 Nate Ilaoa 19 pass from Colt Brennan (Briton Forester kick) Team Statistics Spartans Warriors First Downs __________________________12 __________________28 Total Net Yards________________________192 __________________568 Rushing (Att-Yards) __________________38-82________________26-151 Passing (C-A-I-Yards) ____________40-29-1-417 ____________17-7-1-110 Sacks Against-Yards __________________5-23 ________________2-14 Punting ______________________6-254-42.3 ______________0-0-0.00 Fumbles-Lost ________________________4-2 __________________3-1 Penalties-Yards ______________________3-35 ______________12-140 Time of Possession __________________30:40 ________________29:20 Individual Leaders Rushing (Att-Yards-TD) - SJSU: Cameron Island (5-38-0). Hawai’i: Nate Ilaoa (12-100-1). Passing (Cmp-Yards-TD) - SJSU: Adam Trafalis (7-110-0). Hawai’i: Colt Brennan (28-402-5). Receiving (Rec-Yards-TD) - SJSU: Chester Coleman (2-32-0). Hawai’i: Davone Bess (6-81-2). Punting (Att-Yards-Avg) - SJSU: Waylon Prather (6-254-42.3). Hawai’i: None. Sacks By (No-Yards) - SJSU: None. Hawai’i: Melila Purcell (2.5-9), Ikaika AlamaFrancis (1-8), Michael Lafaele (1-5), Renolds Fruean (0.5-1). Leading Tacklers - SJSU: Damaja Jones (7-3-10). Hawai’i: Solomon Elimimian (102-12). 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 1 0 7 Purdue Hawai’i 2 0 10 3 14 3 4 21 22 OT - Final 35 42 HONOLULU – The nation’s top-rated offense racked up a season-high 653 yards, while the Warrior defense came up with timely big plays, including two key interceptions, to boost No. 25 Hawai’i over Purdue, 42-35, in front of a season-best 47,825 noise-making fans Nov. 25 at Aloha Stadium. Warrior quarterback Colt Brennan threw for 434 yards (33 of 48) and three touchdowns, while running back Nate Ilaoa rushed for a career-high 159 yards and two touchdowns to help Hawai’i win its ninth straight game. The Warrior defense shutout Purdue in the first half and came up with two drive-ending interceptions in the fourth quarter. Hawai’i jumped out to a 17-0 lead before Purdue got going in the third quarter. The Boilermakers capitalized on two UH turnovers to score 14 straight points, and took its first lead of the game (21-20) when Curtis Painter hit Greg Orton for a 28-yard touchdown early in the fourth quarter. Brennan tossed his first touchdown pass of the night, a 14-yard strike to Ross Dickerson to help the Warriors regain the lead, 27-21. But the Boilermakers scored 14 points in the next four and a half minutes to take a 35-27 with 6:50 left to play. And then Brennan went to work, orchestrating an 80-yard drive in just over two minutes, capped by a 5-yard touchdown strike to Ryan Grice-Mullen. Brennan hit Grice-Mullen again for the two-point conversion, tying the game at 35 with 4:48 on the clock. The Warriors got the ball back when Painter tossed an interception. Five plays later, Brennan hit Ian Sample on an inside screen, which went for 28 yards and the winning touchdown. Purdue had the ball at its own 20-yard line with 1:27 remaining, but Painter’s pass was intercepted by Warrior linebacker Adam Leonard to end any hope of a Boilermaker victory. Scoring Summary UH 1 8:24 Nate Ilaoa 4 run (Briton Forester kick) UH 2 11:06 Nate Ilaoa 16 run (Briton Forester kick) UH 2 0:03 Dan Kelly 22 FG PU 3 9:23 Dustin Keller 9 pass from Curtin Painter (Chris Summers kick) PU 3 8:20 Kyle Adams 25 pass from Desmond Tardy (Chris Summers kick) UH 3 4:48 Dan Kelly 52 FG PU 4 14:49 Greg Orton 28 pass from Curtis Painter (Chris Summers kick) UH 4 11:28 Ross Dickerson 14 pass from Colt Brennan (Briton Forester kick) PU 4 7:29 Dustin Keller 19 pass from Curtis Painter (Chris Summers kick) PU 4 6:50 Selwyn Lymon 32 pass from Curtis Painter (Chris Summers kick) UH 4 4:48 Ryan Grice-Mullen 5 pass from Colt Brennan UH 4 (Ryan Grice-Mullen pass from Colt Brennan) 1:27 Ian Sample 23 pass from Colt Brennan (Briton Forester kick) Team Statistics Boilermakers Warriors First Downs __________________________28 __________________33 Total Net Yards ________________________472 __________________653 Rushing (Att-Yards) __________________27-90 ______________20-219 Passing (C-A-I-Yards)____________30-43-2-382 __________33-48-1-434 Sacks Against-Yards ____________________1-7 __________________1-2 Punting ______________________4-198-49.5 ____________1-17-17.0 Fumbles-Lost ________________________1-1 __________________2-2 Penalties-Yards ______________________6-35 ________________4-37 Time of Possession __________________31:55 ________________28:05 Individual Leaders Rushing (Att-Yards-TD) - PU: Jaycen Taylor (7-46-0). Hawai’i: Nate Ilaoa (12-159-2). Passing (Cmp-Yards-TD) - PU: Curtis Painter (29-357-4). Hawai’i: Colt Brennan (33-434-3). Receiving (Rec-Yards-TD) - PU: Dorien Bryant (8-76-0). Hawai’i: Davone Bess (6-117-0), Jason Rivers (6-103-0). Punting (Att-Yards-Avg) - PU: Jared Armstrong (3-155-51.7). Hawai’i: Kurt Milne (1-17-17.0). Sacks By (No-Yards) - PU: Cliff Avril (1.0-2). Hawai’i: Blaze Soares (1.0-7). Leading Tacklers - PU: Terrell Vinson (6-2-8). Hawai’i: Solomon Elimimian (9-5-14). 19 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL GAME 13 • DEC. 2, 2006 ALOHA STADIUM (50,000) Oregon State Hawai’i 1 7 0 2 14 21 3 7 3 4 7 8 OT - Final 35 32 HONOLULU – A school record nine-game win streak came to an end as No. 24 Hawai’i fell to Oregon State, 32-35, in front of a sellout crowd Dec. 2 at Aloha Stadium. The Warriors gained 504 yards of total offense, but Oregon State produced big plays and capitalized on Warrior miscues to steal the victory from 20 departing seniors on the Warrior roster. Warrior quarterback Colt Brennan threw for 401 yards and two touchdowns, but added an uncharacteristic two interceptions, one which the led to the go-ahead touchdown in the third quarter. The Beaver defense sacked Brennan six times on the night. Hawai’i missed two field goals in the first quarter before the teams traded touchdowns, but OSU’s Gerard Lawson took the ensuing kickoff 100 yards to put the Beavers ahead, 14-7. The Warriors scored 14 of the next 21 points, on a 4-yard run by Brennan, and an 11-yard catch by Davone Bess, to tie the game at 21 at halftime. Brennan threw two interceptions in the next three possessions, while Oregon State scored 14 points before the Warrior defense forced OSU to punt. A bobbled snap put the Warriors at the Beaver 44-yard line. Eight plays later, Brennan hit Ryan Grice-Mullen for a 4-yard touchdown to cut the lead to five (35-30) after a failed two-point conversion. The Warrior defense forced a three-and-out on the next series, to get the Hawai’i offense the ball back at the OSU 40-yard line with 4:10 on the clock. The Warriors drove down to the OSU 19-yard line and failed on 4th-and14 to end all hopes of a win. Scoring Summary OSU 1 0:00 Joe Newton 21 pass from Matt Moore (Alexis Serna kick) UH 2 11:27 Nate Ilaoa 1 run (Briton Forester kick) OSU 2 11:10 Gerard Lawson 100 kickoff return (Alexis Serna kick) UH 2 6:54 Colt Brennan 4 run (Briton Forester kick) OSU 2 3:26 Ruben Jackson 30 pass from Matt Moore (Alexis Serna kick) UH 2 0:20 Davone Bess 11 pass from Colt Brennan (Briton Forester kick) OSU 3 5:08 Sammie Stroughter 80 pass from Matt Moore (Alexis Serna kick) UH 3 1:39 Dan Kelly 26 FG OSU 4 13:18 Yvenson Bernard 1 run (Alexis Serna kick) UH 4 7:06 Ryan Grice-Mullen 4 pass (Colt Brennan rush failed) UH 4 0:02 Team Safety Team Statistics Beavers Warriors First Downs __________________________17 __________________31 Total Net Yards ________________________316 __________________504 Rushing (Att-Yards) __________________26-71 ______________29-103 Passing (C-A-I-Yards) ____________11-17-0-245 __________37-50-2-401 Sacks Against-Yards __________________2-12 ________________6-44 Punting ______________________3-158-52.7 ______________0-0-0.0 Fumbles-Lost ________________________2-0 __________________3-0 Penalties-Yards ______________________4-38 ________________3-25 Time of Possession __________________21:44 ________________38:16 Individual Leaders Rushing (Att-Yards-TD) - OSU: Yvenson Bernard (20-108-1). Hawai’i: Nate Ilaoa (8-48-1). Passing (Cmp-Yards-TD) - OSU: Matt Moore (11-245-3). Hawai’i: Colt Brennan (37-401-2). Receiving (Rec-Yards-TD) - OSU: Sammie Stroughter (3-106-1). Hawai’i: Davone Bess (10-116-1). Punting (Att-Yards-Avg) - OSU: Kyle Loomis (3-158-52.7). Hawai’i: None. Sacks By (No-Yards) - OSU: Dorian Smith (3.0-22), Derrick Doggett (1.0-10), Coye Francies (1.0-9), Bryant Cornell (1.0-3). Hawai’i: jacob Patek (1.0-6). Leading Tacklers - OSU: Derrick Doggett (9-3-12). Hawai’i: Adam Leonard (4-6-10). 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 20 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL INDIVIDUAL GAME-BY-GAME (PASSING) #15 Brennan, C Att Comp Int at Alabama 44 30 1 UNLV 35 24 2 at Boise State 36 25 1 Eastern Illinois 41 30 1 Nevada 47 36 0 at Fresno State 39 32 0 at New Mexico State 31 22 0 Idaho 38 31 0 at Utah State 29 18 1 Louisiana Tech 40 27 1 San Jose State 39 28 1 Purdue 48 33 1 50 37 2 Oregon State TOTALS 517 373 11 Pct 68.2 68.6 69.4 73.2 76.6 82.1 71.0 81.6 62.1 67.5 71.8 68.8 74.0 72.1 Yards TD 350 2 296 2 388 5 409 5 419 4 409 5 330 5 333 5 413 6 406 4 402 5 434 3 401 2 4990 53 BRENNAN NOTES Long Sack Yds 32 2 17 32 2 10 37 2 4 43 1 10 63 3 12 47 1 3 36 1 1 50 1 1 60 0 0 49 0 0 37 2 14 49 1 2 34 6 44 63 22 118 Effic 145.5 147.0 200.3 192.3 179.6 212.5 213.6 198.6 243.1 180.8 195.6 161.2 146.6 182.8 #6 Graunke, T. Att Comp Int Pct Yards TD UNLV 9 8 0 88.9 65 0 at Fresno State 5 5 0 100.0 61 1 at New Mexico State 3 1 0 33.3 23 0 Idaho 12 9 0 75.0 164 1 at Utah State 9 5 0 55.6 73 1 Louisiana Tech 4 3 0 75.0 100 1 1 1 0 100.0 15 0 San Jose State TOTALS 43 32 0 74.4 501 4 Long Sack Yds Effic 21 0 0 149.6 40 0 0 268.5 23 0 0 97.7 62 0 0 217.3 29 0 0 160.4 45 0 0 367.5 15 0 0 226.0 62 0 0 203.0 #11 Funaki, I. UNLV Eastern Illinois Idaho TOTALS Long Sack Yds Effic 8 0 0 167.2 58 1 9 150.8 0 0 0 0.0 58 1 9 139.6 Att Comp Int Pct Yards TD 1 1 0 100.0 8 0 10 5 0 50.0 120 0 1 0 0 0.0 0 0 12 6 0 50.0 128 0 QUICK-STRIKE OFFENSE Hawai’i’s Run-and-Shoot offense, ranked first in the country for the eighth straight week, has not only struck often in 2006, but quickly as well. The Warrior offense has scored four touchdowns on one-play drives this season, including a 63-yard pass (Brennan to Sample) against Nevada (Oct. 7), a 60-yard shovel pass (Brennan to Ilaoa) at Utah State (Nov. 4), a 19-yard pass (Brennan to Bess) against Louisiana Tech (Nov. 11), and 19-yard pass (Brennan to Grice-Mullen) against San Jose State (Nov. 18). Hawai’i has recorded a 32 touchdown drives in five plays or less, which currently ranks first in the country (Clemson is second with 27). Hawai’i has also managed 24 touchdown drives in two minutes or less, tied for first nationally with Texas Tech. MORE NUMBERS OPENING DRIVES Opponent Result (Plays-Yards-TOP) at Alabama FG (7-26-3:29) UNLV TD (6-65-2:05) at Boise State Punt EASTERN ILL. TD (9-69-2:12) NEVADA FG (8-63-4:22) at Fresno State Punt at NMSU TD (9-64-4:21) IDAHO TD (11-64-5:58) at Utah State TD (5-71-1:33) LA TECH TD (10-77-2:46) SJSU FG (8-43-3:13) PURDUE TD (10-72-3:26) OREGON STATE Missed FG COIN TOSS Opponent at Alabama UNLV at Boise State EASTERN ILL. NEVADA at Fresno State at NMSU IDAHO at Utah State LA TECH SJSU PURDUE OREGON STATE Result Lost toss (receive) Won toss (receive) Won toss (receive) Lost toss (receive) Won toss (receive) Won toss (receive) Won toss (receive) Won toss (receive)* Won toss (receive) Lost toss (kickoff) Lost toss (kickoff) Lost toss (kickoff) Lost toss (receive) LEADS NATION IN SIX PHASES Quarterback Colt Brennan, who earned WAC Offensive Player of the Week honors three times this season, currently leads the nation in six statistical categories, including touchdown passes (53), passing efficiency (182.8), total offense (410.8), completion percentage (72.14%), total passing yards (4,990), and points responsible for (26.8). Brennan posted career-highs in passing efficiency at New Mexico State (213.6) and at Utah State (243.1). So far this season, Brennan has surpassed the 200 mark four times in passing efficiency. Before this season, Brennan highest efficiency rating was 193.1 against New Mexico State in 2005. His current rating of 182.8 and could break the NCAA single-season record of 183.3 set by Tulane’s Shaun King in 1998. CHASING NCAA TOUCHDOWN MARK Quarterback Colt Brennan has thrown 53 touchdown passes in 13 games this season and needs one more to reach the NCAA season mark of 54 set by Houston’s David Klingler in 1990. Brennan is averaging 4.1 touchdown passes per game with one game remaining on the schedule. He has already broken the NCAA mark for most TD passes in two seasons (83) also held by Klingler. Brennan threw 35 TD passes in 2005, giving him a two-year total of 88. SECOND ON CAREER PASSING LIST Colt Brennan occupies the No. 2 spot on the UH career passing list with 9,291 yards and needs 7,781 yards to catch NCAA career leader Timmy Chang, who holds the top spot with 17,072 yards (2000-04). Brennan has played in 25 games in his UH career, the same as No. 3 Dan Robinson (6,038), nine less than No. 4 Garrett Gabriel (5,631), and 12 less than No. 5 Raphel Cherry (5,046). THE STREAK ENDS IN LOGAN Quarterback Colt Brennan broke the school record for most pass attempts without an interception with 182 at Utah State (old record was 178 set by Timmy Chang in 2004). SPREADING THE WEALTH The Warrior offense has scored 80 touchdowns in 13 games in 2006. Although running back Nate Ilaoa leads the team with 18 touchdowns (13 rushing, 5 receiving), 10 other Warriors on offense have reached the end zone, including receivers Davone Bess (14), Ian Sample (10), Ryan Grice-Mullen (9), Jason Rivers and Ross Dickerson (8 each), Chad Mock (3), quarterbacks Colt Brennan (5) and Tyler Graunke (1), and running backs Reagan Mauia (3) and David Farmer (1). Hawai’i has also scored four defensive touchdowns this season, two by safety Leonard Peters (INT returns), one by linebacker Adam Leonard (fumble return), and another by cornerback Ryan Keomaka (INT return). As a team, the Warriors have scored 84 touchdowns in 13 games in 2006. Hawai’i scored a total of 48 touchdowns in 12 games last season. * denotes KOR TD 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 21 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL RUSHING No-Yds/TD Ilaoa, N. Brennan, C. Mauia, R. Funaki, I. Laumoli, J Graunke, T. Farmer, D. Grice-Mullen Dickerson, R. Peoples, K. Seti, S. TEAM UA UNLV 113-893/13 4-27/0 9-104/2 79-351/5 6-3/0 6-27/1 29-144/2 3-15/0 6-33/0 10-34/0 DNP 2-16/0 4-34/0 DNP 9-30/1 DNP 4-20/0 7-30/1 1-15/0 2-24/0 4-13/0 4-7/0 DNP DNP 3-2/0 DNP 2-1/0 7--32/0 2--23/0 1--2/0 RECEIVING No-Yds/TD Bess, D. 91-1155/14 Rivers, J. 58-870/8 Ilaoa, N. 63-781/5 Dickerson, R. 54-726/7 Sample, I. 53-686/10 Grice-Mullen 38-659/9 Mock, C. 25-363/3 Lane, M. 3-120/0 Mauia, R. 10-109/1 Bain, A. 7-69/0 Washington, M. 3-50/0 Linkner, D. 1-15/0 Farmer, D. 4-12/0 Seti, S. 1-4/0 UA UNLV 8-74/0 10-124/1 3-39/0 2-22/0 5-49/0 3-32/0 5-49/0 2-27/0 2-16/0 6-109/1 7-111/1 2-17/0 DNP DNP 1-16/1 1-4/0 DNP 1-5/0 DNP 1-7/0 DNP DNP 2-14/0 1-0/0 DNP 1-4/0 BSU EIU NEV FSU NMSU IDAHO USU 12-68/0 4-17/0 2-3/0 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP 9-46/1 4--1/0 DNP 3--3/0 DNP DNP 1-0/0 DNP DNP DNP - 14-151/0 7-14/1 1--2/0 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP 2--3/0 6-34/3 7-43/0 DNP 3-14/0 DNP 1-5/0 1-4/0 DNP DNP DNP - 18-94/1 3-7/1 6-28/0 5-63/0 7-26/0 1-2/0 DNP DNP 2-7/0 2--2/1 1-5/0 DNP DNP 2-2/0 DNP 1-1/0 DNP - 6-55/1 1-12/0 2-8/0 1-5/0 DNP 3-6/1 DNP DNP DNP NEV FSU NMSU IDAHO BSU EIU 6-104/2 6-81/3 4-96/0 2-23/0 2-24/0 2-40/0 1-6/0 DNP 2-14/0 DNP DNP 7-58/0 6-106/0 4-29/1 5-67/1 6-122/2 DNP 4-73/1 1-58/0 DNP 2-16/0 DNP DNP 10-139/1 8-70/2 4-55/1 6-39/1 3-27/0 6-80/1 5-49/1 6-108/1 8-68/0 5-78/0 2-41/0 7-48/1 7-55/1 10-115/1 6-125/2 2-57/0 5-107/2 6-83/2 4-42/1 8-90/1 DNP DNP DNP 5-83/2 2-20/0 1-46/0 1-18/0 5-46/0 1-3/0 DNP 1-26/0 DNP DNP 1-23/0 DNP DNP DNP DNP 1--2/0 DNP DNP DNP - ALL-PURP. YDS TOT UA UNLV BSU EIU NEV FSU Ilaoa, N. Dickerson, R. Bess, D. Rivers, J. Sample, I. Grice-Mullen Mock, C. Brennan, C. Mauia, R. Lane, M. Newberry, M. Patton, K. Peters, L. Bain, A. Keomaka, R. Washington, M. Farmer, D. Funaki, I. Laumoli, J Lewis, G. Patek, J. Graunke, T. Veikune, D. Soares, B. Linkner, D. Fergerstrom, V. Peoples, K. Seti, S. Leonard, A. Chopp, A. Hawthorne, CJ TEAM 76 171 74 39 109 3 31 DNP DNP 21 DNP DNP 14 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP 2 -23 136 47 124 22 16 111 17 27 37 DNP -4 35 33 5 7 15 16 20 DNP DNP 5 DNP -2 164 65 104 81 24 40 6 17 3 DNP 27 61 14 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP - 75 98 58 106 122 DNP 73 -1 DNP 58 -2 14 16 -3 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP - 219 55 139 27 107 DNP 20 14 1 52 14 18 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP -3 112 135 70 80 83 DNP 46 43 DNP -1 54 DNP 2 14 DNP 5 DNP DNP 12 DNP DNP DNP - 1674 1342 1224 870 686 683 375 351 253 207 179 135 101 69 52 50 42 34 34 33 31 30 25 18 15 15 7 6 5 4 2 -32 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 22 NMSU IDAHO 135 283 55 49 42 DNP 18 28 26 3 DNP 23 DNP 7 DNP DNP DNP DNP - 55 157 39 108 90 83 46 63 22 DNP 26 29 5 2 DNP -2 DNP 3 2 1 DNP - USU LTU SJSU PUR OSU DNP 12-100/1 12-159/2 8-48/1 6-60/1 7-15/1 6-59/0 14-11/1 6-52/2 1-2/0 1-7/0 4-34/0 DNP DNP DNP DNP 2-24/0 4-13/0 DNP 2-5/0 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP 1--3/0 1--1/0 - LTU 3-35/1 7-143/2 3-51/2 4-113/0 6-155/2 DNP 3-36/0 6-82/1 6-45/1 4-135/2 3-44/0 2-30/1 1-17/0 1-45/0 1-29/0 1-4/0 1-8/0 DNP 1-20/0 DNP DNP DNP DNP - SJSU PUR OSU 6-81/2 4-43/0 6-66/1 2-31/0 5-68/0 4-77/1 1-36/1 1-15/0 DNP 6-117/0 6-103/0 7-52/0 2-26/1 3-43/1 3-20/1 5-57/0 1-16/0 DNP DNP DNP DNP 10-116/1 4-48/0 6-67/0 2-33/0 6-46/0 4-40/1 1-14/0 4-37/0 DNP DNP DNP DNP USU LTU SJSU PUR OSU 210 51 35 51 135 12 12 37 17 24 DNP 8 23 20 6 5 DNP 10 DNP DNP DNP DNP - DNP 105 143 113 45 44 30 60 56 67 77 DNP DNP DNP 33 7 DNP DNP 4 - 166 47 81 43 68 77 36 15 19 DNP 34 31 15 5 DNP DNP -3 211 64 139 103 43 20 57 59 18 13 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP 5 DNP -1 115 64 163 48 46 64 14 11 44 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP 18 8 DNP DNP DNP DNP - SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL INDIVIDUAL GAME-BY-GAME (DEFENSE) TACKLES Leonard, A. Elimimian, S. Peters, L. Purcell, M. Patek, J. Alama-Francis Kalilimoku, B. Newberry, M. Lewis, G. Lafaele, M. Lau, M. Patton, K. Kafentzis, T. Saole, R. Martinez, AJ Keomaka, R. Allen-Jones, CJ Paepule, T. Noa, Ka. Soares, B. Hawthorne, CJ Malala, M. Purcell, A. Veikune, D. Porlas, D. Fruean, R. Galdeira, G. Wilson, L. Watson, K. Pedersen, E. Savaiigaea, R. Fergerstrom, V. Thomas, D. Kelly, D. Kiesel-Kauhane Clore, V. Satele, B. Laeli, F. Mock, C. Funaki, I. LaCount, K. Rice, J. Letuli, L. Farmer, D. Mauia, R. Ieru, R. Bess, D. Ilaoa, N. Rivers, J. Grice-Mullen No TOT UA UNLV BSU 59-49 108 6-5 2-3 3-7 45-36 81 1-6 DNP 40-28 68 6-4 1-0 6-7 34-20 54 1-2 3-0 1-6 32-18 50 5-5 1-1 0-4 18-18 36 0-6 2-0 0-3 19-15 34 4-4 0-4 21-10 31 DNP 1-0 17-13 30 0-1 1-0 1-0 16-13 29 0-1 2-4 13-8 21 0-2 1-0 13-5 18 4-1 4-1 1-3 11-7 18 1-2 1-0 16-1 17 2-0 10-7 17 0-1 2-0 4-3 14-2 16 1-0 DNP 6-9 15 1-1 1-3 1-1 10-5 15 1-1 2-0 9-6 15 1-0 5-5 14-0 14 1-0 1-0 12-2 14 1-0 1-0 7-7 14 0-1 0-1 6-5 11 0-2 8-2 10 2-0 7-1 8 1-0 1-0 4-3 7 4-3 7 DNP 4-3 7 0-1 1-1 1-0 3-4 7 2-2 0-1 5-2 7 DNP DNP 6-0 6 DNP DNP 2-3 5 DNP DNP 4-0 4 2-0 4-0 4 1-0 1-0 2-1 3 DNP DNP DNP 2-0 2 DNP DNP 2-0 2 1-0 0-2 2 0-1 2-0 2 1-0 1 DNP DNP 1-0 1 DNP 1-0 1 DNP 0-1 1 DNP DNP 1-0 1 DNP 1-0 1 1-0 0-1 1 DNP DNP DNP 1-0 1 1-0 1-0 1 1-0 1 1-0 1 1-0 - EIU 9-1 3-0 1-2 3-1 1-0 1-2 2-0 1-0 2-1 0-1 1-0 DNP 2-0 DNP 5-0 1-0 3-2 1-0 0-2 1-0 1-1 1-0 DNP DNP 2-0 1-1 DNP 1-0 1-0 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP 1-0 DNP NEV 8-2 8-0 6-2 4-0 3-0 0-1 1-0 3-0 DNP 1-1 DNP 2-0 2-0 DNP 3-1 0-1 1-0 1-0 DNP DNP DNP 0-1 1-0 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE FSU 3-0 4-3 4-2 1-4 3-1 0-3 1-4 1-1 2-3 2-0 3-0 DNP 1-0 1-2 1-0 2-2 DNP 1-0 1-1 2-1 1-0 2-1 2-0 DNP 1-0 DNP DNP DNP DNP 1-0 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP NMSU 4-7 2-12 0-5 6-2 0-1 0-1 1-1 4-6 6-2 1-2 1-3 DNP DNP 1-0 0-3 1-0 0-1 1-2 0-1 2-0 0-1 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP 23 IDAHO USU 5-2 3-8 2-1 0-2 3-1 4-2 3-0 2-2 3-1 4-2 DNP 3-2 3-1 1-0 3-1 3-2 0-3 0-1 1-0 1-1 DNP DNP 2-1 2-2 5-0 1-0 2-1 1-0 1-1 1-1 0-1 1-0 1-0 1-0 2-0 3-0 3-1 1-0 1-0 DNP 1-0 1-0 1-1 DNP 0-1 1-0 1-0 DNP 1-0 3-1 2-0 1-0 1-1 DNP DNP 1-0 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP 1-0 1-0 DNP 0-1 DNP 0-1 - LTU 5-1 5-0 4-0 4-0 4-0 3-0 3-0 3-0 4-0 1-1 2-1 DNP 2-1 2-0 DNP 3-0 2-0 1-0 DNP 1-0 1-0 DNP 1-1 1-0 DNP 1-0 DNP 2-0 0-1 DNP 1-0 1-0 DNP DNP 1-0 - SJSU 2-3 10-2 2-1 7-1 1-0 3-1 2-0 1-0 0-1 1-0 2-0 DNP 2-1 3-0 1-1 DNP 1-0 0-1 0-1 0-1 DNP 1-0 DNP DNP - PUR 5-4 9-5 3-2 2-3 2-0 2-0 3-0 1-1 6-1 2-0 DNP 1-0 DNP 2-0 3-0 DNP 0-1 1-0 DNP 1-0 DNP 0-1 DNP DNP 1-0 DNP - OSU 4-6 1-5 3-2 4-0 1-0 DNP 1-0 1-2 1-2 DNP 1-0 DNP 2-0 DNP 1-0 DNP 1-0 0-1 1-0 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP - SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL TFL Purcell, M. Alama-Francis Lafaele, M. Kalilimoku, B. Leonard, A. Soares, B. Veikune, D. Noa, Ka. Savaiigaea, R. Elimimian, S. Allen-Jones, CJ Martinez, AJ Kafentzis, T. Peters, L. Wilson, L. Lau, M. Fruean, R. Rice, J. Paepule, T. Purcell, A. Patek, J. Letuli, L. Lewis, G. Keomaka, R. Watson, K. No 12-3 8-2 4-3 5-1 3-1 3-0 3-0 2-1 2-0 0-4 2-0 2-0 2-0 2-0 1-1 1-1 1-1 1-0 1-0 1-0 1-0 0-1 0-1 0-1 0-1 TOT 13.5 9.0 5.5 5.5 3.5 3.0 3.0 2.5 2.0 2.0 2.0 2.0 2.0 2.0 1.5 1.5 1.5 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.5 UA 1.0-1 0.5-1 1.0-2 DNP 0.5-1 1.0-4 1.0-2 DNP DNP - SACKS Purcell, M. Alama-Francis Lafaele, M. Soares, B. Kalilimoku, B. Veikune, D. Fruean, R. Patek, J. Noa, Ka. Purcell, A. Leonard, A. Rice, J. No 7-1 3-0 2-0 2-0 2-0 2-0 1-1 1-0 1-0 1-0 1-0 1-0 TOT UA 7.5 3.0 2.0 2.0 2.0 2.0 1.5 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0-2 1.0 DNP UNLV 1.0-1 1.0-5 1.0-8 DNP 1.0-1 2.0-9 1.0-1 0.5-0 1.0-12 0.5-1 BSU 1.0-9 1.0-3 DNP 1.0-4 1.0-1 DNP DNP - EIU NEV FSU 1.0-9 1.0-2 1.0-2 1.0-5 1.0-2 1.0-4 1.5-8 1.0-2 DNP DNP 1.0-2 1.0-8 1.0-1 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP 1.0-9 DNP DNP DNP DNP 1.0-2 DNP DNP DNP 0.5-4 DNP - NMSU 4.0-4 0.5-1 0.5-0 0.5-1 1.5-4 DNP 1.0-3 DNP DNP - IDAHO 1.0-2 DNP 1.0-1 1.0-1 - USU 2.0-10 1.0-2 DNP DNP DNP 0.5-0 0.5-1 DNP LTU 1.0-8 2.0-20 0.5-0 2.0-3 1.0-13 1.0-4 DNP DNP 0.5-1 DNP 1.0-13 DNP DNP DNP SJSU 3.5-10 3.0-13 1.0-5 1.0-4 DNP 1.0-6 0.5-1 DNP DNP - PUR OSU DNP 1.0-5 1.0-7 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP - UNLV BSU EIU NEV FSU 1.0-9 1.0-9 DNP DNP 1.0-5 1.0-8 1.0-8 DNP 1.0-8 1.0-12 DNP DNP DNP NMSU 3.0-3 1.0-3 DNP IDAHO USU DNP 1.0-8 DNP DNP DNP LTU 1.0-8 1.0-11 1.0-13 1.0-4 DNP DNP 1.0-13 SJSU 2.5-9 1.0-8 1.0-5 0.5-1 DNP - PUR OSU 1.0-7 DNP 1.0-6 DNP DNP DNP DNP 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 24 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL WARRIORS IN THE WAC/NATIONAL STATS Category Rushing Nate Ilaoa (74.4) Passing Average Colt Brennan (383.8) Total Offense Colt Brennan (410.8) Receptions Per Game Davone Bess (7.00) Nate Ilaoa (5.25) Jason Rivers (4.46) Ross Dickerson (4.15) WAC National 5th 46th 2nd NA Scoring (Kick) Dan Kelly (5.8) 1st 2nd 5th 6th 10th Receiving Yards Per Game Davone Bess (88.8) 2nd Jason Rivers (66.9) 3rd Nate Ilaoa (65.1) 7th Ross Dickerson (55.8) 10th All-Purpose Yards Nate Ilaoa (139.5) Ross Dickerson (103.2) Davone Bess (94.2) Passing Efficiency Colt Brennan (182.8) Category Scoring (Touchdowns) Nate Ilaoa (9.0) Davone Bess (6.8) Ian Sample (4.6) 5th 8th 10th 1st STREAKING WARRIORS WAC National 2nd 3rd 7th NA NA NA 2nd NA 1st 5th 30th 62nd 85th 14th 45th 56th 91st 12th 67th 89th Field Goals Dan Kelly (0.85) 4th 69th Field Goal Pct. Dan Kelly (78.6) 2nd NA PAT Kicking Pct. Dan Kelly (93.3) 4th NA Tackles Adam Leonard (8.3) 5th 49th Solomon Elimimian (6.8) T12th NR Sacks Melila Purcell (0.58) 3rd 50th Tackles-for-Loss Melila Purcell (1.04) 4th Ikaika Alama-Francis (0.75) 8th 67th NR 1st T5th 28th T81st 1st Punt Return Average Myron Newberry (5.9) 2nd 70th Fumbles Forced Melila Purcell (0.31) Jacob Patek (0.23) Kickoff Return Average Ross Dickerson (26.2) 1st 16th Fumbles Recovered Adam Leonard (0.31) T1st NA Scoring Nate Ilaoa (9.0) Davone Bess (6.8) Dan Kelly (5.8) 2nd 4th 7th 9th 50th 91st Passes Defended Leonard Peters (0.77) Adam Leonard (0.69) 7th 10th 99th NR 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 25 Consecutive Starts Pos Player OL Samson Satele OL Tala Esera OL Dane Uperesa WR Davone Bess NT Michael Lafaele Starts 52 (1st nationally) 41 24 24 21 Consecutive Games Throwing at least 1 TD Pos Player Games QB Colt Brennan 25 Consecutive Games Throwing at least 2 TDs Pos Player Games QB Colt Brennan 17 Consecutive Games Throwing for at least 300- yards Pos Player Games QB Colt Brennan 11 Consecutive Games Throwing for at least 400- yards Pos Player Games QB Colt Brennan 5 Consecutive Games With at least 6 Receptions Pos Player Games WR Davone Bess 4 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL RECORDS WATCH NCAA RECORDS BROKEN IN 2006... PASSING Most Touchdown Passes (2 Seasons): 88 by Colt Brennan, 2005-06 old record 83 held by David Klingler (Houston), 1990 SCHOOL RECORDS BROKEN IN 2006 INDIVIDUAL PASSING Most Pass Completions (Season): 373 by Colt Brennan, 2006 Consecutive 200-Yard Games (Season): 13 by Colt Brennan, 2006 Consecutive Games Throwing A Touchdown: (Season): 13 by Colt Brennan, 2006 Consecutive Attempts Without An Interception: 182 by Colt Brennan, 2006 (during six games from Sept. 30 to Nov. 4) Consecutive 200-Yard Games (Career): 24 by Colt Brennan, 2005-present Most Touchdown Passes (Season): 53 by Colt Brennan, 2006 Consecutive Games Throwing A Touchdown: (Career): 25 by Colt Brennan, 2005-present Most Passing Yards (Season): 4,990 by Colt Brennan, 2006 INDIVIDUAL TOTAL OFFENSE Yards (Season): 5,341 by Colt Brennan, 2006 Touchdowns Responsible For (Season): 58 by Colt Brennan, 2006 Points Responsible For (Season): 348 by Colt Brennan, 2006 old record 358 held by Timmy Chang, 2004 old record 12 held by Colt Brennan, 2005 old record 12 held by Colt Brennan, 2005 old record 178 held by Timmy Chang, 2004 (during five games) old record 14 held by Timmy Chang, 2001-02 old record 38 held by Timmy Chang, 2004 old record 13 held by Timmy Chang, 2000-02 old record 4,474 held by Timmy Chang, 2002 old record 4,457 held by Timmy Chang, 2002 old record 40 held by Timmy Chang, 2004 old record 242 held by Timmy Chang, 2004 INDIVIDUAL RECEIVING Receptions By A Running Back (Season): 63 by Nate Ilaoa, 2006 Receptions By A Running Back (Career): 99 by Nate Ilaoa, 2005-06 Yards Gained By A Running Back (Season): 781 by Nate Ilaoa, 2006 Yards Gained By A Running Back (Career): 1,055 by Nate Ilaoa, 2002-present TEAM SEASON - PASSING Yards: 5,619 in 2002 old record 42 held by Charles Tharp, 1997 old record 73 held by Gary Allen, 1978-81 old record 435 held by Charles Tharp, 1997 old record 895 held by Gary Allen, 1978-81 5,619 in 2006 TEAM SEASON - SCORING Points: 615 in 2006 old record 502 set in 2002 TEAM SEASON - TOTAL OFFENSE Yards: 7,149 in 2006 old record 6,939 set in 2002 MISCELLANEOUS Largest Road Crowds: 92,138 at Alabama, Sept. 2, 2006 old record 75,615 at Nebraska, 1978 NCAA RECORDS TO WATCH... PASSING Most Touchdown Passes (Season): 54 by David Klingler (Houston), 1990 Highest Pass Efficiency Rating (Season): 183.3 by Shaun King (Tulane), 1998 53 by Colt Brennan, 2006 *** NEEDS 1 TO TIE *** 182.80 by Colt Brennan, 2006 SCHOOL RECORDS TO WATCH... INDIVIDUAL PASSING Completions Percentage (Season): min 150 atts: 68.0% (350-515) by Colt Brennan, 2005 min 200 atts: 68.0% (350-515) by Colt Brennan, 2005 Lowest Interception Percentage (Season): min 200 atts: 1.7 by Raphel Cherry (5-295) Passing Yards Per Game (Season): 358.4 by Colt Brennan, 2005 (4,301 in 12 games) Passing Yards Per Attempt (Season): min 150 atts: 8.6 by Garrett Gabriel, 1989 (249-2,145) min 200 atts: 8.6 by Garrett Gabriel, 1989 (249-2,145) Passing Yards Per Completion: min 100 comp: 16.67 by Garrett Gabriel, 1990 (165-2,752) Pass Efficiency Rating (Season): 155.5 by Colt Brennan, 2005 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 72.1% by Colt Brennan, 2006 72.1% by Colt Brennan, 2006 2.1 by Colt Brennan, 2006 383.8 by Colt Brennan, 2006 9.7 by Colt Brennan, 2006 9.7 by Colt Brennan, 2006 13.38 by Colt Brennan, 2006 182.8 by Colt Brennan, 2006 26 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL Touchdowns With Same Passer & Receiver: (Season): 17 Timmy Chang-Chad Owens, 2004 (Career): 28 Timmy Chang -Chad Owens, 2001-04 Attempts To Touchdown Ratio (Season): 14.7 (35-515), 2005 Colt Brennan to Davone Bess (14) Colt Brennan to Davone Bess (27), Ryan Grice-Mullen (20) 7.04 by Colt Brennan, 2006 INDIVIDUAL RECEIVING Receptions Per Game (Season): 7.84 by Chad Owens, 2004 Touchdowns (Season): 19 by Ashley Lelie, 2001 7.00 by Davone Bess, 2006 Davone Bess (14), 2006 INDIVIDUAL TOTAL OFFENSE Yards Gained Per Game (Season): 371.3 by Colt Brennan, 2005 Average Gain Per Play (Season): 7.41 by Nick Rolovich, 2001 410.8 by Colt Brennan, 2006 8.96 by Colt Brennan, 2006 INDIVIDUAL SCORING Points (Season): 132 by Chad Owens, 2004 (22 TDs) Points Per Game (Season): 10.5 by Jamal Farmer, 1989 Touchdowns (Season): 22 by Chad Owens, 2004 Nate Ilaoa (108), Davone Bess (88) 9.0 by Nate Ilaoa, 2006 Nate Ilaoa (18) INDIVIDUAL KICKOFF RETURN Yards (Season): 852 by Larry Khan-Smith, 1988 Return Average (Season): 33.6 by Chad Owens, 2001 603 By Ross Dickerson, 2006 *** NEEDS 249 TO TIE *** 26.2 by Ross Dickerson, 2006 INDIVIDUAL DEFENSE Forced Fumbles (Season): 6 by Al Noga, 1986 Fumble Recoveries (Season): 5 by three players Sacks (Season): 17 by Al Noga, 1986 4 by Melila Purcell, 2006 *** NEEDS 2 TO TIE *** 4 by Adam Leonard, 2006 *** NEEDS 1 TO TIE *** 13.5 by Melila Purcell, 2006 *** NEEDS 3.5 TO TIE *** TEAM SEASON - PASSING Yards Per Game: 386.1, 2002 Average Gain Per Attempt: 8.8, 1988 Average Gain Per Completion: 16.45, 1998 Attempts Per Game: 53.9, 2003 Completions Per Game: 31.7, 2003 Completion Percentage: 65.6%, 2005 Lowest Interception Percentage: 1.7, 1984 Touchdowns Per Game: 3.44, 2001 432.2 in 2006 9.8 in 2006 13.67 in 2006 44.1 in 2006 31.6 in 2006 71.7% in 2006 1.9 in 2006 4.38 in 2006 TEAM SEASON - TOTAL OFFENSE Yards Gained Per Game: 495.6, 2002 Average Gain Per Play: 6.678, 2002 Touchdowns Rushing, Passing Per Game: 4.35, 2002 Most First Downs Per Game: 25.7, 2005 Most Passing First Downs Per Game: 17.5, 2005 549.9 in 2006 8.470 in 2006 6.07 in 2006 27.1 in 2006 19.62 in 2006 TEAM SEASON - SCORING Points Per Game: 40.3, 2001 Touchdowns Per Game: 5.08, 2001 PATs Per Game: 4.5, 2001 47.3 in 2006 6.46 in 2006 5.6 in 2006 TEAM SEASON - PUNTING Fewest Punts Per Game: 3.41, 2001 1.23 in 2006 TEAM SEASON - KICKOFF RETURN Fewest Returns Per Game: 2.1, 1981 3.31 in 2006 TEAM SEASON - DEFENSE Interception Return Yards: 377, 2001 Interceptions Returned For A Touchdown: 4 in 2002 Most Points Scored By The Defense: 32 in 2002 (5 TDs, 1 safety) Most Touchdowns Scored By The Defense: 5 (1980, 1999, 2002) 290 in 2006 *** NEEDS 87 TO TIE *** 3 in 2006 *** NEEDS 1 TO TIE *** 26 (4 TDs, 1 safety) in 2006 *** NEEDS 6 TO TIE *** 4 in 2006 *** NEEDS 1 TO TIE *** MISCELLANEOUS Victories In A Season: 11 in 1992 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 10 in 2006 *** NEEDS 1 TO TIE *** 27 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL CAREER HIGHS 1 WR RYAN GRICE-MULLEN Receptions: 11 vs. Wisconsin, 11/25/05 Yards: 188 vs. Boise St., 10/1/05 TDs: 4 vs. NMSU, 10/15/05 3 WR IAN SAMPLE Receptions: 8 vs. Idaho, 10/28/06 Yards: 122 vs. Eastern Ill., 9/30/06 TDs: 2, 3x, last at Fresno St., 10/14/06 4 RB NATE ILAOA RUSHING Attempts: 18 at NMSU, 10/21/06 Yards: 159 vs. Purdue, 11/25/06 TDs: 3 at Fresno St., 10/14/06 RECEIVING Receptions: 11 at Rice, 11/16/02 Yards: 155 at Utah St., 11/4/06 TDs: 2 at Utah St., 11/4/06 7 WR DAVONE BESS Receptions: 14 vs. Fresno St., 10/29/05 Yards: 171 at Nevada, 11/5/05 TDs: 2, 9x, last vs. SJSU, 11/18/06 8 LB TYSON KAFENTZIS Tackles: 6 vs. SDSU, 12/3/05 Sacks: None TFL: 1.0, 2x, last vs. UNLV, 9/16/06 INT: None 15 QB COLT BRENNAN RUSHING Attempts: 14 vs. Oregon St., 12/2/06 Yards: 63 vs. Idaho, 10/28/06 TDs: 1, 5x, last vs. Oregon St., 12/2/06 PASSING Completions: 38 vs. NMSU, 10/15/05 Attempts: 54 vs. Fresno St., 10/29/05 Yards: 515 vs. NMSU, 10/15/05 TDs: 7 vs. NMSU, 10/15/05 Pass Eff. Rating: 243.1 at Utah St., 11/4/06 23 DB GERARD LEWIS 34 RB REAGAN MAUIA RUSHING Attempts: 7 at NMSU, 10/21/06 Yards: 56 vs. SDSU, 12/3/05 TDs: 2 vs. La Tech, 11/11/06 RECEIVING Receptions: 4 vs. Oregon St., 12/2/06 Yards: 37 vs. Oregon St., 12/2/06 TDs: 1 at Alabama, 9/2/06 Tackles: 12 vs. UTEP, 10/25/03 Sacks: 3.0 at NMSU, 10/21/06 TFL: 4.5 vs. Florida Atlantic, 9/4/04 41 LB SOLOMON ELIMIMIAN Tackles: 14, 2x, last vs. Purdue, 11/25/06 Sacks: None TFL: 1.5 at NMSU, 10/21/06 INT: 1 at Idaho, 9/24/05 43 LB BRAD KALILIMOKU Tackles: 10 vs. Wisconsin, 11/25/05 Sacks: 1.0, 2x, last at Fresno St., 10/14/06 TFL: 2.0, 2x, last vs. La Tech, 11/11/06 INT: None 44 LB ADAM LEONARD Tackles: 11, 3x, last at Utah St., 11/4/06 Sacks: 1.0 at Alabama, 9/2/06 TFL: 1.0, 4x, last vs. Oregon St., 12/2/06 INT: 1 vs. Purdue, 11/25/06 47 DB LEONARD PETERS Tackles: 16 at Boise St., 10/29/04 Sacks: 1.0 vs. Idaho, 11/20/04 TFL: 1.0, 7x, last vs. SJSU, 11/18/06 INT: 1, 7x, last at Fresno St., 10/14/06 67 NG MICHAEL LAFAELE Tackles: 7 vs. Purdue, 11/25/06 Sacks: 1.0, 2x, last vs. SJSU, 11/18/06 TFL: 1.0, 3x, last vs. SJSU, 11/18/06 26 LB MICAH LAU 84 WR JASON RIVERS Tackles: 6 at Utah St., 11/4/06 Sacks: 1.0 vs. Oregon St., 12/2/06 TFL: 1.0 vs. Idaho, 10/28/06 INT: 1 vs. SJSU, 11/18/06 98 DE MELILA PURCELL Tackles: 10 at NMSU, 10/21/06 Sacks: None TFL: None INT: 1, 2x, last vs. La Tech, 11/11/06 82 WR ROSS DICKERSON 31 DB JACOB PATEK Tackles: 7 at Michigan St., 9/10/05 Sacks: 1.0, 8x, last vs. SJSU, 11/18/06 TFL: 3.0 vs. SJSU, 11/18/06 38 DB MYRON NEWBERRY Tackles: 8 at NMSU, 10/21/06 Sacks: None TFL: 0.5 at Fresno St., 10/14/06 INT: 1, 3x, last vs. Purdue, 11/25/06 Tackles: 4 at NMSU, 10/21/06 Sacks: None TFL: 1.0 at Fresno St., 10/14/06 INT: None 91 DE IKAIKA ALAMA-FRANCIS Receptions: 10 at Fresno St., 11/14/06 Yards: 124 at NMSU, 10/21/06 TDs: 2 at NMSU, 10/21/06 Receptions: 11 vs. UAB, 12/24/04 Yards: 167 vs. Idaho, 11/20/04 TDs: 4 vs. Idaho, 11/20/04 88 WR CHAD MOCK Receptions: 11 at SJSU, 10/22/05 Yards: 147 vs. NMSU, 10/15/05 TDs: 1, 3x, last vs. SJSU, 11/18/06 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 28 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL UNDER JUNE JONES 100-YARD RUSHERS 159 Nate Ilaoa vs. Purdue, 2006 151 Nate Ilaoa vs. SDSU, 2005 151 Nate Ilaoa vs. Nevada, 2006 150 Michael Brewster vs. Nevada, 2004 147 James Fenderson vs. Nevada, 2000 146 Michael Bass vs. UTEP, 2001 126 James Fenderson vs. La Tech, 2000 124 James Fenderson at Fresno State, 2000 116 Thero Mitchell at SMU, 2001 107 James Fenderson at TCU, 2000 104 Nate Ilaoa vs. UNLV, 2006 101 Michael Brewster at Fresno State, 2004 100 Nate Ilaoa vs. SJSU, 2006 100-YARD RECEIVERS 285 Ashley Lelie vs. Air Force, 2001 283 Chad Owens vs. Michigan State, 2004 262 Ashley Lelie vs. BYU, 2001 238 Britton Komine vs. Nevada, 2002 220 Dwight Carter vs. Eastern Illinois, 1999 211 Ashley Lelie vs. Miami-Ohio, 2001 208 Dwight Carter vs. Navy, 1999 207 Jeremiah Cockheran vs. Alabama, 2002 188 Ryan Grice-Mullen vs. Boise St., 2005 188 Justin Colbert at Fresno State, 2002 182 Chad Owens vs. Tulsa, 2004 182 Chad Owens vs. SMU, 2002 181 Ashley Lelie vs. Rice, 2001 171 Davone Bess at Nevada, 2005 170 Ashley Lelie vs. Nevada, 2000 168 Chad Owens vs. Army, 2003 167 Ryan Grice-Mullen vs. SDSU, 2005 167 Jason Rivers vs. Idaho, 2004 164 Chad Owens at Nevada, 2003 163 Ashley Lellie vs. Montana, 2001 162 Jeremiah Cockheran vs. Houston, 2003 * 160 Craig Stutzman vs. SJSU, 2000 159 Britton Komine vs. SJSU, 2004 158 Davone Bess vs. Fresno State, 2005 158 Justin Colbert vs. Tulane, 2002 * 156 Justin Colbert vs. SJSU, 2002 155 Nate Ilaoa at Utah State, 2006 155 Chad Owens vs. Northwestern, 2004 154 Jeremiah Cockheran vs. App. State, 2003 152 Dwight Carrter vs. UTEP, 1999 151 Justin Colbert vs. Miami-Ohio, 2001 149 Chad Owens at SJSU, 2003 148 Jason Rivers vs. UAB, 2006 * 147 Chad Mock vs. NMSU, 2005 147 Britton Komine vs. Nevada, 2004 145 Channon Harris vs. BYU, 2001 143 Jason Rivers vs. Houston, 2003 * 140 Britton Komine vs. Tulsa, 2002 139 Davone Bess vs. Nevada, 2006 139 Ryan Grice-Mullen vs. Wisconsin, 2005 139 Justin Colbert vs. Montana, 2001 138 Michael Brewster vs. UTEP, 2003 138 Dwight Carter vs. Rice, 1999 137 Ryan Grice-Mullen vs. NMSU, 2005 137 Jason Rivers vs. Louisiana Tech, 2004 135 Ryan Grice-Mullen at Utah State, 2006 134 Ryan Grice-Mullen vs. Wisconsin, 2005 128 Davone Bess vs. NMSU, 2005 127 Dwight Carter at SMU, 1999 125 Ross Dickerson at NMSU, 2006 125 Ryan Grice-Mullen at SJSU, 2005 125 125 124 124 124 122 122 122 122 121 120 119 118 117 117 117 117 117 116 116 115 115 114 112 112 112 112 111 111 111 110 110 109 108 108 107 106 106 106 104 104 104 103 103 102 Ashley Lelie vs. SJSU, 2000 Channon Harris vs. Rice, 1999 Davone Bess vs. UNLV, 2006 Jeremiah Cockheran vs. Alabama, 2003 Justin Colbert vs. Wisconsin, 2000 Ian Sample vs. Eastern Illinois, 2006 Jeremiah Cockheran vs. Rice, 2003 Ashley Lelie vs. Fresno State, 2001 Craig Stutzman vs. La Tech, 2000 Ashley Lelie at SMU, 2001 Justin Colbert vs. Nevada, 2002 Neal Gossett vs. SJSU, 2002 Justin Colbret at UTEP, 2000 Davone Bess vs. Purdue, 2006 Jason Rivers vs. Army, 2003 Jeremiah Cockheran at USC, 2003 Nate Ilaoa at Rice, 2002 Justin Colbert vs. SJSU, 2000 Davone Bess vs. Oregon State, 2006 Ross Dickerson vs. USC, 2005 Ross Dickerson at Fresno State, 2006 Gerald Welch vs. Fresno State, 2003 Chad Owens vs. UAB, 2004 * Ross Dickerson vs. Utah State, 2005 Britton Komine at UNLV, 2003 Jeremiah Cockheran at Fresno St., 2002 Channon Harris vs. Boise State, 2001 Ryan Grice-Mullen vs. UNLV, 2006 Ashley Lelie vs. UNLV, 2000 Channon Harris vs. UTEP, 1999 Davone Bess vs. Utah State, 2005 Ross Dickerson at Nevada, 2005 Neal Gossett vs. UNLV, 2000 Jason Rivers vs. Idaho, 2006 Justin Colbert vs. San Jose State, 2001 Ian Sample vs. Nevada, 2006 Jason Rivers vs. Eastern Illinois, 2006 Davone Bess at Idaho , 2005 Davone Bess vs. Boise State, 2005 Davone Bess at Boise State, 2006 Chad Mock at SJSU, 2005 Dwight Carter vs. Wash. State, 1999 Jason Rivers vs., Purdue, 2006 Justin Colbert vs. Tulsa, 2002 Davone Bess at SJSU, 2005 *denotes bowl game TWO 100-YARD RECEIVERS IN SAME GAME Dwight Carter (152), Channon Harris (111) vs. UTEP, 1999 Dwight Carter (138), Channon Harris (125) vs. Rice, 1999 Ashley Lelie (111), Neal mGossett (109) vs. UNLV, 2000 Ashley Lelie (163), Justin Colbert (139) vs. Montana, 2001 Ashley Lelie (211), Justin Colbert (151) vs. Miami-Ohio, 2001 Ashley Lelie (262), Channon Harris (145) vs. BYU, 2001 Britton Komine (238), Justin Colbert (120) vs. Nevada, 2002 Britton Komine (140), Justin Colbert (103) vs. Tulsa, 2002 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 29 Justin Colbert (188), Jeremiah Cockheran (112) at Fresno State, 2002 Justin Colbert (156), Neal Gossett (119) vs. SJSU, 2002 Chad Owens (168), Jason Rivers (117) vs. Army, 2003 Jeremiah Cockheran (162), Jason Rivers (143) vs. Houston, 2003 * Jason Rivers (148), Chad Owens (114) vs. UAB, 2004 * Ryan Grice-Mullen (188), Davone Bess (106) vs. Boise State, 2005 Davone Bess (171), Ross Dickerson (110) at Nevada, 2005 Ross Rickerson (112), Davone Bess (110) vs. Utah State, 2005 Davone Bess (117), Jason Rivers (103) vs. Purdue, 2006 THREE 100-YARD RECEIVERS IN SAME GAME Chad Mock (147), Ryan Grice-Mullen (137), Davone Bess (128) vs. NMSU, 2005 Ryan Grice-Mullen (125), Chd Mock (104), Davone Bess (102) at SJSU, 2005 Craig Stutzman (160), Ashley Lelie (125), Juston Colbert (117) vs. SJSU, 2000 400-YARD PASSERS 475 Timmy Chang vs. Houston, 2003 (SHB) 462 Timmy Chang at Fresno State, 2002 457 Colt Brennan at SJSU, 2005 452 Dan Robinson vs. Eastern Ill., 1999 437 Timmy Chang vs. San Diego State, 2002 434 Colt Brennan vs. Purdue, 2006 434 Timmy Chang vs. Montana, 2001 426 Colt Brennan vs. Boise State, 2005 426 Timmy Chang vs. UTEP, 2003 419 Colt Brennan vs. Nevada, 2006 416 Timmy Chang vs. Michigan State, 2004 413 Colt Brennan at Utah State, 2006 409 Colt Brennan at Fresno State, 2006 409 Colt Brennan vs. Eastern Ill., 2006 409 Colt Brennan at Nevada, 2005 405 Timmy Chang vs. UAB, 2004 (SHB) 405 Timmy Chang vs. Northwestern, 2004 403 Colt Brennan vs. Wisconsin, 2005 403 Timmy Chang vs. Tulsa, 2002 403 Timmy Chang vs. SJSU, 2000 402 Colt Brennan vs. SJSU, 2006 401 Colt Brennan vs. Oregon State, 2006 400 Dan Robinson vs. Rice, 1999 500-YARD PASSERS 543 Nick Rolovich vs. BYU, 2001 530 Dan Robinson vs. Navy, 1999 515 Colt Brennan vs. NMSU, 2005 505 Nick Rolovich vs. Air Force, 2001 500 Nick Rolovich vs. Miami (Ohio), 2001 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL TURNOVER MARGIN Hawai’i ranks fourth in the WAC and 52nd nationally in turnover margin, having given up the football a total of 26 times in 13 games this season. That compared to 27 takeaways equals a turnover margin of +1 (0.08 per game). After a slow start where the Warriors gave up the pigskin 10 times in their first three games (against two takeaways), Hawai’i has managed to take care of the football, with 25 takeaways against 16 giveaways in its last 10 games. The Warrior defense has scored four touchdowns in 2006 and have forced turnovers which has led to 16 touchdowns this season. Opponent at Alabama UNLV at Boise State EASTERN ILLINOIS NEVADA at Fresno State at NMSU IDAHO at Utah State LA TECH SJSU PURDUE OREGON STATE TOTALS Takeaways 0 1 (INT) 1 (INT) 3 (INTs) 2 (2 F) 3 (2 F, 1 INT) 3 (2 F, 1 INT) 2 (1 F, 1 INT) 4 (3 F, 1 INT) 2 (2 INT) 3 (2 F, 1 INT) 3 (1 F, 2 INT) 0 27 Giveaways 3 (2 F, 1 INT) 4 (2 F, 2 INT) 3 (2 F, 1 INT) 2 (F, INT) 2 (2 F) 0 1 (1 F) 1 (1F) 1 (1 INT) 2 (1 F, 1 INT) 2 (1 F, 1 INT) 3 (2 F, 1 INT) 2 (2 INT) 26 Margin -3 -3 -2 +1 0 +3 +2 +1 +3 0 +1 0 -2 +1 Points Off TO (UH-Opp) 0-2 7-7 7-17 7-0 7-0 21-0 14-0 14-0 21-0 14-0 14-7 14-21 0-7 140-61 Variance Final Score -2 L, 17-25 0 W, 42-13 -10 L, 34-41 +7 W, 44-9 +7 W, 41-34 +21 W, 68-37 +14 W, 49-30 +14 W, 68-10 +21 W, 63-10 +14 W, 61-17 +7 W, 54-17 -7 W, 42-35 -7 L, 32-35 +79 10-3 Overall Record DEFENSIVE TAKAWAYS Opponent UNLV at Boise State EASTERN ILLINOIS EASTERN ILLINOIS EASTERN ILLINOIS NEVADA NEVADA at Fresno State at Fresno State at Fresno State at New Mexico State at New Mexico State at New Mexico State IDAHO IDAHO at Utah State at Utah State at Utah State at Utah State LA TECH LA TECH SJSU SJSU SJSU PURDUE PURDUE PURDUE TO INT INT INT INT INT Fumble Fumble Fumble Fumble INT INT Fumble Fumble Fumble INT Fumble Fumble INT Fumble INT INT Fumble Fumble INT Fumble INT INT Player(s) Leonard Peters Kenny Patton Leonard Peters C.J. Hawthorne Myron Newberry FF Jacob Patek - FR Kenny Patton FF Adam Leonard - FR Adam Leonard FF Solomon Elimimian - FR Ikaika Alama-Francis FF Melila Purcell - FR Adam Leonard Leonard Peters Gerard Lewis FF Melila Purcell - FR Adam Leonard Bad snap - FR Kahai LaCount FF Jacob Patek - FR Micah Lau Ryan Keomaka FF Rocky Savaiigaea - FR Lawrence Wilson FR Adam Leonard Ryan Keomaka FF Michael Malala - FR Michael Malala Gerard Lewis Myron Newberry FF Jacob Patek - FR Solomon Elimimian FF Blaze Soares - FR Ikaika Alama-Francis Jacob Patek FR Myron Newberry Gerard Lewis Adam Leonard 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 30 Result Touchdown (33 yards) Led to touchdown Out on downs Led to touchdown Out on downs Led to touchdown Missed FG Led to touchdown Led to touchdown Touchdown (54 yards) Out on downs Touchdown (20 yards) Led to touchdown Led to touchdown Touchdown (29 yards) Led to touchdown Led to touchdown Interception Led to touchdown Led to touchdown Led to touchdown Interception Led to touchdown Led to touchdown Led to touchdown Led to touchdown Ran out clock SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL PARTICIPATION No 62 91 33 85 7 15 2A 46 16 82 41 70 55 48 1A 40 97 11 18 6 1 19 74 4 57 87 29 8 43 60 86 9 77 59 68 96 67 89 26 4A 44 50 23 81 20 3A 34 76 25 88 38 12 22 10 31 24 28 27 42 30 54 98 47 84 3 52 13 65 64 73 92 39 53 78 17 51 72 94 5 93 99 Name Ah-Soon, K. Alama-Francis Allen-Jones, CJ Bain, A. Bess, D. Brennan, C. Chopp, A. Clore, V. Davis, J. Dickerson, R. Elimimian, S. Esera, T. Estes, J. Farmer, D. Fergerstrom, V. Forester, B. Fruean, R. Funaki, I. Galdeira, G. Graunke, T. Grice-Mullen Hawthorne, CJ Ieru, R. Ilaoa, N. Ingram, J. Jackson, M. Jones, K. Kafentzis, T. Kalilimoku, B. Kaonohi, M. Kelly, D. Keomaka, R. Kia, A. Kiesel-Kauhane LaCount, K. Laeli, F. Lafaele, M. Lane, M. Lau, M. Laumoli, J Leonard, A. Letuli, L. Lewis, G. Linkner, D. Malala, M. Martinez, AJ Mauia, R. McKay, N. Milne, K. Mock, C. Newberry, M. Noa, Ka. Olchovy, P. Paepule, T. Patek, J. Patton, K. Pedersen, E. Peoples, K. Peters, L. Porlas, D. Purcell, A. Purcell, M. Rice, J. Rivers, J. Sample, I. Saole, R. Satele, B. Satele, H. Satele, S. Sauafea, L. Savaiigaea, R. Seti, S. Soares, B. Steinhoff, K. Thomas, D. Tuioti-Mariner Uperesa, D. Veikune, D. Washington, M. Watson, K. Wilson, L. GP/GS 11/12/12 13/4 9/13/13 13/13 1/5/2/13/7 12/11 13/13 13/13 12/11/5/10/11/11/7/9/8 13/5 3/12/11 13/1/2/9/7 12/6 10/13/11/9/4/9/7/13/13 10/13/8 3/13/13 3/13/6 2/13/9/4 11/3 2/9/13/2 12/7 12/2 1/13/13/13 6/4 7/2/13/13 13/8/13/13 6/13/11 13/10 13/7/1 13/13 13/13 11/8/3/11/10/13/2/13/13 13/7/11/1 13/- UA XXX START START ... START START ... ... ... START START START START XXX ... ... XXX ... ... ... START START ... START XXX ... ... START XXX ... XXX XXX ... ... XXX XXX START ... XXX ... START ... XXX ... XXX START XXX ... XXX XXX ... XXX ... XXX START XXX ... ... START XXX XXX START ... START XXX XXX XXX START START XXX ... ... XXX ... XXX ... START XXX ... XXX XXX UNLV XXX START START XXX START START ... XXX ... START ... START START XXX XXX ... XXX XXX XXX XXX START START ... START XXX XXX XXX START START XXX XXX XXX ... ... XXX XXX START ... XXX XXX START XXX XXX ... XXX START XXX XXX XXX START XXX XXX XXX XXX START XXX XXX ... 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XXX XXX SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL 2006 GAME-BY-GAME STARTERS OFFENSE at Alabama UNLV at Boise State Eastern Illinois NEVADA at Fresno State at NMSU IDAHO at Utah State LA TECH SJSU PURDUE OREGON STATE XWR Rivers Mock Rivers Rivers Rivers Rivers Rivers Rivers Rivers Rivers Rivers Mock Rivers HWR Bess Bess Bess Bess Bess Bess Bess Bess Bess Bess Bess Bess Bess DEFENSE at Alabama UNLV at Boise State Eastern Illinois NEVADA at Fresno State at NMSU IDAHO at Utah State LA TECH SJSU PURDUE OREGON STATE END M.Purcell M.Purcell M.Purcell M.Purcell M.Purcell M.Purcell M.Purcell M.Purccell M.Purcell M.Purcell M.Purcell M.Purcell M.Purcell SPECIALISTS at Alabama UNLV at Boise State Eastern Illinois NEVADA at Fresno State at NMSU IDAHO at Utah State LA TECH SJSU PURDUE OREGON STATE PUNT Milne Milne Milne NONE Milne Milne NONE Milne Milne NONE NONE Milne NONE NT Lafaele Lafaele Lafaele Lafaele Lafaele Lafaele Lafaele Lafaele Lafaele Lafaele Lafaele Lafaele Lafaele FG/KO Kelly Kelly Kelly Kelly Kelly Kelly Kelly Kelly Kelly Kelly Kelly Kelly Kelly RT Uperesa Uperesa Uperesa Uperesa Uperesa Uperesa Uperesa Uperesa Uperesa Uperesa Uperesa Uperesa Uperesa RG Estes Estes Estes Estes Estes Estes Estes Estes Estes Estes Estes Estes Estes END A-Francis A-Francis A-Francis A-Francis A-Francis A-Francis A-Francis Watson A-Francis A-Francis A-Francis A-Francis A-Francis PAT Kelly Kelly Kelly Kelly Kelly Kelly Kelly Forester Kelly Forester Forester Forester Forester C S.Satele S.Satele S.Satele S.Satele S.Satele S.Satele S.Satele S.Satele S.Satele S.Satele S.Satele S.Satele S.Satele WILL CJ A-Jones CJ A-Jones CJ A-Jones B.Satele CJ A-Jones Lau Lau Lau Lau Lau Lau Lau Lau LSNAP Ingram Ingram Ingram Ingram Ingram NONE NONE Ingram Ingram NONE Ingram Ingram Ingram LG H.Satele H.Satele H.Satele H.Satele H.Satele H.Satele H.Satele H.Satele H.Satele H.Satele H.Satele H.Satele H.Satele BUCK Elimimian Kalilimoku Kalilimoku Elimimian Elimimian Elimimian Elimimian Elimimian Elimimian Elimimian Elimimian Elimimian Elimimian SSNAP Ingram Ingram Ingram Ingram Ingram Ingram Ingram Ingram Ingram Ingram Ingram Ingram Ingram LT Esera Esera Esera Esera Esera Esera Esera Esera Esera Esera Esera Esera Esera MAC Leonard Leonard Leonard Leonard Leonard Leonard Leonard Leonard Leonard Leonard Leonard Leonard Leonard YWR G-Mullen G-Mullen G-Mullen Dickerson Mauia (RB) Dickerson Dickerson G-Mullen G-Mullen G-Mullen G-Mullen G-Mullen Mauia STUB Kafentzis Kafentzis Kafentzis K.Noa K.Noa Kalilimoku Kalilimoku Kalilimoku Kalilimoku Kafentzis Kafentzis Kafentzis Kafentzis KOR Dickerson/Patton Dickerson/Patton Dickerson/Patton Dickerson/Lane Dickerson/Lane Dickerson/Patton Dickerson/Lane Dickerson/Lane Dickerson/Lane Dickerson/Lane Dickerson/Lane Dickerson/Lane Dickerson/Lane ZWR Dickerson Dickerson Dickerson Sample Sample Sample Sample Sample Sample Sample Sample Sample Sample LCB Martinez Martinez Martinez Hawthorne Hawthorne Hawthorne Lewis Lewis Martinez Lewis Lewis Lewis Lewis PR Hawthorne Newberry Newberry Newberry Newberry Newberry Newberry Newberry Newberry Newberry Newberry Bess Bess QB Brennan Brennan Brennan Brennan Brennan Brennan Brennan Brennan Brennan Brennan Brennan Brennan Brennan FS Peters Peters Peters Peters Peters Peters Peters Peters Peters Peters Peters Peters Peters RB Ilaoa Ilaoa Ilaoa Ilaoa Ilaoa Ilaoa Ilaoa Ilaoa Ilaoa Mauia Ilaoa Ilaoa Dickerson SS Patek Patek Patek Patek Patek Patek Patek Patek Patek Patek Patek Patek Patek RCB Hawthorne Hawthorne Patton Patton Patton Patton Newberry Newberry Newberry Newberry Newberry Newberry Newberry HOLD Milne Milne Milne Funaki Funaki Funaki Funaki Funaki Funaki Funaki Funaki Funaki Funaki 2006 GAME-BY-GAME LEADERS Opponent at Alabama UNLV at Boise State Eastern Illinois NEVADA at Fresno State at NMSU IDAHO at Utah State LA TECH SJSU PURDUE OREGON STATE Passing Brennan (350) Brennan (296) Brennan (388) Brennan (409) Brennan (419) Brennan (409) Brennan (330) Brennan (333) Brennan (413) Brennan (406) Brennan (402) Brennan (434) Brennan (401) Rushing Ilaoa (4-27) Ilaoa (9-104) Ilaoa (12-68) Ilaoa (9-46) Ilaoa (14-151) Brennan (7-43) Ilaoa (18-94) Brennan (63) Ilaoa (55) Brennan (60) Ilaoa (100) Ilaoa (159) Ilaoa (48) Receptions Bess (8) Bess (10) Bess/Rivers (6) Bess (7) Bess (10) Dickerson (10) Dickerson (6) Sample (8) Ilaoa (6) Bess (6) Bess/Ilaoa (6) Ilaoa (7) Bess (10) 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 32 Receiving Yards G-Mullen (109) Bess (124) Bess (104) Sample (122) Bess (139) Dickerson (115) Dickerson (125) Rivers (108) Ilaoa (155) Bess (143) Bess (81) Bess (117) Bess (116) Touchdowns G-Mullen/Mauia (1) Ilaoa (2) Rivers (3) Sample/Ilaoa (2) Sample (2) Ilaoa (3) Dickerson (2) G-Mullen (2) Ilaoa (3) Bess/Mauia (2) Bess/Ilaoa (2) Ilaoa (2) 4 Players (1) Tackles Leonard (11) Kalilimoku (8) Peters (13) Leonard (10) Leonard (10) Elimimian (7) Elimimian (14) Leonard (7) Leonard (11) Leonard (6) Elimimian (12) Elimimian (14) Leonard (10) SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL RECORD ALL GAMES CONFERENCE NON-CONFERENCE DATE Sept. 2 Sept. 16 Sept. 23 Sept. 30 Oct. 7 Oct. 14 Oct. 21 Oct. 28 Nov. 4 Nov. 11 Nov. 18 Nov. 25 Dec. 2 Dec. 24 OVERALL 10-3-0 7-1-0 3-1-0 OPPONENT at Alabama UNLV at Boise State * EASTERN ILLINOIS NEVADA * at Fresno State * at New Mexico State * IDAHO * at Utah State * LOUISIANA TECH * SAN JOSE STATE * PURDUE OREGON STATE ARIZONA STATE (SHB) HOME 7-0-0 4-0-0 3-0-0 W/L L W L W W W W W W W W W L AWAY 3-2-0 3-1-0 0-1-0 SCORE 17-25 42-13 34-41 44-9 41-34 68-37 49-30 68-10 63-10 61-17 54-17 42-35 32-35 NEUTRAL 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 ATTEND 92,138 32,008 30,652 29,358 33,761 39,122 17,318 34,051 10,291 32,083 33,622 47,825 50,000 TEAM STATISTICS HAWAI'I OPPONENTS SCORING ____________________________615 __________________313 Points Per Game ______________________47.3__________________24.1 FIRST DOWNS__________________________352 __________________270 Rushing ____________________________79 __________________97 Passing ____________________________255 __________________149 Penalty ______________________________18 __________________24 RUSHING YARDAGE ____________________1530 ________________1705 Yards gained rushing __________________1737 ________________2035 Yards lost rushing ____________________207 __________________330 Rushing Attempts ____________________271 __________________449 Average Per Rush ______________________5.6 __________________3.8 Average Per Game ____________________117.7 ________________131.2 TDs Rushing __________________________22 __________________12 PASSING YARDAGE______________________5619 ________________3193 Att-Comp-Int ______________________573-411-11 ____________420-231-14 Average Per Pass ______________________9.8 __________________7.6 Average Per Catch ____________________13.7 ________________13.8 Average Per Game ____________________432.2 ________________245.6 TDs Passing __________________________57 __________________27 TOTAL OFFENSE ________________________7149 ________________4898 Total Plays __________________________844 __________________869 Average Per Play ______________________8.5 __________________5.6 Average Per Game ____________________549.9 ________________376.8 KICK RETURNS: #-YARDS ________________43-862 ______________61-1290 PUNT RETURNS: #-YARDS ________________28-219 ________________7-50 INT RETURNS: #-YARDS ________________14-290 ________________11-47 KICK RETURN AVERAGE __________________20.0 ________________21.1 PUNT RETURN AVERAGE __________________7.8 __________________7.1 INT RETURN AVERAGE __________________20.7 __________________4.3 FUMBLES-LOST________________________26-15 ________________25-13 PENALTIES-YARDS ____________________93-826 ______________67-603 Average Per Game ____________________63.5 ________________46.4 PUNTS-YARDS ________________________16-602 ______________56-2304 Average Per Punt______________________37.6__________________41.1 Net punt average ____________________34.5 ________________35.8 TIME OF POSSESSION/GAME ______________ 28:40 ________________ 31:20 3RD-DOWN CONVERSIONS ______________71/123 ______________67/171 3rd-Down Pct ________________________58% ________________39% 4TH-DOWN CONVERSIONS ________________8/20 ________________7/22 4th-Down Pct ________________________40% ________________32% SACKS BY-YARDS ______________________26-166 ______________24-131 MISC YARDS ____________________________0 __________________56 TOUCHDOWNS SCORED __________________84 __________________40 FIELD GOALS-ATTEMPTS ________________11-14 ________________11-13 ON-SIDE KICKS ________________________0-1 __________________1-2 RED-ZONE SCORES __________________71-83 86% ____________34-43 79% RED-ZONE TOUCHDOWNS ______________63-83 76% ____________25-43 58% PAT-ATTEMPTS ______________________70-77 91% ____________34-37 92% ATTENDANCE ________________________292708 ______________189511 Games/Avg Per Game ________________8/36588 ______________5/37902 Neutral Site Games __________________________________________0/0 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE SCORE BY QUARTERS Hawai’i Opponents PASSING Colt Brennan Tyler Graunke Inoke Funaki Kurt Milne TEAM Total Opponents G 1st 137 72 2nd 190 88 3rd 140 69 4th 148 84 13 7 11 9 10 13 13 Effic Cmp-Att-Int 182.80 373-517-11 202.99 32-43-0 139.60 6-12-0 0.00 0-1-0 0.00 0-0-0 183.09 411-573-11 133.41 231-420-14 RUSHING Nate Ilaoa Colt Brennan Reagan Mauia Jason Laumoli Inoke Funaki Tyler Graunke David Farmer Grice-Mullen Ross Dickerson Khevin Peoples Siave Seti TEAM Total Opponents GP 12 13 11 3 11 7 12 9 13 2 3 10 13 13 Att 113 79 29 4 10 9 7 2 4 4 3 7 271 449 Gain Loss Net Avg 905 12 893 7.9 472 121 351 4.4 147 3 144 5.0 34 0 34 8.5 46 12 34 3.4 46 16 30 3.3 32 2 30 4.3 24 0 24 12.0 15 2 13 3.2 14 7 7 1.8 2 0 2 0.7 0 32 -32 -4.6 1737 207 1530 5.6 2035 330 1705 3.8 RECEIVING Davone Bess Nate Ilaoa Jason Rivers Ross Dickerson Ian Sample Grice-Mullen Chad Mock Reagan Mauia Aaron Bain David Farmer Malcolm Lane Michael Washington Dylan Linkner Siave Seti Total Opponents G 13 12 13 13 13 9 13 11 9 12 10 7 2 3 13 13 No. 91 63 58 54 53 38 25 10 7 4 3 3 1 1 411 231 Yds 1155 781 870 726 686 659 363 109 69 12 120 50 15 4 5619 3193 Avg 12.7 12.4 15.0 13.4 12.9 17.3 14.5 10.9 9.9 3.0 40.0 16.7 15.0 4.0 13.7 13.8 Pct Yds 72.1 4990 74.4 501 50.0 128 0.0 0 0.0 0 71.7 5619 55.0 3193 TD Lng Avg/G 53 63 383.8 4 62 71.6 0 58 11.6 0 0 0.0 0 0 0.0 57 63 432.2 27 80 245.6 TD Long Avg/G 13 38 74.4 5 30 27.0 2 22 13.1 0 19 11.3 0 12 3.1 1 24 4.3 1 15 2.5 0 20 2.7 0 9 1.0 0 9 3.5 0 1 0.7 0 0 -3.2 22 38 117.7 12 69 131.2 TD Long Avg/G 14 49 88.8 5 60 65.1 8 62 66.9 7 50 55.8 10 63 52.8 9 60 73.2 3 46 27.9 1 29 9.9 0 26 7.7 0 10 1.0 0 58 12.0 0 23 7.1 0 15 7.5 0 4 1.3 57 63 432.2 27 80 245.6 PUNT RETURNS Myron Newberry Davone Bess C.J. Hawthorne Kenny Patton Total Opponents No. 22 4 1 1 28 7 Yds 130 69 2 18 219 50 Avg 5.9 17.2 2.0 18.0 7.8 7.1 TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 Long 25 35 2 18 35 16 INTERCEPTIONS Leonard Peters Gerard Lewis Myron Newberry Ryan Keomaka Kenny Patton Jacob Patek Adam Leonard C.J. Hawthorne Total Opponents No. 3 3 2 2 1 1 1 1 14 11 Yds 101 33 49 52 19 31 5 0 290 47 Avg 33.7 11.0 24.5 26.0 19.0 31.0 5.0 0.0 20.7 4.3 TD 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 3 0 Long 54 33 49 29 19 31 5 0 54 16 33 OT Total 615 313 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL KICK RETURNS No. Ross Dickerson 23 Malcolm Lane 6 Kenny Patton 5 Victor Vergerstrom 3 Blaze Soares 2 David Veikune 2 Chopp, A. 1 1 Chad Mock Total 43 Opponents 61 FUMBLE RETURNS Adam Leonard Kenny Patton Total Opponents No. 2 1 3 7 Yds 603 87 98 15 18 25 4 12 862 1290 Avg 26.2 14.5 19.6 5.0 9.0 12.5 4.0 12.0 20.0 21.1 Yds 20 0 20 28 Avg 10.0 0.0 6.7 4.0 TD 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 FIELD GOALS Dan Kelly Long 100 22 35 12 10 18 4 12 100 100 FG SEQUENCE ALABAMA UNLV Boise State Eastern Illinois Nevada Fresno State New Mexico State Idaho Utah State Louisiana Tech San Jose State Purdue Oregon State TD Long 1 20 0 0 1 20 0 11 SCORING Nate Ilaoa Davone Bess Dan Kelly Ian Sample Grice-Mullen Ross Dickerson Jason Rivers Colt Brennan Briton Forester Reagan Mauia Chad Mock Leonard Peters Tyler Graunke David Farmer Ryan Keomaka Adam Leonard TEAM C.J. Allen-Jones Kurt Milne Inoke Funaki Total Opponents |----------- PATs -----------| TD FGs Kick Rush Rcv Pass DXP 18 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 14 0-0 0-0 0-0 2 0-0 0 0 11-14 42-45 0-0 0 0-1 0 10 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 9 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0-0 0 8 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 8 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 5 0-0 0-0 0-1 0 3-3 0 0 0-0 28-31 0-0 0 0-0 0 3 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 3 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 0-0 0-1 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 0-0 0-0 0-1 0 0-0 0 0 0-0 0-0 0-1 0 0-0 0 84 11-14 70-77 0-3 3 3-4 0 40 11-13 34-37 1-3 0 0-0 1 TOTAL OFFENSE Colt Brennan Nate Ilaoa Tyler Graunke Inoke Funaki Reagan Mauia Jason Laumoli David Farmer Grice-Mullen Ross Dickerson Khevin Peoples Siave Seti TEAM Total Opponents G Plays 13 596 12 113 7 52 11 22 11 29 3 4 12 7 9 2 13 4 2 4 3 3 10 7 13 844 13 869 PUNTING Kurt Milne Total Opponents KICKOFFS Dan Kelly Kurt Milne Total Opponents No. 16 16 56 Rush 351 893 30 34 144 34 30 24 13 7 2 -32 1530 1705 Yds 602 602 2304 Pass 4990 0 501 128 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5619 3193 No. Yds Avg 104 6422 61.8 40 4 246 61.5 0 108 6668 61.7 40 62 3419 55.1 14 Saf Points 0 108 0 88 0 75 0 60 0 56 0 48 0 48 0 30 0 28 0 18 0 18 0 12 0 6 0 6 0 6 0 6 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 615 1 313 Total Avg/G 5341 410.8 893 74.4 531 75.9 162 14.7 144 13.1 34 11.3 30 2.5 24 2.7 13 1.0 7 3.5 2 0.7 -32 -3.2 7149 549.9 4898 376.8 Avg Long 37.6 52 37.6 52 41.1 57 TB 7 0 7 0 FGM-FGA 11-14 TB 0 0 4 FC 5 5 6 I20 Blkd 3 0 3 0 15 1 OB Retn Net YdLn 1290 862 42.4 36.7 Pct 01-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-99 Lg Blk 78.6 0-0 5-6 4-5 1-1 1-2 52 1 HAWAI'I‘I (42) (35) (35),(25),24 (39),(24) (39),(29) (22),(52) 50,38,(26) OPPONENTS (31),31,(23),(27) (32) (43) (28) (25) (26) (46),33 (30) (37) - Numbers in (parentheses) indicate field goal was made ALL PURPOSE Nate Ilaoa Ross Dickerson Davone Bess Jason Rivers Ian Sample Grice-Mullen Chad Mock Colt Brennan Reagan Mauia Malcolm Lane Myron Newberry Kenny Patton Leonard Peters Aaron Bain Ryan Keomaka Michael Washington David Farmer Inoke Funaki Jason Laumoli Gerard Lewis Jacob Patek Tyler Graunke David Veikune Blaze Soares Victor Vergerstrom Dylan Linkner Khevin Peoples Siave Seti Adam Leonard Chopp, A. C.J. Hawthorne TEAM Total Opponents G 12 13 13 13 13 9 13 13 11 10 12 6 13 9 11 7 12 11 3 13 13 7 13 11 11 2 2 3 13 1 13 10 13 13 Rush 893 13 0 0 0 24 0 351 144 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 30 34 34 0 0 30 0 0 0 0 7 2 0 0 0 -32 1530 1705 Rec 781 726 1155 870 686 659 363 0 109 120 0 0 0 69 0 50 12 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 15 0 4 0 0 0 0 5619 3193 PR 0 0 69 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 130 18 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 219 50 KOR 0 603 0 0 0 0 12 0 0 87 0 98 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 25 18 15 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 862 1290 IR 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 49 19 101 0 52 0 0 0 0 33 31 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 290 47 Tot 1674 1342 1224 870 686 683 375 351 253 207 179 135 101 69 52 50 42 34 34 33 31 30 25 18 15 15 7 6 5 4 2 -32 8520 6285 Avg 139.5 103.2 94.2 66.9 52.8 75.9 28.8 27.0 23.0 20.7 14.9 22.5 7.8 7.7 4.7 7.1 3.5 3.1 11.3 2.5 2.4 4.3 1.9 1.6 1.4 7.5 3.5 2.0 0.4 4.0 0.2 -3.2 655.4 483.5 22 28 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 34 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL DEFENSIVE LEADERS 44 Adam Leonard 41 Solomon Elimimian 42 Leonard Peters 98 Melila Purcell 31 Jacob Patek 91 Ikaika Alama-Francis 43 Brad Kalilimoku 38 Myron Newberry 23 Gerard Lewis 67 Michael Lafaele 26 Micah Lau 24 Kenny Patton 8 Tyson Kafentzis 3A A.J. Martinez 52 Rustin Saole 9 Ryan Keomaka 12 Noa, Ka. 33 C.J. Allen-Jones 10 19 20 53 54 94 30 99 28 18 93 97 92 1A 86 17 59 13 88 46 96 74 50 47 11 48 34 68 1 84 7 4 |-------Tackles-------| GP Solo Ast Total 13 59 49 108 12 45 36 81 13 40 28 68 13 34 20 54 13 32 18 50 12 18 18 36 12 19 15 34 12 21 10 31 13 17 13 30 13 16 13 29 13 13 8 21 6 13 5 18 9 11 7 18 9 10 7 17 13 16 1 17 11 14 2 16 12 9 6 15 13 6 9 15 TFL/Yds 3.5-9 2.0-5 2.0-10 13.5-37 1.0-1 9.0-50 5.5-18 . 0.5-4 5.5-22 1.5-10 . 2.0-3 2.0-9 . 0.5-1 2.5-12 2.0-5 |-Sacks-| |----Pass Def----| No-Yards Int-Yds BrUp 1.0-2 1-5 8 . . 1 . 3-101 7 7.5-29 . 1 1.0-6 1-31 3 3.0-27 . 2 2.0-13 . . . 2-49 2 . 3-33 4 2.0-14 . . . . . . 1-19 3 . . . . . 4 . . . . 2-52 . 1.0-8 . . . . 2 QBH 3 2 1 12 4 14 1 . . 1 . . 3 . . . . . |----Fumbles----| Rcv-Yds FF 4-20 1 1-0 1 . 1 . 4 . 3 2-0 1 . . 1-0 . . . . . 1-0 . 1-0 . . . . . . . . . . . . . Blkd Kick . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Saf . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Timo Paepule C.J. Hawthorne Michael Malala Blaze Soares Amani Purcell David Veikune Dane Porlas Lawrence Wilson Erik Pedersen Guyton Galdeira Keala Watson Renolds Fruean Rocky Savaiigaea Victor Vergerstrom Dan Kelly Desmond Thomas R.J. Kiesel-Kauhane Brashton Satele Chad Mock Victor Clore Fale Laeli Raphael Ieru Laupepa Letuli Joshua Rice Inoke Funaki David Farmer Reagan Mauia Kahai LaCount Grice-Mullen Jason Rivers Davone Bess Nate Ilaoa 13 13 13 11 8 13 13 13 7 11 11 10 8 11 13 13 4 7 13 5 7 3 3 6 11 12 11 9 9 13 13 12 10 12 7 14 6 8 7 4 5 4 3 4 6 2 4 4 2 2 2 2 . . . 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 5 2 7 . 5 2 1 3 2 3 4 3 . 3 . . 1 . . . 2 1 1 . . . . . . . . . 15 14 14 14 11 10 8 7 7 7 7 7 6 5 4 4 3 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1.0-2 . . 3.0-24 1.0-12 3.0-14 . 1.5-1 . . 0.5-1 1.5-4 2.0-2 . . . . . . . . . 0.5-0 1.0-13 . . . . . . . . . . . 2.0-20 1.0-12 2.0-12 . . . . . 1.5-4 . . . . . . . . . . . 1.0-13 . . . . . . . . . 1-0 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 2 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 3 . . . . . 2 1 . . . . . 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-0 . . . . 1-0 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-0 . . . . . 2 1 1 . . . . . . . . 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Total Opponents 13 13 510 515 310 231 820 746 68-269 45.0-180 26-166 24-131 14-290 11-47 41 48 52 12 13-20 16-28 16 15 2 4 1 1 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 35 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL RED ZONE NUMBERS HAWAI’I Inside Opponent Red Zone Date Sept 2 Sep 16 *Sep 23 Sep 30 *Oct 7 *Oct 14 *Oct 21 *Oct 28 *Nov 04 *Nov 11 *Nov 18 Nov 25 Dec 2 Opponent at Alabama UNLV at Boise State EASTERN ILL. NEVADA at Fresno State at NMSU Idaho at Utah State Louisiana Tech San Jose State Purdue Oregon State Totals Score L 17-25 W 42-13 L 34-41 W 44-9 W 41-34 W 68-37 W 49-30 W 68-10 W 63-10 W 61-17 W 54-17 W 42-35 L 32-35 Times In RZ 2 6 5 5 8 7 6 7 6 8 8 6 9 83 Times Scored 1 5 4 5 6 7 4 7 6 8 8 5 5 71 Total Pts 7 35 28 31 34 47 27 48 42 51 47 32 30 459 TDs 1 5 4 4 4 7 4 7 6 7 6 4 4 63 Rush TDs 0 3 0 1 1 3 1 2 2 3 2 2 2 22 Pass FGs TDs Made 1 0 2 0 4 0 3 1 3 2 4 0 3 0 5 0 4 0 4 1 4 2 2 1 2 1 41 8 [------- Failed to score inside RZ -------] FGA Downs Int Fumb Half Game 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 1 1 0 0 0 3 3 1 4 1 0 Times In RZ 5 2 6 3 6 4 4 2 2 2 3 3 1 43 Times Total Scored Pts 4 16 2 13 5 32 1 6 5 34 4 24 3 16 2 10 1 7 1 3 3 17 2 14 1 7 34 199 TDs 1 2 4 1 5 3 2 1 1 0 2 2 1 25 Rush TDs 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 2 0 1 12 Pass FGs TDs Made 0 3 1 0 2 1 0 0 4 0 2 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 2 0 0 0 13 9 [------- Failed to score inside RZ -------] FGA Downs Int Fumb Half Game 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 4 2 1 0 0 71 of 83 (85.5%) OPPONENTS Inside Hawai’i Red Zone Date Sept 2 Sep 16 *Sep 23 Sep 30 *Oct 7 *Oct 14 *Oct 21 *Oct 28 *Nov 04 *Nov 11 *Nov 18 Nov 25 Dec 2 Opponent at ALABAMA UNLV at Boise State Eastern Illinois Nevada at Fresno State at NMSU Idaho at Utah State Louisiana Tech San Jose State Purdue Oregon State Totals Score L 17-25 W 42-13 L 34-41 W 44-9 W 41-34 W 68-37 W 49-30 W 68-10 W 63-10 W 61-17 W 54-17 W 42-35 L 32-35 34 of 43 (79.1%) 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 36 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL HAWAI’I RED ZONE DRIVES Opponent at Alabama at Alabama UNLV UNLV UNLV UNLV UNLV UNLV at Boise St. at Boise St. at Boise St. at Boise St. at Boise St. EIU EIU EIU EIU EIU NEVADA NEVADA NEVADA NEVADA NEVADA NEVADA NEVADA NEVADA at Fresno St. ar Fresno St. at Fresno St. at Fresno St. at Fresno St. at Fresno St. at Fresno St. at NMSU at NMSU at NMSU at NMSU at NMSU at NMSU IDAHO IDAHO IDAHO IDAHO IDAHO IDAHO IDAHO at Utah St. at Utah St. at Utah St. at Utah St. at Utah St. at Utah St. LA TECH LA TECH LA TECH LA TECH LA TECH LA TECH LA TECH LA TECH Started A 18 A 18 U 20 U7 U8 U 18 U 14 U 20 B8 B 11 B 18 B 19 B 20 E 15 E9 E 18 E 20 E 18 N 17 N 17 N 19 N 12 N 11 N 17 N8 N1 F 14 F 15 F 20 F 20 F 20 F 11 F 10 N4 N 16 N 20 N 16 N 15 N 11 I 19 I 16 I 10 I 18 I 17 I 18 I 10 U 13 U 12 U 18 U3 U1 U4 LTU 5 LTU 19 LTU 13 LTU 7 LTU 5 LTU 19 LTU 6 LTU 18 Quarter 3rd 3rd 1st 1st 2nd 2nd 3rd 4th 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 4th 1st 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 1st 1st 2nd 2nd 3rd 3rd 3rd 4th 1st 1st 2nd 2nd 3rd 3rd 4th 1st 2nd 2nd 3rd 4th 4th 1st 2nd 2nd 2nd 3rd 4th 4th 1st 3rd 3rd 3rd 4th 4th 1st 2nd 2nd 2nd 3rd 3rd 3rd 3rd Score 3-22 3-22 0-0 7-0 14-0 21-0 35-0 42-7 0-15 6-24 14-34 21-34 27-41 7-0 14-6 27-9 34-9 41-9 0-0 3-7 17-7 24-14 31-21 34-21 34-21 34-21 0-7 14-7 21-7 28-14 42-23 49-23 62-30 0-0 14-14 21-17 28-24 28-24 49-30 7-0 14-7 10-21 10-28 10-41 10-48 10-55 7-3 28-10 35-10 42-10 49-10 56-10 0-3 9-10 16-10 23-10 26-10 33-10 40-10 47-10 Plays-Yards 2-14 2-18 3-20 1-7 2-8 3-18 2-14 7-19 4-4 1-11 1-18 4-19 3-20 3-16 2-9 1-18 3-20 4-18 1-18 1-17 5-24 5-12 4-8 2-16 4-1 1-6 2-14 2-15 3-25 1-20 1-20 1-2 3-10 1-4 1-16 2-20 6-14 3-25 2-7 3-19 5-16 3-10 2-18 2-17 2-18 2-10 1-13 1-12 1-18 1-3 1-1 1-4 3-5 2-19 1-13 1-7 2-5 1-19 3-6 3-18 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE Result Fumble (Reagan Mauia) Touchdown (Reagan Mauia 16 shovel pass from Colt Brennan) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 7 pass to Ryan Grice-Mullen) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 7 pass to Davone Bess) Touchdown (Nate Ilaoa 8 run) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 1 run) Touchdown (Nate Ilaoa 7 run) Fumble (Tyler Graunke) Bad snap on FG attempt Touchdown (Colt Brennan 11 pass to Jason Rivers) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 18 pass to Davone Bess) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 14 pass to Davone Bess) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 8 pass to Jason Rivers) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 16 pass to Ross Dickerson) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 4 pass to Nate Ilaoa) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 18 pass to Chad Mock) Touchdown (Nate Ilaoa 1 run) Field Goal (Dan Kelly 35) Field Goal (Dan Kelly 35) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 17 pass to Ian Sample) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 9 pass to Davone Bess) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 3 pass to Ross Dickerson) Field Goal (Dan Kelly 25) Fumble (Nate Ilaoa) Blocked Field Goal Touchdown (Colt Brennan 6 run) Touchdown (Nate Ilaoa 1 run) Touchdown (Nate Ilaoa 5 run) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 2 pass to Ian Sample) Touchdown (Nate Ilaoa 20 run) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 20 pass to Davone Bess) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 2 pass to Davone Bess) Touchdown (Tyler Graunke 1 pass to Jason Rivers) Touchdown (Nate Ilaoa 4 run) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 16 pass to Davonme Bess) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 9 pass to Ian Sample) Fumble (Colt Brennan) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 13 pass to Jason Rivers) End of game Touchdown (Colt Brennan 10 pass to Jason Rivers) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 2 pass to Davone Bess) Touchdown (Nate Ilaoa 1 run) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 18 pass to Nate Ilaoa) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 11 pass to Ian Sample) Touchdown (Tyler Graunke 18 pass to Ryan Grice-Mullen) Touchdown (Tyler Graunke 5 run) Touchdown (Colt Brennan to Nate Ilaoa) Touchdown (Colt Brennan to Davone Bess) Touchdown (Colt Brennan to Ryan Grice-Mullen) Touchdown (Nate Ilaoa 3 run) Touchdown (Tyler Graunke to Jason Rivers) Touchdown (David Farmer 4 run) Touchdown (reagam Mauia 1 run) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 18 pass to Chad Mock) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 13 pass to Ross Dickerson) Field Goal (Dan Kelly 24) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 1 run) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 19 pass to Davone Bess) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 3 pass to Ian Sample) Touchdown (Reagan Mauia 3 run) 37 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL Opponent SJSU SJSU SJSU SJSU SJSU SJSU SJSU SJSU PURDUE PURDUE PURDUE PURDUE PURDUE PURDUE OREGON STATE OREGON STATE OREGON STATE OREGON STATE OREGON STATE OREGON STATE OREGON STATE Started SJSU 17 SJSU 16 SJSU 8 SJSU 18 SJSU 15 SJSU 15 SJSU 19 SJSU 19 PU 15 PU 17 PU 16 PU 20 PU 18 PU 10 OSU 20 OSU 13 OSU 12 OSU 20 OSU 14 OSU 9 OSU 15 Quarter 1st 1st 2nd 3rd 3rd 4th 4th 4th 1st 1st 2nd 2nd 4th 4th 1st 2nd 2nd 2nd 3rd 3rd 4th Score 0-0 10-0 13-7 20-10 27-17 34-17 41-17 47-17 0-0 7-0 7-0 14-0 20-21 27-35 0-0 0-7 7-14 14-21 21-21 21-28 24-35 Plays-Yards 2-22 5-12 2-8 4-18 2-15 2-15 1-19 1-19 3-15 4-7 1-16 2-37 2-18 1-5 4-0 3-10 3-12 2-20 1-0 1-26 4-15 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE Result Field Goal (Dan Kelly 39) Field Goal (Dan Kelly 29) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 8 run) Touchdown (Nate Ilaoa 4 run) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 5 pass to Davone Bess) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 9 pass to Davone Bess) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 19 pass to Ryan Grice-Mullen) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 19 pass to Nate Ilaoa) Touchdown (Nate Ilaoa 4 run) Out on downs Touchdown (Nate Ilaoa 16 run) Field Goal (Dan Kelly 22) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 14 pass to Ross Dickerson) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 5 pass to Ryan Grice-Mullen) Missed FG Touchdown (Nate Ilaoa 1 run) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 4 run) Touchdown (Cotl Brennan 11 pass to Davone Bess) INT (Colt Brennan) Field Goal (Dan Kelly 26) Touchdown (Colt Brennan 4 pass to Ryan Grice-Mullen) 38 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL HAWAII Team Game-by-Game Date Sept 2, 2006 Sep 16, 2006 Sep 23, 2006 Sep 30, 2006 Oct 7, 2006 Oct 14, 2006 Oct 21, 2006 Oct 28, 2006 Nov 04, 2006 Nov 11, 2006 Nov 18, 2006 Nov 25, 2006 Dec 2, 2006 Opponent at Alabama UNLV at Boise St. EASTERN ILL. NEVADA at Fresno St. at NMSU IDAHO at Utah St. LA TECH SJSU PURDUE OREGON ST. Totals Opponent |---RUSHING---| |--RECEIVING--| |------PASSING------| No. Yds TD Lg No. Yds TD Lg Cmp-Att-Int Yds TD Lg 15 22 0 18 30 350 2 32 30-44-1 350 2 32 31 214 3 24 33 369 2 32 33-45-2 369 2 32 18 88 0 18 25 388 5 37 25-37-1 388 5 37 17 42 1 19 35 529 5 58 35-51-1 529 5 58 24 160 1 35 36 419 4 63 36-47-0 419 4 63 18 100 3 20 37 470 6 47 37-44-0 470 6 47 33 155 1 12 23 353 5 36 23-34-0 353 5 36 15 78 2 26 40 497 6 62 40-51-0 497 6 62 13 86 2 33 23 486 7 60 23-38-1 486 7 60 12 112 3 30 30 506 5 49 30-44-1 506 5 49 26 151 2 20 29 417 5 37 29-40-1 417 5 37 20 219 2 38 33 434 3 49 33-48-1 434 3 49 29 103 2 20 37 401 2 34 37-50-2 401 2 34 271 1530 22 38 411 5619 57 63 411-573-11 5619 57 63 449 1705 12 69 231 3193 27 80 231-420-14 3193 27 80 |--KICK RET--| No Yds TD Lg 5 143 0 48 3 55 0 35 4 84 0 42 2 31 0 20 3 52 0 20 2 32 0 20 4 158 0 64 3 103 1 100 3 37 0 15 4 56 0 23 2 16 0 9 4 51 0 21 4 44 0 18 43 862 1 100 61 1290 1 100 |--PUNT RET--| No Yds TD Lg 1 2 0 2 1 -4 0 0 2 27 0 15 3 -2 0 0 2 32 0 18 2 -1 0 0 1 3 0 3 2 22 0 15 4 24 0 14 2 28 0 25 4 19 0 8 2 22 0 12 2 47 0 35 28 219 0 35 7 50 0 16 All Purp 517 667 606 614 663 655 669 729 656 784 634 731 595 8520 6285 Games played: 13 Avg per rush: 5.6 Avg per catch: 13.7 Pass efficiency: 183.09 Kick ret avg: 20.0 Punt ret avg: 7.8 All purpose avg/game: 655.4 Total offense avg/gm: 549.9 Date Sept 2, 2006 Sep 16, 2006 Sep 23, 2006 Sep 30, 2006 Oct 7, 2006 Oct 14, 2006 Oct 21, 2006 Oct 28, 2006 Nov 04, 2006 Nov 11, 2006 Nov 18, 2006 Nov 25, 2006 Dec 2, 2006 Opponent at Alabama UNLV at Boise St. EASTERN ILL. NEVADA at Fresno St. at NMSU IDAHO at Utah St. LA TECH SJSU PURDUE OREGON ST. Totals Opponent |---------TACKLES---------| |-SACKS-| |-FUMBLE-| Solo Ast Total TFL-Yds No-Yds FF FR-Yds 30 40 70 5.0-11 1.0-2 1 0-0 41 17 58 9.0-38 3.0-25 0 0-0 29 50 79 4.0-17 1.0-9 1 0-0 45 14 59 6.0-18 1.0-9 0 0-0 44 9 53 2.0-10 1.0-8 2 2-0 40 28 68 6.0-32 1.0-8 2 2-0 30 50 80 8.0-13 4.0-6 2 2-20 46 14 60 3.0-4 0.0-0 1 1-0 42 32 74 4.0-13 1.0-8 3 3-0 58 6 64 9.0-62 5.0-49 0 0-0 39 14 53 10.0-39 5.0-23 3 2-0 44 18 62 1.0-7 1.0-7 0 1-0 22 18 40 1.0-5 1.0-6 1 0-0 510 310 820 68.0-269 25.0-160 16 13-20 515 231 746 45.0-180 24.0-131 15 16-28 Date Sept 2, 2006 Sep 16, 2006 Sep 23, 2006 Sep 30, 2006 Oct 7, 2006 Oct 14, 2006 Oct 21, 2006 Oct 28, 2006 Nov 04, 2006 Nov 11, 2006 Nov 18, 2006 Nov 25, 2006 Dec 2, 2006 Opponent at Alabama UNLV at Boise St. EASTERN ILL. NEVADA at Fresno St. at NMSU IDAHO at Utah St. LA TECH SJSU PURDUE OREGON ST. Totals Opponent |------------------PUNTING------------------| No Yds Avg Long Blkd TB FC 50+ I20 3 106 35.3 50 0 0 1 1 0 3 112 37.3 42 0 0 1 0 0 2 83 41.5 43 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 41 41.0 41 0 0 1 0 1 2 90 45.0 52 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 46 46.0 46 0 0 0 0 0 3 107 35.7 44 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 17 17.0 17 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 16 602 37.6 52 0 0 5 2 3 56 2304 41.1 57 1 4 6 11 15 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 39 Int-Yds 0-0 1-33 1-19 3-14 0-0 1-54 1-0 1-29 1-23 2-82 1-31 2-5 0-0 14-290 11-47 QBH 4 8 0 7 3 0 0 4 1 6 10 4 5 52 12 Pass Blkd |--Kicks--XPTS--| Brk Kick Att-Mad Run Rcv Saf Pts 3 0 2-2 0 0 0 17 8 1 6-6 0 0 0 42 4 0 2-2 0 1 0 34 1 0 6-5 0 0 0 44 3 1 5-5 0 0 0 41 2 0 10-8 0 0 0 68 4 0 6-5 0 1 0 49 4 0 9-8 0 0 0 68 2 0 9-9 0 0 0 63 4 0 8-7 0 0 0 61 2 0 7-6 0 0 0 54 4 0 4-4 0 1 0 42 0 0 3-3 0 0 1 32 41 2 77-70 0 3 1 615 48 4 37-34 1 0 1 313 |--FIELD GOALS--| Att-Made Lg Blkd 1-1 42 0 5 0-0 0 07 0-0 0 05 1-1 35 0 8 3-2 35 1 8 0-0 0 0 11 0-0 0 08 0-0 0 0 11 0-0 0 0 11 2-2 39 0 10 2-2 39 0 10 2-2 52 0 8 3-1 26 0 6 14-11 52 1 108 13-11 46 0 62 |------KICKOFFS------| No Yds Avg TB OB 319 63.8 1 0 422 60.3 0 1 215 43.0 1 1 475 59.4 1 0 518 64.8 2 0 666 60.5 3 2 520 65.0 7 0 700 63.6 3 0 727 66.1 7 0 611 61.1 2 3 643 64.3 6 0 489 61.1 5 0 363 60.5 2 0 6668 61.7 40 7 3419 55.1 14 0 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL OPPONENT Team Game-by-Game Date Sept 2, 2006 Sep 16, 2006 Sep 23, 2006 Sep 30, 2006 Oct 7, 2006 Oct 14, 2006 Oct 21, 2006 Oct 28, 2006 Nov 04, 2006 Nov 11, 2006 Nov 18, 2006 Nov 25, 2006 Dec 2, 2006 Opponent at Alabama UNLV at Boise St. EASTERN ILL. NEVADA at Fresno St. at NMSU IDAHO at Utah St. LA TECH SJSU PURDUE OREGON ST. Opponents HAWAII |---RUSHING---| |--RECEIVING--| |------PASSING------| No. Yds TD Lg No. Yds TD Lg Cmp-Att-Int Yds TD Lg 36 125 1 17 16 253 1 36 16-29-0 253 1 36 28 39 1 12 18 232 1 40 18-47-1 232 1 40 44 242 2 27 17 273 3 53 17-29-1 273 3 53 40 234 1 69 8 57 0 10 8-21-3 57 0 10 25 108 1 18 26 364 4 46 26-36-0 364 4 46 41 183 1 25 18 304 4 75 18-29-1 304 4 75 30 118 1 19 32 330 3 61 32-46-1 330 3 61 31 141 0 15 14 193 1 38 14-37-1 193 1 38 42 137 1 11 17 225 0 39 17-31-1 225 0 39 41 135 0 43 17 225 2 43 17-38-2 225 2 43 38 82 2 18 7 110 0 30 7-17-1 110 0 30 27 90 0 14 30 382 5 37 30-43-2 382 5 37 26 71 1 19 11 245 3 80 11-17-0 245 3 80 449 1705 12 69 231 3193 27 80 231-420-14 3193 27 80 271 1530 22 38 411 5619 57 63 411-573-11 5619 57 63 |--KICK RET--| No Yds TD Lg 4 87 0 31 6 145 0 30 3 60 0 21 7 74 0 26 6 142 0 29 6 127 0 24 2 26 0 20 8 168 0 27 4 85 0 24 5 85 0 22 4 89 0 24 2 39 0 25 4 163 1 100 61 1290 1 100 43 862 1 100 |--PUNT RET--| No Yds TD Lg 0 0 0 0 1 13 0 13 1 16 0 16 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 16 0 11 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 5 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 50 0 16 28 219 0 35 All Purp 465 432 607 375 614 630 474 502 458 453 283 513 479 6285 8520 Games played: 13 Avg per rush: 3.8 Avg per catch: 13.8 Pass efficiency: 133.41 Kick ret avg: 21.1 Punt ret avg: 7.1 All purpose avg/game: 483.5 Total offense avg/gm: 376.8 Date Sept 2, 2006 Sep 16, 2006 Sep 23, 2006 Sep 30, 2006 Oct 7, 2006 Oct 14, 2006 Oct 21, 2006 Oct 28, 2006 Nov 04, 2006 Nov 11, 2006 Nov 18, 2006 Nov 25, 2006 Dec 2, 2006 Opponent at Alabama UNLV at Boise St. EASTERN ILL. NEVADA at Fresno St. at NMSU IDAHO at Utah St. LA TECH SJSU PURDUE OREGON ST. Opponents HAWAII |---------TACKLES---------| |-SACKS-| |-FUMBLE-| Solo Ast Total TFL-Yds No-Yds FF FR-Yds 37 20 57 5.0-25 3.0-21 3 2-0 53 8 61 4.0-16 2.0-10 0 2-5 25 32 57 3.0-5 2.0-4 2 2-0 49 4 53 3.0-20 2.0-19 1 1-0 52 2 54 5.0-15 3.0-12 2 2-0 40 18 58 4.0-9 1.0-3 1 0-0 21 62 83 2.0-2 1.0-1 0 1-0 44 2 46 5.0-18 1.0-1 1 1-10 19 24 43 2.0-3 0.0-0 0 0-0 32 12 44 0.0-0 0.0-0 1 1-11 48 9 57 2.0-14 2.0-14 0 2-0 42 12 54 1.0-2 1.0-2 2 2-2 53 26 79 9.0-51 6.0-44 2 0-0 515 231 746 45.0-180 24.0-131 15 16-28 510 310 820 68.0-269 25.0-160 16 13-20 Date Sept 2, 2006 Sep 16, 2006 Sep 23, 2006 Sep 30, 2006 Oct 7, 2006 Oct 14, 2006 Oct 21, 2006 Oct 28, 2006 Nov 04, 2006 Nov 11, 2006 Nov 18, 2006 Nov 25, 2006 Dec 2, 2006 Opponent at Alabama UNLV at Boise St. EASTERN ILL. NEVADA at Fresno St. at NMSU IDAHO at Utah St. LA TECH SJSU PURDUE OREGON ST. Opponents HAWAII |------------------PUNTING------------------| No Yds Avg Long Blkd TB FC 50+ I20 4 159 39.8 55 0 0 1 1 2 5 192 38.4 49 0 0 0 0 4 4 180 45.0 53 0 0 1 2 0 5 193 38.6 48 0 0 0 0 0 3 93 31.0 43 1 0 0 0 0 3 116 38.7 44 0 0 1 0 1 1 56 56.0 56 0 0 0 1 1 7 247 35.3 46 0 1 0 0 1 6 248 41.3 47 0 0 2 0 1 5 210 42.0 56 0 1 0 1 1 6 254 42.3 56 0 1 0 1 2 4 198 49.5 53 0 1 1 3 1 3 158 52.7 57 0 0 0 2 1 56 2304 41.1 57 1 4 6 11 15 16 602 37.6 52 0 0 5 2 3 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 40 Int-Yds 1-0 2-3 1-16 1-10 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-6 1-8 1-2 1-2 2-0 11-47 14-290 QBH 4 1 0 1 2 0 0 0 1 0 1 2 0 12 52 Pass Blkd |--Kicks--XPTS--| Brk Kick Att-Mad Run Rcv Saf Pts 1 0 2-2 0 0 1 25 2 0 2-1 0 0 0 13 6 0 4-4 1 0 0 41 5 1 1-0 0 0 0 9 3 1 5-4 0 0 0 34 4 2 4-4 0 0 0 37 6 0 3-3 0 0 0 30 4 0 1-1 0 0 0 10 5 0 1-1 0 0 0 10 3 0 2-2 0 0 0 17 2 0 2-2 0 0 0 17 6 0 5-5 0 0 0 35 1 0 5-5 0 0 0 35 48 4 37-34 1 0 1 313 41 2 77-70 0 3 1 615 |--FIELD GOALS--| Att-Made Lg Blkd 4-3 31 0 6 0-0 0 03 1-1 32 0 7 1-1 43 0 3 0-0 0 06 1-1 28 0 6 1-1 25 0 4 1-1 26 0 3 2-1 46 0 3 1-1 30 0 4 1-1 37 0 4 0-0 0 06 0-0 0 07 13-11 46 0 62 14-11 52 1 108 |------KICKOFFS------| No Yds Avg TB OB 371 61.8 1 0 113 37.7 0 0 428 61.1 3 0 150 50.0 0 0 344 57.3 1 0 381 63.5 4 0 259 64.8 0 0 132 44.0 0 0 149 49.7 0 0 210 52.5 0 0 160 40.0 0 0 353 58.8 2 0 369 52.7 3 0 3419 55.1 14 0 6668 61.7 40 7 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL HAWAI’I INDIVIDUAL GAME HIGHS OPPONENT INDIVIDUAL GAME HIGHS Rushes 18 Nate Ilaoa at New Mexico State (Oct 21, 2006) Yards Rushing 159 Nate Ilaoa vs Purdue (Nov 25, 2006) TD Rushes 3 Nate Ilaoa at Fresno State (Oct 14, 2006) Long Rush 38 Nate Ilaoa vs Purdue (Nov 25, 2006) Pass attempts 50 Colt Brennan vs Oregon State (Dec 2, 2006) Pass completions 37 Colt Brennan vs Oregon State (Dec 2, 2006) Yards Passing 434 Colt Brennan vs Purdue (Nov 25, 2006) TD Passes 6 Colt Brennan at Utah State (Nov 04, 2006) Long Pass 63 Colt Brennan vs Nevada (Oct 7, 2006) Receptions 10 Davone Bess vs UNLV (Sep 16, 2006) Davone Bess vs Nevada (Oct 7, 2006) Ross Dickerson at Fresno State (Oct 14, 2006) Davone Bess vs Oregon State (Dec 2, 2006) Yards Receiving 155 Nate Ilaoa at Utah State (Nov 04, 2006) TD Receptions 3 Jason Rivers at Boise State (Sep 23, 2006) Long Reception 63 Ian Sample vs Nevada (Oct 7, 2006) Field Goals 2 Dan Kelly vs Nevada (Oct 7, 2006) Dan Kelly vs Louisiana Tech (Nov 11, 2006) Dan Kelly vs San Jose State (Nov 18, 2006) Dan Kelly vs Purdue (Nov 25, 2006) Long Field Goal 52 Dan Kelly vs Purdue (Nov 25, 2006) Punts 3 Kurt Milne at ALABAMA (Sept 2, 2006) Kurt Milne vs UNLV (Sep 16, 2006) Kurt Milne at Utah State (Nov 04, 2006) Punting Avg 46.0 Kurt Milne vs Idaho (Oct 28, 2006) Long Punt 52 Kurt Milne at Fresno State (Oct 14, 2006) Long Punt Return 35 Davone Bess vs Oregon State (Dec 2, 2006) Long Kickoff Return100 Ross Dickerson vs Idaho (Oct 28, 2006) Tackles 14 Solomon Elimimian at New Mexico State (Oct 21, 2006) Solomon Elimimian vs Purdue (Nov 25, 2006) Sacks 3.0 Melila Purcell at New Mexico State (Oct 21, 2006) Tackles For Loss 4.0 Melila Purcell at New Mexico State (Oct 21, 2006) Interceptions 1 By 8 players Rushes Yards Rushing TD Rushes HAWAI’I TEAM GAME HIGHS Rushes Yards Rushing Yards Per Rush TD Rushes Pass attempts Pass completions Yards Passing Yards Per Pass TD Passes Total Plays Total Offense Yards Per Play Points Sacks By First Downs Penalties Penalty Yards Turnovers Interceptions By 33 219 10.9 3 51 40 529 12.8 7 79 653 11.2 68 5 33 12 140 4 3 at New Mexico State (Oct 21, 2006) vs Purdue (Nov 25, 2006) vs Purdue (Nov 25, 2006) vs UNLV (Sep 16, 2006) at Fresno State (Oct 14, 2006) vs Louisiana Tech (Nov 11, 2006) vs Eastern Illinois (Sep 30, 2006) vs Idaho (Oct 28, 2006) vs Idaho (Oct 28, 2006) vs Eastern Illinois (Sep 30, 2006) at Utah State (Nov 04, 2006) at Utah State (Nov 04, 2006) vs Oregon State (Dec 2, 2006) vs Purdue (Nov 25, 2006) at Utah State (Nov 04, 2006) at Fresno State (Oct 14, 2006) vs Idaho (Oct 28, 2006) vs Louisiana Tech (Nov 11, 2006) vs San Jose State (Nov 18, 2006) vs Purdue (Nov 25, 2006) vs Nevada (Oct 7, 2006) vs San Jose State (Nov 18, 2006) vs San Jose State (Nov 18, 2006) vs UNLV (Sep 16, 2006) vs Eastern Illinois (Sep 30, 2006) 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 29 Ian Johnson, at Boise State (Sep 23, 2006) 178 Ian Johnson, at Boise State (Sep 23, 2006) 2 Ian Johnson, at Boise State (Sep 23, 2006) James T Callier, vs San Jose State (Nov 18, 2006) Long Rush 69 WEBB, Vincent, vs Eastern Illinois (Sep 30, 2006) Pass attempts 45 Holbrook, Chase, at New Mexico State (Oct 21, 2006) Pass completions 31 Holbrook, Chase, at New Mexico State (Oct 21, 2006) Yards Passing 357 Painter,Curtis, vs Purdue (Nov 25, 2006) TD Passes 4 Painter,Curtis, vs Purdue (Nov 25, 2006) Long Pass 80 Moore, Matt, vs Oregon State (Dec 2, 2006) Receptions 8 Darlington, J., vs Nevada (Oct 7, 2006) Bryant,Dorien, vs Purdue (Nov 25, 2006) Yards Receiving 160 Williams, Chris, at New Mexico State (Oct 21, 2006) TD Receptions 2 Derek Schouman, at Boise State (Sep 23, 2006) Pudewell, A., vs Nevada (Oct 7, 2006) Pascoe, Bear, at Fresno State (Oct 14, 2006) Williams, Chris, at New Mexico State (Oct 21, 2006) Long Reception 80 Field Goals 3 Long Field Goal 46 Punts 7 Punting Avg 56.0 Long Punt 57 Long Punt Return 16 Long Kickoff Return100 Tackles 12 Keller,Dustin, vs Purdue (Nov 25, 2006) Stroughter, S., vs Oregon State (Dec 2, 2006) Leigh Tiffin, at ALABAMA (Sept 2, 2006) Shields, Bryan, at Utah State (Nov 04, 2006) Conley, T.J., vs Idaho (Oct 28, 2006) Kaufman, Jared, at New Mexico State (Oct 21, 2006) Loomis, Kyle, vs Oregon State (Dec 2, 2006) Quinton Jones, at Boise State (Sep 23, 2006) Lawson, Gerard, vs Oregon State (Dec 2, 2006) Korey Hall, at Boise State (Sep 23, 2006) Nuttal, Nathan, at New Mexico State (Oct 21, 2006) Sacks Tackles For Loss Interceptions Doggett, D., vs Oregon State (Dec 2, 2006) 3.0 Smith, Dorian, vs Oregon State (Dec 2, 2006) 3.0 Smith, Dorian, vs Oregon State (Dec 2, 2006) 2 Piscitelli, S., vs Oregon State (Dec 2, 2006) OPPONENT TEAM GAME HIGHS Rushes Yards Rushing Yards Per Rush TD Rushes 44 242 5.8 2 Pass attempts Pass completions Yards Passing Yards Per Pass TD Passes Total Plays Total Offense Yards Per Play Points Sacks By First Downs 47 32 382 14.4 5 79 515 7.7 41 6 28 Penalties Penalty Yards Turnovers Interceptions By 11 93 4 2 41 at Boise State (Sep 23, 2006) at Boise State (Sep 23, 2006) vs Eastern Illinois (Sep 30, 2006) at Boise State (Sep 23, 2006) vs San Jose State (Nov 18, 2006) vs UNLV (Sep 16, 2006) at New Mexico State (Oct 21, 2006) vs Purdue (Nov 25, 2006) vs Oregon State (Dec 2, 2006) vs Purdue (Nov 25, 2006) vs Louisiana Tech (Nov 11, 2006) at Boise State (Sep 23, 2006) vs Nevada (Oct 7, 2006) at Boise State (Sep 23, 2006) vs Oregon State (Dec 2, 2006) at New Mexico State (Oct 21, 2006) vs Purdue (Nov 25, 2006) at Utah State (Nov 04, 2006) at Utah State (Nov 04, 2006) at Utah State (Nov 04, 2006) vs UNLV (Sep 16, 2006) vs Oregon State (Dec 2, 2006) SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL WARRIOR BOWL GAMES 2004 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL DECEMBER 24, 2004 ALOHA STADIUM (39,754) 2003 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL DECEMBER 24, 2004 ALOHA STADIUM (29,005) UAB __________________40 HAWAI’I ______________59 HOUSTON ______________48 HAWAI’I ______________54 HONOLULU-- Hawai’i outscored Alabama-Birmingham (UAB), 31-14, in the second half to win the Sheraton Hawai’i Bowl, 59-40, Dec. 24 at Aloha Stadium. A crowd of 39,754 filled the stands, the largest in Sheraton Hawai’i Bowl history. Quarterback Timmy Chang threw for 405 (31-of-46) yards and four touchdowns, and rushed for another, while slot receiver Chad Owens caught eight passes for 114 yards and two touchdowns, and scored another on a 59-yard punt return, to put an exclamation point on both storied careers. The two were named the game’s co-MVPs. The teams traded scoring and UAB’s Nick Hayes added a 36-yard field goal to make it 28-26 at halftime. The Warriors took control in the second half. Chang threw a 15-yard strike to Owens to put Hawai’i ahead, 35-26. The pass put Chang over the 17,000-yard mark as college football’s career passing leader. Four minutes later, Owens returned a punt for a 59-yard score down the near sideline to put the Warriors up, 42-26. Justin Ayat added a 43-yard field goal, but Hackney managed an 80yard drive and scored on a 4-yard touchdown rush to bring the score to 45-33, heading into the fourth quarter. Chang helped put the game out of reach, putting together a 15-play, 85-yard drive, capped by a 4-yard touchdown scramble with 9:05 left to play. Hackney hit Lance Rhodes for a 17-yard touchdown to cut the Warrior lead to 12 with 2:05 left in the game, but Britton Komine returned the onside kick 42 yards to the house to end all hopes for the Blazers. HONOLULU-- An all-world performance by quarterback Timmy Chang and a defense that came up with timely big plays and three overtimes amounted to a 54-48 Hawai’i win over Houston in front of 29,005 in the Sheraton Hawai’i Bowl on Dec. 25, 2003, at Aloha Stadium. Chang came off the bench to throw for 475 yards and five touchdowns on 26-of-42 passing, and Kelvin Millhouse Jr. snagged two interceptions, one that led to the go-ahead touchdown, to help Hawai’i win its second bowl game in three tries under head coach June Jones. Chang completed passes to eight different receivers, most notably to senior Jeremiah Cockheran, who finished with five catches for a gamehigh 162 yards, and true freshman Jason Rivers, who had a career night with seven catches for 143 yards and three TDs. Houston jumped out to a quick 10-0 lead when quarterback Kevin Kolb drove the Cougars 73 yards on eight plays, capped by a 34-yard touchdown pass to Chad McCullar. Less than three minutes later, a 60-yard punt return by McCullar led to a 21-yard field goal by Dustin Bell. Kolb finished 19-of-34 for 332 yards and two TDs. Hawai’i managed a 19-yard field goal by Nolan Miranda and Chang needed one play to tie it up. Chang, who came off the bench for starter Jason Whieldon on UH’s third possession, found Clifton Herbert wide open across the middle for a 48-yard touchdown strike to tie the game at 10. Houston took a 20-13 lead at the break, but the Warrior defense and Chang came out of the locker room ready to play. The defense forced two punts and two interceptions, while Chang connected on 8-of-12 for 191 yards and two scores to take the lead, 27-20, at the end of the third. Houston scored 14 points in the fourth, with the tying TD on an 81yard pass from Kolb to Vincent Marshall with 22 seconds left in regulation to send the game into overtime. The teams matched touchdowns in two overtimes and Michael Brewster scored the game-winner on an 8-yard run to leave it up to the Warrior defense, which held Houston to four-and-out on the final stand. 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 42 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL WARRIOR BOWL GAMES 2002 CONAGRA FOODS HAWAI’I BOWL DECEMBER 25, 2002 ALOHA STADIUM (35,513) 1999 JEEP O’AHU BOWL DECEMBER 25, 1999 ALOHA STADIUM (40,974) TULANE ______________36 HAWAI’I ______________28 HAWAI’I ______________23 OREGON STATE __________17 HONOLULU-- The University of Hawai’i won the pre-game entertainment contest with a savvy “Haka,” but fell short against the Green Wave that tore into Honolulu to defeat the Warriors, 36-28, in the ConAgra Foods Hawai’i Bowl at Aloha Stadium. Tulane (8-5) gained 429 total yards and sacked Warrior quarterbacks eight times to win the program’s fourth bowl game. But it was the Tulane special teams that sparked a 30-point second half to overcome a 14-6 halftime deficit. Hawai’i took its first drive of the game 64 yards on seven plays, capped by a one-yard run by Thero Mitchell, to take a 7-0 lead and struck again when senior reserve running back Josh Galeai ran around the left side for a two-yard touchdown to put the Warriors up, 14-0. The Green Wave settled for two field goals, 22- and 37-yards respectively, by Seth Marler to get on the board before the end of the first half. Tulane came out of the locker room like a team on a mission behind big returns by Lynaris Elpheage, who cut the lead to two with a 60-yard punt return for a touchdown early in the third quarter. Elpheage set up Tulane’s go-ahead score with a 56-yard punt return. Six plays later, Tulane quarterback J.P. Losman took it in from one yard out to give Tulane its first lead of the game, 20-14, with 6:17 left in the third quarter. Tulane added to the lead after Shawn Withy-Allen fumbled in UH territory. One play later, Mewelde Moore rumbled 25 yards for a touchdown and Tulane had a 26-14 lead. Hawai’i got the ball back just before the end of the third quarter after blocking a field goal attempt and turned it into a touchdown. Withy-Allen, facing fourth-and-one, tossed a 57-yard strike to Justin Colbert, who turned and dashed untouched to the “house” to bring the Warriors within five at 26-21. Tulane answered with a 10-play, 80-yard drive that took 4:32 off the fourth-quarter clock. Withy-Allen hit Colbert on a crossing pattern for a 31-yard score to put the Warriors within reach, but a safety by the Green Wave ended all hopes of a second bowl victory for Warrior head coach June Jones. Colbert caught nine passes for 158 yards and two touchdowns in his last game as a Warrior. Withy-Allen completed 18-of-31 passes for 239 yards and two touchdowns. HONOLULU-- It was a fairy-tale ending for a fairy-tale season. Hawai’i capped its worst-to-first season with a 23-17 Christmas Day win over Oregon State in the Jeep Oahu Bowl before a crowd of 40,974 at Aloha Stadium. The Warriors, a year removed from a winless season, notched their ninth win against four losses and gave UH fans a holiday gift not soon to be forgotten. Senior quarterback Dan Robinson connected with Channon Harris for two scoring strikes and the Warrior defense recorded six sacks to help lead the school to a victory in its first bowl game in seven years. Things did not start well for UH. OSU running back Ken Simonton busted loose for a 30-yard gain on the Beaver’s first play from scrimmage and then capped a 10-play, 79-yard drive with a 1-yard touchdown to give the Beavers an early 7-0 lead. Simonton gained 58 yards in the first quarter alone, while the UH offense was stagnant with just one first down. The Warriors got their first break of the game early in the second quarter when senior defensive lineman Tony Tuioti recovered an OSU fumble deep in Beaver territory. The turnover was converted into a 26-yard field goal by Eric Hannum to cut the lead to 7-3. UH took a 10-7 lead at the 6:05 mark in the second quarter when Harris finished an 80-yard drive with a 9-yard touchdown catch. Nearly half of the yards in the drive were aided by OSU penalties. For the game, the Beavers were hit for 14 penalties worth 138 yards. OSU also failed to capitalize on numerous first-half scoring opportunities. A UH fumble and failed onside kick twice gave the Beavers excellent field position. However, Ryan Cecsca missed field goal attempts of 42 and 31 yards, while UH’s Sean Butts blocked a third attempt. The freshman place-kicker, however, hit a 37-yarder as the half ended to knot the score, 10-10. Hawai’i took the lead for good when Robinson found a wide-open Harris for a 30-yard touchdown with 6:30 left in the third quarter. A 23yard field goal by Hannum four minutes later gave UH a 20-10 lead. UH sealed the game in the fourth quarter with its defense and the tough performance of Oahu Bowl MVP Avion Weaver. The junior running back finished the game with 150 total yards of offense, including 85 on the ground. The Beavers (7-5) outgained the Warriors, 438-349, including 159 yards rushing by Simonton. However, the UH defense held the OSU offense scoreless for nearly the entire second half. A 13-yard run by Simonton cut the lead to 23-17 with 1:31 left, but the game was finally decided when the Beavers were unable to recover the ensuing onside kick. 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 43 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL WARRIOR BOWL GAMES 1992 THRIFTY CAR RENTAL HOLIDAY BOWL DECEMBER 30, 1992 JACK MURPHY STADIUM (44,457) 1989 JEEP EAGLE ALOHA BOWL DECEMBER 25, 1989 ALOHA STADIUM (50,000) HAWAI’I ______________27 ILLINOIS ______________17 MICHIGAN STATE ________33 HAWAI’I ______________13 SAN DIEGO, Calif.-- The Rainbows made their first appearance in a U.S. mainland bowl game a successful one, defeating Illinois, 27-17, at Jack Murphy Stadium in San Diego, Calif. After spotting the Illini the lead twice, 7-0 and 10-7, Hawai’i put together 20 second-half points to complete its most successful season ever with an 11-2 mark. And when the final polls came out several days later, the Rainbows were ranked 20th in the nation, the first time Hawai’i was listed in the final ratings. With Illinois holding a 7-0 lead at the end of the first quarter, Travis Sims capped a 64-yard drive by going over from the 6-yard line to tie the score. Illinois came back on the next drive and Chris Richardson kicked a 19-yard field goal to make the score 10-7 at halftime. The Rainbows went back to basics in the second half, sticking to their triple option which quarterback Michael Carter ran like a magician. Hawai’i scored 20 unanswered points before Illinois got back on the scoreboard. The Rainbows took the second-half kickoff and marched 80 yards in 13 plays with Sims going up the middle from the one to put Hawai’i ahead for good. Jason Elam’s point-after-touchdown made it 14-10. After forcing the Illini to punt on the next series, Hawai’i marched 62 yards in 16 plays with Elam kicking a 45-yard field goal to make it 17-10. Illinois took the kickoff on its own 9 and eight plays later, gave up the ball with the Rainbows recovering a muffed backward pass on the Illinois 21. Two plays later, the Rainbows tried a fumble-rooskie, but were called for an illegal procedure as the officials were not informed about the trick play. Elam kicked a 37-yard field goal to put Hawai’i up, 20-10. Illinois tried to play catch up, but Hawai’i’s Zac Odom intercepted a Jason Verdusco pass and ran it back to his own 24. From there, Hawai’i needed only six plays to score, with Carter hitting Darrick Branch for a 53-yard touchdown pass. Elam’s PAT made it 27-10 with 7:11 left. After the Illini scored with 4:42 remaining, Carter ran the offense to perfection as the Rainbows ran out the clock at the Illinois 23. Carter was selected the Outstanding Offensive Player of the Game with 105 yards rushing and 115 yards passing. Junior Tagoai was voted the game’s Outstanding Defensive Player. HONOLULU-- Playing on its home field of Aloha Stadium, the University of Hawai’i football team was the visitor in the Jeep Eagle Aloha Bowl VIII. The Rainbows wore their white road uniforms for the first time at home. The Aloha Bowl was the third time in the 1989 football season that the Rainbows lost in white, as Michigan State took advantage of numerous Hawai’i turnovers to win 33-13. It was Hawai’i’s first appearance in an NCAA-sanctioned post season bowl game and if stage fright had anything to do with it, it may explain why the Rainbows were guilty of eight turnovers. Within the first 15 minutes of the game, the Rainbows had already committed four turnovers, one of which led to Blake Ezor’s three-yard TD run for MSU. That score was set up by defensive end Matt Vanderbeek’s recovery of a bad pitch by UH quarterback Garrett Gabriel on the MSU 35. Ezor carried seven of nine plays with the payoff a three-yard run. The fourth turnover, a pass interception near the end of the opening quarter, resulted in Ezor taking it over from the 2 on the first play of the second quarter. This capped a 48-yard, seven-play drive with Ezor carrying five times. An interception of a Gabriel pass by Carlos Jenkins led to a 30-yard field goal by John Langeloh. Langeloh added another field goal late in the half after a fumble recovery, giving the Spartans a 19-0 lead at intermission. Hawai’i tried to make a game of it in the second half with Gabriel hitting Chris Roscoe for an 11-yard touchdown to cut the lead to 19-6. The Spartans then made their fourth interception of the game and drove 57 yards with Hyland Hickson gaining the final yard. On the following series, Gabriel hit Dane McArthur with a 23-yard scoring toss only to see the Spartans come right back with a 48-yard drive. Ezor scored his third touchdown of the game. Ezor finished the game with three touchdowns, tying an Eagle Aloha Bowl record. He carried the ball 41 times for 179 yards, both new marks. He was selected by the media as the MVP for Michigan State. The 33 points scored by the Spartans were the most scored by a team since the bowl began in 1982. Gabriel also made the record books, although not the way he wanted. He was intercepted three times and contributed to the record-breaking four interceptions of Hawai’i passes made by MSU. 2006 WARRIOR FOOTBALL VS. ARIZONA STATE 44 SHERATON HAWAI’I BOWL DEFENSIVE BACK GRATEFUL FOR ANOTHER SEASON AT UH By Stephen Tsai July 23, 2006 To be sure, University of Hawai’i football player Leonard Peters is trying to do the right thing. Peters, a free safety, has never smoked or touched a drop of alcohol in his 24 years. What’s more, he performs hours of community service every week without being begged; forgives the punk who stole his prized truck; spends his free time playing with his nephews and nieces; attends church for four hours every Sunday, and won’t date during football season. “Believe me,” UH assistant strength coach Mel deLaura said, “Leonard Peters is an unbelievably awesome guy.” Rich Miano, who coaches the UH defensive backs, said: “I could coach another 50 years and never have another player like him both on and off the field.” Last year, teammates voted Peters as defensive team captain. Defensive coordinator Jerry Glanville, who refers to players by their position and jersey number, said, proudly: “I know his name. ‘Leonard Peters’ is the only Samoan name I know.” Peters, in fact, is a mix of Fijian and Samoan. His paternal grandfather changed his surname from “Matavau” to his stepfather’s “Peters.” For now, Peters is making a name as the Warriors’ defensive leader. Last month, Peters was awarded a medical exemption that will allow him to play as a sixth-year senior this season. Peters’ range, Glanville said, will enable the UH cornerbacks to play more bump-and-run, man-to-man coverages. Peters, a graduate of Kahuku High School, has bulked up to 215 pounds, adding 15 pounds to his 6-foot-2 frame, while maintaining his quickness and improving his strength. He has run 40 yards in 4.47 seconds, and bench pressed more than 400 pounds. In the flat-bench discipline, with 135-pound dumbbells in each hand, he performed eight repetitions. Peters works out at UH every weekday, leaving his home in La’ie before the dawn’s early light. He lifts and runs in the morning, then runs again in the afternoon. He took took a breather to answer questions from The Advertiser. On coaching at youth camps every week: “I always try to give back to the community and help the younger kids. I talk to them about staying away from drugs, and to listen to their coaches and parents. I want them to reach for their dreams, not let anyone tell them they can’t do it just because they’re from Hawai’i. It always helps to hear it from an older person who’s in college, living the dream they want to get to. Sometimes it’s better to hear from the student-athlete.” On just saying “no” to drugs and alcohol: “It’s a choice I made. Growing up, I didn’t want to get caught up in that kind of stuff. I’m not saying I’m perfect. I just don’t want to get involved in that kind of stuff. There are always temptations. People will always put pressure on you to do the wrong thing. I’ve been raised by good parents and in a good community. I’ve learned not to do those kinds of things.” On his early childhood: “I was born in American Samoa. I remember a lot about it. I moved to Hawai’i when I was 8 years old. Samoa is beautiful. It’s just like La’ie. It’s country. The community is small. Everybody knows everybody there. They say you’re not raised by just your family, you’re raised by the village. “In the community I lived in, you don’t have to worry about people stealing. Whatever anybody has, he shares with others. You do things because you want to do them. You don’t worry about getting paid back, because everybody helps everybody.” On moving to Hawai’i: “I didn’t know anything about Hawai’i. I knew it was a beautiful place. That was about it. “My parents wanted to move to make a better life for me and my siblings. They figured by moving to Hawai’i there would be better opportunities. “It was my first time on an airplane. It was pretty scary. I closed the windows. It was a long trip.” On breaking the language barrier: “English is my second language. It was tough to learn. I don’t think I really prepared for it. Any kid who comes from (other) Pacific Islands, you’re put in what they call a step class. They teach you English and stuff like that, break it down for you a little bit slower. It was pretty hard. I used to always think in Samoan first, then try to translate it in my head. It was even harder for me in Hawai’i. It wasn’t only English (spoken) where I lived. It was pidgin. You’re trying to learn English and pidgin at the same time. You’re trying to learn two languages instead of one. “I learned English by watching TV, and listening and watching other people talk. I CLIPPINGS 1 looked at their lips to see how they would make the different sounds. I would watch anything on TV. After a year or two, I started to pick it up. It’s equal to me now.” On adjusting to Hawai’i: “I remember when I moved here, I looked forward to recess, because that would be a time to make friends. I would race everybody on the field. Knowing I was a little faster, everybody would cheer for me and want to be my friend. “I was (in a class) with the other Polynesian kids who came from Tonga, Tahiti. They were straight off the boat, as they would say. You could still smell the fish. We clicked. It was like us aliens coming to another place. We grew to be good friends.” On the Golden Arches: “We didn’t have McDonald’s in Samoa. Going to McDonald’s was like a field trip for us. Anytime we ate at McDonald’s we were always happy. Like they say, we were like a kid in the candy shop.” On his true valentine: “My first love was Polynesian dancing. I was about 12 when I first started dancing. There was an audition at the Polynesian Cultural Center. My mom was working there at the time as a secretary. She took us, and we auditioned. I didn’t know much dancing, but I was good at following instructions. “That was my first love. I love to go out there. I love the beat of the drums. When I hear the beat of the drums and the songs and what they represent, I get goosebumps. I just love it. “I also do the fire-knife dance. You have to get used to the heat. That’s the main thing, and getting burned. The first time I got burned, it really hurt. But I went back because I just love it. It’s like in football. You get hit, but you go back again and again because you love it so much. I love performing just as much as I love football. The secret (to fire-knife dancing) is to spin it fast. Keep spinning it. If it’s going fast, you don’t feel it. If you stop it from spinning, you can really feel the heat. You get battle scars. It’s like a sport. You get scars from playing football. You get scars from playing soccer. Everybody gets scars from fire-knife dancing.” On playing football: “I was playing soccer at first. Then I heard about Pop Warner football. I had to beg my parents to let me play. They didn’t want me to get hurt. You know how parents want to protect their kids. At the same time, I was working (as a dancer at the Polynesian Cultural Center). I had to beg them. I would ask them every night. Finally, they gave in, and it was all great.” On receiving only one scholarship offer, from UH, as a Kahuku senior: “It didn’t matter that I wasn’t recruited by a big Mainland school. I wanted to stay home. I would have picked UH anyway.” On taking a semester’s break before enrolling at UH: “I made the Polynesian Cultural Center’s promotion team. You get to travel the world to get people to come to Hawai’i. I went to Taiwan, Japan, Poland, Alaska. I was really lucky. How many people can say they’ve been to all of those places? I was working (as an entertainer), but it was a job I loved. “Poland was beautiful. We were treated like celebrities up there. They never saw people dance with fire before. It’s funny with dancing. You can connect with people, even if you don’t speak the same language.” On joining the Warriors: “I was lucky because I’ve always had great coaches, especially Rich Miano. I didn’t know at first who Rich Miano was. I went and did some research and found out he played in the NFL for 11 years. I was excited about that. Then I learned my high school DB coach actually played with Rich Miano at UH. I’ve learned so much from coach Miano. He not only can coach me, he can show me what to do. Not a lot of kids get that. A lot of coaches draw things on the board. I’ve been fortunate to have coaches who can show me how to do drills. If I’m doing something wrong, they’ll show me how to do it the right way instead of writing it on the board. They always talk about chalkboard coaching. I’m lucky to get on-thefield coaching. Coach Miano is in great shape. He works every day. He has love for the local kids. He went to Kaiser (High School). He knows what it’s all about. Sometimes he’ll show us tapes from when he was in college, and we’ll rag on him. But he was such a physical specimen. You can see it now. He’s like 40 something years old, but he can play.” On his numerous injuries: “I don’t know what it is. I just play the game. I’ve had (injuries to the) spleen, shoulders, knees, ankles, arms. Everything. I’ve been lucky. I only had one surgery, to my (left) shoulder. The rest I could recover on my own. “When I injured my spleen (in 2003), I didn’t need surgery. I ripped my spleen. It was like a freak accident. It was in training camp. One of my teammates accidentally hit me with his elbow on my side. I thought I just lost my wind. I sat out a play, and went back in to finish practice. I went to take a shower, and then I started bleeding. I checked with the trainer. I went to the hospital. They took a CAT scan, and sure enough, I was bleeding inside. “With the (left) shoulder (in 2004), I played through the whole season. I couldn’t even comb my hair (with the left hand). It got to the point where I was walking around school, and the shoulder would pop out (of the socket) on me. I would shrug my shoulder, and it would go back in. I thought, ‘It’s just a shoulder.’ The doctors told me, ‘You’re going to have to have surgery.’ I told them to put the brace on it, and I’ll have surgery after the season. It was really hard. I remember I hurt it in the USC (road) game. We stayed up on the Mainland to play UNLV. I had to get special shoulder pads to hold my arm close to my body. Underneath that, I had a brace that would tie up. I couldn’t even raise my arm. I thought I’d just play through it. I was fortunate I could finish the season. I figured if I didn’t hurt my team, I would play through it.” On why he won’t change his aggressive style of play: “I play the game knowing that at any snap or any time, you can get hurt. I think that’s why I’ve gotten hurt so much. I play as hard as I can. If I get hurt, I get hurt. I always want to play football. I’ll play football until my legs fall off. If the doctors told me, ‘If you take one more hit, you’ll get paralyzed,’ I’ll play until that day comes. I love the game so much.” On receiving his medical exemption, allowing him to play this season: “I was happy about that. A lot of people were telling me, ‘The team needs you.’ I don’t think it was that way. I needed the team. I’m happy I can suit up one more year. A lot of people don’t get cleared. I’m very grateful.” On forgiveness: “I had a truck I loved. I dropped it. I had the rims. I changed the lines. I changed everything on the truck. It was a fast truck. Everybody knew my truck. It was different from any other truck on the road. One night, I was sleeping, and I was sleeping right in the garage. The truck was right outside. I didn’t hear it start up. My mom woke me up, and said, ‘Who took the truck?’ I was like, ‘No, I’ve got the keys right here.’ I went outside and it wasn’t there. A police officer came over and you could hear (on the scanner) another police officer following the truck. You could hear him on the radio saying, ‘OK, turn down so-and-so street,’ and ‘He’s going down the Pali,’ and ‘He’s busting a U-turn, and is going up the Pali.’ It was silent for a while, and then you hear, ‘I lost him.’ I’m like, ‘What? You lost him?’ I figured if that person was so desperate to steal my truck, he probably needed it more than I did. I know he knows who I am, because my license is in the truck. I never saw the truck again. They either chopped it up or sent it to the Mainland. I don’t see it on the island.” On living in La’ie during the school year: “I take turns driving (with teammates Tala Esera and Inoke Funaki). If you come and live in La’ie, even for one day, you’ll know why I make that drive. It’s such a peaceful place. And I’d rather sleep in my own bed. Even if I have to get up at 4 o’clock in the morning and drive down every day, I’ll sleep in my bed. A home cooked meal after you come home from practice? You can’t beat that. I’m not a freshCLIPPINGS 2 man anymore. That dorm life, with all of that noise? I’d rather wake up (and) listen to roosters crow in the morning than hear the mopeds and the shuttles going back and forth. It’s a great drive. It’s not like you don’t have anything to look at. There are beautiful beaches. The sun rises while you’re driving. It’s like a movie. “But the gas? Oh, my gosh. They should make a special price for people who have to drive in from my side of the island. It’s the cost of living, like everything else here. Milk’s expensive. Food’s expensive. I pay $80 to fill up my truck. I come to school. I do the errands I need to do. By the time I get home, it’s at halfway already. About every other day I have to fill it up. All of my dance money is going to gas. But that’s OK. I’ll pay for the gas if it means I can live in La’ie.” On his golden rule: “When I come from practice during the season, we’re not to talk about football. When I’m home, with my family, I want to spend time with them. I’m sure it’s the same for any other person who works in America. When they come home, they don’t want to talk about work. It’s the same for me. My family always wants to ask questions, like, ‘Who’s hurt?’ I don’t want to talk about it. I leave football at UH. I want to play with my nieces or nephews and enjoy my time at home.” On dating: “No girlfriend. This is my last year. I want to focus on school and football. It’s difficult. Living in Hawai’i, there are beautiful ladies everywhere. I don’t want to be detoured. My mom always says I don’t need a girlfriend because I have three sisters and a mom, and that’s enough girls in my life.” ALAMA-FRANCIS BORN FOR FOOTBALL Despite finding the sport late, the son of a former Packer is gaining notice nationally By Dave Reardon July 23, 2006 When Ikaika Alama-Francis was a little boy, he never bragged about being the son of an NFL player. First, it’s not in his nature to do so. Plus, it would have been difficult, considering he didn’t know anything about Joe Francis’ gridiron history. “My dad’s a quiet person. I had no idea until I was playing Pop Warner and I started hearing stories,” Alama-Francis said. “When I got into basketball at Kalaheo (High), I learned more about it. I heard all the stories about what a tremendous athlete he was. Some from my mom and many other people around. Everyone except him. He’s always been a humble guy, very quiet.” Before his career was shortened by injuries, Joe Francis was a backup quarterback for the Green Bay Packers during their glory years of the late 1950s and early 1960s, during the era when Vince Lombardi and Bart Starr led them to wins in the first two Super Bowls. Francis returned to Hawaii, where he was the longtime football coach and a P.E. teacher at Pearl City High, retiring five years ago. He also coached at Pac-Five, running innovative offenses at both programs. When he was a youngster, Alama-Francis spent his time on video games and cartoons, so his father’s football-playing past never came up. “He was in his own world,” said Francis, who also starred at Kamehameha and Oregon State. “I never told him about it, he never heard about it. I never saw any reason to bring it up because he wasn’t interested in football. “Later, my friends would talk, and that kind of opened up his eyes. I think he was around 11 years old. Then he started to play Pop Warner (football) at Pearl City, and he had some success. They needed someone to pass the ball, so they put him at quarterback. It kind of piqued his interest.” But not that much. By the time AlamaFrancis got to Kalaheo High, he was a basketball player first and a volleyball player second. Football? He played it on a computer screen, if at all. That didn’t stop University of Hawaii coach June Jones from offering him a scholarship anyway, based on his potential. After a stellar high school basketball career, the 6-foot-5 Alama-Francis walked on to the UH basketball team. He played as a freshman forward in 2002-03, getting mostly mop-up minutes at the end of blowouts. That spring, Alama-Francis showed up for spring football practice. “He came home one day and said, “I’m going to try football,’” his father said. “I said, ‘Go ahead.’ He said, ‘I already did.’” Francis said he had some doubts at first that his 220-pound son could grow into an effective college football player. “When I watched him play basketball I didn’t think he was overly physical, a skinny kid,” Francis said. “I figured football? He’s got to be a little more physical than what he showed in basketball. “Then I watched him on the scout team, and I saw the kid had the motor going. Sometimes he was pretty decent.” Alama-Francis increased his bulk (by some 70 pounds) and his strength, and soaked up enough knowledge to become a starter at defensive end last year in UH’s 3-4 scheme. “I think I have the tools to be a good defensive end,” Alama-Francis said. “I think I’ve just got to keep getting better technique, and get a little more physical. If I can do those things I can be better. “I just try to play the hardest I can every play and hope for the best. I try to stay under control and read the offense.” When the Warriors start their season Sept.. 2 at Alabama, Alama-Francis will be UH’s leading returnee in sacks, with five last year. He is on the watch list for the Ted Hendricks Award, given annually to the nation’s best defensive end. “Jerry (defensive coordinator Glanville) and I both said last year we didn’t have anyone as good as him in the NFL,” Jones said. “I think he’s a first-day draft pick.” Defensive line coach Jeff Reinebold said he’d never seen another end with “the combination of speed, size, flexibility and tenacity” in 14 seasons of college and pro coaching. “It’s even more incredible when you break it down by the number of snaps he played going into last season -- less than 50 snaps,” Reinebold said. “That is amazing that a kid with that little experience could accelerate to being mentioned among the best at his position. Jones and strength and conditioning coach Mel deLaura said Alama-Francis is among the hardest weight room workers on the team. He’s up to 290 pounds. “He has an unquenchable thirst for work,” Reinebold said. “And he learned from his father to respect the game and to play hard. If anybody should take credit for his development, it has to be dad Joe. Joe really lit a fire in him early in his life, not about football, but doing the right thing and being the right kind CLIPPINGS 3 of guy.” Jones chose Alama-Francis to represent the Warriors at this week’s Western Athletic Conference Media Day in Boise. His intriguing story and potential and personable demeanor should make him a popular interview subject. “I really think the kid can sell ice cubes to Eskimos. He has me buffaloed sometimes,” Francis said of his son. “But everything he has he’s earned. I don’t know how far he’ll go, but I wish him all the luck. He came from a tomato can, and he’s working toward a consommé.” One of Francis’ best friends from the Packers glory days is Jerry Kramer, who lives near Boise. Alama-Francis regrets that he won’t have time to meet up with the Hall of Famer on this quick trip. “My dad’s told me a lot about Jerry Kramer and his other buddies from Green Bay ... only since I started playing football,” Alama-Francis said. IT’S SHAPING UP TO BE A GOOD SEASON AT UH By Stephen Tsai August 5, 2006 With 82 of 104 players completing a series of 220-yard sprints, it was the highest success rate (79 percent) during Mel deLaura’s six years as summer conditioning coordinator. After breezing through his six 220-yard sprints, Colt Brennan showed his arm is in good shape, too. The success of Mel deLaura’s School of Hard Knocks could be measured in the low dropout rate. DeLaura, who oversees the summer conditioning program for University of Hawai’i football players, measures his students’ accomplishments with the “220s” — a rite-ofWarrior discipline in which each player must complete 10 sprints of 220 yards. The 220s are always conducted on the first practice of training camp, and time limits and rest breaks are set according to a player’s position. As a bonus, deLaura allowed 38 players who participated in every summer workout to run only six 220-yard sprints. DeLaura said 82 of 104 Warriors completed the discipline. Offensive lineman Larry Sauafea did not run because of an ankle injury. The success rate of 79 percent is the highest during deLaura’s six years as summer coordinator. “They did an awesome job,” deLaura said. UH head coach June Jones said: “They worked hard all summer, and they obviously reported to camp in shape, even the guys who were on the Mainland. They handled their 220s pretty good.” DeLaura said the four quarterbacks, 17 of 18 receivers and all but two defensive backs completed their required 220s. Kicker Daniel Kelly and punter Kurt Milne breezed through their 220s. Quarterback Colt Brennan took off his cleats and ran in socks. Strong safety Brad Kalilimoku ran in bare feet, then practiced that way, too. Running back Nate Ilaoa, who had perfect summer attendance, easily completed his six sprints. “I feel good,” said Ilaoa, who failed to make his minimum sprints last year. “The hardest part of camp is the 220s. We got that out of the way. It’s now just football.” Jones said: “Nate had a good summer.” Jones also was pleased with the improved condition of several players who spent the summer on the Mainland. Adam Leonard, who is projected to start at middle linebacker, spent the summer at his family home in Seattle, reshaping his body. Two years ago, as a high school senior, Leonard underwent two knee surgeries. He played in eight games as a UH freshman last year, but was admittedly out of shape. “I came in (last year) at 237, (but) it was a lot of bad weight,” Leonard said. “I cut down to about 225 (in the spring), then I put the good weight back on (this summer).” He said he weighs 235 pounds. Tyson Kafentzis, who is listed No. 1 at left outside linebacker, gained 22 pounds, and now weighs 230. Ilaoa compared Kafentzis to a former AllAmerican and first-round NFL draft choice. “I thought he was A.J. Hawk when he showed up,” Ilaoa sid. Kafentzis said: “I had to go home (to Washington) for the summer because I can’t afford to live here, being a walk-on and all. I went home, and mom fed me. I’m really working hard.” Kafentzis said he worked a construction job during the day, then trained in the late afternoon and evening. “You have to do what you have to do,” he said. “I love being here. I wouldn’t change it. If I have to be a walk-on for five years (to play here) ... that’s what I’ve got to do. I don’t want to be (a walk-on), but I love playing here. There are a lot of guys (on scholarship) who aren’t going to be playing. I’m a walk-on, and I’m playing.” As for being listed as a starter, Kafentzis said: “You can lose your job in one day. I know that.” CLIPPINGS 4 SPIRITUAL BELIEFS, FAMILY TIES GUIDE WARRIOR LINEBACKER By Stephen Tsai August 6, 2006 Each day, Solomon Elimimian kneels in prayer. He prays for the good health and safety of his parents, who live in Los Angeles’ most hard-scrabbled area, South Central. He prays in thankfulness for his life’s blessing — his University of Hawai’i football scholarship, his free tuition, his chance for a good life. Most of all, he said, “I ask God to show me the right path, to use me to be the best person I can be, to better the world. That’s my No. 1 goal: To better the world. I want to do something positive with my life, and maybe that will inspire someone. I want someone to say, ‘If he can do it, why can’t I?’ That’s what I pray for. Every day.” Elimimian already accomplished much last season, his first year at UH. By the third game of his college career, weeks before he took his first mid-term exam, Elimimian was a starting inside linebacker and the director of the Warriors’ defense. Overcoming homesickness and a bad diet, he finished as the Warriors’ second-leading tackler as a freshman in 2005 while maintaining a B average. For that, he thanks God. “Our family is really Christian-based,” said Elimimian, whose siblings have the Biblical names of Abraham, Jacob, Elizabeth and Isaac. “We have a strong faith. Without God, nothing is possible. With God, everything is possible. “For me, I’m blessed to have the opportunities I have. I get to come to Hawai’i to play football. This is a great place to play. It’s all about taking advantage of opportunities. I’m a very blessed person.” UH coach June Jones praised Elimimian, saying, “Solomon played like an NFL veteran. For a freshman to come in and take control of a defense, to make the calls and adjustments and play the game the way he played as a freshman, he’s got a really bright three years ahead of him.” UH opened training camp Thursday, but Elimimian managed to take time to answer questions from The Advertiser. On his Nigerian birthplace: “I came to America when I was 1. I’ve never been back to Nigeria. My parents have been back. I haven’t. It seems whenever they go, it’s during school or football season. I plan to go (next) year. I have a lot of family still living in Nigeria.” “When we first came to America, we lived in San Luis Obispo (Calif.), maybe around nine, 10 years. I remember a lot about that. It was really cool. It was a nice neighborhood. I guess that’s where my family really bonded.” On moving to South Central: “We moved to L.A. because it was a big opportunity for my family. But it was a change. It was really tough. “A lot of people in SoCal would know (the area). It’s called ‘The Jungles.’ It’s government housing and stuff. There was a lot of gang violence. It was really hard to be accepted by the kids. Everything you were taught was challenged by the kids. You were doing things a certain way, and the kids were doing the opposite. “There were a lot of temptations to join the gangs. The part we were living in was real heavy on gangs. In middle school there were a lot of gang-bangers. Having a strong family, I knew I could never go that route. I had my brothers in college. My dad was a professor with a PhD in English. My mom got a degree in college. I couldn’t go that route. I was never in a gang, but I hung out with a lot of guys who were in gangs. “Being an athlete, I had a pass, I guess. I never messed with that stuff. “A lot of people think gang members are heartless. They’re human beings who don’t have a lot of opportunities. There were cool people. They let me do my football thing and not interfere with that.” On his parents: “It was hard growing up in L.A. with Nigerian parents. They were overprotective and strict. No matter how old you get, it seems it was always their way. I didn’t really understand that when I was little. Now I understand that’s how the culture is. I respect it a lot. It’s always strict, but it worked. “My friends used to ask why I couldn’t spend a night, why I couldn’t go out, stuff like that. I felt bad. Every kid wants to be accepted. Having Nigerian culture, it was difficult in that aspect. The freedom wasn’t really there. The curfew was when it got dark, you had to be in the house. I never really spent time in my friends’ house. Even when I go back to L.A., my parents don’t really like me to go out. It’s really dangerous in L.A. “As I look at it now, it was great. Not many of my friends are in college. My parents taught us well.” CLIPPINGS 5 On his brother, former UH cornerback Abraham Elimimian: “My brother was a big inspiration to me. Growing up, I always wanted to be like my brother Abe. When Abe was playing basketball, I was playing basketball. When Abe dropped basketball and started playing football, that’s when I stopped playing basketball and started playing football. I didn’t play football until my ninth grade year. It was natural, I guess. My brother is the reason I played football.” On turning down other schools to sign with UH: “After my (recruiting) trip, I kept thinking about signing, but I didn’t really want to follow my brother’s path. I wanted to make my own path. The more I thought about it, I realized I can make my own path even if I went to Hawai’i. “I think I made the best choice. The (UH) coaches are cool. They teach you how to play. They inspire. (Linebacker) coach Cal (Lee) is a great guy. He always has time for us. That’s what I like about coach Cal. “Hawai’i is the best place for me. I wouldn’t change anything. A lot of schools wouldn’t give a freshman a chance to play. The coach told me they would give me a chance. All I had to do was show them what I’ve got. They were honest with me.” On his first start, replacing Ikaika Curnan, who was a senior: “I really look up to Ikaika Curnan. He was hurt all last year. If he were healthy, I wouldn’t have started. He didn’t have a grudge against me. He was a hero, a real inspiration. How can a man be so humble? He was the man when my brother played here. I looked up to Ikaika Curnan. I was surprised at how he embraced me, how he tried to help me a lot. He could have been bitter, and that’s understandable. A lot of guys get bitter when they’re not playing. I feel he was an inspiration to me. I had his support. He couldn’t really play 100 percent. That’s when (defensive coordinator Jerry) Glanville told me, ‘You’re going to start this week.’ I was really nervous, but excited to play. “The most nervous I ever got was the (season-opening) USC game. I’m from L.A., and everybody back home was like, ‘I’m going to have to watch you.’ But I did pretty good. That boosted my confidence.” On being asked to call the defensive plays as a freshman: “It was real tough. When things go wrong, and the line can’t hear you calling the plays, you get blamed for it. It’s your responsibility to make sure everyone knows what you’re doing. You have to call the audibles. You have to grasp the whole concept almost as much as the defensive coordinator. I guess you’re the general on the field. “I was really worried about how the (older) players would receive me. A lot of guys don’t respect you. That’s the honest truth. You’re a freshman. You haven’t done anything to help the program. They don’t know you. Everybody is looking at you. You hear stuff. ‘Solomon this.’ It’s tough, but you respect it. They’re the seniors. You’re a freshman. You have to earn your way. You have to earn respect. It’s really hard to trust a freshman calling plays. “But the environment I grew up in Crenshaw (High School), the coaches really got us prepared to accept challenges. They’re yelling in your face. There’s a lot of pressure.” On his first year at UH: “My freshman year was mind boggling. It was the hardest year of my life. The coaches take in mind you’re a freshman, but it was either right or wrong. You don’t do things right, you’re not going to play. “Even though people were saying I had a good freshman year, I didn’t feel I had a good year, not by my standards. Being away from Los Angeles, it was really hard. I was homesick. It was tough. But I feel the fact I was playing helped me through it. It kept me focused on things, not going out to clubs. I feel if I redshirted (as a freshman), I would have been miserable. It would have been hard to be so far from my family and not playing. “The hardest thing about being a freshman is learning to take care of your responsibilities. I’ve got to be honest with you. I don’t really like school, but I did pretty well. What helped me through was football. In order for me to be successful in football, I have to go to school. There are a lot of guys who aren’t here because of school. It’s not that hard. You have to go to class. Study hall is long. But in the end, it pays off. It’s mandatory, so you might as well go in there and do the work. The biggest thing about school is being focused.” On the difference between Hawai’i and Los Angeles: “Hawai’i is a big melting pot. There are so many different cultures. In South Central, it’s a different way of people thinking. There’s less violence (here). It’s real easy. It’s not about material things. It’s not how you dress or how much jewelry you have on. Out here, it’s more free. You wear sandals wherever you go. I like it. You don’t have to worry about materialistic stuff. “I feel, in my heart, L.A. will always be home. I feel I need that tough environment to bring out the best in me. When things are tough, as the saying goes, people get better. Los Angeles is a tough place to live in. But if you can get out, you’re most likely to be successful. “As a matter of fact, two weeks ago, I got a phone call that my best friend’s cousin got shot. He’s still in a coma. My ninth grade year until now, I’d say over 15 people I knew per- sonally are dead through gang violence or stupid things. It makes me angry that people can’t see there’s more to life than gang-banging, and that they don’t value human life. “In a way, it’s understandable. I don’t agree with what they do, but it’s understandable when you have parents who gang-bang. They have no role models. For me, it was different. I had my brothers and my parents. Some kids don’t have role models. The rap artists are talking about killing and drinking. And the parents are gang-banging. It’s wrong, but it’s understandable. It’s what you know. It’s so hard to change how you think, especially when everyone around you is thinking one way.” On his offseason conditioning program: “I felt like last year I was in the worst shape I’ve ever been in. I got to 235 (pounds) at one point. It was bad weight. I felt really bloated. I was eating like I never ate before. I was eating everything. I had to understand you can’t eat everything. You have to eat how your body wants you to eat. “I’m at a good weight now. I worked hard during the summer. I’m at 226. That’s a good weight. It’s all about if you can play, if you can run, especially with the defense we play. “I was up in Seattle for eight weeks this summer, working out with Adam (Leonard, UH’s other starting inside linebacker). Adam’s place was surprising. The family eats a lot, eats really good. My family eats good, too, but not like Adam’s family. I thought the reason they were cooking so much was because of me. I told Adam, ‘Your parents don’t have to cook that much because of me.’ He said, ‘No, we eat like this all of the time.’ It was great. By the time I left I was really comfortable. “Adam is the closest friend I have on the team. We’re competitive. He brings out the best in me, and I bring out the best in him. Training with Adam is the best for me. He has a goal, which is similar to mine, which is to be the best linebacker.” On his off-field interests: “I’m not a real outgoing person. A lot of my teammates said I was a hermit because I never really went out. That’s fine with me. I like to relax, hang out with my friends, play some dominos. Dominos is really competitive. It’s strategic. If you don’t have the hand that you want, you have to be more strategic. You need a poker face. You can’t have people read you. You can’t let them know what you’re thinking or what you’re trying to do. That’s easy for me. Everybody says I never smile. It’s just me. It’s not that I don’t like to smile, but that’s how I am. What you see is what you get, I guess.” CLIPPINGS 6 RESPECT WORKS BOTH WAYS FOR UH CENTER By Stephen Tsai August 13, 2006 For Fa’alata Satele, every day is Father’s Day. “I don’t know where I would be without my dad,” said Samson Satele, the University of Hawai’i football team’s starting center and undisputed leader. Fa’alata introduced his son to football and good manners. Fa’alata calls every guy by the same first name — “Mister.” “He taught me to be respectful of other people,” Samson recalled. “When I was in high school, I never respected anybody. A father is going to discipline you if you’re not being respectful. I got tired of being disciplined. I learned my lesson, and now I show respect to everyone.” Fa’alata has opened his home to all of Samson’s cousins on the team — running back Nate Ilaoa, offensive linemen Larry Sauafea, Raphael Ieru and Hercules Satele, defensive end Melila Purcell III and outside linebackers Amani Purcell and Brashton Satele. “All Samoans are related,” Samson said, smiling. On the real Father’s Day, Fa’alata receives the same gift. “I give him a big hug,” Samson said. “He loves it. He knows there’s a lot of love between us. He’ll always love me until the day he dies, and I’ll always love him until the day I die. My whole life, he helped me make the right decisions.” Samson has missed the past three days of practice because of a sore right Achilles tendon. That allowed him to sit down with The Advertiser and discuss his full house, the baldheaded coach who broke his heart, and why somebody named Samson should never cut his hair. On his first name: “My dad told me the story that when he was a junior in high school, he had a dream where he named his son ‘Samson.’ He wrote ‘Samson’ on his Bible. When I was born, in ‘84, he named me Samson. Whatever child came out, he was going to name the baby ‘Samson.’ I’m glad it was me and not my sister.” On living at his paternal grandparents’ home in Kalihi this summer: “My grandma and grandpa always had so much love. She welcomes anybody. It’s a pretty big house — big enough to hold my cousins. It holds 15 of us. I was dorming the last four years, but I’ll be staying there this fall. Plus, it’s closer than when I was living on the Windward side. Driving in from the Windward side takes, like, an hour, with all of the traffic. It’s only 10 minutes from Kalihi to school.” On his introduction to football: “Football is the first sport I ever watched on TV. I fell in love with it. I loved the contact. I was looking up to people who played football. I always wanted to be one of those guys. Hopefully, I can be somebody’s idol. “I played for the first time when I was 6. I was too heavy, but they let me play, anyway. I had to lose weight to play. “My idol was (offensive lineman) Larry Allen, because I liked the Dallas Cowboys. I always watched them pull (the guards). He was big, but he could get very low. When he made contact, it was over.” On becoming an offensive lineman: “I started playing d-end. I moved to linebacker. One day, my dad sat me down, and he told me, ‘To get to the next level, you have to play offensive line.’ I was in the ninth grade. I listened to him, and look what happened.” On growing up in Hawai’i: “We moved all over. I’ve been to 11 different schools. We’ve been moving back and forth, going from Kane’ohe to Kalihi, Kane’ohe to Kailua, Kahalu’u, Kaimuki. Every ‘K’ out there. I had a choice to go to Kahuku, Kailua or Kamehameha (for high school). I went to Kailua.” On his next move: “My mom just got granted (Hawaiian Homestead) land in Waimanalo. My (maternal) grandma was on the waiting list until the day she died, but she never got it. She put my mom on the list. “I wasn’t there when my mom was granted the land. My sister called me. She was there, and she was all happy. My mother was happy. There were 1,000 people there, and only 100 got called. “My mom said because (my grandma) is buried in Hilo, she wants all of us to go to Hilo and thank her for everything she’s done. Hopefully, we’ll name the house after her.” On being recruited by Brigham Young, which is administered by the Mormon church: “I’m Mormon, and proud to be Mormon. (BYU coaches) recruited me hard, because they knew I was Mormon and part of the LDS church. But I knew I wanted to stay in Hawai’i. “The day before UH beat BYU, 72-45 (in 2001), I verbally committed to UH. The (BYU) coaches were down here. They wanted CLIPPINGS 7 to have dinner. I told them I chose Hawai’i. I didn’t want anyone else on my back, and I always wanted to go to UH.” On his relationship with 5foot-6 Mike Cavanaugh, who was coaching UH’s offensive linemen at the time: “It wasn’t that hard of a decision (to pick UH). Coach Cav was recruiting me since I was a junior. I had trust in him, coming out of high school. He taught me a lot of things. “Everybody was like a son to Cav. Every O-lineman, no matter who you were. You could be a nobody coming to Hawai’i, and coach Cav will make you into somebody. “The first time I saw him, he was a cool guy. It was like, ‘We want you,’ and all of that. I didn’t look at him as being a tough guy until we went onto the field. Then it was, ‘There went that little guy.’ “When I stepped on that field for the first time, I heard him yelling, swearing. He got me moving just yelling and swearing. I thank him for that. I like it when coaches yell — well, not every time — but when they’re on you, they’re coaching you. When coaches are not talking to me, something’s wrong. That’s the way I look at it. “I could talk to him about anything. Whatever I say to him, stays with me, him and the four walls. He kept it like that. We all had trust in him. He used to eat dinner with us on Thursdays, just to get the O-line together as a unit, just to make us comfortable with him. That was a good thing.” On Cavanaugh’s resignation in February 2005 to coach at Oregon State: “It was hard, but he made sure he called all of us before he announced the decision. Family comes first. You’ve got to take care of your family before you take care of others. He was taking care of his family. He made a good choice. We can’t act like we died. Life goes on. We have to pick it up. “But I was hurt. I thought he would leave after my class (graduated). I guess he had other plans. He stayed here and coached me for three years. I learned a lot from him. I wanted him to stay longer, so I could learn more. “After he left, I didn’t talk to him for a long time. I was kind of mad at him. I was sad, but more mad.” On making up with Cavanaugh: “He came back that summer (in 2005) to visit. I saw him, and he was the same guy, just yelling and more yelling.” On adjusting to life without Cavanaugh: “At first it was hard, because you didn’t know what to expect. We had a good leader in (center) Derek Fa’avi. He told us to respect whoever was going to coach us. In the back of our minds, you hear Cav’s voice telling you what you did wrong. When Cav left, Derek took over as the leader of the pack. I thank Derek for that. He kept my head in there. He kept everybody’s head in there. Derek was like a step-dad. He was funny. He knew when to work. Derek was open to everybody. He talked to anybody. He would be your friend if you were alone. He was a great leader and set good examples for us.” On establishing his role as a leader last week by scolding teammates for breaking a team rule: “When I heard guys weren’t disciplined and guys weren’t respecting coaches, somebody had to step up. “It’s not my team. It’s everybody’s team. If you disrespect the coach, he’s not going to coach you. My dad always said, ‘Never show respect to anybody who doesn’t show respect.’ I was looking around to see if somebody would step up, but nobody did. I told myself I wasn’t going to be that vocal person. But if I have to do it, I’ll do it. “A couple of guys came up to me after practice and said, ‘Good speech. We never knew you had that in you.’ I always had it in me. My dad always told me I’m a leader. But I wanted to be a leader by example, not by yelling.” On Dennis McKnight, who will help Wes Suan coach the offensive line this season: “He’s like a bigger version of Cav. You can’t get away with anything because he’s always watching the films. He’s learning, too, while he’s coaching. He’s watching every little detail, from your footwork to your hands and head. He knows what to do and what not to do at a certain time or play. He’s very strict on technique. If you’re bad on technique, he’s going to correct you, no matter if it takes five minutes or 10 minutes or how many minutes. “He’s intimidating to look at. He’s a very big guy. The first time I saw him was in the spring. It was like, ‘Who is this guy?’ He was a beast. I found out he was the special teams coach back in ‘99. When I found out he was coming, I was very scared of him and what he was going to do to us. He’s very intense. Very loud. Very intimidating. I trust him, just like I trust coach Cav. I can go into his office at any time. I can tell him anything. I like the guy.” On playing with injuries: “I hurt my (left) shoulder (two years ago). I never really thought about it every game. If I hurt something during practice, I won’t tell anybody, unless it’s really sore. If it’s sore, I’ll let it go. But if I can’t walk or move, I’ll tell the trainers. But this shoulder thing, I didn’t think it was bad. I just wanted to play because I love this game a lot. My shoulder wasn’t really bothering me until my sophomore year. Then I checked it out with the doctor. The ligaments were messed up. I had surgery. Everything is all fixed. It’s like a brand new shoulder.” On his decision to return for his senior season instead of declaring for the NFL draft as a junior: “I wanted to finish school. I talked to a lot of people about staying or going. Cav told me I was in a win-win situation. I could go to the NFL and make money, or stay in college and try to win a WAC championship, and get to hang out with my cousins. I love college. I couldn’t lose with my decision. “My mom and dad told me that no matter what I decided, I shouldn’t worry about the money. They would take care of me. “I thought it was a hard decision, but my parents knew I wanted to stay. I wanted to see (cousin) Brashton (Satele) play his first season, and I wanted to be on the same team with Colt (Brennan), Davone (Bess), Ryan (GriceMullins), Jason Rivers and, well, the list goes on and on.” On moving from left guard to center: “I’m going to miss pulling (as a guard). Maybe I can try to be a pulling center. “My favorite play (as a guard) was ‘Tampa Right.’ We ran that a bunch. I start pulling, and whoever’s in front, I just hit him. “(Moving to center) is something coach Jones wanted me to to do for the team. But in the long run, it’s going to help me out. It might help me get to the next level. “Because I started for three years next to Derek, I learned a lot. Derek was the smartest center.” On his fellow linemen: “Every year we have a barbecue. Last year, we had it at Ala Moana. The year before, we had it at (Tala Esera’s) place. This year we had it at the water park. Almost everybody came. Three or four guys were on the Mainland. We had steak, chicken, ribs. I like to barbecue. I can cook anything. That’s why Sam Choy has my name.” On his free time: “I like to stay home with my family. I like to hang out with my sisters. “(Tiatti) was taller than me for a while. It was bad. She’s a year younger, and she was taller than me when she was in the fifth grade. I was short. I would get mad because she was taller. My dad said my sister was going to stop growing at a certain point, and I was going to start growing. I would try to stretch myself and eat right. Being shorter than my sister was not a good thing. When she was taller than me, I would not stand next to her. I would sit down whenever I would see her. I’m taller now. I grew to 6-3. She’s 5-9.” On his long hair: “I always wanted my hair to be long. Every time I saw my grandma, she told me to cut my hair. I cut my hair my freshman year CLIPPINGS 8 (at UH). I grew it out, and I’m used to it. I haven’t cut it since. I want it to be as long as it can be. You know the story about Samson. It wasn’t good for Samson to cut his hair.” UH LINEBACKER LEONARD MAKES SIZABLE STRIDES By Jason Kaneshiro August 14, 2006 As Adam Leonard gradually built strength -and trust -- in his surgically repaired knee, a skill highly valued in a linebacker was among the slowest to return. “Change of direction was the most difficult for me, as far as planting and getting off that leg,” Leonard said. Close to two years after a complete tear of the anterior cruciate ligament and the meniscus in his right knee changed the direction of his football career, the Hawaii sophomore finally feels back up to speed. “Now it’s like nothing’s wrong,” he said as the Warriors left the field following a grueling fall-camp workout. “If I need to get somewhere, I can get there and it just feels great.” Leonard appeared to have a route to a Division I program all mapped out in the fall of 2004, but was forced to alter course when the injury ended his senior season at Seattle’s Rainier Beach High School. He returned to action late in his freshman year at UH, recording nine tackles, but still couldn’t perform at his previous level. After a spring and summer devoted to enhancing his strength and speed, Leonard finally feels like his old self. At 6-foot and 236 pounds, he tops the depth chart at Mac (inside) linebacker and is slated to start alongside fellow sophomore Solomon Elimimian in UH’s 3-4 alignment, bearing little resemblance to the player who arrived on campus a year ago. “He looks like a different player,” UH head coach June Jones said. “He looks like the player we thought we recruited. I can see why now USC and Tennessee, and all those guys recruited him before he hurt his knee. “I told him last year, it’s going to be a year before you get over that type of knee injury. ... That’s what’s happened. He’s had a year, he’s played one season, now it’s 100 percent, and he’s playing like he did (in high school).” Leonard’s blend of physical gifts had him on track to earn a scholarship with a high-profile program entering his senior season at Rainier Beach. But when his ACL gave way early in the season, the offers went with it. “All the schools that were recruiting me before basically dropped me,” he said. “Cal tried to talk me into going to junior college, Duke tried to talk me into going to military school. I knew in my heart that shouldn’t be the route I should have to go. I was academically eligible and I had the ability, so I wanted to find a D-I (school) and thankfully the Lord put it on (Jones’) heart to say, ‘I’m going to take a chance on him.’” A tape of Leonard’s high school highlights found its way to Jones’ office and convinced the coach to fly him over for a recruiting visit. “Speed and acceleration to the football,” Jones said, recalling the skills that leapt off the screen. “He just finds the football and he’s a hitter.” Leonard spent most of his first year with the Warriors working back into football shape and progressed enough to contribute on special teams and at linebacker late in the season. Following a freshman year of on-the-job training, both Leonard and Elimimian returned to Manoa confident and comfortable with the system as they aim to help the Warriors improve on a 2005 season in which the defense ranked 102nd in the country in yards surrendered. “Last year it was kind of new to everybody -- we were learning as we went,” said Elimimian, who finished second on the team with 83 tackles last fall. “This year it’s more comfortable, everybody knows where to go, what to do. We’re just out there having fun.” Said Leonard: “You don’t think about it, you feel where the other guy is at. You trust that he’s going to be there, he’s got your back. It’s easier to fly around and make plays because if I make a mistake I know Sol will be right there. If he makes a mistake, I’ll be right there. It makes it real easy to go out there and just relax.” With Brad Kalilimoku, a starter at linebacker last season, moving to safety in the spring, Leonard was elevated to the top line of the depth chart. To prepare for his opportunity, Leonard sought the help of former NFL star Eric Metcalf in the offseason and convinced Elimimian to join him in Seattle. Metcalf, a three-time Pro Bowl selection, is a regular on the track at Rainier Beach and picked up a couple of workout partners over the summer. “When I got out of school I let him know, ‘E, I see you working out every day, I’m ready to get down,’ “ Leonard said. “He said, ‘Just get here at 9 every morning.’ “I told Sol, I said Eric’s going to help us out a lot. And he said, ‘I’m willing to sacrifice and get up to Seattle for the summer,’ and that’s what he did.” Throughout his journey, Leonard’s faith helped him through the rough spots, and he’s part of a prayer group organized by team manager Bryan Maneafaiga, which meets on the field after each practice. And having navigated his way through the unexpected turn, Leonard said he feels CLIPPINGS 9 blessed to have found his way to the islands. “It all collapsed on one play,” he said of his initial post-high school plans. “It was hard, but I stuck through it and I knew something good would turn out, and it was Hawaii.” UH’S FUNAKI ROLLING ALONG By Dave Reardon August 15, 2006 Hawaii quarterback Inoke Funaki could end up with a new nickname one of these days. Maybe “Skates” or “Carhop.” He covers the 300 yards between the Warriors locker room and practice field, twice a day, on roller skates. “The first time I saw that I almost ordered a cheeseburger from him. I thought he was from one of those restaurants,” UH running back Reagan Mauia said. “Maybe he should play that sport, where they skate around in a circle. What is it? Yeah, roller derby.” Most of the Warriors walk. A few ride bikes. Funaki is the only one on skates. And they’re the old-school, four-wheel kind, not the more modern in-line version. “I was gonna bring a bike (to fall camp), but I couldn’t fit it in the car,” said Funaki, who is from Laie. “Earlier this year, I was cleaning out the garage and found a box. There was a lot of old stuff and I found the skates. I don’t know who they belong to.” Funaki said teammates tease him a lot about his mode of transportation. “They always making fun,” he said. “Just making jokes when I roll past them. They’re walking and here I come, weaving in and out. And they all start laughing, ‘Aw man, you must be the (goofiest) quarterback in the nation.’ I just laugh and keep going and say, ‘I’ll see you guys in the locker room.’ “ Also, Mauia said Funaki might be starting a fashion trend with old-fashioned two-stripe socks.” “Those socks are classic, man. They’re awesome, especially with the skates. A lot of guys are starting to wear the socks,” Mauia said. “I don’t know about the skates. But that’s a smart idea. I’d rather skate than walk, but I’d probably break my ankle. He’s got a brain on those shoulders.” Quarterback Colt Brennan summed it up. “Inoke’s the only guy who can make wearing roller skates seem cool.” CLIPPINGS 10 LINEMAN ON TOP OF HIS GAME By Stephen Tsai August 13, 2006 A deal is a deal, and if University of Hawai'i football player Dane Uperesa wanted to make a public announcement, he needed to come through with his part. “Tell a joke?” Uperesa said, his voice trailing into a mutter. “That’s not easy for me.” It was a difficult request for the selfdescribed “boring guy.” But it was no more difficult than the other things he has done that went against his nature. Like how he struggled as a Punahou School freshman before working up the courage to ask for tutoring. He averaged a Bplus as a junior and senior. Or how he followed his father’s “suggestion” to play football, even though he never really felt comfortable in the sport, and now is a pro prospect as an offensive tackle. So after several pauses, Uperesa said: “Why do scuba divers fall backwards into the water?” Shrug. “It’s because if they fall forward, they would fall into the boat.” Uh ... OK. “That’s about as good as I can do. That’s the only clean joke I know, and I stole it from (offensive lineman) Brysen Ginlack.” Then Uperesa said: “I know this is coming out on my mother’s birthday, so I want to wish her a happy birthday. My mom is my spiritual and emotional guide. I can talk to her about anything. I’m very blessed to have her opinion on many things. She broadens my view of the world. So, happy birthday, Mom. I love you.” Uperesa also discussed life in the “happiest place on Earth,” learning a lesson from an Appalachian State player, and why real men wear poker bracelets. On living in Southern California for eight years: “I was born here. When I was about eight months old, my dad (Kevin Uperesa) had been in Los Angeles trying out with the Rams. He hadn’t seen me when I was born. Finally, we moved to California when I was eight months old. That was the first time he saw me. He always stresses how hard it was not to see his first born. “Unfortunately, he blew out his knee. That was the end of his football career. We stayed there (in Fullerton). He worked security for Disneyland, and became management over there. We got in for free, actually. I’ve been there so many times. It was tons of fun.” On moving back to Hawai’i. “My parents didn’t want us growing up in Southern California. They had a lot of childhood memories growing up here. They wanted to send me and my brother to Punahou. They worked hard. They sacrificed a lot. “Because my dad and his brother (Keith Uperesa) were standout athletes (at Punahou), and they tried to contribute to the school, I had a better shot (at being admitted). I did well on the test. Fortunately, I got in. It was still hard, even though I had financial aid. It’s an expensive school. It’s very competitive from an academic standpoint. I went to a good school before Punahou, but when I got there, it was still tough. I started in the ninth grade. Everyone is talking about Harvard and Yale. I found it a struggle at first. “We lived in Hau’ula. My dad woke up very early, made breakfast, got us up. It was a long drive. But I wouldn’t trade living out there for anything. I love it out there — the atmosphere, the people, the scenery. Even though it was a long drive, it was a nice drive.” On adjusting to Punahou: “I almost made academic probation as a freshman. Not that I wasn’t working hard, but I thought it was too much for me. I was really struggling at the time. I thought I might have to leave the school. I had that kind of fear. The thing was, I was always pushed to do well in school, and I always did well in school. It was hard to struggle like that. My biggest thing was I was scared to ask for help. I didn’t want to seem like the stupid kid. I finally got the courage to ask teachers for help, to stay after, to do what no other kid wants to do: to appear less than average to his peers. But I had to suck it up and do it. I started to get the study habits down, probably by the end of my sophomore year. That’s when I was no longer in the red. I was getting my average up. My junior and senior years were when I hit my stride. I knew how to write papers and do the work. The last two years, I got a 3.4 GPA. It really came together for me.” On taking up football: “I played basketball. That was my first love. I didn’t want to play football in high school. I wanted to focus on basketball. My dad said I had to play. I never played it, but I thought, ‘why not?’ I could still remember my first day of football. It was JV conditioning week. I had never worn a helmet before. I was always this out-of-shape kid. I put on the helmet, and it was just hell. It was the worst day of my life. My neck was sore. I couldn’t CLIPPINGS 11 breathe. I thought, ‘Wow, this is football.’ “They told me to line up at defensive end. I ran 20 yards away from the coach. He was yelling: ‘What are you doing?’ I didn’t really know anything about football. If I ever watched a game, it would be to see who would score a touchdown, because I knew what that was. “I’ve been a project the day I first put on that helmet. Football never came naturally for me. In basketball, if you throw me the ball, it feels right. You put me in pads across from a guy just as big as me, I have to adjust.” On choosing to play for the Warriors. “At first, they weren’t recruiting me at all. We were almost at the end of our season, and my friend was invited (by the UH coaches) to a game. He had an extra ticket, so he invited me. I was sitting there, eating my meal with the recruits. (Mike Cavanaugh, who was UH’s offensive line coach at the time) came up to me and asked if I committed (to a school) yet. I said, ‘no,’ and that’s when we really started talking. He came out for my last game against Iolani. He went on to offer me a scholarship during my recruiting trip. “(Southern California offered) a walk-on deal. Cal(ifornia) offered a full ride. It came down to Cal, Hawai’i and maybe SC. Everybody thought I was going to Cal. When I was sure about my decision was the BYU game (in 2001). I went to that game. I remember traffic was horrible. I just got there before the kickoff. I saw Chad Owens’ touchdown. To see that crowd respond, my home crowd, I knew right then that’s where I wanted to go. If Chad Owens doesn’t take it to the house, maybe I’m at Cal today. “My parents never said they wanted me to go to Hawai’i. But I could see it in my dad’s eyes. I remember my dad and mom were in their room, watching TV. I knocked on the door, and came in. I told them I verbally committed to the University of Hawai’i. They were really happy for that. I know my dad was waiting for me to get him tickets. They never used to follow UH sports. Now they’re two of the biggest fans. They’ll go to basketball games and volleyball games. “There is pressure at Punahou to send the kids to the Mainland. I didn’t feel pressure. I knew once I made my decision, that was it.” On redshirting as a UH freshman in 2002: “I remember being on the scout team that year. I tell all of the freshmen, ‘Scout team is nothing like it was for us when we were fresh- men.’ We had Pisa (Tinoisamoa), Chris Brown, Lui Fuga, Isaak (Sopoaga), Lance (Samuseva), Houston (Ala), Travis (LaBoy). Big, strong guys. And they were fast. There was probably no better way for me to learn than by throwing me into the fire against them. And they’d beat up on us. I couldn’t believe their speed. “I thought Kevin Jackson was probably the toughest guy. He had the speed to get around you, and he was physical enough to bull rush you. It’s funny. He wasn’t even starting.” On his struggles as a second-year freshman in 2003: “I started against Appalachian State (in the opener). That was a wake-up call. I got my butt kicked that game. I can still remember the defensive end, K.T. Stovall. If I ever see him again, I’ll thank him. That’s what I needed, to get up in front of all of those people, and get my butt kicked. I needed a wake-up call. From then on, I made an effort to get in the weight room six days a week, and work hard. “I remember in 2003, that was the toughest year for me. There were a whole bunch of things going on — on the field and off the field. I got through that year, and the next year I was asked to move to the defensive line by coach Jones. It wasn’t an order. It was an open invitation. He said, in the end, it’s up to me. I consulted Cav, who still thought I had something in me to play the offensive line. He told me ultimately it was up to me. He told me if I did return to the offensive line, I’d have to make a better effort to be the player he thinks I can be. My dad and my family said the same thing. I was probably very close to switching over to the D-line. I remember one night I made the decision that I was, but the next morning I changed my mind. Coach Jones told me he thought I could still be a player. I made the decision I was recruited for the offensive line; that Cav, who is a great offensive line coach, still believed in me; that my family still had faith in me. I made the decision to stay on the offensive line.” On his comeback in 2004: “Against Idaho, there was ‘260,’ which is a screen to the right. I probably got up to the (line)backer faster than I’ve ever done before. I really tried to put it on him, because I was trying to change my attitude. Everybody always tells me I’m too much of a nice guy. I don’t think my problem was the nice-guy thing. I think it was because I wasn’t comfortable as a football player until recently. “In the bowl game against UAB, I was backing up both the right and the left tackle. Tala (Esera) had some food poisoning the night before. He started the game, but I could tell something was wrong. I went in there (at left tackle) about halfway through the first quarter. I got to block for Timmy (Chang) and Chad (Owens) in their last game. It was exciting. I did good enough, I guess, to make me the starter the next year. On developing into one of the strongest Warriors: “There’s no way I thought I’d be there. I was benching probably 260 after high school. I used to see guys throw on three plates, and I was like, ‘Oh, my goodness.’ “I remember my first day coming to UH. It was the Monday after I graduated. I came in to work out. I walked into the weight room. I was intimidated. I wasn’t very strong. I saw these guys in there — La’anui (Correa), Wayne Hunter. I remember seeing Vince (Manuwai) for the first time, and how big his arms were. I was very intimidated. I didn’t look like that. I kept my shirt on. I remember sitting outside the weight room. I saw Tala sitting outside, too. We knew each other from before. We struck up a conversation. We were like, ‘Man, everybody in there is huge.’ We sat out there for an hour, thinking of what we were going to do, or waiting for them to leave. I remember Jonathan Kauka came out, and he helped us get into a weight program, to calm our nerves around the veterans. He was so good at it I thought he was a coach. On the first day of camp, I see him come out with a helmet. We’re like, ‘What is this?’ On his future wife: “We’ve been together for four years. We got together during graduation. She’s a Punahou grad. Her name is Brook. She’s a very smart and dedicated woman. She’s one of the most beautiful people I’ve known, both inside and out. She just graduated (from college). She’s studying medicine. I see a future with her. Definitely. She’s the love of my life.” On his other great love: “I was born a Lakers fan. We were on the San Jose State trip (three years ago), and I got a phone call from Kainoa Akina. He told me the Lakers were in the weight room. That was the year they had Karl Malone and Gary Payton. I ran to the weight room to see if they were there. I got on a bench, because no one was in there at the time. I did a set, I sat up, and I looked to my left, and Kobe (Bryant) was benching right next to me. There went my whole workout. Needless to say I was staring in his direction most of the time.” On being a regular at the Warriors’ Texas Hold’em tournaments: “I’ve been fortunate to win five of these circuit events. Hercules (Satele) is good. Ian (Sample) is good because he’s aggressive. The worst is Marques (Kaonohi). He doesn’t really know how to play. He’s always asking, ‘Can I bet?’ or ‘Can I raise?’ One game he kept doing it. He kept catching cards. We play for pride. We call them bracelets. I think coach Jones would have a good poker face. I definitely wouldn’t want to call him.” CLIPPINGS 12 BRENNAN MASTERS WARRIOR OFFENSE By Stephen Tsai August 28, 2006 Anyone who has been to Dave & Buster’s knows the seemingly simple games of skills are not so simple at all. It is why starting quarterback Colt Brennan has earned the admiration of the University of Hawai’i football coaches. The coaches were not as much impressed with Brennan’s gaudy statistics as a third-year sophomore last season — nation-leading 4,301 passing yards and 35 touchdowns — as they were with his consistency. One of UH coach June Jones’ pet plays is the bubble screen to the slotbacks, a pass that travels no more than 10 yards. It would be as easy as throwing a football through a hanging tire — that is, if the tire were moving diagonally in the opposite direction and 280-pound defensive ends were approaching at feedingtime speed. “As much as the average person thinks that’s an easy throw, it’s not,” said Dan Morrison, who tutors the quarterbacks. “It’s a tough angle, a throw to the sideline, with the receiver running downhill.” Morrison said Brennan completed all 21 of those passes last season. “It’s a difficult play,” Jones said. “On those type of passes, he’s the most accurate we’ve had here.” And as much as Brennan uses the awshucks demeanor of having limited knowledge of the four-wide offense last season, his first at UH, in fact, according to Morrison, by midseason Brennan was given as many plays as his predecessor, Tim Chang, the NCAA’s career passing leader, had as a senior. “He was doing pretty much everything Timmy was asked to do, and he showed he could do it,” Morrison said. And that is why entering Saturday’s season opener against Alabama, Brennan is given more leeway than any other quarterback Jones has coached. Jones has not tried to change Brennan’s throwing motion, nor put the brakes on Brennan’s willingness to scramble when all else fails. In the four-wide system, the quarterback is instructed to go through his progressions — look at the first receiver, and if he’s covered, go to the next, and so forth — before scrambling. This Colt, the coaches have learned, cannot be harnessed, and Brennan often jetted out of the pocket after only a few reads. “He does have a certain ability to improvise,” Morrison said. “You want to be careful not to take that away from him. He’s learning to stay within the system, because the system is very good, and it will help him. At the same time, we don’t want to completely — and this is a bad way to phrase it — corral him. You want to utilize his strength. We want him to stay in (the pocket) longer, but we understand there will be times he’s going to take off, and usually good things happen when he does.” Brennan said he and Jones reached a compromise last year. Jones held his right hand chest high and his left hand a foot lower. The left hand indicated Brennan’s play-making level. “I want to bring you here,” Jones said, waving his right hand. Jones emphasized that a completed pass covers more yards than a scramble, and staying in the pocket a second longer will open more options. “He did a good job with me,” Brennan said. “He had a lot of patience with me, as far as letting me develop into the system. “I understand you’ve got to do what the system is asking you to do to be successful. I understand that. I was really trying hard. That’s why this leeway came. Because I was trying so hard, but when I couldn’t get it, I would go. Coach would be yelling at me, but we’d be going down the field together. He would scream at me to ‘hit this guy’ or ‘hit that guy,’ but I would pick up first downs with my scrambling or finding someone. Coach decided instead of taking that away from me, he would allow it, if I did it within his system.” Brennan also said he was pleased he was not forced to change his passing motion. “People are judgmental about that,” Brennan said. “They say I have a sidearm motion. I really don’t. If you watch tape of me, I don’t have a sidearm motion. I throw a little bit lower than the average guy. But there comes times in the game when you have to lower your arm to get a ball off. People will see me lower my arm to throw a ball. People will say, ‘He’s a sidearm thrower.’ It’s one of those things.” In 2005, Brennan was playing for his fifth team in five years. He is a 2002 graduate of Mater Dei High School. After that, he attended the Worcester Academy in Massachusetts, the University of Colorado and Saddleback Community College in California. “I’ve been around,” he said. “I’ve seen a lot.” Brennan opened the 2005 season as a backup to Tyler Graunke, his former roommate. By the third game, against Idaho, CLIPPINGS 13 Brennan was the starter. By then, he won over his teammates. And it wasn’t only because he buys pizza for the offensive linemen after each victory. “Look at him, he’s a pretty-boy from California,” right tackle Dane Uperesa said, laughing. “Really, he’s just a heck of a guy. He’s a good leader. He has a leadership quality you don’t find in many people. We let him take the lead of the offense, and we like to follow him.” In deciding to remain at UH for his senior season, center Samson Satele said he wanted to play another season with Brennan. Last Friday, teammates Leonard Peters and Inoke Funaki invited Brennan to attend the Kahuku High School football game on the North Shore. After practices, Brennan is among the most animated in performing the haka. “That’s our leader,” Uperesa said. Most important, Brennan joins Dan Robinson as the only UH starting quarterbacks in the past 16 years never to be booed by the home crowd. Garrett Gabriel, who led UH to two thumpings of arch-rival Brigham Young; Michael Carter, the star of the Warriors’ 11-2 season in 1992; Nick Rolovich, who led the Warriors to an 8-1 finish in 2001, and Chang were never embraced as warmly as Brennan. Brennan has no explanation, and is hopeful — knock on wood — the affection will continue. He offers only this: “I’ve grown up and I’ve played football for so long now. I love playing the game. I think, maybe, the fans enjoy seeing someone have fun. I take a lot of pride in football, and I love playing the game. People out here are very old school. They love the hard-hitting. Maybe they love to see me run, get laid out and pop right back up.” WARRIORS SETTLE ON TRICAPTAINS By Stephen Tsai August 29, 2006 Making official what was already acknowledged, free safety Leonard Peters, defensive right end Ikaika Alama-Francis and center Samson Satele were named tri-captains for the University of Hawai’i football team this season. They were selected following a team election. The Warriors usually pick an offensive and defensive captain. But Alama-Francis and Peters finished in a dead heat, and both will share the defensive leadership. UH coach June Jones said he will name a special teams captain for each game. Each of the tri-captains is a senior. Peters, who is starting his sixth season at UH, was named defensive captain last year. During the first half of the 2005 opener, Peters suffered a knee injury. Although he did not require surgery, he did not play again the rest of the season. Peters successfully petitioned the NCAA for an exemption that allows him to play as a sixth-year senior in 2006. But Peters was not as persuasive when it came to the election. Peters told the coaches he wanted to be removed from consideration. “I was captain last year,” Peters said. “I wanted them to let somebody else have a chance.” But Jones refused to accept Peters’ withdrawal. “Leonard is a leader by example, and he’s highly thought of by his teammates,” Jones said. During a team meeting yesterday afternoon, Jones announced that Peters and AlamaFrancis would be captains of the defense. “The guys pick who they want to pick, so I guess I’m a captain,” Peters said. “I’m honored. Hopefully, Ikaika is going to be the guy who yells at everybody.” Peters, who is 6 feet 1 and 217 pounds, said he has healed from a sprained right ankle that kept him from competing in contact drills for nearly two weeks. Alama-Francis, who has gained 75 pounds since moving from the UH basketball team in 2003, has grown into a leader. “Ikaika has worked really hard,” Jones said. “He’s earned everybody’s respect by the way he’s worked out and played. He gives so much every play.” Alama-Francis, who is 6 feet 5 and 290, has improved his strength. When he first reported to the Warriors, he could bench press 225 pounds one time. Now he can bench press 405 pounds. Last month, Jones asked Alama-Francis to represent the Warriors at the Western Athletic Conference Football Media Preview in Boise. Being named captain, Alama-Francis said, “is something special. When I came over from basketball, I never thought this would happen. The way I look at it, we’ve got great leaders on this team. Everybody is a captain in his own way.” Several teammates, especially quarterback Colt Brennan and running back Nate Ilaoa, had looked to Satele to emerge as a vocal leader. That happened on the fourth day of training camp, when the Warriors were forced to do 20 minutes of painful drills as punishment for some players missing curfew. Five minutes into the drills, Satele began yelling. At the end of the punishment, he scolded the rule-breakers during an impromptu team meeting. “He’s the king,” Brennan said, a reference to Satele’s nickname of S-King. “This isn’t just his team. This is his monarchy.” Satele said: “It’s an honor, and I accept it. It feels wonderful. It wasn’t really a shock to me, because everyone has been telling me to be a leader since Day 1, so I’m a leader now.” Jones said Satele was the right choice. “Samson has asserted himself in a leadership role this year through his workouts and on the field,” Jones said. “He’s trying to be a winner. He’s a good kid, and a very powerful player.” Peters CLIPPINGS 14 Alama-Francis Satele TIDE HANDLE HAWAII The Warriors hang around until the final play of the game before falling short in Tuscaloosa By Dave Reardon September 3, 2006 TUSCALOOSA, Ala. » That first 30 minutes of football Hawaii stumbled through last night in its season opener at Alabama was nothing new. And recent history shows that at a tough road site it's usually more of the same after halftime, leading to an embarrassing final score against a brand-name foe or WAC contender. At USC in 2003, Boise State and Fresno State in 2004, and Michigan State last year come to mind. This time it was different. Very much so, as the Warriors almost gave the Tide something to really be Crimson about before 92,138 at the breaking in of newly refurbished Bryant-Denny Stadium. This time the Warriors fought back, down to the final second and the final play. But Lionel Mitchell intercepted Colt Brennan's pass at the Alabama goal line to preserve the Tide's 25-17 win. UH was a 17-point underdog, and played like it most of the first two quarters. But then the Warriors (who beat Alabama at Aloha Stadium three years ago) proved they are far from a typical BCS nonconference seasonopening cupcake -- at least they are this year. "A year ago, I don't think we had the camaraderie or team cohesion to fight in the second half," said Brennan, who passed for 350 yards and two touchdowns, both late in the game. "You have to take the positive and you have to look at the negatives. I think the negatives were pretty blatant, but the positive is that we fought with a great football team." The Warriors' woes in the first half were many. Two dropped passes by the usually dependable and often spectacular Davone Bess. A mishandled snap by punter Kurt Milne leading to a safety. A fumble by Nate Ilaoa that turned into three Tide points when Leigh Tiffin hit a 31-yarder, one of his three field goals. "The fumbles really hurt us and the dropped punt," Jones said. The Warriors were just fortunate the mistakes didn't cost them more. "We weren't ourselves in the first half," Jones said. "You could tell we were nervous and stumbling." Dan Kelly made a 42-yarder when Hawaii's opening drive stalled after Brennan started the game with four straight completions. That was all UH would score until late in the third quarter. Four minutes into the second half, Alabama led 22-3 when Keith Brown scored on a 35-yard pass from J.P. Wilson. Wilson, in his first start, was expected to spend most of the game handing off to star running back Kenneth Darby. But Wilson piled up 253 yards on 16-for-29 passing, including six catches by Brown for 132 yards. "My number was called tonight," said Brown, who had a bigger role with fellow receiver D.J. Hall out due to a suspension. "I had to step up and make plays." Darby was limited to 25 yards on 16 rushes. One of his backups, Jimmy Johns, led the Tide with 58 yards, and Alabama rushed for 125 total. "We were a little off with the running game," Alabama coach Mike Shula said. "That's something we'll get corrected." The Tide managed just 22 yards on 14 carries after halftime. "We went to some fresh people and made some minor adjustments," UH defensive coordinator Jerry Glanville said. "We changed very little, just a couple of little tweaks." Inside linebacker Adam Leonard, making his first start, was in on a game-high 11 tackles, including the only sack of Wilson. UH finally reached the end zone on a 16yard shovel pass to Reagan Mauia from Brennan, then a 31-yarder on a fade route to Ryan Grice-Mullins, with 7:04 left. That accounted for the final score and put the Warriors back in the game. "We saw that they played a lot of manfree, really pretty much the whole game," Grice-Mullins said. "So Coach said just go for it right here, and just beat him off the line and get to the corner." Grice-Mullins caught six passes for 109 yards -- all but one for 11 yards in the second half. Hawaii's defense -- which many predicted would wilt under the pressure of Alabama's running game -- stiffened and forced the Tide to punt twice in crucial fourth-quarter situations. The first set up the 85-yard drive that culminated in Grice-Mullins' touchdown, and the second -- preceded by Leonard's sack of Wilson -- gave UH the ball at its own 35 with 2:52 left and a chance to tie it with a touchdown and 2-point conversion. The Warriors, using a series of short passes and an 8-yard scramble by Brennan, drove to the Alabama 26 with 13 seconds remaining. But the last three passes were high for Bess, incomplete to Jason Rivers in the end zone, and then into the hands of Mitchell. "We were just trying to take a shot," Brennan said. It was a long shot, the final pass, with five Alabama defenders at the goal line. CLIPPINGS 15 It was a long shot, taking on the Crimson Tide at Tuscaloosa. But fewer mistakes in the first half, and Hawaii could be celebrating today instead of thinking about what might have been. "It was like everything was there for us and we couldn't do the little things," Brennan said. The Warriors have a bye this week before their Sept. 16 home opener against UNLV. WARRIORS’ PETERS VOWS TO PLAY DESPITE RIB CAGE INJURY By Stephen Tsai September 7, 2006 University of Hawai’i football player Leonard Peters said he will not miss any games or practices despite being diagnosed with a “broken cartilage” in his rib cage. X-rays taken Tuesday afternoon showed the damage, said Peters, who is the starting free safety and a tri-captain. “He’s probably going to be sore for six to eight weeks,” UH head coach June Jones said. “If he keeps playing on it, he’ll be sore all year. It’s a tough injury to go through if you’re trying to hit people.” Peters said he suffered the injury during the third quarter of Saturday’s 25-17 loss to Alabama. He did not notify the trainers of the extent of the injury for fear of being removed from the game. He finished with 10 tackles and a forced fumble. He wears a padded wrap during practices. “I have to play with the pain, which is OK,” Peters said. “They said the cartilage is broken, whatever that means. I played through pain before. It shouldn’t be a problem.” During his six-year UH career, Peters has suffered injuries to his spleen, shoulders, knees, ankles and arms. He played the entire 2003 season with a torn ligament in his left shoulder. “I can play through the pain,” Peters said. “I’m not going to miss any games. My legs are fine, and I can still use my arms. The only thing is (the injured area is) my core. It connects to everything. But I’ll be all right.” PATEK FULFILLS HIS FATHER’S PREMONITION UH’s strong safety from Texas is living out his dream of playing Division I college football By Jason Kaneshiro September 11, 2006 Clicking the remote control looking for his college football fix on a Saturday afternoon in Texas, Gary Patek happened upon a glimpse of his son’s future. “We were sitting here and we were watching a Hawaii game and I said to my wife, ‘Wouldn’t it be something if he went to Hawaii,’ “ recalled the father of Jacob Patek, then a promising junior college prospect. Hawaii? Yeah, right. The Pateks were familiar enough with Hawaii’s reputation and one of Jacob’s former Blinn Junior College teammates had gotten a call or two from Warrior coaches. But Manoa was an awfully long way from Victoria, Texas, and the family figured Jacob would continue his football career much closer to home. But after riding a recruiting roller coaster following his sophomore season at Blinn, Jacob Patek ended up making a prophet out of his dad by signing with UH last February, and he has taken little time in making an impact with the Warriors. Since arriving in late July, the transfer quickly ascended the depth chart, earned the starting job at strong safety during fall camp and began his Division I career by recording 10 tackles against one of college football’s legendary programs. “When I came out here I was trying to work hard -- my goal was to be a first-teamer,” said Patek. “I wanted to show the coaches that I wanted it and try to get them to trust me so they know I’ll be able to do what I have to do.” Patek got off to a bit of a shaky start in UH’s opener at Alabama on Sept. 2. (“I was pretty nervous,” he said. “When we graded out, probably five of the first 10 plays I messed up on.”) But once he got his legs under him, he turned in a solid debut as the Warriors put a scare into the Crimson Tide before falling 25-17. “The first quarter he got lined up wrong a few times and made a couple mistakes, but he’ll get better each week,” UH defensive coordinator Jerry Glanville said. “He’s a hitter and he’s a hustler. Now, as long as you do those two things, you’ve always got a chance.” Following standout careers at Victoria Memorial High School and Blinn JC, Patek received some interest from Kansas and coaches from Division II Henderson State kept the phone ringing. But things got really interesting when Texas A&M entered the picture. After an all-conference sophomore season, he faced a choice of walking on at Texas A&M -- where he had already started the admissions process -- accepting a scholarship to Henderson State, or returning to junior college to further explore the recruiting process. “We were all on different pages,” said Gay Patek, Jacob’s mother. “None of us were in agreement on what Jacob should do and we spent that entire Christmas holiday, two weeks, agonizing every day just looking at every detail of what’s going to be best for Jacob.” When it was decided that Patek would return to Blinn for the spring, the Texas A&M staff summoned him back to College Station to offer him a scholarship. But after making the 2-hour drive from Victoria, he was told there had been a mixup and the Aggies’ last scholarship had been already promised to another player. Word of the developments in Texas quickly reached Hawaii assistant coach Jeff Reinebold, and he wasted little time in working the phone. When Jacob broached the idea to his folks, Gary was transported back to that afternoon in his living room. “The day A&M called and told him they wanted him to walk on, he called that night and said ‘What about me playing for Hawaii?’ “ Gary Patek said. “I said, ‘two months ago I said that.’ It was pretty unreal. “It was boom, boom, boom. Not much time to feel upset about it. It went from a low to a high real quick.” Patek was sold on his recruiting visit and signed with the Warriors in the spring. Patek had played outside linebacker in a 4-3 scheme at Blinn, where he racked up 96 tackles, including six sacks, in 2005. But the Warrior coaches envisioned a future as a safety for the 6-foot 202-pounder in UH’s 3-4 alignment. “I’m doing a lot of the same stuff,” Patek said. “I wasn’t back in coverage (in JC), I wasn’t on any deep stuff. Other than that, everything’s pretty much the same. “I think I caught on quick because I’ve always seen myself as a safety. When I was in junior college, I’d do drills with the safeties, so it wasn’t too much different.” Once he got into fall camp, the coaches quickly took notice of his hustle and tenacity. “His effort and work intensity are second to no one,” Glanville said. “He’s just a great character person, he chases the ball like (Warrior free safety) Leonard Peters and does everything the way you want it done, really. “We’re hoping to keep his size up, keep him in the weight room and hope that he keeps eating good food, because he’s a little underCLIPPINGS 16 sized for the position. But his heart’s big enough to play anywhere.” The Patek family is planning to visit Oahu for two weeks in November and catch the Warriors’ games against Louisiana Tech and San Jose State at Aloha Stadium. His parents and sister have already had a chance to see Jacob play in person, as they were among the 92,000-plus fans crammed into BryantDenny Stadium. “When Jacob was a junior in high school he told me he wanted to play in front of a crowd of 80,000 at a D-I school,” Gary Patek said. “And to sit there and watch him on the field and see him play the way he did, it just overwhelms you. It’s just unbelievable that he’s out there playing at that caliber and playing his dream. “At one point my wife said something about not going to Alabama. And I said I don’t care if I’ve got to walk. This is his first game and I’m going to be there.” QUICK-STRIKE WARRIORS CRUISE TO VICTORY By Stephen Tsai September 17, 2006 Hawai’i running back Nate Ilaoa is untouched as he scores on an 8-yard run. Ilaoa carried nine times for 104 yards and scored two touchdowns. Hawai’i quarterback Colt Brennan avoids a tackle attempt by UNLV linebacker Jason Beauchamp to score on a 1-yard run in the second quarter. Dominating from the pregame haka to the singing of the alma mater, the University of Hawai’i football team rolled to a 42-13 rout of UNLV last night in Aloha Stadium. Before 28,173 — the third-smallest UH home opener in three decades — the Warriors relied on inspiration and perspiration to improve to 1-1. The Rebels, who have lost 11 consecutive road games, fell to 1-2. “We did what we were supposed to do,” said UH running back Nate Ilaoa, who rushed nine times for 104 yards and two touchdowns. “It was a lovely thing.” The Warriors threw multiple problems at the Rebels, who rarely guessed correctly. In 2 1/2 quarters of work, Colt Brennan completed 24 of 35 passes for 296 yards and two touchdowns. Ilaoa, who is 5 feet 9 and 250 pounds, and 285-pound running back Reagan Mauia ran — hard — into the heart of the 3-3-5 defense until the Rebels were ready to tap out. And the UH defense turned the Rebels’ offense into a Rocky Horror Show. Quarterback Rocky Hinds, playing on a wounded knee, was held to 13-of-37 passing and 166 yards. The Rebels’ first touchdown came when the Warriors had only nine defenders on the field. “The players did a great job,” UH defensive coordinator Jerry Glanville said. “They knew what to do. I promise you, by the time we got off the bus, our job as coaches was done. I just watched. It was fun to watch.” The program began during warmups, when the Warriors performed the haka, a Maori war dance, in the Halawa drizzle. “It’s a Polynesian tradition that people on our team take seriously,” slotback Davone Bess said. “It’s a chance to take all of the anger and excitement we have inside and get it out. It really gets us going.” And the Warriors wasted little time, using less than eight minutes to race to a 14-0 lead. Ryan Grice-Mullins caught a pass in the left flat, then zipped past safety Daryl Forte to complete a 7-yard scoring play on the Warriors’ opening drive. “We wanted to come out striking,” GriceMullins said. “It felt good to score the early touchdown. Scoring early sets the tone, and it usually sets the tone to a good night.” On their next possession, the Warriors drove 68 yards in six plays, with Bess punctuating it with a leaping catch for a 7-yard score. “I did my squats this summer,” Bess said. “Actually, it’s second nature. If you see the ball, you have to go get it.” The stunningly quick deficit forced the Rebels to abandon their original balanced plan of mixing option runs and passes. The health of Hinds also contributed to the modifications. Last week against Iowa State, Hinds exited early in the second quarter after suffering a sprained right knee. He did not practice Monday and Tuesday, but resumed workouts on Wednesday. Still, Hinds, who has run 100 meters in 10.4 seconds, admittedly was not at his best. “I wasn’t 100 percent, but I played as hard as I could,” he said. While Hinds, who is 6 feet 5 and 225 pounds, often was able to buy time with scrambles, he was inefficient on option plays. He never had a legitimate rushing attempt — his three credited rushes were on sacks — and the Warriors sniffed out the weakness. UH often brought up the two outside linebackers, creating a five-man front, which was intended to bracket Hinds’ play area. “We knew he was a runner,” defensive end Ikaika Alama-Francis said. “We’ve been watching films on him for two weeks. All we had to do was keep him contained, keep him in the box. It wasn’t easy. He’s so fast he keeps you on your toes. He was running all over the place (on pass plays). I felt I was running a 40yard dash on every play.” The Warriors also received a boost from inside linebacker Brad Kalilimoku, who started in place of injured Solomon Elimimian (sprained right knee). Kalilimoku, an inside linebacker last year who practiced at strong safety from spring practice until last week, doubles as the Warriors’ nickelback. Kalilimoku was able to rotate between playing inside linebacker and defensive back without forcing the Warriors to substitute. “It was fun,” he said. “I could play a lot different places. I played where the coaches told me to play.” Kalilimoku, and his defensive teammates, also followed the lead of free safety Leonard Peters, who was playing despite a broken rib cartilage. On UNLV’s first possession, Peters leaped to break up a fourth-down pass. “Trust me, I thought I had angels carrying me up because my ribs were hurting the whole game,” said Peters, who also scored on a 33CLIPPINGS 17 yard interception return. Inside linebacker Adam Leonard, who made UH’s defensive calls, said: “Leonard Peters and the other seniors inspired us. We know the pain he’s going through, and all of the things he’s going through to be out there. For him to play through that, to play for us, he’s a real hero. We fed off that.” And Ilaoa proved to be inspiration for the offense. Ilaoa, who suffered a concussion in the season opener two weeks ago, this time left the Rebels dizzy. He caught three passes off slip screens — lobs over on-rushing defenders — and turned one running path into his personal contra-flow lane. Most of his rushing yards came on Tampa Right, a stretch play in which left guard Hercules Satele pulls to the right as the lead blocker. “It was an honor to block for him,” Satele said. BRONCOS BOOT WARRIORS The Warriors come closer, but mistakes keep them from winning in Boise for the first time By Dave Reardon September 24, 2006 BOISE, Idaho » It was almost equal parts recurring nightmare and spirited comeback. Ultimately for Hawaii, it was another oh-soclose loss aided by further review that left the Warriors kicking themselves. Dogged by its own mistakes and Boise State’s efficiency, the UH football team stubbed its collective toe again on the blue turf last night. Ian Johnson rushed for 178 yards, and UH was betrayed once again by its special teams in 25th-ranked BSU’s 41-34 victory. A sellout crowd of 30,642 watched on a nearly balmy night at Bronco Stadium as BSU beat UH for the fifth season in a row. Hawaii lost its WAC season opener despite five touchdown passes by Colt Brennan, including three to Jason Rivers. “They have an offense that can score from anywhere, so we knew we had to keep the pressure on,” Brennan said. “We just made too many mistakes. Our defense did some good things for us, but we just didn’t get it done overall.” UH fell to 1-2 overall, while four-time league champion Boise State went to 4-0 and 1-0 in the WAC with its third victory over UH without a loss here. “It’s disappointing,” Hawaii coach June Jones said. “But they’re a good football team.” Not that the Broncos were error-free: They suffered from numerous dropped passes and were penalized nine times for 90 yards, compared to four for 23 for UH. But the Warriors’ mistakes were game and heart breakers. So were two instant-replay reviews that went against the Warriors late in the game while they were trying to battle back. But it might not have come to that if UH hadn’t botched a field-goal try and two pointafter-touchdown attempts, both on bad snaps. “I don’t even know what to say. ... I practice as hard as I can. Snap, snap, snap,” said UH snapper Jake Ingram. “It’s not like I was nervous in the game, or I felt pressured. There was no bad thoughts. I feel bad I let everyone down.” On one flubbed PAT, Orlando Scandrick returned a fumble by holder Kurt Milne 88 yards for 2 points. Scandrick was the same player to return a blocked PAT for a score on the decisive play of BSU’s 44-41 win last year at Aloha Stadium. “Every year (against Boise State) it’s been special teams,” said Milne, a senior who is also UH’s punter. “Returns, field position, blocked kicks. I really honestly don’t think it’s what they do. We do it to ourselves.” Boise State took a 15-0 lead on Johnson’s first of two TDs and Jared Zabransky’s 6-yard scoring pass to Legedu Naanee, giving it 84 unanswered points on the blue turf going back to Hawaii’s 69-3 loss here in 2004. “A couple of years ago we came in here and we didn’t do too good,” Rivers said. “This year we got down, but our guys showed pride.” Touchdown passes to Rivers from Brennan of 26 and 11 yards kept the Warriors in the game this time, and Boise State’s halftime lead was 27-14. Following the break, Brennan found Davone Bess for an 18-yard scoring pass after Johnson ran in from 8 yards out, and Boise State led 34-21. The Broncos had a chance to go up by 20 and put the game away late in the third quarter, with first and goal at the UH 10. But after a holding penalty, a sack by Mike Lafaele and a tackle for loss by Karl Noa (who had 10 tackles) of Zabransky, BSU faced third and 32. On the next play, Kenny Patton picked off Zabransky’s pass in the end zone and returned it to the Hawaii 19. The Warriors then drove steadily downfield, scoring when Brennan hit Bess for a 14yard TD on fourth and 5, and BSU’s lead was cut to 34-27. UH failed again on the ensuing PAT, with a bad snap skidding by Milne. Kicker Dan Kelly picked up the ball and threw a pass that fell to the ground nowhere near anyone. Hawaii forced BSU to punt, and the Warriors offense had the ball at the Broncos 48 after a roughing call, setting up the final turning point of the game. As Colt Brooks sacked Brennan for a 2yard loss, Brennan either threw or dropped the ball and it was recovered by BSU’s Gerald Alexander. The officials ruled it a fumble, and a replay review requested by Jones went for naught. “It’s too bad,” Jones said. “That’s life. If you don’t win the turnover battle on the road, you give it away on the road, you don’t give yourself a chance.” For the third time in three games this season, Hawaii turned it over more than its opponent. UH lost two fumbles and an interception, while the Warriors got just the one pick by Patton. “I thought they threw up three interceptions in the first half and we didn’t get any. Both games (Boise State and Alabama) we should be making interceptions on bad balls, ducks,” defensive coordinator Jerry Glanville said. CLIPPINGS 18 The Warriors allowed a season-high 515 yards, and Johnson netted more yards against UH himself on the ground than Alabama and UNLV combined. “He’s the real deal,” Jones said. “He’s better than what I thought he was. I thought he was just a fast guy.” Johnson got the tough yards, too, carrying eight times in a row on the next series before Zabransky found tight end Derek Schouman for an 18-yard touchdown and a 41-27 lead with time running out. On Johnson’s fifth carry of the drive, Noa appeared to recover a fumble by him. But a replay review reversed the call. The official determined that Johnson lost control of the ball after he hit the ground. “You never leave it up to the referees,” said UH safety Leonard Peters, who had a game-high 13 tackles. “You got to win the game on your own. We should’ve got a couple calls, but it should never come down to that.” Brennan hit Rivers for an 8-yard TD with 2:59 left, but Brennan’s junior-college teammate Jerard Rabb recovered the onside kick and BSU ran out the clock. The teams combined for 991 yards. “We always have interesting games with Hawaii,” BSU coach Chris Petersen said. “They usually are high scoring, but I thought it would be more of a defensive struggle.” UH’S BRENNAN IMPRESSING JONES The Warriors’ coach says his junior quarterback is one of the best he’s worked with at any level By Jason Kaneshiro September 26, 2006 June Jones has tutored his share of talented passers in his travels, and the Hawaii football coach rates his current pupil near -- if not at -the top of the list. Although a couple of turnovers proved costly in last week’s 41-34 loss to Boise State, Jones saw some next-level qualities in junior quarterback Colt Brennan in last Saturday’s loss to the nationally ranked Broncos. “Colt, this game, was about as good as I’ve seen him,” Jones said yesterday during his weekly press conference. “Unfortunately, he’s remembering the fumble and the interception, which to be quite honest shouldn’t have happened, but he played almost a perfect game other than that.” Brennan completed 25 of 36 passes for 388 yards and five touchdowns against Boise State and enters Saturday’s game against Eastern Illinois second in the nation in passing yards per game (344.7) and total offense (360.3 ypg). He trails only New Mexico State’s Chase Holbrook in both categories. The miscues Jones referred to were an interception in the second quarter that led to a Boise State field goal and a fumble in the fourth quarter that the Broncos converted into a touchdown to extend their lead to 41-27. Still, in two games against Boise State, Brennan has passed for 814 yards and nine touchdowns while being intercepted three times. Overall this season, he’s completed 69 percent of his passes for 1,034 yards and nine touchdowns. “I think physically he’s the best (he has coached),” Jones said. “Jeff George threw the ball better, but he doesn’t do all the things Colt does. As far as everything, he’s the real deal.” Jones -- who said he doesn’t know whether an early jump to the pros might be a possibility for Brennan -- pointed to his command of the offense during the Warriors’ rally as an indication of his improved grasp of UH’s system. “He made throws under pressure in critical situations when you have to have the throws,” Jones said. “We’re trying to fight to get it to a seven-point game, he has two touchdown passes dropped, doesn’t even let it faze him, throws the next strike for a first down, then throws another one for a touchdown. That’s the stuff the great ones have and I’m seeing those things in him now. That makes him different than everybody else.” Though frustrated by the Warriors’ second close loss on the road this season, Jones credited the team’s resolve in battling back from a 15-0 deficit to get back within a touchdown in the second half. “There’s no question this is the best football team I’ve had since I’ve been here,” Jones said. “I have no problem saying we’re going to win games this year and we’ll get it done because the guys I have in the room are character people, they’ve already shown it for three games. “That 15-0 lead would have snowballed two or three other times I’ve been up there. The kids weren’t going to let it snowball.” CLIPPINGS 19 NATE’S DOING GREAT With the end of his Hawaii career in sight, productive running back Nate Ilaoa is happy he picked UH By Dave Reardon September 28, 2006 Hawaii slotback Nate Ilaoa played his first college football game in 2002 against Eastern Illinois, the Warriors’ opponent Saturday at Aloha Stadium. “I scored my first touchdown, a good memory,” he said yesterday. The good memories at UH as one of the guys have been many for Ilaoa, one of the Warriors’ most popular players among his teammates. He still has 10 or 11 games to add to them, but there haven’t been as many on the field as were predicted for Ilaoa, who coach June Jones has said is the Warriors’ most gifted football player -- on one of the most physically loaded squads in the program’s history. Four years since that first game -- after surgeries for shoulder and knee injuries, questions from his coach about his dedication, and a position change -- Ilaoa, now UH’s starting running back, is still here. He had his choice of Top 25 programs out of high school, but Ilaoa has no regrets. “Hawaii was the perfect place,” he said. And now, he’s living up to the promise the highly regarded recruit arrived at Manoa with in 2001, after he was named the Washington Post’s Metro Offensive Player of the Year. The NCAA granted Ilaoa an additional year of eligibility because injuries knocked him off the field for almost two full seasons. He’s made the most of it so far, with a teamhigh 376 all-purpose yards for the 1-2 Warriors. He leads UH in rushing with 199 yards in 25 attempts. Jones said Ilaoa could’ve been a running back from the beginning. “He had the capability to, but I knew he’d be a great slot. He was a great slot. He played very, very well,” Jones said. “He’s a great runner.” Last year Jones challenged him publicly to get in better shape. Ilaoa has since proven he’s effective as a running back at 5-feet-9 and 254 pounds. Ilaoa was courted by schools all over the country after his stellar high school career at Stafford, Va. His first choice was Oklahoma. He had lived there when he first started playing football, and was a Sooners fan. Ilaoa’s father was a Marine whose office was at the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City. Filipo Ilaoa knew many of the 168 people who died from the massive explosion there April 19, 1995. “He was a recruiter for that entire area of the country. Luckily he was on the road that day,” Ilaoa said. “He lost some friends in there.” When the family was re-stationed in Virginia, Nate Ilaoa’s football heart remained with the Sooners. “I was ready to go to Oklahoma. I had an offer on the table and was close to verbally committing, but I wanted to take all my visits and I didn’t want to commit early. By the time my visit came up, they pulled back the scholarship and said they had enough receivers. That was my first choice. After that I really had to start looking for a school,” Ilaoa said. “The kid who committed ended up going to Kansas State and then Tulsa. The guy took my dream-school scholarship and didn’t even use it.” Miami and Virginia Tech were among those providing firm offers, but Ilaoa chose UH, partly because his father would be stationed at Kaneohe. It wasn’t because of the ocean. “I don’t go to the beach at all. Not unless we’re barbecuing or something,” Ilaoa said. “I don’t like the water. I think all humans should stay on land. When you see a shark walking around Dole Street, let me know.” That sense of humor is why quarterback Colt Brennan asked Ilaoa to be his roommate for road games. “I kind of like the pressure being taken off me. I like to enjoy myself and be relaxed. He definitely brings that atmosphere,” Brennan said. “You sit around laughing for a day-and-ahalf and before you know it it’s game time. CLIPPINGS 20 “My one goal is to tackle Nate,” Brennan said. “I try, countless times, to tackle him when he’s not looking. He said it only counts on the football field. When we’re practicing I try to get him, and I haven’t yet.” Brennan isn’t alone. Opposing defenders have had their difficulties, too. Ilaoa’s average of 8.0 yards per rushing attempt is among the best in the nation. “He can make guys miss, he can run through you,” Jones said. UH WINS IN ROUT By Stephen Tsai October 1, 2006 Starve the defense, feed the offense. That was the remedy for the University of Hawai’i football team in a 44-9 rout of Eastern Illinois last night before 22,480 at Aloha Stadium. The treatment took 2 hours, 54 minutes. “We wanted to finish them off early,” said UH running back Nate Ilaoa, whose team rebounded from last week’s loss to Boise State to improve to 2-2. Eastern Illinois, a Division I-AA team limited to 63 scholarships —22 fewer than UH — fell to 2-3. “We’re happy everybody came out healthy, and nobody was hurt,” said EIU running back Vincent Webb. The only bruises were to the Panthers’ feelings. The Panthers managed 291 yards against the Warriors’ self-described “hungry” defense, with 57 yards accumulated on pass receptions. In the meantime, Colt Brennan fueled the Warriors’ offense, completing 30 of 41 passes for 409 yards and five touchdowns. He left after the Warriors’ second series in the second half, which concluded with Ilaoa’s 1-yard run to make it 41-9. Brennan was dealing with a shuffled lineup. Ryan Grice-Mullins, the usual starting right slotback, was wearing a medical boot because of a badly sprained left ankle. Ross Dickerson, who started the first three games at right wideout, opened at right slotback. Ian Sample, a sixth-year senior, made his first start of the season at right wideout. “Our receivers are so good, you can move them in and out and around, and it won’t make a difference,” Brennan said. Indeed. On the game’s opening drive, Sample sprinted past cornerback Terrance Sanders on a post pattern for a 29-yard scoring play. On the Warriors’ next drive, Dickerson sneaked into the right corner of the end zone to secure Brennan’s 16-yard pass. “It was a perfectly placed pass,” Dickerson said. “Colt went through all of his progressions, and saw me in the corner. He put it right there.” Dickerson had played two years at slotback before moving to wideout in the spring of 2004. While the offense has an equal number of opportunities for the four receivers, Brennan admitted, “When you’re an outside receiver, you’re really limited in what you can do. In our offense, the focal point is on the two inside guys. When Ross was told he would move inside, you could tell he was excited. He knew he would get more opportunities.” Dickerson dropped his first pass, much to Brennan’s surprise — and amusement. “Ross never makes mistakes, so it was funny to see,” Brennan said. “But he came back and made some big plays.” Dickerson finished with five catches for 67 yards; he was trumped by three other starting receivers. Sample caught six passes for 122 yards, left wideout Jason Rivers was six for 106, and left slotback Davone Bess, playing on a sprained ankle, was seven for 58. “We wanted to go out there and make plays and have fun,” Bess said. “We clicked, and we ended up having fun.” The Panthers, who were without injured All-America linebacker Clint Sellers, had no permanent answers for the Warriors’ four-wide offense. When they crammed the tackle box to deny the Warriors’ pet play, the shovel pass, Brennan would throw to the wideouts running post patterns. When the Panthers dropped seven defenders into pass coverage, Brennan would throw inside screens to the wideouts, swing passes to the slotbacks, or shovel passes and slips screens to Ilaoa. “The defense was bouncing around, making it hard to read,” Brennan said. “We fell back on what we know and what we’re taught. I would throw the ball, and somebody would be right there to catch it. I don’t think we played the best we can play. But we made the plays when we needed to make the plays. Luckily, the ball was in our court. The ball bounced our way. Did I leave out any other basketball analogies?” The run-and-gun style gave the Warriors leads of 14-0, 21-9 and, at the intermission, 34-9. The defense did the rest. “We were so hungry,” defensive end Ikaika Alama-Francis said. “It was depressing after we lost to Boise State. We couldn’t wait to take it out on somebody. Eastern Illinois is a good team, but they were next on the schedule. We wanted to jump on them early. We wanted to set a tone and get them out of there as fast as we could.” The Panthers rushed for 234 yards, including Webb’s 117. But 69 of those yards came when Webb broke free off a trap play. Other than that, the Panthers were largely ineffective in the first half, when the outcome was still in suspense, and they faced too many obvious passing situations. “We knew when it was a passing down, they tried to go long,” UH safety Leonard Peters said. But the Panthers were without wideout Ryan Voss, who was held out because of a shoulder injury, and 6-foot-6, 220-pound wideout Micah Rucker could not get unhinged from the Warriors’ grasping cornerbacks. CLIPPINGS 21 Rucker, who entered averaging a touchdown every third catch, finished with two catches for 17 yards. Neither reception was a touchdown. C.J. Hawthorne, who is 5 feet 11 and 166 pounds, and Kenny Patton, who is 6 feet and 185 pounds, took turns defending Rucker. “Big guys don’t like to be pushed, so we made sure we were really aggressive,” Patton said. “Coach (Jerry) Glanville set up schemes where we had hands on (Rucker) the whole game. He couldn’t run down the field free.” Rich Miano, who coaches the defensive backs, said: “We thought he would be the best receiver we’d face in terms of his physical ability. We wanted to jam him. We wanted to affect him. We wanted to double him. A lot of the game we didn’t double him, and when we didn’t, the corners really went up for the ball and made some plays. “A lot of big receivers don’t let the corner get off the ground,” Miano added. “They lean on the corner. Our guys did a good job of timing it up and getting the ball at the highest point. That’s what we teach, that’s what they practice, and that’s what they did.” Hawthorne said the best pass defense is a good pass rush. “Our front seven did all the work,” Hawthorne said. Nose tackle Michael Lafaele held the point, and defensive ends Melila Purcell III and Alama-Francis sealed the perimeters. The Warriors then sent blitzers from all points. The Panthers combined for 8-of-21 passing for 57 yards. Starter Mike Donato was 2 of 8 for 15 yards. “The quarterback was running for his life,” inside linebacker Adam Leonard said. “It’s hard for a quarterback to put the pass on the money when he’s running around.” Purcell said: “He looked like he was scared. I would be a little scared if I saw Ikaika coming off the edge.” The Warriors ended up with a season-high three interceptions. “We wanted to force turnovers, and let our offense do its thing,” Peters said. “That’s what happened. It was a nice night.” UH’S ESERA EAGER TO LEAD The converted defensive tackle is taking his senior season seriously By Dave Reardon October 5, 2006 Ask Tala Esera about his hunger for a win against Nevada on Saturday, and the Hawaii left tackle will tell you that you are understating the issue. “I’m starving,” Esera said after yesterday’s practice. “Put it that way.” It wasn’t always that way for the former defensive tackle from Kahuku. After switching over from defense after his redshirt year, Esera caught on quickly and did a competent job for nearly two years as the main bodyguard for Tim Chang and then last season for Colt Brennan. But one of coach June Jones’ favorite compound words, want-to, was rarely uttered in the same sentence with Esera’s name. But his stomach is growling now and Jones has noticed. “Obviously he has some ability,” the coach said. “He’s progressed. He’s worked harder this year.” Maybe it’s because this is his last year, and Esera knows the scouts are watching closely. Maybe it’s because as leader of the team’s Maori-warrior inspired haka dance, Esera is more pumped up at the start of games. “That’s when the beast comes out,” slotback Davone Bess said. Esera and senior safety Leonard Peters learned the haka last summer from relatives of Esera’s wife, Nadia. “I’m not Maori,” Esera said. “But my daughters (Talia and Maia) are.” Esera’s newfound leadership isn’t confined to the pregame dance. His trademark used to be that he didn’t make mistakes -- the first priority for a left tackle, and his consistency earned him WAC second-team recognition last year. But now he’s added passion to his game. “I see a tremendous growth in Tala from last year,” quarterback Colt Brennan said. “He’s really stepped up and taken on the senior leadership thing. “Most importantly it’s what you see on film. (Against UNLV the coaches) gave him player of the week because he was flying around, he was doing so many things, so athletic and he was playing with so much intensity. Then the next two weeks he played even better.” As he is every game, the 6-foot-4, 305pound Esera will be on the spot against the Wolf Pack. The left tackle is in many ways the key to pass protection schemes, and Nevada, which has 12 sacks in five games (including five by J.J. Milan) likes to attack from all directions. “They move around a lot, swarming like bees. Watching the film, it looks like one of the toughest defensive lines we’re going to face, I think. We’re going to have to focus down, get the looks in,” he said. Esera is scheduled to graduate in December. Until then, he balances school, football and raising a family. He gets up a 5 a.m. each day to carpool from the North Shore with fellow Kahuku grads Leonard Peters and Inoke Funaki. “It’s really, really stressing me out right now. But you gotta put in the work,” he said. “Hopefully I can reap the benefits later.” Reserves out: Reserve freshman outside linebacker Brashton Satele is out for at least two weeks with a hamstring he pulled on kickoff coverage drills Tuesday. Satele had started at outside linebacker against Eastern Illinois, but it appears C.J. Allen-Jones reclaimed his old spot. “He graded out the best,” position coach George Lumpkin said of Allen-Jones. Also, junior cornerback Ryan Keomaka is expected to miss at least one game with a sprained ankle suffered at yesterday’s practice. “We have some other players at cornerback, but his energy will be missed on special teams,” defensive backs coach Rich Miano said. Bess in the nation: Sophomore slotback Davone Bess was excited yesterday about being accepted into UH’s communications program. But he was also happy about ranking first in Division I-A in pass receptions per game with 7.75. “It feels real good, and it reinforces in me to just stay humble,” he said. “Stay focused and push to stay No. 1, and try for even more.” CLIPPINGS 22 UH NOSE TACKLE LAFAELE ONE TOUGH COOKIE By Stephen Tsai October 6, 2006 Think your job is tough? Har. Don’t even whine if you’re not a shark tamer, Paris Hilton’s publicist or a nose tackle in football. “If we didn’t have training camp and practices,” Hawai’i defensive coordinator Jerry Glanville said, “we’d prepare our nose tackle by sending him out to the Interstate and letting him dodge cars.” Jeff Reinebold, who coaches the UH defensive linemen, mused: “Know how we pick our nose tackle? We take a guy into a room, turn out the lights, and three guys with baseball bats hit him from different angles. If he can stand up and walk, then we sign him up. If not, we send him to another position. What happens in that room is what a nose tackle will experience for the next five years in games and practices.” For the past two seasons, it was Michael Lafaele who stood and delivered. Lafaele, a fourth-year junior from Farrington High School, is the unknown soldier in the Warriors’ three-man defensive front. Lafaele, who is 6 feet and weighs 305 pounds, holds the point — keeping the offensive traffic from advancing — to allow his celebrated wingmen, defensive ends Melila Purcell III and Ikaika Alama-Francis, to seal the perimeters. The ferocity of the defensive line is why the Warriors are third among Western Athletic Conference teams in scoring defense, relinquishing 22 points per game. “He’s part of the reason we’re special,” Glanville said. Reinebold, who has become a devoted video student, declared that Lafaele, “for the position he plays, is playing as well as anybody I’ve seen on tape. And I’ve watched everybody’s people when we’re doing our cross-scouting evaluation. He has taken his play, in my opinion, to the next level. “He’s not a great guy to look at,” Reinebold added. “He’s not going to win any beauty contests coming off the bus in his uniform (for his style of play). But once the ball is snapped, that’s what matters.” UH’s 3-4 defense involves the same concepts as the scheme used by the Super Bowl champion Pittsburgh Steelers. Because of that, Lafaele has earned the nickname “Kimo,” in tribute to Moloka’i High grad Kimo von Oelhoffen, a defensive tackle with the Steelers last season who now plays for the New York Jets. “They wear the same number (67) and play the same style,” Reinebold said. “Kimo’s not a real pretty guy, either, but he’s a really good football player. I think it’s a good compliment for Michael.” Lafaele deflects such praise. Told of the comparison to von Oelhoffen, Lafaele said: “No ways.” In UH’s defense, Lafaele has the difficult two-gap job, meaning he is responsible for covering the gaps on each side of the opposing center. “He does it well, and it’s not an easy thing to do,” Reinebold said. It is even more difficult because Lafaele is suffering from plantar fasciitis, a painful injury to the heel of his left foot. “When he’s not playing, he has to wear a special (medical) boot,” Glanville said. “He can’t even take (a pain-killing) injection.” Lafaele said he tries to ignore the stabbing pain. “I have treatment on it two times a day, before practice and before (the afternoon) meetings,” Lafaele said. Glanville said: “He’s a tough guy. I don’t know how he can even stand on it.” Lafaele also said he does not mind the double blocks he faces on every play. “I’m used to it,” he said. “You just have to play fast and smart.” Reinebold said: “The reason he’s good is he’s a tough, tough guy. He’s the kind of guy you need on your football team. There are a lot of guys who get overlooked in your recruiting because everybody wants the bigger, taller, faster guy. But when the final analysis is made, there are a lot of big, tall, fast guys who aren’t making plays. Michael makes plays.” And, there are times, when Lafaele is playful. “I’m always busy with football and school, but I try to spend as much time with my kids,” said Lafaele, who is a father to two daughters, 5 years and 20 months, and a 9month-old son. “Their mom does a great job with them. I try to help.” CLIPPINGS 23 UH WINS A HOWLER Hawaii leads the entire way but needs a goal-line stand to give Nevada its second loss in the WAC By Dave Reardon October 8, 2006 DIFFERENT people have different ideas of fun. Hawaii nose tackle Mike Lafaele loved the fact that Nevada fought back in the fourth quarter and the Warriors needed to make a goal-line stand to hold off the Wolf Pack. UH prevailed 41-34, but not until the defense stopped Nevada’s offense with four tries from the Hawaii 3 last night at Aloha Stadium. “I like this kind of game, where they keep coming after us. It shows how tough our defense is. It’s a lot of fun. It makes the celebration a lot better,” Lafaele said. Quarterback Colt Brennan, who passed for four touchdowns and rushed for another, would prefer a blowout like the ones UH dealt UNLV and Eastern Illinois in previous home games. Brennan, who completed 36 of 47 attempts with no interceptions, passed for 419 yards and went into the game leading the nation in touchdowns responsible for. He was worried that this game would end up as a loss responsible for. And there’d be no fun in that. “Once I fumbled, all the fun went out,” said Brennan, whose miscue with less than 4 minutes left gave Nevada the ball at the 3 and its chance for a first WAC win in Hawaii. With a full moon over Halawa at the end of a day that included WAC victories by Utah State (over Fresno State) and Idaho, the Aloha Stadium stage was set for something exciting. That’s what the 29,427 in attendance got, as Nevada kept clawing back. In the end, Hawaii’s prolific offense and improving defense proved too much for visiting Nevada to overcome, and the home team held serve for the seventh consecutive time in this series. “It got a little antsy at the end, but I’m glad we came out on top,” UH coach June Jones said. “(Brennan) was pretty phenomenal. At the end of the game, we fumbled the ball, but I’m glad it didn’t make a difference and overshadow the great game he played.” The Warriors (3-2, 1-1 WAC) led all the way, but needed the entire game to shake the gum-on-the-shoe Wolf Pack. Offensive stars, as usual, were plenty for UH, and they helped the Warriors build what seemed a comfortable lead. Nate Ilaoa rushed for 151 yards and managed 68 more receiving. Davone Bess caught 10 passes for 139 yards, including a touchdown. Ian Sample grabbed five for 107 yards and two scores. Nevada closed to 41-34 on touchdown connections of 13 and 5 yards from Travis Moore to Anthony Pudewell, the second with 3:57 left. Travis Branzell then recovered an onside kick. But Nevada was called for being offside and the Wolf Pack kicked it away to UH. The Warriors took over at their own 5 with less than 4 minutes remaining, but on the second play, Brennan rolled left and had the ball knocked out of his grasp by Jason DeMars. Charles Wilson recovered at the Hawaii 3. Nevada could not move the ball in four plays, the last with Amani Purcell pressuring Moore and Leonard Peters providing the pass coverage in the end zone as the ball and Nevada’s hopes fell to the ground. “We were doubling on that slot (Mike McCoy) and we were lucky they went to him,” Peters said. “They were going to have to throw it through me or over me, and that’s what they did (over).” Purcell pressured Moore into a hasty throw. “People think I’m the hero,” Peters said. “But the defensive line and linebackers were pressuring them all game.” Lafaele said stopping Luke Lippincott for no gain on first down was crucial. “They came at us that first play running the ball. We knew they couldn’t run on us,” Lafaele said. Lafaele sought out Brennan afterward. “He told me after the game to just trust us and I sure do now,” Brennan said. For the second game in a row, two of Brennan’s TD passes were to Sample. “I like the trend,” Sample said. “I hope I can keep it up.” The Warriors led 31-21 at halftime, but Nevada (3-3, 0-2) took the momentum to the lockers after putting together a successful 2minute drill aided by two Hawaii penalties. The 80-yard drive was capped by Nevada starting quarterback Jeff Rowe’s 3-yard touchdown pass to McCoy. After the break, Dan Kelly’s second field goal, a 25-yarder, pushed UH’s lead to 34-21 at 7:49 of the third quarter. Hawaii threatened to add to the lead on the next series, but Ilaoa fumbled at the Wolf Pack 1. Leonard forced and recovered Brandon Fragger’s fumble on the next play at the Nevada 21, but again UH could not score. This time Joe Garcia blocked Kelly’s 24-yard field-goal try. The UH defense continued to come up big in key spots. Karl Noa knocked the ball out of Rowe’s hands and Purcell recovered, apparently giving Hawaii the ball at the Nevada 33. But the CLIPPINGS 24 replay official ruled Rowe was already down before the ball came out and the Wolf Pack retained possession. Once again, Hawaii stopped Nevada, this time on fourth and 1 at midfield. Three plays later, Brennan was in the end zone after a 6yard run. Hawaii led 10-7 after a first quarter in which the two quarterbacks combined for just one incomplete pass in 19 attempts. Brennan was 13-for-14 and Rowe 5-for-5 . One of Rowe’s passes was a 19-yard touchdown to Jack Darlington, and Brennan hit Sample for a 17-yard score. Sample’s first touchdown was reviewed by officials because it appeared he may have been out of bounds before he could put the ball over the goal line. There was no doubt on Sample’s next score, which came on the Warriors’ next offensive play. Brennan found him wide open on a post pattern for a 63-yard score, and UH led 17-7 early in the second quarter. The Warriors extended the lead on a 9yard pass from Brennan to Bess. It culminated a 61-yard drive set up by Kenny Patton’s recovery of a fumble by Nevada’s Robert Hubbard. PAYBACK COMPLETE By Stephen Tsai October 15, 2006 FRESNO, Calif. — The University of Hawai’i football team took all of those IOUs, consolidated them into a dominating performance, and cashed out a 68-37 rout of Fresno State yesterday at Bulldog Stadium. “This is so sweet I can’t even describe it,” said UH free safety Leonard Peters, who scored on a 54-yard interception return. “We put it all on the line, and this is the result.” It ended with right tackle Dane Uperesa kicking the “head” of the painted Bulldog logo at midfield, where the Warriors performed the haka while the stunned-into-silence Fresno State Marching Band watched from the side. It ended with UH slotback Davone Bess pointing at the “Boneyard” — the mock cemetery with bone-shaped tombstones marking the Bulldogs’ conquered opponents — and yelling, “Let them go bury themselves!” It ended with June Jones, after giving his last we’re-happy-to-win interview, running into the locker room, jabbing a reporter on the shoulder and flashing the widest grin in his eight seasons as UH head coach. The Warriors’ point total was their most for a road game — and the most a visiting team scored in Bulldog Stadium. It also put to rest the nightmare of the Warriors’ last visit to Fresno, in 2004, a 70-14 disaster in which the Bulldogs attempted an onside kick late in the fourth quarter. Although only 18 of the 60 players on yesterday’s UH travel roster played in that game, the bitter story has been passed down to this generation. “They really stuck it to us the last time,” said Uperesa, a senior. “No mercy. No mercy at all. We felt so bad. We knew we had to make it right.” Bess, a UH prospect in 2004, was in the stands for that game. “It was so embarrassing,” Bess recalled. “Right then, I knew I definitely wanted to go to UH. I wasn’t even part of that team, but it hurt so bad I wanted to do everything in my power not to let it happen again.” History did not have the slightest chance of a hana hou, thanks to the dart-fling accuracy of Colt Brennan, who passed for 409 yards and five touchdowns; running back Nate Ilaoa, who scored three touchdowns, and a UH defense that forced three turnovers and dazedand-confused a senior who entered as the nation’s seventh-leading rusher. UH improved to 4-2 overall and 2-1 in the Western Athletic Conference. FSU is 1-5 and 1-2. UH built leads of 28-7, 42-17 at the intermission, and 62-23. “When we were up 42-14, we said, ‘Let’s make it the game they made it two years ago,” Brennan said. Brennan, a junior from Irvine, Calif., completed 71 percent of his passes in the Warriors’ first five games. Yesterday, he was even better. He was 32 of 39 (82 percent), and made only one inaccurate throw — a pass knocked down at the line of scrimmage. There were four dropped passes; wideout Ian Sample slipped after breaking into the open, and Bess caught a pass outside of the sideline. “He’s so consistently accurate, and he’s becoming more consistently accurate,” said Dan Morrison, who coaches the UH quarterbacks. “It’s a little scary when you think about his potential. And nothing bothers him. It can be day. It can be night. It can be in front of a hostile crowd.” Brennan certainly wasn’t flustered by an early deficit — 7-0, when FSU’s Bear Pascoe scored on a 75-yard, catch-and-trudge play — or the Bulldogs’ initial bump-and-bump-somemore coverages. On UH’s second series, Brennan broke the ice with a shovel pass to Ilaoa, who juked his way for 39 yards. “Right then, we knew we could move the ball,” Brennan said. “We didn’t see it on their faces, we saw it on our faces. It was like, ‘Here we go. We got a big play. Let’s roll.’ Once we started rolling, there was no stopping us.” When the FSU defensive backs pressed, the UH receivers ran cut patterns. “All you had to do was go past the linebackers and it was pretty much one-on-one with the safeties,” left wideout Jason Rivers said. “We forced the safeties to make choices. If they pick one, we pick the other. We have so many weapons.” Sample, UH’s right wideout, said: “It’s really hard to play us one-on-one. All you need is half an inch on somebody, and Colt will find you. Colt is so perfect at placing the ball. His accuracy is crazy. When you’re open, you know the ball is coming to you, and it’s always on the money. We really don’t have to make plays. Colt makes plays for us.” Ross Dickerson led UH with 10 receptions for 115 yards and a touchdown. Bess, who is the nation’s leading receiver, had eight grabs for 70 yards. Sample and Rivers each had six catches. “Colt did a nice job of finding people,” Jones said, noting Brennan used a silent count to counter the crowd noise. “We practiced the silent counts all week, but it’s not easy, not in this place.” Ilaoa said: “If you want to get rid of the loud crowds, you have to execute.” Ilaoa, the uppercut to Brennan’s rat-a-tat passing, powered his way off “Tampa,” a play in which he follows a guard pulling from the back side. Left guard Hercules Satele made the key block on Ilaoa’s 5-yard scoring run; right guard John Estes led the way on a 20-yard touchdown run. “He was ‘Nasti Nate,’ “ Brennan said. “We have to keep feeding him the ball and keep him happy.” The Bulldogs, meanwhile, were running on empty. Dwayne Wright, who entered averCLIPPINGS 25 aging 132.6 rushing yards per game, carried 11 times for 16 yards, including a 12-yard run. He fumbled twice — once when hit by a visually challenged Solomon Elimimian. Elimimian, the left inside linebacker, said he was struck on the left eye the play before forcing the fumble. “I couldn’t see (clearly) out of my whole left eye for two plays,” said Elimimian, who sought guidance from right inside linebacker Adam Leonard. “I was like, ‘Adam, what’s the play?’ My left eye was blurry. All I saw was the guard pull. I knew that was an automatic (run). I scraped downhill, and I saw (Wright’s) red shirt, and I just hit him. I was lucky to force the fumble.” To defend the run, the Warriors often turn to their “Jumbo” package, which employs five defensive linemen. This time, the Warriors went with “jumbo shrimp,” featuring nose tackle Michael Lafaele, defensive ends Melila Purcell III and Ikaika Alama-Francis, and undersized outside linebackers Brad Kalilimoku (5-10, 213 pounds) and Micah Lau (5-9, 215). Kalilimoku, who had the Warriors’ only sack, moved to outside linebacker last Wednesday. “Coach told me to have fun and play football, and I had fun and I played football,” Kalilimoku said. Lau, who was making his first UH start, set the defensive tone when he tackled Wright for a 9-yard loss on a screen play in the first quarter. “We were practicing that the whole week,” Lau said. “I was waiting for it to happen. You have to make plays when they put you in. I never think about my size. It’s not like I can get taller overnight. Worrying isn’t going to get me playing time. I’ve got to rely on my speed and strength.” The key to UH’s defense was Lafaele, who moved from center to nose tackle two years ago. Lafaele was able to control Fresno State’s Kyle Young, regarded as one of the nation’s best centers. In the Bulldogs’ offensive scheme, when the center can’t move the nose tackle, the running game dies. “I just wanted to use my technique and hands,” Lafaele said. That wasn’t so easy because he suffered a broken middle finger in his right hand during the game. “The reason we played well is because Mike Lafaele took what was supposed to be one of the best centers in the nation and physically abused him,” said Jeff Reinebold, who coaches the defensive line. Lafaele said: “(Young is) a good player, but I think our center (Samson Satele) is 10 times better, and I face our center every day in practice.” A half-hour after the final whistle, Fresno State coach Pat Hill went into the UH locker room to congratulate Jones. After 10 minutes, Hill emerged, but declined further interview requests. “I’m done talking,” Hill said. “(What happened in the game) says enough.” UH RULES THE ROAD The Warriors poke another hole in their image as a team that cannot win away from Aloha Stadium By Dave Reardon October 22, 2006 LAS CRUCES, N.M. » Hawaii is in danger of losing its football identity -- at least the popular perception of teams that haven’t played the Warriors. UH’s national image as a finesse team that can’t win on the road took a serious pounding last night, almost as rough as the one UH laid on New Mexico State in the fourth quarter as 17,318 watched at Aggie Memorial Stadium. Hawaii ruined a second consecutive homecoming by dominating the end game after NMSU, nearly a three-touchdown underdog, managed to hang within four points with three quarters in the books. UH’s Colt Brennan (330 passing yards, five touchdowns) and NMSU’s Chase Holbrook (323 yards, three TDs) didn’t disappoint for the most part in the highly anticipated matchup of prolific quarterbacks. But it was Hawaii’s huge defensive plays late in the game that allowed the Warriors to take control and win 49-30. Hawaii (5-2, 3-1 WAC) won its fourth consecutive game. The Aggies (2-5, 0-3) are still looking for their first win against a Division I-A team since 2004. “I told the team it was going to be a dogfight,” Warriors coach June Jones said. “Whoever hit the hardest and got turnovers and took care of the ball would win. We did that. We got some big hits and turnovers and that made the difference.” Coupled with UH’s 68-37 win at Fresno State last week, the Warriors have now won road games consecutively for the first time since they were victorious at Oregon and Air Force to start the 1992 season. UH is still a game behind unbeaten Boise State (the last team Hawaii lost against) in the standings, but Aggies coach Hal Mumme said the Warriors are a better team. “I think they are the best team in our conference. We’ve played all the top teams now and those guys are road warriors,” Mumme said. “You realize they’ve been on the road four out of the last eight weeks and with who’ve they had to play, June has done a real good job.” So did the UH defense last night, when the game was on the line. The Warriors forced the Aggies to turn the ball over on downs and to fumble twice late in the game, resulting in 21 Hawaii points that put it out of reach. Sophomore linebacker Adam Leonard scooped up a fumble forced by end Mel Purcell’s big hit on Holbrook. Leonard returned it 20 yards for his first touchdown since high school and a 42-24 lead with 11:11 left. “Our motive was to come out and get some turnovers, and everybody came out fired up. We just had big plays,” Purcell said. Leonard was in on 11 tackles. “We knew whatever plays their offense made we just had to line up and try again,” said Leonard, of going up against the nation’s No. 1-ranked passing offense. “We just had to play longer than them and keep pushing and pushing and finally we made some plays at the end.” A dividend of the play was Holbrook being knocked out of the game for the next few plays. “It caught me out of the ceiling,” Holbrook said. “It just dazed me a bit. He got a solid hit on me, I didn’t see him coming. It was a clean tackle.” When Holbrook did return, he fumbled the snap from center and UH’s Kahai LaCount recovered at the New Mexico State 42. Two plays later, Ross Dickerson scored his second touchdown of the game on a 36yard pass from Brennan, and the Warriors owned a 49-24 lead with 7:58 left. “It had to be that way,” said Dickerson, who led UH with six catches for 125 yards. “Because their receivers can catch the ball. And our defense had to hit them in the mouth to give us the ball back. They can score and we can score. So whoever’s defense was there, out there hitting, making guys fumble (would win).” And running back Nate Ilaoa, along with the UH offensive line, also provided a physical presence. Ilaoa pounded the Aggies’ weak defense for 94 yards and the game’s first touchdown rushing and 41 more on two receptions. “I think what really helped our defense is the offense running the football,” UH defensive coordinator Jerry Glanville said. “That quarterback can play. That’s a good football player. Everything that we did to him, for him to keep playing. I’m glad to get out of here.” The Warriors led 28-17 after a first half in which Brennan completed his first nine passes and threw for touchdowns to Dickerson, Davone Bess and Ian Sample. UH also got a huge break when an apparent fumble by Bess was called back and Hawaii -- trying to build on a 21-17 lead -retained the ball because of an inadvertent whistle before the end of the play. “The umpire (Mike Rhoades) came over and apologized after the play was over and said it has never happened in all the years that he had been officiating,” Mumme said. “It’s unfortunate, but that’s not what cost us the CLIPPINGS 26 game. We got beat by a better team.” Brennan completed his first nine passes before an incompletion at 14:27 of the second quarter, including a 34-yard TD to Dickerson to give UH a 14-0 lead. But the Aggies tied it up with two scores in the space of 34 seconds. Chris Nwoko scored on a 3-yard run, capping a 12-play, 68-yard drive. NMSU elected to deceive on the ensuing kickoff, with Matt Pratt recovering his own onside kick at the Hawaii 46. A face-mask penalty on UH moved the ball to the 31, and Holbrook hit Chris Williams for a 27-yard TD. Williams, who entered the game as the nation’s second-leading receiver by yardage per game, caught seven passes for 160 yards and two scores. Brennan hit Bess for a 16-yard score and a 21-14 lead as Bess split the safeties and Brennan found his third option. The Aggies settled for a 25-yard field goal by Ryan Bowling on the next drive. Holbrook appeared to connect with Nick Cleaver for a touchdown, but safety Jake Patek caught up to the play and knocked the ball out of Cleaver’s hands. Later, Holbrook eluded Hawaii’s pressure long enough on second and 11 to find Williams wide open 40 yards downfield. The 61-yard touchdown clipped UH’s lead to 28-24 at 12:39 of the third quarter. Dickerson returned the next kickoff from a yard deep in his own end zone to the NMSU 36. The Warriors drove to the 1, but were stonewalled by the Aggies. UH committed its first and only turnover in three games as Brennan tossed a bad pitch toward Ilaoa on fourth and goal at the 2 and NMSU’s Brandon McKinney recovered. The Aggies then drove to the Hawaii 21. NMSU survived Myron Newberry’s interception when it was called back because of a roughing call against Lawrence Wilson, but not a fourth-down stand when Holbrook scrambled 11 yards but was stopped short of a first down by Solomon Elimimian (who had a game-high 14 tackles) and C.J.Allen-Jones. HAWAII’S ILAOA THROWS EVERYBODY OFF By Kalani Simpson October 27, 2006 MAYBE it’s just my imagination, because, eh, nobody’s out there hitting ME, but it just looks like teams aren’t trying too hard to tackle Nate Ilaoa. Yeah? These days it really seems like they want no piece of him. Um ... well, based on the reaction to the question, maybe it is just my imagination because I’m not the guy getting hit. The guy getting hit has a dissenting opinion. He has the bruises to prove it. Not trying to tackle him? “I hope they’re not trying to tackle me,” the Hawaii running back says, busting out a grin the way he bursts into the secondary. “That would be easier!” Well, maybe he’s just making it look easy. Maybe that’s it. Maybe he’s so good right now it seems like defenders can only stick out an arm and wave as he goes by. Maybe it just looks like they drop their heads going in, maybe he just makes them look like they’re ducking, just hoping he’ll trip in their wake. Maybe it’s what Nate says. Maybe it’s that they’re not quite sure what to do with him, these days, and so maybe it isn’t so easy for him, either -- they’re so undecided, he’s befuddled. He has no idea how they’re going to come at him. And how is a running back supposed to react to that? “I’ve got guys going low now,” he says, “so it’s kind of hard for me to guess what they’re going to do. Because I usually try to have a mind-set of what they’re doing so I can get ready for it, my moves and stuff. Yeah, they give me all type of different looks.” Maybe that’s it. Maybe when they’re coming up to hit him they’re the worst thing an athlete can be: unsure. Maybe that’s how good he’s been this season. Maybe this is what happens when you take the Washington Post high school player of the year, add 20, 30, 40 ... whatever number of pounds, keep the moves -- well, you see that coming at you, it can be ... confounding. How are they supposed to react? “Usually, when I was smaller, most guys would try to put the big hit on you because when you’re smaller they try to give you the big hits,” Nate says. “I guess now, my mind frame is still like I’m a little guy, when I’m running and stuff. But these guys are going low, like big backs. Sometimes it feels a little bit awkward. You could hurdle ‘em, but last time I hurdled and hit my leg ...” See how confusing this is for everybody? Well, somehow, Ilaoa has found a way to live with it, to the tune of eight touchdowns and 8.9 yards every time he touches the ball. And make no mistake. Colt Brennan is in a Rolo zone and Hawaii’s receivers are both good and plenty, and the line is playing out of its mind (this line is incredible). This offense would get a lot of yards and a lot of points even without a running threat, that’s true. But Ilaoa is the X factor -- he gives it that nextlevel gear. He’s the guy who makes it all go. Doubt it? Why is it that it looked like those New Mexico State guys looked like they actually wanted to hit him, for once? “I think they did a better job,” Ilaoa says. “I feel like they were spying on me, both linebackers were spying on me, so not that I knew anything, but the ends were kind of two-gapping it, looking in the backfield, waiting for those little screens.” Think about that. That’s four guys looking at one guy. You think you have a shot to stop Colt Brennan if that’s your defensive scheme? Well, what choice is there? With Nate Ilaoa back there you have to think shovels and runs. Sure, you’re vulnerable against the pass, but at least with the pass you can still have hope that someone might drop one. When Nate has the ball the next thing you know everyone starts ducking and waving, not quite sure how to approach him, what to do next. And then it’s 10 yards, then 20. Something about him just throws everyone off. That’s how good he’s been this year. “My quickness and stuff are still there,” he says, “I’ve still got that mentality of being that 185 dude, when I first came in.” (Wait a minute. He was 185? That’s 40, 50 ...) “Other than that I just feel a lot bigger,” he says. “I just feel like there’s a little Porsche inside that Hummer frame.” CLIPPINGS 27 WARRIOR WIPEOUT By Stephen Tsai October 29, 2006 The University of Hawai’i football team’s night to remember was Idaho’s nightmare to forget. The Warriors, who took control from the coin toss, scored on the opening kickoff return and never looked back in a 68-10 rout before a homecoming crowd of 29,364 at Aloha Stadium. Colt Brennan threw for 333 yards and five touchdowns. It was his third consecutive five-touchdown game, and fifth in the last six weeks. The Warriors won their fifth in a row to seize sole possession of second place in the Western Athletic Conference. They are 6-2 overall and 4-1 in the WAC. The Warriors are promised a berth in the Sheraton Hawai’i Bowl if they finish with a winning regular season. They can meet that goal with a victory in Saturday’s road game against Utah State. “We’re a pretty good football team right now,” UH coach June Jones said. Brennan said: “We’re finally coming around that hump. We started the second half of our season (last night). We’ve seen so many teams have good first halves, and then go in the tank. For us to come out and win the way we did, against a pretty good Idaho team, that was great.” The Warriors won the coin toss and, as always, chose to receive. In reviewing videotapes, the Warriors noticed that the Vandals try to overplay their kick coverage. In the huddle before the kickoff, the UH coaches called for “left return.” “We knew that ‘left return’ was going to break,” said Timo Paepule, who plays “center” on the front line of the UH kick return. “They loaded the other side. I was smiling, a big smile. I turned around and looked at Ross (Dickerson), and I thought, ‘This is going to the house.’ “ Dickerson, who was aligned on the right, fielded the kickoff on the goal line. Malcolm Lane, the other kick returner, then joined David Veikune, Amani Purcell and Bully Fergerstrom to form the initial four-man wedge. “Everybody did their job, and Ross made it happen,” Lane said. Dickerson emerged from the wedge, and sprinted along the left sideline to complete the 100-yard touchdown play. “It was wide open,” Dickerson said. “Everybody did their job. It just popped wide open. I was running and my guys were knocking people down, keeping guys away from me. It came out to be six. It was a total team effort.” On the UH sideline, free safety Leonard Peters recalled: “Everybody was pumped and jacked up. We always talk about getting momentum. We got it on the first play. Ross led the way.” Dickerson also showed his leadership before the game. Dickerson started the first three games at right wideout, but moved to right slotback as an injury replacement for Ryan Grice-Mullins. With Grice-Mullins prepared to return last night, Jones decided to rotate Grice-Mullins and Dickerson. But Jones had difficulty coming up with an order. Grice-Mullins wanted Dickerson to start, but Dickerson refused, and ordered GriceMullins to open at right slotback. “I wanted him to go in there, but he kept insisting and insisting,” Grice-Mullins said. “I had no choice. He took the leadership role and made me go in.” Brennan said: “Ross gave up his starting position to let Ryan play. I’m a big karma guy. I believe what goes around comes around. I think when Ross did that, he set the tone for us. He showed we’re a team. He made a personal sacrifice to help us reach our team goals. That means a lot.” After that, the Warriors could not be stopped. They scored touchdowns on their first six possessions. Brennan was 31 of 38, extending his streak of passes without an interception to 168. He also was able to solve the riddle of the Vandals’ multiple-blitz schemes. In the first quarter, the Vandals alternated blitzing a cornerback or linebacker. On one play, linebacker Josh Bousman raced toward Brennan on a delayed blitz. Just before absorbing the hit, Brennan lofted a pass to Jason Rivers, who was running a slant pattern, for a touchdown and a 14-0 UH lead. “When you blitz, you leave your coverage at a disadvantage,” Brennan said. “Right now, our offense has a good understanding. We know what we need to do and where we need to be. Sometimes I know where the receiver is supposed to be even before he gets there. That’s what happens when you practice the same plays over and over. You get that feel. If they’re going to blitz like that, we should have an answer. Today we had the answers.” The Warriors appeared to be a step ahead. Davone Bess’ 2-yard scoring catch was set up when Grice-Mullins went into motion, drawing away a defender. Later, Nate Ilaoa appeared to have scored on a 10-yard run around the left side. But the replay official nullified the touchdown, saying Ilaoa’s knee touched the ground at the 1. “I was thinking, ‘Dang replays,’” Ilaoa said, smiling. “But I was happy to get a second chance.” He scored easily on the next play. “Our defense had no answers,” Idaho linebacker David Vorbona said. “It was one of those nights you want to forget. They could do CLIPPINGS 28 whatever they wanted to us. We couldn’t wrap up. We couldn’t make tackles. I think they converted every third down on us. When that happens, you’re not going to be successful. It just wasn’t our night.” Idaho’s offense did not have it any easier. After falling behind 14-0 and then 21-7, the Vandals scrapped their power running game and opted to pass frequently. Thing is, UH defensive coordinator Jerry Glanville said, “I think they decided they would throw every down before the game started.” Instead of using the jumbo package featuring five defensive linemen, the Warriors went nearly the entire game with their basic 34 scheme, with the secondary mixing zones and man coverages on Idaho’s four receivers. “We didn’t even look for the run,” Glanville said. “If they ran, they ran.” The Warriors, encouraged by their student sections — more than 1,000 pairs of ThunderStix-like noisemakers were circulated — made a six-play stand in the second quarter that resulted only in an Idaho field goal. Later, on fourth-and-10 in the third quarter, quarterback Steve Wichman tried to sprint for a first down. UH strong safety Jake Patek raced over and floored Wichman short of the first-down marker. Wichman did not return. It was the sixth time this season UH has forced a quarterback from the game. “Something clicks when you see a quarterback scrambling,” Patek said. “You think, ‘It’s a quarterback, I’ve got to hit him as hard as I can.’ ... I saw a receiver. I don’t know if he was trying to block me. The quarterback tried to make a move outside the receiver. Once he made the move, I knew I had to come out and put the shoulder to him. “Coach Glanville is always telling us ‘big bag, big bag’ (hit a player hard). I wonder if Glanville was pleased?” Glanville said: “I have to go check it on film. Live, it looked pretty good. All of our players looked pretty good.” DICKERSON GETS IT GOING The return man gets the first punch in against Idaho By Jason Kaneshiro October 29, 2006 Hawaii’s special teams got some rare recognition before the Warriors’ game against Idaho last night, and the group responded by setting the tone for a blowout victory. The kickoff coverage unit was introduced before the game and the return crew got the night off to a rousing start, as Ross Dickerson took back the game’s opening kick to the house. Dickerson’s 100-yard goal-line-to-goalline sprint sent the Warriors off to a 68-10 Western Athletic Conference win over the Vandals at Aloha Stadium. The return gave the nation’s second-highest scoring offense a head start and the Warriors scored touchdowns on each of their first six possessions. “We knew we had a chance to return one, but I didn’t know it would be on the opening kickoff,” UH head coach June Jones said. “The kids executed the return that we wanted. They blocked it correctly and Ross did the rest.” If Jones didn’t have an idea it would happen, one person on the unit did. “Timo (Papilla) called it,” special-teams player Rustin Saole said, referring to his fellow reserve linebacker and another contributor in the kicking game. “He said we were taking it to the house.” With the fans still settling in, Dickerson fielded the kick near the right hash mark, veered to his left and burst through a hole in the Vandals’ coverage. He followed his blockers to the sideline, then sprinted untouched to the end zone. “We just executed the game plan and things just seemed to work out,” Dickerson said. “We got it to the house, so everybody had a key block.” Dickerson, the reigning WAC special teams player of the week, entered the game first in the WAC and 13th in the nation in kickoff returns with an average of 28.1 yards per attempt. The touchdown return was UH’s first since Dickerson went the length of the field in his debut as a Warrior against Appalachian State in 2003. “We’ve been close all year,” UH special teams assistant Dennis McKnight said. “The kids up front have been busting their butts and we were fortunate tonight. Every guy got their guy and Ross made a great run. “(Dickerson’s) not the fastest guy in the world, but a great returner hits it north and south and that’s what he did tonight.” Dickerson’s dash moved him past Darrick Branch into fifth place in career kickoff-return yards and spooked Idaho into keeping subsequent kickoffs on the ground. He also contributed a big play on offense in the third quarter, breaking loose over the middle for a 50yard completion from Colt Brennan to set up UH’s seventh touchdown of the night. The UH coverage team made its mark as well after getting its moment in the spotlight before kickoff. “It’s a big thrill because they’ve worked hard, they deserved it and they earned it and (head coach June Jones’) the type of coach who knows that,” McKnight said. On a night when UH defenders seemed to one-up each other with big hits, Saole got into the mix by drilling Idaho returner Raymond Fry at the Vandals’ 20 on a third-quarter kickoff return. “I was kind of nervous coming out,” Saole said of having his name called as he ran out of the tunnel. “I was taking all the energy from the crowd and my teammates, I was just ready to come out and just play. “We know what we can do and we have the faith we can do it. Every game no matter if we’re up or down we’re going to keep coming at you.” CLIPPINGS 29 GLANVILLE’S BIG BAG THEORY HELPS DEFENSE By Stephen Tsai November 1, 2006 On the first day of football training camp in August 2005, University of Hawai’i defensive coordinator Jerry Glanville introduced his close friend — a 6-foot, 200-plus-pound, buoy-shaped green bag — to the players. “The first time I saw it,” inside linebacker Adam Leonard recalled, “I thought, ‘That’s a big bag. I wonder what you use it for.’ “ Indeed, the big bag was named the Big Bag, and it was used as a tackling and teaching tool. In the drill known as “hitting the Big Bag,” a player braces against the opposite side while a defender tries to knock over the bag. “One guy can’t do it,” Leonard said. “You need another guy to jump in and help knock it over. That’s the way the bag is designed. It doesn’t fall if one guy hits it. It teaches us that it’s always good to have more guys in on the tackle. That’s how we got our saying: ‘There’s always room for one more.’ “ In position drills each practice, pairs of defenders take turn trying to hit the Big Bag. “Ever since I’ve known Jerry, we’ve always had the Big Bag,” head coach June Jones said. “The Big Bag represents an attitude and a belief in gang tackling. Jerry does a great job of getting that part of it done. He uses the Big Bag as a real person.” Glanville created Frankenstein’s monster in 1974, his first year as a coach with the Detroit Lions. Glanville said he was told: “This is pro football. We don’t do live hitting.” Glanville found a loophole. “They said ‘no live hitting.’ That didn’t mean we couldn’t hit something that wasn’t alive,” he theorized. Glanville crafted the design for a large tackling bag. A manufacturer in Michigan built the first Big Bag. Glanville ordered a new Big Bag every year. “We used to put Big Bag in a golf cart,” Glanville said. “We drove the cart onto the field to let Big Bag watch the game. For all of the work he does, we figured he deserved to go to the game.” After his last NFL job, with the Atlanta Falcons, Glanville went into broadcasting and race-car driving. During those years, Big Bag went into retirement. In April 2005, Glanville was hired as UH’s defensive coordinator. His first call was to the Michigan company. “Sorry,” Glanville was told, “We don’t make it anymore. We only had one customer, and you went to TV.” Glanville called around, and found a company in Alabama. Glanville sent the designs. “It has a heavy bottom, like a lot of people I used to know,” Glanville said. At the start of the 2005 training camp, Big Bag arrived. The players originally nicknamed it “Uriah,” after former UH offensive lineman Uriah Moenoa. “It’s just Big Bag,” Glanville stressed. Glanville said the athletic department paid for Big Bag. “I’m not sure of the cost, but I know the cost wasn’t as much as the shipping,” Glanville said. He also does not know the contents of Big Bag. “I’m guessing they filled it with the dirt from my office,” Glanville said. Glanville said the smaller bag, which is used for solo tackling, is “Big Bag’s son. That’s Little Stick.” Leonard said: “Big Bag really works. It’s helps us a lot.” This season, 10 running backs and six quarterbacks have been forced from the game after absorbing UH hits. CLIPPINGS 30 IT DOESN’T GET ANY BETTER THAN BRENNAN’S BODYGUARDS Hawaii’s offensive linemen can accomplish anything as long as they can do it together By Dave Reardon November 2, 2006 It was the greatest upset in the history of University of Hawaii sports. But hardly anyone saw it, and few can even remember the score. “Well, if you ask them, they’ll say they weren’t trying,” Samson Satele said. “But it wasn’t a fluke. We beat them by four.” It was the UH football team offensive line’s triumph over the defensive line two summers ago -- in basketball. “We have these little tournaments between units and we have the best five on the team,” starting right tackle Dane Uperesa said. “Me, Tala (Esera), Sam (Satele), Keoni (Steinhoff) and (John) Estes.” A formidable five, especially under the boards. But the defensive line’s team had former UH basketball players Ikaika AlamaFrancis and Tony Akpan. “And Mel Purcell, he can play,” Uperesa said. “But we made our shots.” Who played point guard? “Estes,” Uperesa said. “He’s like a fatter Steve Nash. He knows how to handle the rock.” This fabulous five is even better in pads. Just sub in Hercules Satele for Steinhoff, and you have the starting group that paves the way for the nation’s most productive offense. Heading into Saturday’s game at Utah State (17, 1-3 WAC) the Warriors (6-2, 4-1) are atop Division I-A in points scored (45.4 per game), total offense (529.2) and passing (421.9). A veteran NFL scout said the group might be the best in college football, and that all three seniors -- Esera, Satele and Uperesa -will be drafted. “Texas might be close. But I certainly don’t see any better at pass blocking,” the scout said. Coach June Jones has sent five offensive linemen to the NFL in his previous seven seasons at UH. He says this group is the best overall. “They’re physical pass blockers. Normally you think of that as a passive thing,” Jones said. “But they’re initiators and they’re very aggressive in their approach to blocking. And they finish the plays, playing the play longer than the opponent. I think this is the best, going by the way the whole group plays.” Quarterback Colt Brennan is the main beneficiary of the efforts, which have led to just 15 sacks compared to 353 pass attempts. “They’re walking into every game to make a statement with the way they block and that has a lot to do with the fact that they punish guys. That’s one of the funnest things I like to watch on film. I watch guys come blitz at me hard in the first quarter and try to get me off track. By the second, third, fourth quarter, guys are tired of coming up and meeting these guys in the hole. You can see when they blitz, guys don’t even come hard. Once they come to the O-line they stop and try to go around them,” Brennan said. “They just wear teams out and hit ‘em and hit ‘em and hit ‘em. As a QB, I get to just stand back there and have a day.” Durable Warriors Hawaii has started the same five offensive linemen all season. Here are their numbers and what offensive line assistant Dennis McKnight has to say about the five starters: Tala Esera Pos: Left tackle Height: 6-4 Weight: 308 Year: Senior Career starts: 41 McKnight: “Tala I think right now is the most dominant game-in and game-out offensive lineman we have.” Hercules Satele Pos: Left guard Height: 6-2 Weight: 288 Year: Junior Career starts: 8 McKnight: “Herc’s the glue who was the final straw to make it a good line. I think he’s the most improved player we got. On the whole team.” CLIPPINGS 31 Samson Satele Pos: Center Height: 6-3 Weight: 298 Year: Senior Career starts: 47 McKnight: “Sam, for having moved inside and playing his third position in four years, has done a phenomenal job at center. He makes all the calls. He’s so smart. If we lost Sam, Marques (Kaonohi) would be able to step inside and do a good job.” John Estes Pos: Right guard Height: 6-2 Weight: 290 Year: Freshman Career starts: 8 McKnight: “John Estes is 10 times better than he was his first start, and he was pretty damned good then.” Dane Uperesa Pos: Right tackle Height: 6-4 Weight: 310 Year: Senior Career starts: 16 McKnight: “Dane just played his best game of the year.” BRENNAN MAKES MOST OF ANOTHER CHANCE AT HAWAII By JAYMES SONG, AP Sports Writer November 2, 2006 HONOLULU (AP) -- The nation’s most efficient passer goes by the name Colt. That his last name is Brennan and not McCoy may surprise a few people. Colt Brennan -- not to be confused with Texas quarterback Colt McCoy -- has been super sharp in his second season, picking apart defenses, racking up huge numbers and leading Hawaii to five straight wins. The junior is the main reason why Hawaii is No. 1 in the nation in total offense (525.2 yards a game), passing (421.9) and scoring (45.4 points). “I used to run this offense not to mess it up,” he said. “Now I run this offense to attack everything I see.” Brennan has thrown for more than 300 yards and five TDs in five of the last six games. In eight games, he has passed for 2,934 yards and an NCAA-leading 33 touchdowns with five interceptions. He has completed 74 percent of his passes and leads the nation in passing efficiency. McCoy, a freshman, ranks seventh. Pretty good, considering Brennan’s career was nearly derailed as part of the Colorado recruiting scandal. After high school, he was a walk-on at Colorado but was cut from the team after a woman accused him of drunkenly barging into her dorm room and fondling her. The allegations came at the height of the scandal in which player-hosts were accused of supplying alcohol, drugs and sex to prospective recruits. Brennan said he thinks he was used as an example by the school, police and prosecutors, who were under fire for allegedly giving special privileges to athletes. Brennan pleaded not guilty and denied abusing the woman. A jury convicted him of felony burglary and trespassing but acquitted the quarterback of sexual assault and indecent exposure. Prosecution on misdemeanor sexual contact was deferred, meaning the charge has basically been dropped, the district attorney’s office said. He was sentenced to 60 hours of community service, four years’ probation and seven days in jail. “Those were the seven longest days of my life,” Brennan said. “I made a mistake, but did not commit a crime. For me to be charged with what I was charged with, it was just wrong.” Hawaii offered him a second chance when several schools wouldn’t. So far, no team has managed to slow Brennan, including No. 14 Boise State. Brennan threw for 388 yards and five touchdowns in Hawaii’s 7-point loss on the road last month. Brennan said he’s getting a stronger grasp of June Jones’ run-and-shoot offense in his second season. “I don’t think it will ever be 100 percent, knowing coach Jones,” he said. “He doesn’t ever let us think we’re perfect, and I like that because it makes us that much better.” In Hawaii’s five-game winning streak, he has thrown 24 touchdowns and one interception. His current streak of 158 passes without a pick is second to Notre Dame’s Brady Quinn (169). “I could see (Jones) was going to give me a chance and really wanted to see me do well,” Brennan said. Brennan’s stats have caught the attention of NFL scouts, although some wonder whether they are more a product of Hawaii’s offense. “It’s funny how people get caught up in the whole thing about system quarterbacks. In the NFL, all you really hear about is a guy learning how to run the system,” Brennan said. “If you’re a system quarterback, it means you’re doing everything right.” Jones, a former NFL quarterback and coach, said Brennan is among the top three quarterbacks he’s worked with. Quite a compliment, considering Jones has coached Jim Kelly, Warren Moon, Chris Miller and Jeff George. “He’s the real deal,” Jones said. “He’s very competitive like Jim Kelly. He’s mobile like Chris Miller. He’s very accurate like Warren.” Barring injury, Brennan could reach 5,000 yards and 50 TDs this season, joining Houston’s David Klingler as the only college quarterback to reach both milestones in one season. If Hawaii (6-2, 4-1 WAC) earns a bowl berth, he would have six games left. The Warriors would become bowl eligible if they beat Utah State (1-7, 1-3) Saturday. Jones is confident Brennan will make the NFL. “There’s no question, he’ll play on Sundays,” Jones said. “He’ll make it big-time, barring injury.” CLIPPINGS 32 HAWAII BOWLING The Warriors blow out another opponent to become eligible for December’s Hawaii Bowl By Dave Reardon November 5, 2006 LOGAN, Utah » Athletic director Herman Frazier accepted the Hawaii Bowl invitation. The Warriors mugged for the TV camera and performed a postgame haka. Then, as quickly as it had begun, the celebration of UH’s sixth consecutive win, a 63-10 crushing at Utah State yesterday, was over. The team assembled and broke by shouting in unison its next team goal: “WAC champs.” Sure, it was a happy plane ride home. But the Warriors are already thinking about the home stretch that begins with Saturday’s game at Aloha Stadium against LaTech. Hawaii is 7-2 overall and 5-1 in the Western Athletic Conference, one loss behind unbeaten Boise State (9-0, 5-0). The Broncos are the only WAC team to have beaten the Warriors. But if they finish tied, it is a shared championship. “It’s definitely possible. Boise’s not guaranteed every WAC win. We’re not guaranteed every WAC win either,” said UH receiver Ryan Grice-Mullins, who caught four passes for 135 yards and two touchdowns. “That’s why we gotta continue to practice the way we practice and meet the challenges the way we do and continue to do it.” Running back Nate Ilaoa scored three touchdowns while piling up 210 all-purpose yards (including a game-high 155 receiving). He continues a remarkable season a year after coach June Jones called him out publicly for poor conditioning and limited his playing time. “He’s been in pretty good shape all year,” Jones said. “We’re executing pretty well and Nate’s a good football player.” The Hawaii defense again did its part. It recovered three Aggies fumbles and intercepted a pass, scoring touchdowns after all three fumbles. “Again, when they turned the ball over we did something with it,” Jones said. “And that changes momentum in games. The defense has been doing a good job taking the football away.” Linebacker Adam Leonard was in on a game-high 11 tackles and recovered one of the fumbles as well. “Same old deal, they keep playing hard,” said UH defensive coordinator Jerry Glanville, after a second consecutive game of just 10 points for the opponents. Meanwhile, the Warriors scored enough in each quarter alone (at least 14) to win, as they did against Idaho. Quarterback Colt Brennan broke two school records in a season-high six-touchdown, 413-yard passing effort. He now holds the UH record for single-season touchdown passes with 39 and most consecutive passes without an interception with 182. (Tim Chang set both records in 2004 with 38 TDs and 179 pick-free passes.) Brennan was finally intercepted for the first time in five games, late in the third quarter by Terrance Washington. By then, the score was 42-10, and the only drama remaining was if Brennan was injured by a hit delivered by USU linebacker Paul Igboeli. “That was one of the few plays that we didn’t pick up correctly, and we paid the price for it,” Jones said. But Brennan said he just had the wind knocked out of him. He returned to lead a final touchdown drive, capped by Ilaoa’s third score, a 3-yard run ending the third quarter. The Aggies tried to pressure Brennan, but the Warriors still managed to build an early 143 lead on a 29-yard touchdown pass to GriceMullins six plays into the game, and a 13yarder to Ilaoa. After rare back-to-back punts, the Hawaii defense held. Then the Warriors dug USU’s grave with the shovel pass. UH caught the Aggies in a blitz, with Brennan tossing the ball to Ilaoa. The 5-foot-9, 250-pound Ilaoa, known more this season for bulling through defenders, outran the USU defense 60 yards to the end zone and a 21-3 lead. Utah State coach Brent Guy said going to the shovel pass was a great adjustment by UH coach June Jones. “We wanted to give them a different look, because we knew, we sat there and watched everybody else sit back and play zone and let them catch it. ... We played some man, brought some pressure, but Colt did a good job,” Guy said. “June ended up going to the shovel, the way we were playing them. That was his best play, and obviously it worked for him.” Hawaii’s defense set up the next score, as Rocky Savaiigaea forced Antraun McDaniel to fumble and Lawrence Wilson recovered at the Utah State 48. Two plays later Brennan hit Jason Rivers 10 yards past the line of scrimmage. Rivers stepped out of a tackle and finished a 35-yard play for his first of two touchdowns, making the score 28-3. Then it was the shovel again, in the third quarter, and again Ilaoa for 60 yards. It set up a 12yard TD pass to Davone Bess. “The first couple of steps, it looks like a pass,” Brennan said. “Everybody’s saying CLIPPINGS 33 ‘Pass, pass, pass,’ then I shovel it to Nate real quick. It puts defenses in a bind, especially when you’ve got O-linemen who move the way ours do and Nate doing his thing. It’s just a great play and I’m glad we capitalized on it.” A big key to the play’s success is the offensive linemen selling it as a longer pass. “We have to act like its pass blocking, then have the right timing to get downfield and block,” left guard Hercules Satele said. “We didn’t practice that play during the week because we didn’t think we were gonna run it that much. But it worked out and Nate took it to the house the first time and then another long one.” Ilaoa now has 13 touchdowns for the season. “That dude’s unstoppable now,” GriceMullins said. “I think he’s one of the best players in the country right now. You see his stats, you see the way he runs. You can’t tackle him. He just keeps rumbling.” So does Brennan. He will likely receive some more individual attention after yesterday’s performance. But he prefers to talk about team achievements and goals. “We’re bowling, baby -- put on your bowling shoes. It’s obviously night and day compared to last year (when Hawaii went 5-7). You look at teams like Utah State, and they’re struggling. We were there last year. But we took a couple of things from last year and learned from them,” Brennan said. “Boise State’s last game, they’re at Nevada. ... We’re very much still in the run for a WAC championship. But the main focus is keep winning. We want a WAC championship, but there’s a lot of other great things we can have -- a great end to the year, a national ranking. We just gotta keep winning right now.” STRUGGLES OFF THE FIELD MAKE BRENNAN STRONGER By Adam Rittenberg (ESPN.com) November 5, 2006 Colt Brennan audibles for the first time in the conversation. After all he’s been through -- the trial, the sentence, the seven days in jail, the criticism, the embarrassment, the island escape, the fresh start, the rise to glory -- Brennan can’t decide whether or not he’s a fatalist. ”There is that whole belief, things happen for a reason,” said Brennan, Hawaii’s superstar junior quarterback. “I go back and forth on it. I believe it sometimes, but I try not to believe it fully. I like to think you have a lot of say in what happens to you.” It makes sense why Brennan doesn’t choose a side. Right now, he’s pulling all the strings in his life. No football player in America (sorry, Brady Quinn) possesses more control over a game than Brennan. He leads Division I-A in touchdown passes (43), total offense (401.9 ypg) and passing efficiency (189 rating), topping all three categories by wide margins. He steers a Hawaii offense that leads the nation in scoring (48.7 ypg), total yards (542.4 ypg) and passing yards (436.7 ypg). Behind Brennan, the Warriors have scored 61 or more points in four of their last five games and have been held to fewer than 34 points only once this season. They enter Saturday’s matchup with San Jose State on a seven-game winning streak. “I can’t imagine anybody in America is playing better football than him,” Hawaii coach June Jones said. Brennan is living the surreal life. He spends each day in paradise. Practices in postcard conditions. Masters an offense most quarterbacks would give their non-throwing arms to run. Immerses himself in the carefree island lifestyle. “I’m out here in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, just doing my day-to-day thing,” Brennan said. “Living out here changes you. I didn’t fight it, and if anything, I embraced it.” He had to. For Brennan, Hawaii was more than a refuge. It was a place to regain control, something he lost on Jan. 28, 2004. That night, Brennan, then a freshman at Colorado, drunkenly entered a female student’s room uninvited and didn’t leave. He was charged with several crimes including sexual assault. Colorado, which at the time faced accusations of sex crimes involving several football players, quickly dismissed Brennan from the team. Brennan was convicted of first-degree criminal trespass and second-degree burglary, but was acquitted of charges of sexual assault and indecent exposure. He was sentenced to seven days in jail and four years probation. Brennan went through plenty of “rockbottom things” after the events of that January night, but mixed in were moments of hope. “Sitting in that courtroom with not one person sitting behind the district attorney,” he said, “there was not one person that sat behind him and there were 50 people sitting behind me. That’s a statement. I almost felt like I won that case even though I kind of lost.” Brennan received similar support from coaches, teammates and teachers at Saddleback Junior College in Mission Viejo, Calif., near his hometown of Laguna Beach. He enrolled at the Southern California college after his dismissal from Colorado and led Saddleback to a conference title in 2004. But the sting of shame remained. “I was embarrassed,” Brennan said. “I wanted to get away and then come back a new man, somebody different, somebody new. Hawaii really presented that to me.” Brennan had scholarship offers from five or six schools, including San Jose State, where his cousin, Brent, served as wide receivers coach. Jones didn’t offer a scholarship but rather a promise: to make Brennan the first quarterback selected in the NFL draft. “We were going through some things at the university, ticket price changes, trying to market different,” said Jones, who has a history of taking players with checkered pasts. “I just said, ‘You have some pending court things that I don’t want to deal with right now. But if you’re not smart enough to know that you’ll be maybe the first quarterback taken in the draft if you walk on here, then you’re not the guy I thought you were.’ “He walked on, and the rest is history.” Operating an NFL-style offense wasn’t the only draw for Brennan. Brennan’s first connection with star wide receiver Davone Bess occurred nowhere near a football field. In the summer of 2005, Bess and several other Hawaii players invited Brennan over to their apartment after a workout. At one point during the night, Bess went outside to take a phone call. When he hung up, he saw Brennan walking up the porch. “Next thing you know, we had a heart-toheart,” Bess said. “Within 15 or 20 minutes into the conversation, we felt like we knew each other. We’d both been down the same road; we both went through the same situations.” Bess was sentenced to 15 months at a juvenile detention facility after being convicted as an accessory for possessing stolen goods in July 2003, two weeks before he was set to begin his collegiate career at Oregon State. “Our situations were totally two different scenarios, but we both had the finger pointed to us without the proper evidence,” said Bess, who enrolled at Hawaii four months after CLIPPINGS 34 being released. “We both were pretty much taking life for granted. We couldn’t be stopped. Everything was going so good for us. And then all of a sudden, bam! That’s a reality check. “ “Now you have no choice but to mature and man up, take it and learn from it, grow from it and tell others your situation.” That’s exactly what both men are doing. Brennan lives near Hale Ho’omalu, the main juvenile detention center in Honolulu. Several Sundays ago, the quarterback was walking by the center to get his morning coffee when one of the employees stopped him. They began chatting. After several minutes, Brennan asked if he could talk to the detainees. He spoke for an hour, sharing his story, instructing the kids to maintain strong relationships with their probation officers. “They’re talking to a convicted felon who also is a kid that’s kind of idolized around the island right now,” Brennan said. “For them, being in that juvie center, it gave them a lot of hope. They were sitting there thinking, ‘God, my life is not ruined. I can make my life a lot better.’ “ Brennan hopes to go back to Hale Ho’omalu this week. Last Sunday, he and Bess, who has also spoken at juvenile detention centers, attended a church service where Brennan gave a testimonial. “Any time I can help out or make a difference,” Brennan said, “I’m going to put myself out there to do it.” He’s taking the same approach on the field. Last year, Brennan felt “like such an idiot” trying to figure out Jones’ offense, but he still led the country in total offense (4,455 yards) and touchdown passes (35). This fall he’s been a model of efficiency, completing 72.4 percent of his passes and throwing only seven interceptions in 380 attempts. Brennan is also dangerous on the run, averaging 5.1 yards per carry. “Every time Colt scrambles, I’m running downfield, crossing my fingers, like, ‘Oh my God, please get out of bounds or something,’ “ Bess said. “He wants to stick his head in there, get that extra yard.” Brennan’s off-field troubles have made him fearless on Saturdays. “My biggest weakness now is a poorly developed sense of fear and the fact that I’ve got no concept of the odds against me,” he said. “I don’t care about things as much as I used to. The fear is gone.” His numbers are unparalleled, but Brennan, much like Timmy Chang before him, often gets labeled a “system guy.” “Our offense is designed to put up numbers,” Brennan said. “I don’t understand why people want to talk that down. It’s funny because I watch some of the guys, the Brady Quinns, the Brian Brohms from Louisville, and they get credited for big games when they throw for 280 yards and two touchdowns.” Jones is confident Brennan will get his just due when it counts -- on draft day. “He will be the first quarterback taken,” Jones said. Whether that happens this April or next remains to be seen. Brennan’s full intention is to return for his senior year, though he plans to gauge his draft stock following the season. Was all this part of a grand plan for Brennan? Doesn’t matter now. “I’m so happy where I’m at, so happy with the way things are going,” Brennan said. “That’s the main thing, and that’s the way I plan to stay.” HERE COMES HIGH-POWERED HAWAII By JAYMES SONG, AP Sports Writer November 6, 2006 HONOLULU (AP) - Hawaii has never been ranked nationally under eighth-year coach June Jones, despite four seasons with at least nine wins and four bowl appearances. Being in the Western Athletic Conference, failing to win big games on the road and playing home games starting at midnight Sunday on the East Coast haven’t helped Hawaii’s cause. “We’re 7-2 and a pretty good team, but the rest of America doesn’t know it yet,” Jones said Monday. Things could be changing. High-powered Hawaii, which has won six straight by a margin of nearly 34 points, earned 11 votes in this week’s Associated Press college football poll. And the Warriors (7-2, 51) are drawing more media attention every week. “I know we’re certainly getting more recognition and if we just stay on course, all that stuff takes care of itself,” Jones said. The Warriors have been hard to ignore. They are ranked No. 1 in the nation in total offense (534 yards a game), passing (429) and scoring (47.3). Jones said the main reason the Hawaii Bowl-bound Warriors don’t get more media attention is because of the time difference. Hawaii’s home games start at 6:05 p.m. in the islands, which is 11:05 p.m. on the East Coast, or just past midnight during daylight savings. “The New York Times and Washington Post don’t even have our scores in there, let alone know what our record is,” Jones said. “It’s just one of those things. (But) if we’re sitting here at 9-0, I think we’d already be recognized.” But Jones said he likes the late start and doesn’t want to change it. Hawaii is 4-0 at Aloha Stadium and has four more games at home to close out the regular season. The Warriors lost by 8 at Alabama and by a touchdown at No. 14 Boise State. A major reason for Hawaii’s success this year is quarterback Colt Brennan, who threw for 413 yards and six touchdowns in the Warriors’ 63-10 win over Utah State. The junior leads the nation in TD passes with 39 and passer rating at 190. He is third in yards passing with 3,347 and tops in total offense per game at 394.8. Jones had huge praise for Brennan during his Monday news conference. “Colt has inside of him what the great ones have. That’s a lot of pressure to put on him, but he’s got it,” Jones said. “He just has to understand it, be humble and keep doing what he’s doing.” Brennan needs just 15 TD passes to tie the NCAA record of 54 set by Houston’s David Klingler in 1990. He has five games left in the season, including the Hawaii Bowl. But how much is Jones’ run-and-shoot a factor in producing Brennan’s lofty numbers? “I get this question all the time. ‘Is it the offense?’ Yeah.” Jones said. “The offense makes average quarterbacks a whole lot better than they would be in another scheme. But when we have a great one, they’re better in what we do. “That’s proven with Jim Kelly, Warren Moon all the quarterbacks I’ve had. They had their best seasons in our offense,” he said. Brennan is quick to give credit to Hawaii’s beefy offensive line, bruising running backs and speedy receivers. Brennan said he also has a stronger grasp of the offense compared to last year when he had a 75 percent understanding of the offense but still led the country in total offense and TD passes “He made a lot of good things happen last year, but he had no idea what he was doing,” Jones said. “He was just running around making stuff happen. I knew once the light came on, he would really, really blossom.” CLIPPINGS 35 OVER THE RAINBOW BRENNAN HAS FLOURISHED WITH SECOND CHANCE AT HAWAII By Cory McCartney Thursday November 9, 2006 Thousands of miles from the darkest time of his life, Colt Brennan has found redemption in the warmth of paradise. After being charged with breaking into a dorm room and fondling a girl and getting dismissed from the team at Colorado, he has learned some valuable lessons to become the player and person he always thrived to be. But the Hawaii quarterback hasn’t forgotten, not for a moment. He remembers that feeling in a Boulder, Colo., courtroom of having his life hanging in the balance of a jury. “That whole experience just kind of brought me down a level, just put my whole life in perspective,” Brennan said. “It made me wake up and realize you don’t always have complete control of your life.” Brennan was given a second chance by coach June Jones at Hawaii and has become the best quarterback you’ve never seen. The 6foot-3, 196-pound junior leads the nation in passing efficiency (190.0) -- completing an astonishing 72.9 percent of his passes -- and total offense and has thrown a Division I-A best 39 touchdowns to just six interceptions. But there was a time when none of this seemed possible. The February 2004 incident, which came at the height of the school’s sorded recruiting scandal, got Brennan outsed from the team. He says he felt “like I was really being made an example of.” He pled not guilty to all charges and was acquitted of the sexual assault charge, but was convicted of first-degree criminal trespass and second-degree burglary. He received a sentence of seven days in jail and four years probation. “I’m a big believer in karma and I think that there were a lot of things that went down out there in Colorado that really set me up and I kept my head straight that there was something really big waiting for me down the road,” Brennan said. “Something really, really big.” That something came in the form of Jones, who saw a tape of Brennan playing for Saddleback Community College in Mission Viejo, Calif., after he left Colorado. “At the end of [his highlight tape] was an actual game tape,” Jones said. “I watched the first 20 plays. I asked my quarterbacks coach Dan [Morrison], ‘Who is this guy? This guy can play.’ I’ve never seen anyone so accurate throwing the football. Most highlight tapes come with guys completing balls, but receivers have to turn sometimes [to catch the ball] or whatever. But every ball on this tape was right on the money in stride.” Jones had found his next quarterback, but because of Brennan’s past he wasn’t willing to offer him a scholarship. So he made a trip to Brennan’s Laguna Beach home and gave him a simple choice: “If you walk on, I’ll take care of you,” Jones told him. “You can go to Syracuse, go to San Jose [State] and you might get drafted. But if you come to Hawaii, and trust me on this, I’ll make you the first quarterback taken in the National Football League.” Three weeks later Brennan was in Honolulu, and in his first year in Jones’ runand-shoot offense he threw for a Division I-Abest 4,301 yards and 35 touchdowns, including a 515-yard, seven-touchdown performance against New Mexico State. Despite the gaudy statistics, Brennan says he didn’t have much of a grasp of things his first year. “When I ran this offense last year, I was running it not to mess it up,” he said. “I was running it to try and do what I was taught. Now when I run this offense, I do it to attack everything I see.” And attack he has. Brennan is at the controls of the nation’s top-ranked passing attack and has thrown for more than 300 yards in all but one of game for the 7-2 Warriors, including a season-high 419 yards against Nevada. He has had five five-touchdown games and is coming off a six-touchdown outing in a 63-10 rout of Utah State. But Brennan already knows what you’re thinking: It’s all the system. It’s the same passhappy offense that allowed Timmy Chang to shatter the NCAA all-time career passing record by more than 2,000 yards. Brennan has heard it all before, and he revels in it. “Everything I’ve taken in from stuff I’ve watched in the NFL is they’re trying to get the quarterback to run the system and I get baffled when people say, ‘Oh, he’s a system quarterback,’” Brennan said. “Isn’t that the job? Isn’t that what defines a good QB, someone who runs the system that they’re taught to run? People call me a system quarterback, but I really take that as a compliment.” Jones has seen what the run-and-shoot can do in the most capable of hands, having worked with Hall of Famers Warren Moon with the Oilers and Jim Kelly when he played for the Houston Gamblers (USFL). “I think people don’t understand that our system is going to make an average quarterback a whole lot better,” Jones said. “When you have a great one, he becomes even better ... If you have a great one, it doesn’t matter what system you line up in. That’s true of Colt. CLIPPINGS 36 “There’s no question in my mind Colt is one of the best quarterbacks I’ve ever had and that includes all the pro players and I have put a lot in the Pro Bowl. He’s a special, special player.” Brennan says when he was dealing with the charges in Colorado he turned to a Bible passage, Romans Chapter 12, as inspiration. He cites Chapter 12:2 as a passage that has helped mold the life he now leads. And be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye may prove what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of God. “That’s what I’ve been trying to do ever since then is just trying to be a good person as far as the community, for my football team on the field,” Brennan said. “That’s what I’ve been trying to do since then is just be so good that I show the world exactly who I am.” COLT’S WELL-BEING TOPS STATISTICS By Ferd Lewis November 9, 2006 No longer is it only opposing defenses that University of Hawai’i quarterback Colt Brennan poses dilemmas for. Now it is his coaches. With most quarterbacks the issue of when to take them out surrounds too many interceptions and not being able to move the ball or put up points. But when you have Brennan, someone who has thrown but one interception in the last 184 passes and is the triggerman on the nation’s most productive passing offense, there are altogether different questions. Like: After how many points does he come out? Is there a distinct Brennan Line, the point after which leaving him in becomes foolhardy? Those questions — and more — hung in the chilly mountain air during the second half of UH’s 63-10 victory at Utah State last week and are likely to bubble to the surface again Saturday night at Aloha Stadium if Louisiana Tech’s status as a 38-point underdog holds true. The Colt quandary, you suspect, is one most of the 119 NCAA Division I-A head coaches would give their courtesy cars to have. Still, the questions are topical with the way the Warriors are putting up pinball-like points. At Utah State, Brennan seemed headed for a well-deserved pat on the back, a warm parka and a seat on the sideline with 4 minutes, 11 seconds left in the third quarter and UH up, 42-10. He had just thrown his first interception after a school record 179 passes without one. With six touchdown passes and 330 yards, it seemed an opportune time to call it a day and let the Tyler Graunke further polish his skills. But Brennan was brought out for the Warriors’ next series to close the third quarter and drove UH to a touchdown and 49-10 lead, adding 83 yards to his yardage total. Not before being knocked on his wallet by a shot to the numbers from linebacker Paul Igboeli, the first of a couple licks that made Warrior fans cringe. Afterward Brennan said he’d only had some wind knocked out of him. After that series, Graunke was brought in for UH’s first possession of the fourth quarter. With a game seemingly in the bag and a such magical season in progress you’d hate to risk Brennan’s health or the rest of the season on a disabling shot. The Aggies weren’t doing it, but you could see where some vanquished opponent of less sportsmanship and self control might turn saltiness to a late hit. That’s a thought that has to be balanced by what’s fair to Brennan and UH and the stillfresh memory of Nevada. So well had the UH offense been executing and so swiftly had it been scoring — five touchdown drives of five plays or less — that Brennan had seen only 31 plays when he threw the interception at Utah State. A tour of duty that hardly qualifies as padding the stats for someone who rarely sees fourth quarter playing time anymore as he chases several NCAA records with seemingly one hand tied behind his back. Then there is the lesson of Nevada. The Wolf Pack, you’ll recall, rallied from a 41-21 fourth-quarter deficit to have four shots are forcing overtime — or winning it all with a two-point conversion — in the final minute last month before losing 41-34, at Aloha Stadium. Brennan has helped make this a special season for UH, knowing when to say when on taking him out can keep it that way. CLIPPINGS 37 RIVERS GIVES WARRIORS LEADERSHIP THIS YEAR The receiver didn’t play in 2005 but is making up for it with his unselfish attitude this season By Dave Reardon November 10, 2006 Playing receiver at Hawaii is all about adjustments. They’re usually in the middle of plays. For Jason Rivers, the most important ones were made mid-career. He found himself in an awkward position last offseason, a veteran and a rookie at the same time. After two solid years in the same lineup with Chad Owens, the former state sprint champ was poised to become UH’s primary target in 2005. A big highlight was catching the 7-yard touchdown pass in 2004 that gave Tim Chang the NCAA career passing-yardage record. That came against Louisiana Tech (3-6, 1-3 WAC), the team the Warriors (7-2, 5-1) play tomorrow at Aloha Stadium in search of their sixth consecutive win. Rivers’ breakthrough season of 2005 never happened because academic and injury issues kept Rivers off the field. Freshman slotbacks Ryan Grice-Mullins and Davone Bess emerged as the Warriors’ top receivers for new quarterback Colt Brennan during UH’s transition year. Rivers returned to the team last spring. In some ways he was just another talented young pass catcher who had to prove himself. In others, he was a wizened veteran left over from the Chang years. Rivers entered the 2006 season 14th in UH career receiving yards, but had yet to catch a pass from Brennan. In his first two games, Rivers had just five catches for 61 yards and no scores. In the last four, he has 20 receptions for 288 yards and five TDs. “They already had their chemistry and I was coming in new. I think it’s better now. I’ve got a few games under my belt. It’s all quickly coming together,” Rivers said. At 6-feet-2 and 192 pounds, Rivers is the Warriors’ most physically impressive receiver. His position coach, Ron Lee, said he is living up to his potential. “Jason, right now, is playing the best football of his career,” Lee said. “He’s practicing at a high level. He’s having fun, and I think his best football is still ahead of him.” For the season, Rivers has 40 catches for 563 yards and eight touchdowns. He doesn’t lead the Warriors in any category, but is right in the middle of a tightly spaced group of six who have received for between 476 yards (Grice-Mullins) and 698 (Bess). Grice-Mullins said the threat of Rivers catching a deep ball helps the other receivers. So does his willingness to share -- the football, as well as his knowledge. “He definitely helps stretch the field and he brings a physical game. He and (slotback) Ross (Dickerson) will run right through you,” Grice-Mullins said. “The year with him sitting out I think really helped him. He’s a totally different guy now. He’s more of a team guy. He understands it’s not about how many balls you catch or yards you get. He’s taken a leadership role.” Rivers was a big part of UH’s late-season rallies in 2003 and 2004 that led to winning records and Hawaii Bowl appearances. He said this season is more exciting because of the way the Warriors have played on the road (they finished 3-2 away from home, and clinched a winning record and Hawaii Bowl bid with a 63-10 win at Utah State last Saturday). “This is better than before because it says a lot about our team, going on the road and winning consistently, putting up 60 points,” Rivers said. “That says a lot about us playing to our potential.” CLIPPINGS 38 ILAOA’S DREAM SEASON BUILT ON PERSEVERANCE By Stephen Tsai November 10, 2006 Nate Ilaoa is “a LenDale White with Reggie Bush skills,” says strength coach Mel deLaura, who helped the 245-pound Ilaoa get in shape. While recovering from knee and shoulder injuries early in his career, University of Hawai’i senior running back Nate Ilaoa never dreamed things would turn out this way. That he would become a triple threat — as a blocker, runner and receiver — or that he would be, as quarterback Colt Brennan said, “the straw that stirs the drink.” Or that strength coach Mel deLaura would declare Ilaoa as the “best athlete” in the Western Athletic Conference, only to be trumped by defensive secondary coach Rich Miano’s declaration of “best player.” Or that opposing defensive coordinators would have fits trying to solve the riddle of a 5-foot-9, 245-pound player who is deceptively quick and evidently strong. Ilaoa never had these sweet dreams because to dream requires sleep, and there were precious few REM nights three years ago. His series of unfortunate events began in 2002, his second year and first season at UH, when he suffered a subluxation of his right shoulder. “It kept popping out of the joint,” Ilaoa said. “It kept popping out every game, and I’d pop it back in, and keep playing. It was really sore. I couldn’t throw a football. I couldn’t raise my (right) arm. A lot of things were tough.” Even resting had become difficult. “When you’re sleeping, your arm could just slip out (of the joint),” he said. “You wake up and your arm is just stuck. I’m like, ‘All right, I’ll have to pop it back in.’ “ Ilaoa would sleep on his back, with a pillow under his right shoulder, his right arm across his chest. “It was very hard to sleep,” he said. After undergoing shoulder surgery in the spring of 2003, he was even more limited. “That year I was lifting like crazy, up to 370 (pounds) benching,” he said. “After my surgery, I couldn’t even do the bar.” Then in the 2003 season opener against Appalachian State, he suffered a torn knee ligament. It took two full seasons for the knee to heal. In the meantime, he underwent a second surgery on his right shoulder. “So now I’m getting surgery and my knee’s not even done healing, and that means you can’t rehab,” he said. “I can’t lift and I can’t run. I can’t squat (lift) or do the dumb- bell stuff. I’m just sitting there with a bad knee and a bad shoulder, and the doc is saying, ‘just chill.’ “ Ilaoa, who weighed 180 pounds when he signed as a slotback in 2001, was up to 240 pounds entering the 2005 training camp. “He had that midnight problem,” said his cousin, UH center Samson Satele. “That’s Jack-in-the-Box, Zippy’s, whatever’s open at midnight. That’s how he gained the weight.” After Ilaoa suffered a pulled hamstring on the second day of the 2005 training camp, head coach June Jones voiced his displeasure to reporters. Jones said Ilaoa was overweight, and had let down teammates. Jones said Ilaoa’s poor condition led to the hamstring injury. “It was a tough situation,” Ilaoa said. “But I wasn’t going to give up. I had a lot of support.” DeLaura knew that Ilaoa’s injuries made it difficult for him to train. Unwilling to give up on Ilaoa, deLaura created a special conditioning program. “He really worked with me,” Ilaoa said. After a few weeks, Ilaoa, who had moved from slotback to running back, was the starter. He finished with 643 rushing yards, an average of 7.6 yards per carry, and six touchdowns. During the offseason, Ilaoa committed to improving his strength and stamina. Accepting reality, Ilaoa realized he could not lose the 30 pounds to fit the image of the speed back. Instead, Jones said, Ilaoa “decided to get into shape at the weight he was at. That’s what he did.” Despite gaining about 70 pounds during his UH career, Ilaoa had never lost his quickness nor elusiveness. DeLaura worked on Ilaoa’s endurance, mapping out sprint drills. “Summer time, he ran every day,” deLaura said. Ilaoa also spent hours on the Elliptical, a cross-training machine. Ilaoa reported to training camp at 254 pounds, but Jones said, “he was in shape.” The result was a player whom Miano described as a “hybrid. He has a fast player’s feet and a big man’s power.” In football, comparisons are used to rate players. Scouts have compared Ilaoa to running back LenDale White, a second-round pick by the Tennessee Titans. But deLaura said Ilaoa shares the qualities of Southern California’s starting running backs last season. “He’s a LenDale White with Reggie Bush skills, as far as catching and shakes and moves,” deLaura said. “Look at the numbers,” said Miano, who serves as UH’s liaison to the NFL. “He’s averaging 7.2 yards per carry (this year).” CLIPPINGS 39 On shovel passes, which are UH’s equivalent of draws, Ilaoa’s yards-after-catch average is better than 15.0 per play. He averages more than one broken tackler per rush. In team testing last spring, Ilaoa ran 40 yards in 4.65 seconds, performed 121 sit-ups in two minutes, and bench pressed 225 pounds 30 times. “He’s one of a kind,” Jones said. “No question about that. I’ve had a lot of great big runners — “Ironhead” (Heyward), Jamal Anderson, Alonzo Highsmith. They were taller, 6 feet, probably. Nate’s 5-9, maybe 5-10. I’ve not had a player that heavy run that fast or make the moves that he makes.” New Mexico State defensive coordinator Woody Widenhofer, whose “Steel Curtain” defense won four Super Bowls with the Pittsburgh Steelers, marveled at Ilaoa’s skills. Widenhofer used an offensive lineman to simulate Ilaoa in practice. Utah State defensive coordinator Mark Johnson said he used a defensive lineman to portray Ilaoa. Louisiana Tech head coach Jack Bicknell said he didn’t even bother to find a stand-in. “Who are we going to use?” said Bicknell, whose defense will face Ilaoa and the Warriors Saturday at Aloha Stadium. “We don’t have anyone that big who is that fast.” USU’s Johnson has described Ilaoa as a “freak” because of his footwork and “center of gravity.” Johnson said Ilaoa is comparable to Chris Fuamatu-Ma’afala, a Saint Louis School graduate who played for the Steelers, “although I think Nate might be better. Nate’s tougher.” Miano said if Ilaoa drops another 10 pounds, to 235 pounds, “he’s a legitimate firstround talent.” All of which leaves Ilaoa feeling “blessed.” “I’ve been fortunate to be surrounded by a lot of great people playing football,” Ilaoa said. “I’ve had great coaches from Day One. I know all of the coaches were in my corner. Some have had different ways of getting (the message) to me.” Jones said: “I like all of my guys, but they can’t be treated the same. ... Nate is a great kid. He’s got a good heart. The players love him. He’s a good kid. He needed to get focused, and he did this year. He has a bright future.” UH FOOTBALL: ‘NASTI’ NONETHELESS By Stephen Tsai November 12, 2006 No Nate Ilaoa? No early lead? No problem for the University of Hawai’i football team, which cruised to a 61-17 victory over Louisiana Tech last night at Aloha Stadium. Even without their best running back, the Warriors won their seventh in a row to improve to 8-2 overall and 6-1 in the Western Athletic Conference. They racked up more than 49 points for the fifth Saturday in a row. “We’re never worried,” center Samson Satele said. “We’ve got Colt.” Colt Brennan completed 27 of 40 passes for 406 yards and four touchdowns. He also rushed for 60 yards and another score. For the sixth time this season, he did not play in the fourth quarter. Instead, he spent the final minutes signing autographs and posing for cellphone pictures. And picture this: Brennan now has 43 touchdown passes in 10 games; last year, the Warriors scored 48 touchdowns in 12 games. Brennan is within reach of David Klingler’s NCAA single-season record of 54 TD passes, set in 1990. “I’ve got to give thanks to Reagan (Mauia),” Brennan said. “He stepped in and did an unbelievable job.” Mauia, a 5-foot-11, 284-pound senior, played in place of Ilaoa, who was held out because of a sprained ankle. Mauia rushed six times for 52 yards, including a momentum-boosting obstacle run near the end of the second quarter, scored two touchdowns and provided knockdown, backfield blocking for Brennan. “When he blocks, defenses don’t like to blitz anymore,” Brenann said. “He is so physical. You know on defense how they have a rover, a guy who goes around? He’s our rover, man. He knocks blitzers and guys coming up the field. It just kills defenses. “I don’t get to hear his blocks,” Brennan added. “But after I throw the ball, I look around and see the guys on the ground.” Most remarkable is Mauia also should have been on sick leave. He has a torn medial collateral ligament in his left knee, a torn meniscus in his right knee, and sprains in both shoulder joints. “It’s God,” Mauia said. “He gave me the strength to keep playing and do what I love to do. He lets me play for my family, my son back home (in California), my father. I do it for everybody. And, of course, I like to help out Colt.” Mauia’s loudest cheerleader was Ilaoa. “I activated the bulldog,” Ilaoa said. “I gave the bulldog a chance to strut his stuff.” Ilaoa’s constant advice was to protect his knees. “I told him they were going for his lumber,” Ilaoa recalled. “I kept yelling, ‘Pick up your lumber.’ They were trying to cut him down. They still couldn’t bring him down. His swagger meter is too loose.” On the first possession of the second quarter, Louisiana Tech took a 10-9 lead when Zac Champion and tight end Dennis Morris collaborated on a 43-yard scoring play. Champion faked a handoff to freeze-frame the defense, then fired a pass to Morris, who was sprinting down the middle of the field. “That probably was what got us in gear, being down 10-9,” Brennan said. “We calmed down, and took it play by play. Before you knew it, it turned into the usual thing.” Then Warriors regained the lead, at 16-10, when wideout Chad Mock made a leaping grab of Brennan’s 18-yard pass. The drive was fueled when Jason Rivers, who finished with six receptions for 113 yards, caught a 49-yard pass. Later, Brennan found Ross Dickerson for a touchdown at the end of a 13-yard post route. The turning point came shortly before the intermission, when the Warriors advanced to the Louisiana Tech 19. Brennan scrambled 5 yards, but appeared to fumble after being hit by linebacker Chris Pugh. But the whistle had blown before the fumble, with the officials ruling that slotback Davone Bess held on the play. Louisiana Tech coach Jack Bicknell argued vehemently, charging that the fumble should stand because holding is not a dead-ball penalty. The replay official said he could not review the play because the whistle had blown. “I’m not supposed to criticize the officials,” Bicknell said. “I thought it was a fumble. But I’d rather not say it that way. It appeared to me, on the field, to be a fumble.” On the next play, from the 29, Brennan and Rivers hooked up for an apparent touchdown pass. But the officials ruled that Rivers was an ineligible receiver. Rivers was forced across the left sideline and, instead of re-entering at the point he crossed, he ran a few yards before running back onto the field. After a heated debate, this time initiated by UH coach June Jones, play resumed. Mauia, on a stretch play to the left, broke two tackles en route to a 22-yard gain. He ran out of bounds, at the 7, with three seconds remaining. Dan Kelly then converted his second field goal of the game. He had entered without a field-goal attempt in the previous four games. CLIPPINGS 40 “In the second half,” said Bess, who caught seven passes for 143 yards and two touchdowns, “we got on a roll, and started clicking. It was just like how we practiced. It was a matter of executing. It started with the o-line blocking, and the receivers running the right routes, and Colt doing his thing.” The defense, meanwhile, contained the Bulldogs, who were held to 165 yards in the second half. Cornerbacks Myron Newberry and Gerard Lewis each intercepted a pass, leading to UH touchdowns. In last season’s meeting, the Bulldogs rushed for 327 yards in a 46-14 rout in Ruston, La. Last night, they gained 135 yards, with only 27 amassed in the final two quarters. The Warriors said they found motivation from a message delivered by defensive line coach Jeff Reinebold. Reinebold, who used to coach for Louisiana Tech, met his former recruit, Bulldog left guard David Accardo, during warmups. Reinebold relayed the discussion to his players before the game. “They were talking a lot of trash about us, how they were going to kill us, and beat us up like they did last year,” UH safety Leonard Peters said “Once you call one of us out, you’re taking on the family. They called out (nose tackle) Mike (Lafaele). They were going to dominate him.” Lafaele said: “It was the left guard. That was the guy Reinebold recruited. He was talking smack about me.” But after the game, Lafaele approached Accardo. “He said, ‘It wasn’t me,’ “ Lafaele said. “He got me hyped before the game. Everybody was hyped with what that dude said.” Asked about the story, Reinebold said: “Was the speech true? Of course, it was true. I don’t tell stories. He said he was going to kick (Lafaele’s) butt. Here’s the deal: I love the kid for being that confident and saying, ‘I’m going after you guys.’ “ “I’m even more proud of the fact that our guys, when I told them in the meeting, they responded,” Reinebold added. “Mel (Purcell, the left defensive end) took it from there. He did what great players do. He drew the line in the sand and said, ‘This isn’t happening.’ (Louisiana Tech) had success with the draw play early, which singed us a little bit. After that, you do the math.” WARRIORS MAKE IT 8 San Jose State sticks around, but Hawaii turns it on late for its eighth consecutive victory By Dave Reardon November 19, 2006 Hawaii didn’t kill the messenger last night. The Warriors swarmed to the source. UH receiver Davone Bess met up on Friday with his old buddy from Skyline High School in Oakland, Calif. Yonus Davis is San Jose State’s star running back. Bess was more than happy to let safety Leonard Peters and the rest of the UH defense know that Davis planned on shredding them for 200 yards. “I think he did get 200,” Peters said. “But it was sideways. But that doesn’t count last I checked.” The defense held Davis to 29 yards on 14 carries as UH crushed San Jose State 54-17 for the Warriors’ eighth win in a row. The Friday night meeting of Bess -- who caught two of Colt Brennan’s five touchdown passes -- was actually an extension of a text message conversation in the days leading up to the game, with Bess as the middle man. “They basically let me know that they were going to swarm me and be all over me,” Davis said. “They came out and produced and played a tough game and were more physical than us.” San Jose State managed just 192 yards in offense, while the Warriors added to their nation-leading average by piling up 568. It was the lowest output by an offense against UH this season. “There was no magic game plan,” Warriors defensive coordinator Jerry Glanville said. “There was no cerebral thought from me.” UH is 9-2 overall and finished its WAC season at 7-1, clinching at least sole possession of second place. If Nevada can beat visiting Boise State next week, the Warriors get a share of the conference title. The largest Aloha Stadium crowd of the season (29,523) saw the Warriors win their fourth homecoming game of the year -- Fresno State’s, New Mexico State’s, their own against Idaho, and last night’s return of former UH coach Dick Tomey as the Spartans head man. But the Spartans hung in longer and stronger than some of the other teams the Warriors have dominated this fall. Compared to the recent early-round knockouts this was more like a late-round TKO. UH coach June Jones said his team was not as sharp as usual. “It was not our best game,” Jones said. “We overcame a lot. The positive was there was a lot of good hitting going on.” A five-touchdown spurt by the Warriors after halftime -- enabled by UH’s crushing defense -- finally locked it up as Hawaii matched the school record for consecutive victories in one season. UH led just 27-17 midway through the third quarter, but three San Jose State turnovers in the fourth quarter and the Warriors’ offense turned it into a rout. “It’s not very complex,” Tomey said. “They were just more physical than we were.” UH will likely make the Top 25 in the polls today, and Brennan -- though still a long shot -- did nothing to hurt his Heisman Trophy candidacy. “We can just wait (for the Top 25),” Brennan said. “We don’t need it now. We have games against two teams (Purdue and Oregon State) from big-time conferences coming up. Once we get that job done, it will say enough.” Brennan passed for 402 yards and the five TDs, and rushed for another, and was intercepted once. He is six away from tying the single-season record of 54 touchdown passes set by Houston’s David Klingler in 1990. Nate Ilaoa joined Bess in scoring two touchdowns for Hawaii, which also leads the nation in scoring and passing yardage. Ilaoa rushed for 100 yards on 12 carries coming off missing last week’s game with a sprained ankle. UH scored on its first possession for the fifth straight game, on Dan Kelly’s 39-yard field goal. Hawaii made it 10-0 on the next series when Brennan passed to Chad Mock for a 36yard touchdown. Mock got behind San Jose State cornerback Dwight Lowery, who came into the game with eight interceptions. The Spartans got on the board midway through the second quarter thanks to a special-teams gaffe by the Warriors. Myron Newberry mishandled Waylon Prather’s punt deep in UH territory, and the Spartans’ John Broussard recovered at the UH 5. James T. Collier, running behind 6-4, 335pound blocking back Jibri Sharp, pounded it in from 1 yard out for the first rushing touchdown against UH at home since the Oct. 7 Nevada game. Another bad UH return, this one by Ross Dickerson on the ensuing kickoff, put the ball on the Hawaii 7. “We made two bad decisions on special teams on kicks that we shouldn’t have touched,” Jones said. But the Warriors covered the 93 yards in eight plays, with Brennan scrambling for the final 8. CLIPPINGS 41 Jared Strubeck made a 37-yard field goal for San Jose State with 4 seconds left in the half. Ilaoa rushed for all 53 yards of UH’s drive to start the second half after Rustin Saole recovered SJSU’s attempted onside kick. Ilaoa went 4 yards for the score and the Warriors led 27-10. “(Running) was the game plan,” Brennan said. “Coach Jones felt like it’d be fun, to mix it up. Almost every time we ran, we had a great play.” Collier scored again from 1 yard out, capping a 10-play, 77-yard drive and putting the difference back to 10 points. “They didn’t stay down,” Brennan said. “Luckily we kept a level head.” The Warriors regained control with two consecutive long drives ending in touchdown passes of 5 and 9 yards from Brennan to Bess. The second gave Hawaii a 41-17 lead with 12:42 left in the game. A fumble recovery by Ikaika Alama-Francis and Jake Patek’s first career interception led to 19-yard TD passes from Brennan to Ryan Grice-Mullins and Ilaoa. The recovery by Alama-Francis (on a fumble caused by Blaze Soares), was the third turnover in three plays. It came after Rakine Toomes intercepted Brennan and Solomon Elimimian recovered another SJSU fumble, caused by Patek. “The running back was talking to Davone and said we were trash,” Peters said. Linebacker Solomon Elimimian led UH with 12 tackles, and Alama-Francis turned in three tackles for loss. It was the best performance of the season by the defense, which continues to improve each week. “It’s fun to watch them. It’s what they are and what they’ve become,” Glanville said. DEFENSE DEMANDS ATTENTION The offense gets all of the accolades, but the defense has also stepped up By Dave Reardon November 20, 2006 Any coach will tell you. It all starts up front. And Saturday at Aloha Stadium, a lot of it stopped there, too. The Hawaii three-man defensive front simply dominated San Jose State at the line of scrimmage (and behind it), stifling any dreams the Spartans had of keeping up with UH’s offense. Hawaii crushed San Jose State 54-17. It was the Warriors’ eighth consecutive victory, propelling UH (9-2, 7-1 WAC) to a No. 25 ranking in all three polls and tying the record for wins in a row in one season set by the 1973 team coached by Dave Holmes. That UH squad was built on defense, limiting seven of the nine teams it beat to 10 or fewer points. San Jose State managed just 192 yards, the least for a UH opponent since Sept. 24, 2005, when Idaho had 153 and the Warriors blanked the Vandals 24-0. Ends Melila Purcell and Ikaika AlamaFrancis and nose tackle Michael Lafaele created opportunities for the back seven when they weren’t making big plays themselves. “The defensive line played great,” senior free safety and tri-captain Leonard Peters said. “Any time the linebackers fill holes like that (Solomon Elimimian’s 12 tackles were almost all at the line of scrimmage), it’s because the linemen are taking on two guys and keeping them off them.” Purcell, in particular, has played incredibly well in recent games. The 6-foot-5, 276pound senior has thrived in the 3-4 alignment this fall after learning its nuances while dealing with nagging injuries last year. “We just wanted to come out here and dominate the line and take the momentum away and put it on our side.” Purcell matched his season high with eight tackles. He was involved in three sacks, four quarterback hurries and he forced a fumble. “The last half of the season, (Purcell) has really taken a step,” defensive line coach Jeff Reinebold said. “He’s become an outstanding leader, in practice on the field, in meetings. And I think he’s starting to play at a level that we all hoped he would get to. And Ikaika, the same thing. And Mike Lafaele, you tell me who’s got a nose tackle who makes more plays than that guy does. “They all played really, really well. They dominated the line of scrimmage,” Reinebold said. “I’m proud of them, they deserve every good thing that happens to them.” The Hawaii offense leads the nation in scoring and total offense and gets most of the notice. But the Warriors defense has come on in recent weeks, and opponents have averaged just 13.5 points in the last four games. UH held San Jose State to 92 yards on the ground. The Spartans entered the game averaging 198.6 rushing yards, second in the WAC and 10th in the nation. Running back Yonus Davis averaged 101.3 yards going in. He walked out of Aloha Stadium with just 29 yards in 14 attempts against the Warriors. “They played a helluva game,” Davis said of the Hawaii defense. “They got the job done.” The Warriors try to continue their winning streak Saturday against Purdue (8-4) at Aloha Stadium. CLIPPINGS 42 PURCELL AS ‘AMAZING’ AS HE WAS IN SAMOA By Stephen Tsai November 21, 2006 While recruiting in American Samoa nearly five years ago, University of Hawai’i assistant coach Rich Miano came across a 17-year-old Leone High senior who could run 40 yards in 4.6 seconds, dunk a basketball off a 360degree move, and long jump 21 feet. “He’s an amazing athlete,” Miano said at the time. “His only fault is he wants to become a journalist.” Melila Purcell III, now a 6-foot-5, 278pound UH senior, is making news as one of the Western Athletic Conference’s best defensive ends. Yesterday, for the second time this season, Purcell was named the WAC’s Defensive Player of the Week. In Saturday’s 54-17 victory over San Jose State, Purcell played 44 snaps, amassing eight tackles, 2.5 sacks, four hurries and a forced fumble. Of the Spartans’ 22 pass plays, Purcell was in the quarterback’s grill seven times. UH uses a scoring system in which a defender is awarded a “hit” for every tackle or shot that leads to a tackle. Purcell was credited with 11 hits against the Spartans. “In 44 plays, that’s a good number for a linebacker,” defensive line coach Jeff Reinebold said. “It’s phenomenal for a defensive lineman, really unheard of for someone who plays on one side of the field.” In UH’s 3-4 scheme, Purcell is aligned on the left side — usually an offense’s strong side — and faces a minimum double team on every pass play. The Spartans also had a power package in which they used six offensive linemen at the same time. “We don’t want him engaged in a block too long,” Reinebold said. “We ask him to be a movement guy, which means to move all over the field and make plays. That’s not easy when the other team sends two blockers after you.” Purcell uses his speed (now 4.7 seconds over 40 yards) and strength (benches more than 400 pounds) to break free from blockers. “What’s fun about watching Mel play is his total command of his responsibilities,” defensive coordinator Jerry Glanville said. “He totally knows on every call where he’s supposed to be and what he’s supposed to do. It’s a great teaching tool for the people who are playing on the defensive line. You can say, ‘Look at this, look at how he’s doing.’ “ Mel deLaura, who coordinates the conditioning program, said Purcell is working out with the same ferocity as he did as a secondyear freshman in 2003. Purcell attended classes but did not practice in 2002 because the NCAA did not accept a high school English course as a core class. Purcell weighed about 220 pounds as a second-year freshman. But the progress he made in 2003 could not be developed further because of a series of injuries the next two years. This year, despite an arm injury, Purcell bit his mouthpiece and kept working. “He decided he was going to make this his big-time year,” deLaura said. “It started in January. He worked hard in the weight room and at running. He took care of business. Maybe it’s because he’s not as banged up. But he decided he was not going to be the guy going through the motions. He came in and worked his butt off. It’s paid off. He’s always working out, every day. When I come in, he’s here. When I leave, he’s here.” Purcell, who gained 25 pounds during the offseason, acknowledged he is in better health. What’s more, he said, “I’m more comfortable with the defensive scheme. My teammates encourage me to play at a higher level every week.” Reinebold said to maximize effectiveness, the defensive linemen are placed under play limits. Purcell’s 44 plays against SJSU were his most in a game this season. “We always tell our guys, ‘You’re not going to play as an NFL player after you cash your first NFL check,’ “ Reinebold said. “That means they have to play at that NFL level before the NFL will even consider them.” Reinebold said Purcell, based on his play this season, is deserving of a shot in the NFL. “The NFL draft is a matter of being in the right place at the right time, and being the match for the right team,” Reinebold said. “But when I compare him to guys I’ve coached or been around, he’s certainly as talented as anyone. Look at the impact he has in games.” Reinebold said Purcell’s skills — strength, quickness, good “motor” — are comparable to former All-Pro L’Roi Glover’s abilities. “Now that doesn’t mean Mel will be a Pro Bowl player,” Reinebold said. “That means he’s playing at an extremely high level.” Reinebold also said Purcell has maintained his strong play late in the season. “That something the pros notice,” Reinebold said. “When you’re an NFL team playing a 16-game schedule over 17 weeks, with all of that travel, you’re looking for players who won’t wear down.” Purcell also has shown feistiness this season. During a practice, he scuffled with his CLIPPINGS 43 cousin, center Samson Satele. “Mel is Mel,” Satele said. “I knew he was the best, but sometimes he keeps it in. Maybe it was because he was hurt. But he’s playing at a high level, like an NFL d-end. When he brings it out, he’s unstoppable.” 25TH-RANKED UH RALLIES TO WIN ITS NINTH STRAIGHT By Stephen Tsai November 26, 2006 In a finish that will eventually be retold as a sweet-dreams bedtime story, the 25th-ranked University of Hawai’i football team willed a 42-35 victory from Purdue last night at Aloha Stadium. Before 44,298 — the largest home crowd since the 2005 season opener — the Warriors surged from an eight-point deficit with six minutes remaining to win their ninth in a row. Right wideout Ian Sample’s 23-yard, screen-and-sprint touchdown with 1:27 remaining proved to be the difference. The Warriors (10-2) sealed the outcome when Adam Leonard intercepted Curtis Painter on the Boilermakers’ final please-please-please possession. It was the first interception by a UH linebacker this season. “What an absolutely fabulous victory,” Mayor Mufi Hannemann gushed in the postgame celebration. “I’m so proud of them. They’re Hawai’i’s team. They’re Polynesia’s team.” For another week, the Warriors will retain their place in three national polls and in school lore. “I love this game!” said UH slotback Ryan Grice-Mullins, who tied the game at 35 with a 5-yard scoring catch and ensuing twopoint conversion. Quarterback Colt Brennan, who threw for 434 yards and three fourth-quarter touchdowns, said: “We believed. I don’t think the victory went to the team that wanted it the most. I think it went to the team that had the most love for each other. You could see it. When the chips were down, the team came right together. That’s what it’s all about. That’s what this team is all about.” It appeared the Warriors would cruise after constructing a 17-0 lead in the first two quarters. Running back Nate Ilaoa scored two touchdowns in the first half en route to rushing for a career-high 159 yards on 12 carries. But the usually sure-handed Ilaoa fumbled two times in the second half. The Warriors had three second-half turnovers, all of which were parlayed into Purdue touchdowns. “It was my fault,” Ilaoa said. “I’ve got to do some ball security. But the team had my back. That’s the big thing about this team.” Ilaoa’s second fumble gave the Boilermakers possession at the UH 32. On the next play, Painter lofted a pass to 6-foot-4 wideout Selwyn Lymon, who out-leaped 5-9 cornerback Myron Newberry in the end zone, giving the Boilermakers a 35-27 lead with 6:50 to play. “Newberry had it played perfectly,” UH defensive coordinator Jerry Glanville said. “He just wasn’t tall enough. That’s not his fault. He did what he was supposed to do.” After that, the Warriors looked at the JumboTron clock, then at each other. “I told the guys, ‘We’re two passes away from winning the game,’ and we were,” UH coach June Jones said. Brennan recalled thinking: “When we were down by eight, we knew we could come back. We just knew.” Grice-Mullins said: “We play a different ball on the island. We’ve got too much heart.” Brennan was facing a Purdue defense that switched from a 3-3-5 experimental scheme in the first half to its usual menacing 4-3 style. In the 4-3, the two defensive ends use their strength and quickness to trap Brennan in a collapsing pocket. “They changed it up on us at first,” Brennan said. “But coach (Jones) taught us well. He taught us what to look for.” Dodging heavy pressure, Brennan found slotback Davone Bess for 28 yards and left wideout Jason Rivers for 22 to ignite the comeback. After UH advanced to the 4, Jones called for an out-and-go to Grice-Mullins. “All I had to do was beat my guy,” said Grice-Mullins, who secured Brennan’s pass to close UH to 35-33. “And I beat my guy.” On the ensuing conversion play, GriceMullins and Brennan produced a hana hou. “The line blocked, the other receivers did what they’re supposed to do, Colt and Reagan (Mauia) did what they were supposed to do, and I did what I was supposed to do. We followed the plan.” But Purdue was not done. On the UH sideline, the coaches were screaming for another stop. That came four plays in the drive, when Painter overthrew Dorien Bryant on the right side. Left cornerback Gerard Lewis, who was in deep coverage, made a diving interception. “I don’t usually dive,” Lewis said, “but I knew we needed a stop. It was an adrenaline decision.” Defensive backs coach Rich Miano said: “When Gerard made his interception, it was an unbelievable play in terms of getting his hands underneath the ball. It was just a great play.” CLIPPINGS 44 UH took over at its 46 with 2:27 remaining — more than enough time, Brennan insisted. Brennan threw 13 yards to Rivers along the left sideline. After an incompletion, Brennan went back to Rivers for a 14-yard gain. On the next play, Brennan scrambled 4 yards to the 23. Jones then called for “460” — an inside screen to Sample, who was angling from the right. Sample caught the pass, kept running diaganolly until he reached the left side, and cut up to complete the 23-yard scoring play. “I knew my line would be blocking, so I decided to follow my blocks,” Sample said. “I just read it all the way. Jason (Rivers) made a block. The o-line made blocks. It was easy for me.” Rivers said he was happy not to be typecast only as a receiver. “You can’t be good in only one aspect of the game,” Rivers said. “To be a great team, everybody has to do everything. I didn’t know Ian was going to come my way. I peeked to the right, and I saw Ian coming. I said, ‘Man, I’ve got to (block) somebody.’ Everybody was doing a job. It would be a shame if I didn’t do my job.” After Leonard’s interception, the Warriors counted down their statement-making victory over a bowl-bound school from the Big Ten. “I’m so proud of these kids,” said defensive line coach Jeff Reinebold, who was raised in Indiana. Two of his children attend Purdue. “People have no idea about the differences between that place and this place in terms of facilities, and money, and athletes, even,” Reinebold added. “But they don’t have what we have: as great a love for each other.” After the game, the Mayor agreed it was fortunate he wasn’t running against Brennan. “That’s for sure,” Hannemann said. “Or Nasti (Ilaoa) or anyone else on this team.” WARRIORS RISE IN NATIONAL RANKINGS By Stephen Tsai November 27, 2006 Saturday night’s 42-35 comeback victory over Purdue helped the University of Hawai’i football team ascend from No. 25 last week to No. 23 in the current USA Today coaches poll and No. 24 in the Associated Press top-25 rankings. It also stirred the continuing discussion as to whether Colt Brennan, who threw three fourth-quarter touchdown passes to increase his nation-leading total to 51 this season, will be named a Heisman Trophy finalist. Asked if Brennan will be invited to the Dec. 9 ceremony in New York, UH coach June Jones answered with this anecdote. Jones said Purdue coach Joe Tiller has faced Notre Dame quarterback Brady Quinn and studied hours of videotape of Ohio State quarterback Troy Smith — both regarded as the leading Heisman contenders. After the final whistle sounded Saturday night, Jones and Tiller met at midfield. “He said to me, ‘That’s the best quarterback I’ve ever seen. Good luck in the bowl,’” Jones recalled. “That’s the only thing he said to me coming off the field. That says it all.” Asked for his personal opinion, Jones said of Brennan: “He’s the best college player in America. I’ve said it all along.” Jones said he saw hints of that in last season’s game against Boise State, when Brennan was a third-year sophomore and first-year Warrior. Six weeks into this season, Jones said, “that’s when I knew he was the best college player in America. “He has not had one bad game this year,” Jones added. “Not one.” Asked if Brennan will be regarded as a first-round pick, Jones said: “Best college player in America.” But Jones said he “would anticipate” Brennan returning for his senior season. “He said he would come back,” Jones said. “He’s having a lot of fun here. I’m having a lot of fun. It’s been an unreal year.” Jones said Brennan’s skill was evident in the way he adjusted to Purdue’s defensive scheme. In the second half, the Boilermakers switched to a four-man front, with the defensive ends stepping into the passing lanes to the flats. “They did a great job of getting their hands up and jumping,” Brennan said. “We get the ball out very quick (to the flats), and they did a great job of trying to defend it.” After three passes were knocked down, Brennan adjusted by throwing wide of the defensive ends. On the winning screen pass to Ian Sample, Brennan said, “I had to doubleclutch it because (defensive end Cliff Avril) had his hands up.” Brennan said the knockdowns had little to do with his motion, which sometimes appears to be side-armed. He said, in fact, he is throwing with a three-quarter motion favored by most quarterbacks. “There would have been way more batted balls throughout the year if there were any issues with my throwing (motion),” Brennan said. The Warriors, meanwhile, said the victory over a Big Ten team showed they were worthy of their national ranking. “A lot of the people didn’t think we deserved to be ranked,” linebacker Solomon Elimimian said. “They thought the teams we played (in the previous eight weeks) weren’t good. We had to show the people we could play with the big boys. We showed our critics we deserved to be ranked.” Slotback Davone Bess said the outcome showed “our true character. People across the country pretty much doubted us and thought we were a fluke. We proved the football world wrong. We’re enjoying this win, but we’re definitely not satisfied.” Brennan said Saturday’s victory eased the burden. “Obviously, there’s a great weight lifted off of our shoulders,” Brennan said. “There’s that stigma that right after you get ranked, you lose. That weight definitely has been lifted, and it helped that it was a really tough game. The mentality is to keep winning and to keep climbing in the top-25 poll.” The Warriors set several goals during the season. One of them was to win the final four regular-season games. They close the regular season against Oregon State on Saturday. “We have one more to go,” Jones said. “We set goals for the team, all kinds of deals, and we’re fulfilling them. That’s what makes you feel good. I’m proud of them.” Bess said the Oregon State game is important, and not just because he was supposed to play for the Beavers. “This is still Oregon State, one of the top teams,” Bess said. “They beat USC.” The Warriors are expected to learn within the week who they will face in the Sheraton Hawai’i Bowl. If it were up to the players, Elimimian said, the choice would be UCLA. “That’s who I want to play,” said Elimimian, who was raised in Los Angeles. “That’s who a lot of the guys want to play. We hope it’s UCLA. Everybody knows UCLA. That’s a name with prestige. I’m sure if UCLA came, it will be a full house.” CLIPPINGS 45 WARRIORS CREATE ‘SPECIAL’ BLEND By Stephen Tsai December 1, 2006 “This senior class has been kind of special,” Hawai’i football head coach June Jones said. Standing, from left: Marissa Bonilla, Victor Fergerstrom, Nate Ilaoa, Michael Malala, Chris Williams, Melila Purcell III, Lawrence Wilson, Ikaika Alama-Francis, Samson Satele, Renolds Fruean. Kneeling, from left: Marques Kaonohi, Reagan Mauia, Ian Sample, Chad Mock, Kurt Milne. Sitting, from left: Dane Uperesa, Tala Esera, Ross Dickerson, Leonard Peters. To be sure, the University of Hawai’i senior class of 2006 is unique. It features three sixth-year players (running back Nate Ilaoa, wideout Ian Sample and free safety Leonard Peters). One defensive end, Melila Purcell III, is from American Samoa. The other, IkaikaAlama Francis, moved from the UH basketball team, where he was a 190-pound forward. Sample, wideout Chad Mock, linebacker Chris Williams and safety Mike Malala are not on scholarship. Alama-Francis, running back Reagan Mauia, defensive lineman Renolds Fruean, linebacker Bully Fergerstrom and punter Kurt Milne started their UH careers as walk-on players. Fruean takes the bus every morning from the Leeward Coast. Peters and tackles Tala Esera and Dane Uperesa drive in from the North Shore. And all of them could exit with the winningest season in the program’s history. “This senior class has been kind of special,” head coach June Jones said. “They’ve taken real leadership off the field and on the field.” The most special might be team manager Marissa Bonilla, who is completing her fifth season. “She’s been great,” Jones said. “She has been very reliable and accountable. She does what she’s supposed to do. She’s going to be a great teacher one day in the school system. And she’s a good snapper.” Indeed, as one of her many roles, Bonilla snaps the football to the quarterbacks during three of the passing drills. “She has probably hundreds of snaps a day,” quarterback Colt Brennan said. “She’s unbelievable with the football. She can throw the ball like 30 yards, tight spirals. She’s got great hands. The receivers throw the balls in, and she catches them with one hand, then turns around and snaps it to us. I’m impressed with how well she does her job.” She also helps set up the equipment, times the drills and, on game days, braids the players’ hair. Bonilla lettered in volleyball, basketball and softball at Kaua’i High. She learned of the manager’s job through former athletic director Hugh Yoshida. “I told my mom that’s the only reason that I would stay in Hawai’i, if I could work in sports,” Bonilla recalled. Bonilla, who will graduate when she completes her student teaching, said she treasures her time with the program. “I’m going to miss all of the coaches,” she said. “They’re like second fathers to me. They’ve been nothing but nice to me for five years.” IKAIKA ALAMA-FRANCIS Position: Defensive right end. Hometown: Kane’ohe. High school: Kalaheo. Graduation day: May 2007 (sociology). Fun fact: He knows every single line from the movie, “Predator.” Best UH football memory: “The friendships I’ve made. I can’t say enough about the people I’m around every day. I’ll remember some of the games, but I’ll remember all of the friendships. They’re such loving people. I’m blessed to be in a place like this.” ROSS DICKERSON Position: Slotback. Hometown: Waipahu. High school: Saint Louis. Graduation day: Dec. 17 (political science). Fun fact: He aspires to run for public office. Best UH football memory: “This past game. It was the greatest game of my life, the way we came back and fought for each other. That’s what a team is all about.” TALA ESERA Position: Left tackle. Hometown: Hau’ula. High school: Kahuku. Graduation day: Dec. 17 (sociology). Fun fact: “I can juggle three balls. And I can do a head stand.” Best UH football memory: “The best is yet to come.” CLIPPINGS 46 VICTOR “BULLY” FERGERSTROM Position: Linebacker. Hometown: Kamuela. High school: Hawai’i Prep. Graduation day: Dec. 17 (sociology). Fun fact: “When I was a little kid, I had so much fat on my arms, it looked like I had muscles. That’s how I got the nickname Bully.” Best UH football memory: “Probably the first game I played in the stadium. It started to rain. It was like home.” RENOLDS FRUEAN Position: Defensive lineman. Hometown: Kapolei. Schools: Waipahu High, Washington State. Graduation day: May 2007 (sociology). Fun fact: Earned the nickname “GEICO” after defensive coordinator Jerry Glanville said his long hair made him look like a caveman. Best UH football memory: “The road trips and the games.” MARQUES KAONOHI Position: Center. Hometown: Waimanalo. High school: Kailua. Graduation day: May 2007 (communications). Fun fact: He is a big-wave surfer. Best UH football memory: “Being in camp with the boys.” NATE ILAOA Position: Running back. Hometown: Stafford, Va. High school: North Stafford. Graduation day: May 2007 (history). Fun fact: As a military dependent, he once attended five elementary schools in one year. Best UH football memory: “Just everything about football. Everything’s been good.” KAHAI LACOUNT Position: Nose tackle. Hometown: Kailua. High school: Kailua. Graduation day: May 2007. Fun fact: He trains pitbulls. Best UH football memory: “There are a lot of good memories. But (the best are) hanging out with all of my friends, and laughing at all of the stupid things everybody does.” MICHAEL MALALA Position: Strong safety. Hometown: Honolulu. Previous school: UH-Hilo. Graduation day: May 2007 (psychology). Fun fact: “I was raised in Washington.” Best UH football memory: “Cruising with the guys.” REAGAN MAUIA Position: Running back. Hometown: Stockton, Calif. Junior college: San Joaquin Delta. Graduation day: December 2007 (family resources). Fun fact: He trains for ultimate fighting. Best UH football memory: “When I got my scholarship (in January). I was happy. My son was out here at the time. I was real happy I could get a scholarship for him.” KURT MILNE Position: Punter. Hometown: Roswell, Ga. High school: Centennial. Graduation day: May 2007 (economy). Fun fact: His great-grandfather, A.A. Milne, wrote “Winnie-the-Pooh” and “The House at Pooh Corner.” Best UH football memory: “The Alabama game (in 2002) was my first big win since I’ve been here. It was against a big-conference team. That was the best memory. That game, the Purdue game, the Houston game. They’re all up there.” CHAD MOCK Position: Wideout. Hometown: Honolulu. Schools: McKinley High, Avila College. Graduation day: May 2007 (sociology). Fun fact: He collects football cards. Best UH football memory: “This season. This whole season.” KENNY PATTON Position: Cornerback. Hometown: Honolulu. High schools: Punahou/St. Francis (Altadena, Calif.). Graduation day: Dec. 17 (English). Fun fact: Patton and former UH volleyball player Victoria Prince are proud parents of Champ, a chihuahua. Best UH football memory: “Playing wise, it was the Nevada game, because that was a great win. Watching wise, it was definitely the Purdue game. It was unbelievable. I would have given anything to get even one snap in that game. It was crazy. It was a great game.” LEONARD PETERS Position: Free safety. Hometown: La’ie. High school: Kahuku. Graduation day: Dec. 17 (sociology). Fun fact: “I don’t like A.C. It bothers my nose.” Best UH football memory: “Playing with all of my friends.” MELILA PURCELL Position: Defensive left end. Hometown: Pago Pago, American Samoa. High school: Leone. Graduation day: May 2007 (sociology). Fun fact: He can dunk a basketball off a 360degree move. Best UH football memory: “Hanging out with the guys.” IAN SAMPLE Position: Right wideout. Hometown: Washington Township, N.J. Previous college: Bergen. Graduation day: Dec. 17 (English). Fun fact: He has nearly finished writing a book. Best UH football memory: “This whole season. The camaraderie, and the heart we have. I’ve never felt more like a team. In high school, I felt like a team. In college, it felt more like a business. But this year, just being healthy and playing with these guys, it’s a great thing.” SAMSON SATELE Position: Center. Hometown: Kane’ohe. High school: Kailua. Graduation day: Dec. 17 (sociology). Fun fact: He has not cut his hair since his freshman year. Best UH football memory: “Meeting all of the guys.” DANE UPERESA Position: Right tackle. Hometown: Hau’ula. High school: Punahou. Graduation day: Dec. 17 (communications). Fun fact: He loves to sing. Best UH football memory: “It would have to be this season, probably the last game against Purdue. Just the way we were down. Past teams might be out of it. But this team came together on offense. We weren’t even worried. We said, ‘We’re going to score, convert the two-point conversion, and the defense will get us back the ball, and we’ll score again.’ The fact we can do that, like the great teams in the country. It’s just a great feeling for me, especially in my senior year, to be part of a special group like this.” CHRIS WILLIAMS Position: Linebacker. Hometown: Honolulu. Schools: McKinley High, Fresno City College. Graduation day: May (psychology). Fun fact: “I can sing.” Best UH football memory: “It has yet to come. After we win our next two games, then the whole season will be a great memory.” CLIPPINGS 47 LAWRENCE WILSON Position: Nose tackle. Hometown: Honolulu. Schools: Farrington High, Dixie State College. Graduation day: May 2007 (sociology). Fun fact: He eats Zippy’s teri-chicken mixed plate after every home game. Best UH football memory: “Being on this team. Everybody is like family.” WARRIORS DROP OUT VERSATILE DICKERSON NAMED WARRIOR MVP By Stephen Tsai December 4, 2006 University of Hawai’i football player Ross Dickerson, a political science major who aspires to a career in politics, was voted the winner of the Alec Waterhouse Most Valuable Player Award last night at the team banquet. The MVP was the most prestigious of the awards presented during the annual ceremony at the Hilton Hawaiian Village. Dickerson, a fifth-year senior from Saint Louis School, has played right wideout, right slotback, kick returner and, in Saturday night’s game, running back. He caught 54 passes for 726 yards and a touchdown, and averaged 26.2 yards per kickoff return. Dickerson opened the season as the starting right wideout, then moved to right slotback as the injury replacement for Ryan GriceMullins. When Grice-Mullins returned, Dickerson volunteered to cede the starting job. Dickerson started at running back against Oregon State despite practicing only four days at that position. He was such a feared kick returner OSU pooched its final three kickoffs. Left tackle Tala Esera, who was Colt Brennan’s back-side blocker, won the Ben Yee Most Inspirational Award. Esera also called the chants during the Warriors’ performances of the haka. The Most Outstanding Warrior awards went to Brennan, who leads the nation with 53 touchdown passes, and running back Nate Ilaoa for offense; defensive ends Ikaika Alama-Francis and Melila Purcell III for defense; and Timo Paepule for special teams. Center Samson Satele, free safety Leonard Peters and special teams member Michael Malala each received a Captain’s Award. Right tackle Dane Uperesa was named the Scholar-Athlete winner. Scout awards went to Will Brogan, Ryan Perry and Jayson Rego. As expected following the 35-32 loss to Oregon State, the Warriors dropped out of the Associated Press Top 25 and USA Today coaches poll. They were ranked No. 24 and No. 23, respectively, last week. “It’s disappointing,” Brennan said. “You can’t blame the polls or the people for moving us back. That was our responsibility to rise above. ... Because we didn’t get it done (Saturday) night, on the grand scale, in front of national TV, you can understand what happened.” Head coach June Jones said: “You miss a couple of field goals and drop a pass here or there, and bust a couple of things, and (allow) the kickoff return (for a touchdown), that’s 20 something points right there. We didn’t get it done. We’ll give it another try in the Sheraton (Hawai’i) Bowl, and hopefully send out our seniors as winners.” By winning the Christmas Eve bowl, the Warriors would tie the school record for most victories in a season, set by the 11-2 team in 1992. Asked if the OSU loss would dim Brennan’s chances as a Heisman Trophy finalist, Jones said: “I have no way of knowing. I thought he showed enough on TV that everybody saw what we had been saying. He did a lot of good things. He was under duress a lot more than he usually was, and he still got it done.” Against OSU, Brennan completed 37 of 50 passes for 401 yards and two touchdowns. He was intercepted twice and sacked a seasonhigh six times. CLIPPINGS 48 BRENNAN NAMED WAC’S TOP OFFENSIVE PLAYER By Stephen Tsai December 5, 2006 “There’s no quarterback as talented who’s playing now,” June Jones says of Colt Brennan, who leads the nation in total offense and TD passes. In what continues to be a joyous season, the Western Athletic Conference named Hawai’i quarterback Colt Brennan as Offensive Player of the Year and June Jones as Coach of the Year. It is the first time a UH player has been named the top offensive player in the school’s 27-year WAC membership. “There’s no quarterback as talented who’s playing now,” Jones said of Brennan, who leads the nation in total offense (410.8 yards per game) and touchdown passes (53). In turn, Brennan said: “That’s awesome about coach Jones. He did a great job. I’m so happy for him.” Brennan was among a school-record nine Warriors to earn berths on the All-WAC first team. The others were: running back Nate Ilaoa, left slotback Davone Bess, left tackle Tala Esera, center Samson Satele, defensive left end Melila Purcell III, defensive right end Ikaika Alama-Francis, free safety Leonard Peters and kick-returner Ross Dickerson. Named to the second team were: left wideout Jason Rivers, right tackle Dane Uperesa, nose tackle Michael Lafaele and inside linebacker Adam Leonard. Despite a lumbar strain and hamstring tightness — “little nicks here and there” — Brennan is leading the nation’s highest-scoring offense (47.3 points per game). “This isn’t about me,” Brennan said. “It’s about our offense. We wanted to make a statement that we weren’t one of the best offenses in the nation; we wanted to win the overall title.” UH met that goal, leading the nation in total offense (549.92 yards per game, an average of 73.09 yards more than runner-up Louisville). “That’s why this is a good honor for the receivers, the O-line, and Nate,” Brennan said. “They deserve as much credit.” Jones said: “Colt’s been a great competitive player for us this year. He’s a winner.” Ilaoa is playing with a painful bruised left heel. The only thing that keeps him balanced is his sprained right ankle. “I don’t think about those things,” said Ilaoa, who leads the Warriors with 1,674 all-purpose yards (893 rushing, 781 receiving) and 18 touchdowns. “I just want to be out there with the other seniors helping the team win.” Bess, who was named to the first team as a freshman last season, is the Warriors’ leading receiver with 91 catches for 1,155 yards and 14 touchdowns. After a mid-season slump, Bess has caught 29 passes for 457 yards and five touchdowns in the past four games. “He was pressing a little bit early,” Jones said. “He and I had a talk, and ever since then, he’s let it flow. I think he’s the real deal. He’s been fantastic.” Bess said: “The hard work paid off. I’m thankful for my teammates around me, the blocking, and for Colt getting me the ball.” Each day, Esera makes the long ride from the North Shore. A greater journey was going from an unheralded defensive lineman to one of the nation’s best backside blockers. “He really turned it up this year,” Jones said. “He hustled. He was an inspirational leader.” Esera, who is married with two children, credits his family. He said he receives “big time” support from his parents and in-laws. “I’m very thankful,” Esera said. “All I have to do is show up and go to classes.” Esera and Peters, both Kahuku High graduates, coaxed Jones into allowing the team to perform the haka. Jones said the haka, which often brings him to tears, will become a “new tradition” for the Warriors. Peters is playing — and performing the haka — despite a chipped cartilage in his rib cage and partially torn ligament in his right knee. “I can’t imagine playing safety with a broken rib,” Jones said. “You get used to it,” Peters said. “You try and focus it somewhere else.” Jones described Peters as “not just a great player, but a great person.” Jones had similar praise for Dickerson, who accepted a request to move from wideout to slotback. Jones said Dickerson never complained last season, when he played despite a torn ligament in his ankle, and this season, when he voluntarily ceded a starting job. “He took a leadership role,” Jones said. “He’s got heart. And he made a lot of sacrifices.” So, too, did Satele, who passed up an opportunity to apply for the NFL draft in April. Instead, he returned for his senior season, while moving from left guard to center. Fresno State’s Kyle Young was regarded as the WAC’s best center entering this season. Satele kept Young’s picture in his locker for “motivation.” “He had a lot at stake (coming back),” Jones said. “He had a very good season. Samson is all I thought he would be, and CLIPPINGS 49 more.” Jones said Purcell and Alama-Francis — both high school basketball standouts — fulfilled projections. Purcell, who was a 208-pound freshman, developed into a relentless defender. “I don’t think there’s anybody playing any better than him in the last five or six weeks,” Jones said. Purcell said: “I didn’t work hard for awards. I worked hard to help my team.” Alama-Francis joined the Warriors after playing for the UH basketball team as a freshman. “He just blossomed,” Jones said. “Year after year, he got better.” Alama-Francis turned 22 yesterday. “I couldn’t have asked for a better birthday present,” he said. “I owe a lot to coach Jones. He gave me a chance and believed in me. There aren’t enough ways to thank him.” Jones, meanwhile, said he feels thankful. “God blessed me in many ways,” he said. “In one of them, He blessed me with great people. Some of that comes by divine intervention. How does a Colt Brennan end up coming here? How does he come, really, to know how to have a spiritual embracement here. There’s a reason why that happens. “Sometimes it’s out of our hands,” Jones added. “It’s in God’s hands. It’s like me living through my (car) wreck (in 2001). Why do I live? Why do I get lucky and live, and why is someone else not as lucky? It comes to God just isn’t ready to take me. He has some other things for me to do. I really do feel that part of why God didn’t take me was for this season. Because we’ve had so many kids come to know the Lord through our football team.” Jones said the most fulfilling part of the season is “we learned to love and play for each other. I always talk about it every year. The reason we have success is because we’ve had a nucleus of people always buy into the principles of what it takes to win. This year, I could tell, we had some real strong leadership. That’s why we were successful.” JONES: BRENNAN DESERVES N.Y. TRIP The UH coach says he’d be “shocked” if his QB is not invited to the Heisman Trophy ceremony By Dave Reardon December 5, 2006 Conventional wisdom says Hawaii’s loss to Oregon State completing the regular season last week also likely ends junior quarterback Colt Brennan’s hopes for a seat as a Heisman Trophy finalist Saturday. But no one has ever accused Warriors coach June Jones of believing the pack mentality. “I think had we won the game he probably would’ve finished one, two or three. I still think he’s going to get invited. I’d be shocked if he doesn’t,” Jones said at his weekly news conference yesterday. “I don’t care what you say, there’s no quarterback as talented and playing like he’s playing.” None has had a better season statistically this fall. That’s why Brennan leaves this afternoon for Orlando, Fla., to participate in ESPN’s college football awards show on Thursday, accompanied by his parents, quarterback coach Dan Morrison, and UH media relations director Lois Manin. He’s up for the Davey O’Brien Quarterback Award. Ohio State’s Troy Smith and Notre Dame’s Brady Quinn are the other finalists. Brennan is also a finalist for the Walter Camp Award that goes to the nation’s top player, similar in qualifications to the Heisman. Because Smith is probably a runaway Heisman winner, the Downtown Athletic Club might choose to bring just two others to the ceremony, diminishing Brennan’s chances. He finds out tomorrow, after voting is completed at noon Hawaii time. (Star-Bulletin sports editor Paul Arnett e-mailed his ballot yesterday. It will be disclosed Sunday.) Brennan -- named the Western Athletic Conference offensive player of the year yesterday -- has read and heard it all about how his stats (and UH’s 10-3 record) are the product of feasting on bad WAC defenses and not considered Heisman-worthy by a lot of voters. It irks him a little, but he shakes it off. “If you read the press, it seems like that’s how they feel. Just because we had a lot of success this year, there’s been a lot of criticism of how we got that success,” Brennan said. “I don’t get caught up in it. I’m just going out there to have fun and enjoy myself. I’m just going to enjoy the fact that I’m going to meet some cool guys and be at Disney World for a couple days and miss a couple days of school as well.” Brennan, who is in good academic standing, said he’ll probably have to make up for an incomplete class since this is crunch time of the semester. It might be too late to make up for the incomplete pass on fourth down that would’ve kept the potential winning drive alive against the Beavers. Jones hopes the voters who had Brennan penciled in are better than that. (And as he pointed out, most probably weren’t watching the ESPN telecast by that point since it was after 3 a.m. on the East Coast.) If they were watching earlier and are astute enough to understand why one of his passes was intercepted, it wasn’t a reason to drop him from the ballot, Jones said. “The first interception, the one in the end zone, after a 99-yard drive, I thought was his best play of the year,” Jones said. “It’s just unfortunate (receiver) Davone (Bess) stumbled coming out of the break. It would’ve hit him perfectly and only a few guys can make that throw. “The ESPN announcers saw the same thing I did. They said that on ESPN,” Jones added. “I think it’s all positive. And I’ll be disappointed if he doesn’t get in.” CLIPPINGS 50 UH QB BRENNAN NOT HEISMAN FINALIST By Stephen Tsai December 7, 2006 After being snubbed as a Heisman Trophy finalist yesterday, quarterback Colt Brennan said his only disappointment was missing the chance to promote the state, the University of Hawai’i and its football program. “I was telling (teammates) how much I was going to give love and praise and just represent Hawai’i the way it should be represented,” Brennan said. National voting closed yesterday, and the finalists were invited to New York for the Heisman show on Saturday, when the winner will be announced. “I was going to have fun with it,” Brennan said. “If I got invited, it wasn’t going to me going up there as a candidate. It was going to be me going up there and having fun and kind of showcasing what this Hawai’i football team is all about. “I was born and raised in SoCal,” added Brennan, a native of Orange County, “but Hawai’i’s my home away from home. I love Hawai’i, and I was going to let people know what a great place it is and how great the people are.” The finalists are: Ohio State quarterback Troy Smith, regarded as the overwhelming favorite to win the Heisman as the nation’s best college football player; Notre Dame quarterback Brady Quinn; and Arkansas running back Darren McFadden. “I’m disappointed,” UH slotback Davone Bess said. “Week in and week out, Colt’s been just as good as anybody else up for the Heisman. Honestly, it’s all politics. Obviously, the school and the conference play a factor. I think he should have been invited.” Brennan has superior statistics compared to the two quarterback finalists. Brennan leads the nation with a pass-efficiency rating of 182.8 (Smith is fourth, 167.9; Quinn is 14th, 151.6), total offense with 410.8 yards per game (Quinn is eighth, 278.6; Smith is 32nd, 228.3), 53 touchdown passes (Quinn has 35; Smith 30), and 4,990 passing yards (Quinn is eighth, 3,278; Smith is 33th, 2,507). McFadden is 10th nationally in rushing with 119.58 yards per game and 14 rushing touchdowns. Boise State’s Ian Johnson — who, like Brennan, plays in the Western Athletic Conference — is second with 146.64 rushing yards per game and 24 touchdowns. “Colt was deserving,” said Dan Morrison, who coaches the UH quarterbacks. “You would think he had a nice opportunity to be there. But that’s OK. He’s a junior. He’s fine.” Brennan said: “It was one of those things if I had been invited it would have been a tremendous experience. Obviously, I would have been very grateful. Because I didn’t get invited, I’m not bummed. It’s just the way it is.” Brennan expressed surprise that Quinn received a nod. Still, Brennan noted, everyone else is a runner-up to Smith. “We know who won the Heisman Trophy,” Brennan said. Brennan said he would have liked to have used the ceremony as a platform to promote the Warriors. “It’s one of those things where it would have meant a lot, but not just for me,” Brennan said. “I really wanted to have some kind of statement, some kind of effect, that Hawai’i made a move into the national spotlight, that Hawai’i was moving up in the college football world. “I wanted to be a part of that,” Brennan added. “That’s what next year and the years to come are all about. It’s been a great year. Not getting invited to New York is nothing negative to me or to our team.” Brennan gets another chance to plug the UH program tonight. He is in Orlando, Fla., for the presentation of the Davey O’Brien Award as college football’s best quarterback and Walter Camp Award as college football’s top player. “The people out there in college football have given me that respect and credit, and I’m very grateful for that,” he said. Brennan reiterated that he expects to return for his senior season. As a fourth-year junior, he is eligible to apply for the National Football League draft when this season concludes following the Sheraton Hawai’i Bowl on Christmas Eve. Asked if he will return for his senior season, Brennan said: “That’s my intentions, you know. I’m very excited to come back and play next year and be part of the team. I’m still going to look at all of the options when the time comes. That’s the smart thing to do — to step back and look at every option and every aspect and make the best decision for yourself and the team. “I’m going to entertain everything,” he added. “But I can’t think of anything more fun than coming back for my senior year and playing for Hawai’i.” CLIPPINGS 51 BRENNAN, SATELE EARN ALL-AMERICA HONORS By Stephen Tsai December 8, 2006 University of Hawai’i quarterback Colt Brennan met with players and parents from the Koloa (Kaua’i) Packers and the Manoa Paniolos at Walt Disney World’s All-Star Resort in Orlando, Fla., yesterday. The two teams are participating in the junior peewee division of the Pop Warner Super Bowl. Manoa finished third in its division, while Koloa completes play today in the consolation round. University of Hawai’i quarterback Colt Brennan and center Samson Satele yesterday were named to All-America teams. Brennan, a fourth-year junior from Orange County, Calif., was named to the prestigious Walter Camp Football Foundation’s All-America second team. Satele, a fifth-year senior from Kailua High School, was selected to Sports Illustrated’s All-America second team. Brennan and slotback Davone Bess were honorable mention. Brennan is the first UH quarterback to be recognized on an All-America list since 1978, when Jeff Duva was named honorable mention by the Associated Press. Brennan was told of the honor Wednesday night, but was asked to keep mum until the official announcement yesterday. “That’s pretty cool,” Terry Brennan said of his son’s recognition. The Walter Camp announcement was the highlight of a whirlwind day for Colt Brennan, who was in Orlando, Fla., for the Home Depot College Football Awards Show. Brennan was one of three nominees for the Davey O’Brien Award as the nation’s best college quarterback. Ohio State quarterback Troy Smith, who also is favored to win the Heisman Trophy tomorrow, was the winner. Yesterday morning, Brennan met with youth teams from Manoa and Kaua’i, said Dan Morrison, who coaches the UH quarterbacks. Morrison said Brennan signed autographs for about an hour. After that, Brennan and the other invited players went to Disney World. In the late afternoon, the players were guests at a dinner. Brennan’s parents, UH media relations director Lois Manin and Morrison dined at a nearby restaurant. At the awards show, which was televised live on ESPN, Brennan sat in the fifth row, behind Rutgers running back Ray Rice. Brennan wore a black jacket with a blue tie. “He looked good,” Terry Brennan said of his son. “We were surprised the Davey O’Brien Award was announced first. By the time we got settled in, all of a sudden they announced, ‘We’ll start with the Davey O’Brien.’ Yikes. It was like, ‘Give us a punter or field-goal kicker first.’ But it was fine. And (the winner) Troy Smith is a great player.” After the ceremony, Brennan and the other players were taken to an ESPN-sponsored social event. “It’s been a great experience for him,” Terry Brennan said. “He’s had a ball. We wish he had won because he wanted to talk a little more about Hawai’i, give Hawai’i a little more love.” Morrison said Brennan bonded with several players, including Smith. “It was truly a great experience, hanging around some of these great, great players,” Morrison said of Brennan. “He should feel he belongs. The experience will make him better and lift him up. He was pleased people around the country knew about him. It surprised him, and made him feel good.” Morrison said the other players were aware of Brennan’s accomplishments. Brennan leads the nation in total offense (410.8 yards per game), passing yards (4,990), touchdown passes (53), pass efficiency (182.8 rating) and points responsible for (27.54 per game). “The (other) players knew it,” Morrison said. “They were basically telling him ‘to keep going.’ They were very respectful of what he had done. “Players know and coaches know it’s no fluke,” Morrison added. “It’s not tied to the (Warriors’ four-wide offensive) system. He operates within the system at an extremely high level. But that’s him. That’s not the system. The system helps him, but you have to be very special to do what he did.” Morrison also said the trip should serve as the launch for Brennan’s 2007 campaign. “The thing that happened is once you’ve been here, and kind of laid the ground work, it helps you for next year,” Morrison said. “You’re better known to the writers and people who do the voting. It’s like he belongs. He’s not an aberration. He’s for real.” Morrison said several of this year’s winners were nominees last year. “There is that sense they’ve been there, they’ve done that, it’s their time,” Morrison said. “Maybe Colt had to go through that. He has a great personality, and he’s a great young man. A lot of the players were respectful of him. He will elevate and grow through the experience.” Brennan already won an endorsement from Bess. Of all of the quarterbacks in the country, Bess said, “the only one I want to CLIPPINGS 52 play for is Colt. I like everything about him — his leadership, his composure, his talent.” Bess said Brennan deserved to win the Davey O’Brien Award, but “I kind of knew they wouldn’t give it to him because of the conference and stuff like that. But he definitely should have won it. Just being a finalist is good. There are 119 Division I schools. To be in the top three is big.” Morrison said: “Colt has done a good job. I’m happy to be here, but this is all about him. It’s all about the kids who play between the lines. Colt’s had a great year. I’m happy for him. He’s one of the good guys.” Dennis McKnight, who coaches the offensive line, also was pleased that Satele received national recognition. But Mc-Knight said Satele should have been named to Sports Illustrated’s first team. “I would say that unless the guy from the Steelers, (Jeff) Hartings, came back to college to play or Olin Kreutz played somewhere at a college, Sam probably got (short-changed),” McKnight said. Although the Warriors average 45.8 pass attempts per game, they are yielding an average of 1.77 sacks, or one every 25.9 pass attempts. “It’s a shame, really,” Mc-Knight said. “Most people say, ‘Well, he doesn’t run-block enough.’ Well, first of all, in the NFL, you get paid to pass-block. And second, he’s an unbelievable run-blocker. “I would be hard-pressed to find a better center in college football,” McKnight added. “He’s a complete center. Nobody’s quicker. Nobody’s smarter. Whoever they picked for the first team, I’m sure, came from a so-called, big-time conference or top-ranked school.” Sports Illustrated named Dan Mozes of West Virginia to the first team. West Virginia is a member of the Big East Conference, whose champion is assured a berth in a BCS bowl. McKnight said his praise of Satele is “just my opinion. Maybe they’ll say I have overfavoring Sam. I don’t think I am. I’d like people to watch his games all year, like I do, and tell me he’s not the best center in college football.” McKnight added: “I wish I had Sam’s problems, and probably be drafted in the second round. I would be happy. If being on the second team is his biggest problem, he’s going to have a hell of a life.” NOT MUCH DOWN TIME FOR WARRIORS’ UPERESA By Dave Reardon December 12, 2006 The Hawaii football team had last week off, but Dane Uperesa didn’t stop working. “Not really,” the senior starting right tackle said, when asked if he got to relax a little. “I’ve been writing my thesis paper and it’s about 40 to 50 pages. I had to dedicate a lot of time to the computer.” Uperesa is among the Warrior seniors who graduate Sunday. Yesterday, he learned he was named to the District VIII All-Academic team. Uperesa, who has a cumulative GPA of 3.63, is getting a degree in communications. His thesis deals with the effects of media exposure on body image for males. “In the research we came across reverse anorexia. Some guys work out too much and it can cause problems,” Uperesa said. Of course, there are some athletes who don’t work out enough. Uperesa said the Warriors didn’t suffer that problem last week, as players still found their way to the weight room during the lull before practices for the Dec. 24 Sheraton Hawaii Bowl against Arizona State. “We worked out, but we also all definitely took some time away from football last week, and that’s good. Heal the body up. Of course the winning made the weeks go by faster. We were so immersed in football for 12 straight weeks,” Uperesa said. “It’s good to get away from it, especially around finals week.” The Warriors (10-3) have one big onfield exam remaining in the Sun Devils (7-5). A victory in the Hawaii Bowl allows UH to tie the school record for wins in a season. It could also propel the Warriors into the final polls after the Dec. 2 loss to Oregon State to end the regular season knocked them out of the rankings. Yesterday, the team went through a light hour-long workout, and will do the same tomorrow after taking today off. Uperesa said he’s fully recovered from a bent wrist that sidelined him for the last four plays of the Oregon State loss. “I put a brace on it and it was sore the next morning, but I’m ready to go now,” he said. The Sun Devils arrive next Monday and will be staying at the Sheraton Waikiki. The Warriors move into their Hawaii Bowl rooms at the Sheraton Moana Surfrider on the same day. BRENNAN GETS AP HONOR By Stephen Tsai December 13, 2006 Respect often is distributed in increments, and the University of Hawai’i football team yesterday received a serving when quarterback Colt Brennan was named to the Associated Press’ All-America third team. Brennan, a fourth-year junior from the Orange County, Calif., is the first UH quarterback to be named an AP All-American. “That’s cool,” Brennan said. “That’s awesome. Considering the year it was in college football, and the big-name guys out there, for me to be recognized up there as an AllAmerican, even third team, that’s still a great, great compliment.” Indeed. Third-team members are qualified to carry the “All-America” title. Jeff Duva was named an AP All-America honorable mention in 1978. “This team kind of set out to break barriers, to kind of change the perception of UH football,” Brennan said. “Whether it’s winning on the road or achieving national notoriety, we fought through a lot this year. I’m glad to see, at the end of the year, we were able to get the notoriety that we deserved.” Although Brennan led the nation in five of the seven significant categories for a quarterback — including touchdown passes (53), passing efficiency (182.8 rating) and total offense (4,990 yards) — he predictably lost to Heisman Trophy winner Troy Smith and Notre Dame’s Brady Quinn, respectively, for berths on the AP’s first two teams. But Dan Morrison, who coaches the UH quarterbacks, said Brennan is deserving of top recognition. Morrison noted Brennan accomplished the “unheard of” feat of leading the nation in yards and accuracy. It was likened to a basketball player leading in 3-point attempts and field-goal accuracy. “To throw for just under 5,000 yards and complete more than 70 percent of your passes, that’s just unheard of,” Morrison said. “Those two categories don’t reconcile together. A high efficiency usually goes to someone who doesn’t throw very much.” Most telling is Brennan’s impact on the Warriors. According to an Advertiser analysis, of the 131 full drives in which Brennan was the quarterback, the Warriors scored 85 times (75 touchdowns, 10 field goals), a scoring efficiency of 64.8 percent. During the Warriors’ nine-game winning streak, the scoring efficienCLIPPINGS 53 cy was 75 percent when Brennan was the quarterback. In comparison, Smith led the Buckeyes to scores on 57 of 119 drives (47.9 percent) and Quinn was 61 of 134 (45.5 percent). Brennan has taken 743 snaps this season. When he is the quarterback, the Warriors score once every 8.7 plays. “I wouldn’t trade him for anyone else in the country,” UH coach June Jones said. Brennan acknowledged the Warriors are doing more with less. “We only lost three games, but we lost in dramatic fashion, all in the fourth quarter,” Brennan said. “It’s OK for Notre Dame to get blasted by a good football team. It’s OK for West Virginia to lose to a football team that’s 7-4. It’s OK for a lot of the good teams out there to lose and still get a lot of respect. “But for us ... we seem to get a little more disrespect out of those losses,” Brennan added. “It’s kind of a bummer. Playing in Hawai’i we don’t have the money. We don’t have nearly the tradition that the schools we’re competing against have. Yet we get held to their standard. People need to realize what we’ve overcome this year to compete at that level, and not just compete, but to win.” Brennan credits Jones’ four-wide offense, the players and the coaches. “It stems from the offensive line and the way we all work together,” Brennan said. “We’re doing something no other runand-shoot offense has done in terms of productivity and efficiency. It shouldn’t be discredited. It should be respected.” OVERACHIEVING LAU WOWS COACHES The undersized linebacker starts ahead of players with more natural talent By Dave Reardon December 14, 2006 When Micah Lau walked onto the Hawaii football team two years ago, he had the same big dreams every non-scholarship player does. But Lau, a practical, unassuming sort, considered them just that. Dreams. This year they came true. The undersized overachiever from Kamehameha earned a scholarship as a scoutteam grinder and special-teams stud in 2005. This fall he worked his way into the Warriors’ starting lineup as a 5-foot-9, 215-pound outside linebacker six games into the season. And there he still is heading into the Dec. 24 Sheraton Hawaii Bowl, atop the depth chart above several other players with more natural talent. “I always had thoughts (about starting), but I never thought this would happen,” Lau said after yesterday afternoon’s practice. “It’s been a great experience this year, being able to play a lot. It’s been a pleasure playing with all these guys, because if it wasn’t for them, I don’t think I’d be in there.” Lau’s stats aren’t super impressive; he has 21 tackles, including 1.5 for loss and a fumble recovery. But his attention to alignment and assignment prevents big offensive plays and allows other defenders to make the hits. Freshman Blaze Soares has been getting more playing time in recent games, but Lau remains the starter. “He plays hard and he’s been accountable,” UH coach June Jones said. “He completes his assignments and he’s given us all he has. He’s played well.” Outside linebackers coach George Lumpkin said Lau’s work in the weight room allows him to play bigger than he is. “He’s always been a good player, a smart player. Tough guy. With his size, sometimes people think he’s going to be overwhelmed, but he doesn’t. He does his job and he does it well,” Lumpkin said. “He’s physical for a small guy and he’s smart and he does things right. We thought we’d put him in there and see what he could do because he was always doing things right in practice.” In his first start, on the road at Fresno State, Lau made a huge play early in UH’s 6837 victory. He stuffed Dwayne Wright, the Bulldogs’ star running back, for a 9-yard loss on a screen pass. Although Fresno State scored on that drive, Lau’s play helped set the tone for the defense in one of Hawaii’s biggest wins of its 10-3 regular season. Lau would like nothing better than to make another big play and help send his senior teammates out with a victory in their final game. “I wanted to win every game for the seniors. Not just this one or the last one, every one. Every game we play, just go out hard and play my heart out because I know they’re playing their hearts out too,” he said. The Pac-10’s Arizona State (7-5) will be the Warriors’ third-straight opponent from a BCS conference. “It’s always exciting to play a big team, way more exciting than playing a WAC team,” Lau said. “It lets us look at ourselves as the underdog.” Lau will shoulder at least some of the responsibility of containing ASU second-team All-America tight end Zach Miller. “Technique is probably the thing that helps me against a 6-7, 6-8 tight end. My height isn’t going to help me. My weight isn’t going to help me, so I have to rely on technique,” Lau said. “It’s just another player.” Short yardage: Senior cornerback Kenny Patton participated in conditioning drills yesterday and was scheduled to undergo an X-ray today. Patton broke his collarbone in the Fresno State game. He hopes to at least suit up for the Hawaii Bowl. ... Defensive coordinator Jerry Glanville was expected to return today after some time off following the end of the regular season. ... Quarterbacks coach Dan Morrison missed practice yesterday with an aching back. ... The Warriors practiced on the soccer field because the regular football practice field is being fertilized. CLIPPINGS 54