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Saturday, September 04, 2010

Jeremiah Masoli eligible at Ole Miss

OXFORD, Miss. -- In another surprising twist to a month-long saga, Mississippi quarterback Jeremiah Masoli has been cleared to play football just one day before the start of the season.
Three days ago, the NCAA ruled that the former Oregon quarterback had to sit out a season after enrolling at Mississippi. But the university appealed that decision and announced Friday that the NCAA Division I Subcommittee for Legislative Relief had overturned the first ruling.
Ole Miss coach Houston Nutt said he couldn't talk about specifics of Friday morning's appeals hearing but was thrilled with the committee's decision.
"It's a big lift for us and the team's really excited," Nutt said. "We feel very fortunate. Jeremiah and his family were in tears, they were so happy afterward.
"It's a great feeling," he said.
Masoli is expected to be the Rebels' starting quarterback this season, though Nutt said sophomore Nathan Stanley will start against Jacksonville State on Saturday because of the short notice.
Masoli played for Oregon the past two seasons, leading the Ducks to the Rose Bowl in 2009. But he was kicked off Oregon's team earlier this summer after two run-ins with police. He pleaded guilty to a second-degree burglary charge and was also cited for misdemeanor marijuana possession.
Masoli had already received an undergraduate degree from Oregon and decided to transfer to Ole Miss, where he entered the Parks and Recreation graduate program. The NCAA will often waive a one-year residency requirement for athletes who enter a graduate program not offered at the previous school but initially didn't clear Masoli because "the waiver exists to provide relief to student-athletes who transfer for academic reasons to pursue graduate studies, not to avoid disciplinary measures at the previous university."
Obviously, the NCAA subcommittee disagreed, and the Rebels' offense is likely better for it.
"We would like to thank the NCAA staff and subcommittee for approaching this case and all of its details with diligence and fairness," Ole Miss athletic director Pete Boone said in a released statement.
Masoli accounted for 51 total touchdowns over two seasons at Oregon and is considered one of the best dual-threat quarterbacks in the country.
In other Ole Miss news, it was determined after exams that defensive end Kentrell Lockett will not need heart surgery.

Cal-Hi Sports All-East Bay

2010 Preseason All East Bay
Football Team

OL Freddy Tagaloa (Salesian, Richmond) 6-8, 275, Jr. 
DL Tavita Taito (Deer Valley, Antioch) 6-3, 315, Jr.

All-CIFSS Orange County FB team

Preseason All-Orange County


First Team 
OL Faitele Faafoi (Tustin) 6-5, 295, Sr.
OL Isaac Luatua (La Mirada) 6-2, 290, Sr.
DL Humana Sasi (Tustin) 5-10, 285, Sr.



Friday, September 03, 2010

Preseason All-Sun (San Bernardino) football team

Util - Sateki Finau, Sr., Rancho Cucamonga

49ers waive Will Tukuafu

San Francisco 49ers waive defensive end Will Tukuafu

Broncos waive Kory Sperry

Denver Broncos waive tight end Kory Sperry.

Thursday, September 02, 2010

The Area's Elite 11

Su'a Cravens
Vista Murrieta, defensive back
Class: Sophomore
Height, weight: 6-foot, 190 pounds
The lowdown: Transfer started at Temecula Valley as a freshman last year. ... Recorded 46 tackles and three passes defended in nine games played. ... Already drawing heavy NCAA Division I interest from the likes of UCLA and Hawaii. ... Listed on maxpreps.com's top-100 watch list for the nation's class of 2013.

North County's Elite 11 players

Ian Seau
La Costa Canyon, outside linebacker
Class: Senior
Height, weight: 6-2, 255
All about Ian: Feedback on Seau was decidedly mixed with some coaches saying he lacks every-down intensity, while others said they game-planned to run away from him. A fierce pass rusher, Seau led the North County last year with 14 sacks. He also blocked a punt vs. Chula Vista, recovered a fumble vs. Santa Margarita, intercepted a pass vs. Fallbrook and averaged more than 24 yards on his four receptions.
From La Costa Canyon coach Sean Sovacool: "He is super-talented and just has so much raw ability. He can be as good as he wants to be. You shouldn't be able to move that way at 260 pounds."

Jeremiah Kose
Vista, linebacker
Class: Senior
Height, weight: 6-2, 215
All about Jeremiah: This season will be a little different without his brother Ofisa playing next to him. But Miah (MY-uh), as he is known to his teammates, was an active presence a year ago as the Panthers posted three shutouts and held four other teams to one touchdown. He was a first-team All-Palomar League selection.
From Vista coach Danny Williams: "He is a big kid who has a good knack for the ball."

Senior quarterback Alo holds key to Carson's gridiron success

Among the ultra-talented skill players and the gargantuan linemen, it did not take long for new Carson football coach Elijah Asante to find the face of his program.
Meet Justin Alo, a strong-armed quarterback who might hold the key to Carson's success this season.
Asante said he immediately saw something special in a 6-foot-2, 190-pound senior.
"A lot of people don't know about him yet, but he's going to have a big year. A `big' year," Asante said. "I think he can be the L.A. City (Section) Player of the Year and get a Division I scholarship. He can leave a legacy here by winning a championship."
When Asante talks about quarterbacks, he commands immediate attention.
Asante's track record speaks volumes, having coached both Deshawn Beck and James Boyd at L.A. Jordan. Both became City Section Players of the Year.
Now Asante has grand plans for Alo.
"Beck was a phenomenal athlete, and Boyd was a man-child who could physically dominate a game, but Alo is a combination of those guys and is more of a complete quarterback," Asante said.
"The main thing is his demeanor and leadership. He's very calm, intelligent and he's good at reading defenses and picking up blitzes."
Alo split time last season with Daniel Torres, but Asante said he is putting Alo in control this season.
"He will be calling a good percentage of plays, and that doesn't happen too often at the high school, college or pro level," Asante said. "He can manage a game - downs and distance. He's a playmaker, and I have complete trust in him."
Alo, who shed his poofy long hair for a cleaner braided look this season, said he feels prepared to lead the Colts as they open the season against powerhouse Mater Dei on Saturday at 7p.m. at Santa Ana Stadium.
"I took last season and learned from it," Alo said. "Now I'm a senior, and I'm going to step up and be a playmaker."
Alo said Asante has been in his corner the entire time since taking over as coach in March.
"He's made me feel like a leader," Alo said. "He gave me the freedom to take control of the offense and has given me a lot of confidence.
"I didn't know much about him when he arrived, but I learned he worked with Beck and could bring something to the table. He's been very open-minded and has wanted to hear what I've had to say. He mixed it all together."
Alo will have the benefit of taking snaps behind a sizeable line that is anchored by Steven Dine and Christian Saole.
Then there is his talented receiving crew that includes Darreus Rogers, Jeremy Bennett and tight end Dominique Birria.
Alo said he and Rogers developed a repertoire when they were both on the junior varsity team together two years ago.
"I've got a lot of playmakers, but I've had a chance to play with Darreus before," Alo said. "We played together on junior varsity, and now we have a chance to keep building a strong connection on varsity."
If Alo is a name that is familiar, it is because Alo's family carries rich athletic bloodlines.
He has three older siblings - James, 28, Adrienne, 26, and Ryan, 21.
Adrienne has her number retired by the Carson softball program and played at Oregon State.
And "Uncle Mike" is Michael Alo, one of the finest football players in Banning's rich history.
There is usually a large Alo cheering section at each Carson game.
"It's a lot of people," Alo said. "We have a big family."
Asante believes Alo has positioned himself for a breakthrough season, one that can ignite the recruiting process. As of now, Alo has only received letters of interest, no offers.
But Alo has put in time at the USC camp and summer passing leagues. Asante deemed him ready to take over the program.
"He's a competitor. He worked hard in the offseason," Asante said. "He's already pretty comfortable.
"He knows the success of the team rests on his shoulders."

Auburn's Danny Shelton hoping for better finish to this season

Seattle Times staff reporter
AUBURN รข€” The childhood bully became a high-school teddy bear.
But Auburn's Danny Shelton is still a terror on the football field.
At 6 feet 3 and just less than 300 pounds, Shelton dominates on the line with moves like a linebacker. Opposing coaches tell stories of him swatting away blockers with one arm and his legend on the wrestling mat grew quickly as he learned the sport just last season, reaching the 4A state semifinals at 285 pounds.
Tahoma coach Tony Davis remembers watching in awe as Shelton made a catlike move in one match.
"My jaw was on the ground," Davis said. "This is someone almost 300 pounds. You're not supposed to be able to do that. ... I've got to imagine the sky's the limit for him. He's a scheme-adjuster. Whether he's on offense or defense, you've got to locate him and then do something different than you probably want to do."
As a kindergartner, Shelton tried to do whatever he wanted.
"He was a troublemaker," said his mother, Oneone (pronounced OnayOnay). "He tried to take food from kids and beat them up."
The fourth of five children, Shelton lived with his grandparents in Samoa until he was 3 and didn't speak English when he came to live with his parents in California. It took him a while to adjust to his siblings.
"I kept yelling at them in Samoan," he said.
The parents divorced and Oneone brought the children to Washington, first Tacoma and then Auburn in 2000. Her brother, Steve, came with his family, too, and became a father figure to his niece and nephews.
The two of them kept Danny in line at school and got him involved in church activities. He still participates in some Samoan dance performances. As a seventh-grader at Cascade Middle School, he played organized football for the first time and found it the perfect channel for any pent-up frustrations.
"I get to build anger through the day, then let it loose when it comes to games and practice," he said.
He apparently masks his anger well. Teammates Nick Conlan and Dylan Rutledge call Shelton shy and a big teddy bear.
"He's the hardest-hitting nice guy you'll know," Rutledge said.
Shelton's two older brothers played at Auburn, and Danny frequently tagged along at practice. Coach Gordy Elliott noticed his intense interest in the game. While other 10-year-olds soon ran off to throw a ball around, Danny took everything in.
"Even then he was a student of the game," Elliott said.
And a big one. Too big, in fact. Danny was born with high blood pressure, which required a two-week hospital stay, and he weighed 320 pounds by the time he was 14. His mom took him to a specialist in Tacoma, who guided him toward a better diet.
Danny played on Auburn's freshman football team that season, "even though he was probably better than some of the seniors ahead of him," Elliott said. Shelton saw his first varsity action in the SPSL 3A final against Auburn Riverside and recorded two tackles. He appeared in the Trojans' two playoff games and became a full-time fixture on the line as a sophomore, when he started making recruiting lists.
"My sophomore year is when I blew up, I guess," Shelton said.
Auburn went 11-0 before losing in the 3A state quarterfinals to Skyline.
Back in the 4A ranks last season, the Trojans again finished 11-1. Shelton was named the offensive and defensive lineman of the year in the SPSL North Division, even though he missed parts of two games with a sprained foot.
"I don't think I deserved the awards I got," he said. "I don't think I did as good as I could have, and this year I'm going to make up for that."
Shelton said he made a goal for himself as a freshman to develop into the best lineman in school and state history. Those things are hard to gauge, Elliott noted, but said, "I can't imagine there have been too many that have the tools that he has."
Shelton, who just turned 17, was named the "Big Man MVP" at the UCLA camp this summer and has the Bruins on his top-four list, along with Washington, Oregon and California.
And while most tend to look at him as a prospect on defense, Elliott raves about his abilities on offense.
"At his age already, some of the things he can do on offense are things it takes college kids a couple years to learn," he said. "For his size, he's really athletic, that's what sets a kid like him apart from other big kids. If you're big, you're big, and sometimes you're able to do things in high-school football just because you're big. He would be as effective a lineman at 175 pounds with the same skill set. He could easily be a starting tight end for us. He's a total athlete."
Wrestling helped Shelton with his footwork, strength and conditioning. He also competed in track and field, placing fifth at state in the shot put and sixth in the discus. This year he has visions of wrestling and playing basketball, although that seems unlikely due to practice and scheduling conflicts.
More than anything, Shelton wants to finish business on the football field after what he felt was a disappointing climax to last year's season.
"Our goal together this year is to make it the best year and win state," he said. "We have the talent, and I think we're ready to do it. It's our last shot."
And for teddy bear Danny Shelton, anything less would be unbearable.

At 6-foot-3, 295 pounds, Shelton just one of the guys

To the outside world, Danny Shelton is the next coveted NCAA Division I football recruit from the state of Washington – one most people around here consider another sure get for the Washington Huskies.
Get the senior where he’s truly comfortable – with his squad at Auburn High, and on the new turf of the town’s three-schools-for-one-Memorial Stadium – and he’s just one of the guys.
“He’s just Danny, and part of what we’re doing,” coach Gordon Elliott said. “Because of his personality, he’s not strutting around here, and people aren’t looking at him as the star.”
The South Puget Sound League North’s reigning two-way lineman of the year is a major college recruit .
Of his nine Division I scholarship offers, seven have come from Pacific-10 Conference programs – favorite Washington, Oregon, Washington State, Oregon State, California, UCLA and Stanford.
Amid speculation that he would make a decision over the next couple of weeks, Shelton confirmed he’ll stick with his original intentions – take official visits, and decide after the season.
“I’m going to wait it out,” he said.
Shelton and Nick Conlan became the first linemen in the Elliott era to start both ways as sophomores.
With four starters returning, including Shelton and Conlan, the Trojans’ line is an obvious strength. Also, a pair of 1,000-yard rushers, including sought-after prospect Alphonse Wade (team-leading 1,582 yards), are back.
Shelton is the starting right tackle on the offensive line – the key blocker in the team’s “Jet” sweep run.
One big transformation took place in the offseason – Shelton’s body shape.
He decided to go out for wrestling at Auburn. Once 320 pounds, he shed nearly 40 pounds in a month to get to the weight limit for his new sport.
“I really joined to have fun. I started conditioning and losing weight,” Shelton said. “In pickup football games, I was faster. So I started competing more ... and taking (wrestling) seriously.”
Shelton said he altered his diet: “I just ate less instead of eating bad. For lunch, I’d have a roll or a sandwich wrap, and I drank lots of water.”
He was a surprise Class 4A semifinalist at Mat Classic, the state wrestling championships. And he’s stuck with it – he even attended the Oregon State wrestling camp in between football activities last summer.
“He’s back up to 295, and that is a lot better (than 320). He has a better body, which has helped him. He should run better,” Elliott said. “I expect him to be a complete lineman.”


Read more: http://www.thenewstribune.com/2010/09/02/1324764/at-6-foot-3-295-pounds-shelton.html#ixzz0zlNxzTAZ

Football runs in family for Warriors' Pritchard

n 2007, Clover Park coach Jon Randall had concerns about starting a freshman quarterback.
It wasn’t as if Tana Pritchard didn’t have the physical tools. It’s just that baptism by fire is something most coaches try to avoid with young players.
“That’s an awful lot to ask of a 15-year-old quarterback,” Randall said, “but at the start of the season both our senior quarterbacks were ineligible. Tana stepped right in and took control of the position. By the time the two seniors returned they couldn’t beat him out.
“So it’s basically been Tana’s team since he arrived here.”
Now a senior, Pritchard enters his final season as the Warriors’ quarterback and expectations couldn’t be higher as Clover Park steps into the newly formed South Puget Sound League 2A, which appears to be as wide open as any league in the state.
All eight teams appear evenly matched, meaning a handful of plays could catapult any school from also-ran to champion.
Making the big play should be part of Pritchard’s routine.
“Everyone here is very excited about the upcoming season,” Pritchard said. “We’re young at some positions, but everyone has put in a lot of work this summer. (Clover Park) hasn’t had the best of records the last couple of years. We want to change that.”
Pritchard, who has already received a scholarship offer from UNLV and is drawing interest from Washington and Washington State, possesses all the attributes one would want in a quarterback looking to lead an inexperienced squad to newfound success.
His natural athletic ability is enough to cause defensive coordinators plenty of headaches, but when you factor in his game smarts, competitiveness and willingness to work, suddenly the 6-foot-3, 205-pound Pritchard is even more dangerous on the field.
“The great thing about Tana is he’s worked hard to improve every year he’s been in our program,” Randall said. “His mechanics have improved. His reads have improved. His work ethic and dedication to improve, combined with his size, speed and athleticism, really make him a special player.”
According to Pritchard, his bloodlines played a large role in helping him develop into the type of player he is today. It’s easy to understand how that would be the case.
His brother, Tavita, played quarterback at Stanford and is best remembered for leading the 41-point underdog Cardinal to an improbable 24-23 upset over top-ranked Southern California in 2007.
His father, David, started at center for Washington State in 1981.
Uncle Jack Thompson followed up his record-setting quarterback career at WSU by being selected third overall by the Cincinnati Bengals in the 1979 NFL draft and played six seasons of professional football.
Pritchard will once again be called upon to play defense – something he excelled at last year as he led the team in interceptions from his safety position en route to earning first-team all-league honors.
“He’s not your typical quarterback, he likes contact,” Randall said. “He’s a physical player.
“His first two years he didn’t play defense because we were so thin at quarterback we couldn’t afford to have anything happen to him. We have depth at the position now and turned him loose last season and he excelled at it.”


Read more: http://www.thenewstribune.com/2010/09/02/1324770/football-runs-in-family-for-warriors.html#ixzz0zlNddo2C

All-CIFSS Orange County FB team

Preseason All-Orange County
Football Team

OL Faitele Faafoi (Tustin) 6-5, 295, Sr.
OL Isaac Luatua (La Mirada) 6-2, 290, Sr.
DL Humana Sasi (Tustin) 5-10, 285, Sr.

All-East Bay CA Football Honors

2010 Preseason All East Bay
Football Team


OL Freddy Tagaloa (Salesian, Richmond) 6-8, 275, Jr.
DL Roydon Fonua (Fremont, Oakland), 6-4, 290, Sr.
DL Tavita Taito (Deer Valley, Antioch) 6-3, 315, Jr.

LAKES: Think you're a multi-tasker? Check out Lancers' Manaea

DOUG PACEY; Staff writer

Ma’ne Manaea is taking on an expanded role for the Lakes football team this season. After starting at outside linebacker last season, the junior will add slot receiver and punt return duties to his Friday night checklist.
With so much for Manaea to do, Lancers coach Dave Miller is left with a worry.
“My only concern,” he said, “is we might need oxygen because we’re getting the ball to him a lot and he’s breaking long plays.”
The first part of the comment was made in jest, of course, but Miller is serious about the latter. He expects the wiry 5-foot-11, 180-pound Manaea to be the latest in a long line of Lakes playmakers.
“He’s a weapon,” Miller said. “He’s really got great speed, you can see his explosiveness.”
Quarterback Cedric Dozier is confident in his newest go-to receiver.
“He’s great, he’s phenomenal,” Dozier said. “He goes hard every play and his hands are good.”
Catching passes isn’t new to Manaea. He played receiver for eight years with the Lakewood Lumberjacks youth team.
But the Lancers didn’t need him on offense last season. With a backfield full of experienced running backs and a dominant offensive line, Lakes’ ground game pounded away on defenses and rarely threw.
That allowed Manaea to keep his focus on one area – defense – and not become overwhelmed, which can easily happen to a sophomore. Manaea said it wasn’t until halfway through the regular season that he felt at ease on the field.
“Toward the middle of the season, against Enumclaw, I knew what I was supposed to do,” he said. “I knew how it felt to come out there and just play the game.”
Manaea shined in that contest. He intercepted a pass and helped the Lancers rally from a halftime deficit to beat the Hornets, 35-14.
With a year of experience, Miller said he believes Manaea is ready to contribute in all areas this season.
“He’s a football player,” Miller said, “and ready to play the whole game now.”
Manaea’s offensive contributions won’t be limited to those of a traditional receiver. The Lancers will find ways to get him the ball.
“In our offense, he’s going to be running fly sweep, not just catching the ball,” he said. “We’re going to hand it to him a bunch, too.”
Manaea is thrilled at the opportunity to play both ways.
“It gives me a chance to show my stuff, run my routes, catch the ball,” he said. “I get to run the ball, too. I’m just trying to help out the team.”
As one of four returning starters – Dozier and linemen Zach Banner and Eddie Releford are the others – Manaea acknowledges that the Lancers are still learning. But don’t expect Lakes to be unprepared.
“These two-a-days are helping us a lot,” he said. “Coaches are really getting to the players, showing them how we do everything. The starters that came back, we just go and show everybody how it’s done.”
At Lakes, that means another trip to the playoffs.


Read more: http://www.thenewstribune.com/2010/09/02/1324768/think-youre-a-multi-tasker-check.html#ixzz0zlFhx3BO

Sophomore linebacker Manti Te'o displays his Samoan culture and values, on and off the field


When Manti Te’o returned from Christmas Break in January, he had two surprises in store for his Irish teammates.
One — he had decided not to take a two-year service mission during his college career, as is customary in the Church of Latter Day Saints, of which Te’o is a member.
Two — he was sporting a Samoan tattoo, courtesy of his native Hawaii, which covered his left bicep.
Irish fans and players alike were overjoyed by the first decision, but it is the tattoo — a tradition in Samoan culture — that displays the true character of Te’o.
The cultural value of a tattoo
“It is very special to me, because it represents everything that I stand for: my culture, my home and my family,” the junior linebacker said. “Everything that is important to me I have here on my arm.”
Te’o speaks of his culture and family as often as he does football. Not only does the tattoo represent the Samoan culture, but he also sought permission from his parents before putting the ink to skin.
“Whenever you put something on yourself that is permanent, you want to ask your parents, especially if your parents are Samoan,” he said. “My dad is the Samoan patriarch of our family, and he has one. … They were very supportive of it.”
Once his teammates saw the “tatau” — Samoan for tattoo — they quickly deemed it the “tightest” tattoo on the team, and some even considered getting a similar one. But to Te’o, while he does consider some of his teammates to be as close as brothers, the tattoo is not for just anyone.
“Sure, it’s a very nice tattoo, but it represents more than just some body art. It represents a whole culture, a whole group of people,” said Te’o, a nominee for the 2010 Rotary Lombardi Trophy. “For somebody to get this, and not be Samoan, makes me wonder, ‘Why are you getting it?’”
Values shine without a mission
The first of those two surprises — not taking a two-year service mission — could carry effects for years to come, especially the next three years for Irish fans. When he first arrived at Notre Dame, Te’o was considering taking his mission after his freshman season, but his time at Notre Dame, and time talking with his family, led to the Christmas Break decision.
“When I went home over Christmas I sat down with my family. I prayed a lot about it,” Te’o said. “I just felt that it was the right thing to do to come back and focus on football, try my best to help my team win.”
Even though he has remained in northern Indiana, Te’o is constantly reminded of his family, culture and faith, simply by not seeing them around him.
“It’s not that hard to remember who you are and what you stand for when you look around and there is nobody like you,” he said. “There was no other Samoan.”
Now, with freshmen Justin Utupo and Kona Schwenke joining him on the football field, Te’o sees two Samoans that remind him of the values he stands by.
“Samoans are very prideful people. We pride ourselves in our culture and our strength of values that we live by, and how we respect others,” he said. “Discipline. Honor. All those kind of values that aren’t really stressed in today’s society. That is something that I’m proud of, that I come from a culture that stresses loyalty, strength and honor.”
Samoan values at Notre Dame
Te’o has found those values among his Irish teammates and coaches as well.
From his defensive coordinator, Bob Diaco, Te’o hears criticism and advice that he always responds positively to.
“He is interested in being the very best that he can be,” Diaco said. “He has a nice, thick skin. He isn’t overly-sensitive to constructive criticism, so he comes out diligently to try to work on the things you’re coaching from the day before. That is how a player moves forward.”
Te’o handles that criticism so well because he has always heard it, especially back at home, he said.
“When it comes to the thick skin, it is from knowing who I am, knowing the kind of guy that my parents raised me to be.”
Among his teammates, Te’o has found suitable additions to his five siblings at home.
“I have friends here who I am very close with. [Junior linebacker] Darius Fleming is one of my very best friends. He is one of those guys that I can go to, no matter what,” Te’o said, adding sophomore running back Cierre Wood to that list as well. “I know no matter what happens, they’ll always have my back, and I’ll always have their backs.”
With Te’o’s parents and four-year-old brother Manasseh coming into town for both the Purdue and Michigan games, his Notre Dame friends and Samoan parents will spend much time together, but Te’o knows the meetings and meals will feel as if everyone has always known each other.
“My parents know that my friends are mirror images of me, so when they see them, they aren’t shocked. They are very happy around my friends,” Te’o said. “I completely understand that my friends have a direct impact on me, and I’ll never choose a friend, call him my brother, if he is somebody that could be detrimental to me in any way.”
Family on the field
Having those friends, or “brothers,” on the field should help Te’o play even better than he did in his freshman season, when he finished with 63 tackles.
“When you are around people you don’t really know and you don’t really trust, you tend to not come out of your shell,” Te’o said. “But when you trust somebody, you can be you. You can do things, you can act the way you want to act and you know they won’t be offended.”
That might not seem real applicable to play on the field, but when he takes his position Saturday, he will know Fleming is less than 10 yards to his side, along with nine other of his closest friends nearby. Of those 11 players on the field, Te’o will be leading them, in what Diaco called “that spot.”
“I’m just going to be me. I’m going to make sure all my teammates are ready, are aligned where they need to be,” Te’o said. “That’s all it’s about. It’s on me to make sure that offense doesn’t score. At the end of the day, if we play our hearts out and execute on every play, we’ll be able to look at the scoreboard and be happy.”
‘Just win’
When Te’o explains the meaning of his tattoo, the meaning of his family and the role of his friends around him, it is easy to envision him playing his heart out.
But in all of reality, that won’t be enough for him. Only one result this year will satisfy Te’o: “I am just excited more than anything, to get out there and start a new season. Just win.”
Once this season plays out, win or lose, Te’o has another mission to continue, on his left bicep. This time his team won’t be as surprised.
“The tattoo’s going to extend up here [onto the lower portion of his neck] and then down here [onto his upper chest],” Te’o said. “I’ll wait until after the season because I have to go home to get it, but it’ll be as soon as possible.”

East Bay Football: 25 Players to Watch

The list includes a group of Polys

Roydon Fonua
Fremont, OL/DL
A monster at 6-foot-4, 290 pounds, Fonua is generating plenty of Pac-10 interest and will have a big role in the success of the defending Silver Bowl champions.

Freddie Tagaloa
Salesian, OL/DL
The 6-foot-8, 300-pound junior has been on the radar of college coaches since his freshman year and again will anchor the line for a Salesian team in search of its ninth straight BFL title.
Tavita Taito
Deer Valley, DL
Highly recruited from the beginning of his sophomore season, Taito embarks on his junior year with hopes of helping the Wolverines win another BVAL championship.

Wednesday, September 01, 2010

Southern California defensive backs to watch in 2010

Su'a Cravens, Vista Murrieta, 6-1, 190, Sophomore. All signs point toward becoming big-time player.

ILH Football Preview

Damien

Coach: Punahou Aina
Last year: 1-10 (1-7 ILH)
On paper: Though they struggled in a tough league last season, the Monarchs were competitive, thanks to a massive offensive line and playmakers like Makana Ka'annoi.
The gauntlet has been merciless with losses to Aiea, Radford and Castle, but Aina sees potential.
Quarterback Alan Mohika and wide receivers Dustin Lungay and Shayvis Wilson are progressing. Lungay has improved at running back, though the team lost a promising athlete in Tanner Asuncion (5-10, 170), who was recently accepted into Kamehameha, Aina said.
The offensive line is anchored by seniors Logan Waracka (5-11, 220) and Beau Flores (5-11, 255).
Damien is young defensively, though three returning starters are back at linebacker. Austyn Flores (5-9, 205), Maui Bayne-Bryant (5-10, 175) and Stacen Choy (5-9, 160) are key to the unit.
The skinny: Injuries and inexperience have hindered the Monarchs' progress, but they're continuing to open up the offense with more passing and flex-option plays.
X factor: The Monarchs can be competitive in D-II if they can stay away from injuries.

'Iolani

Coach: Wendell Look
Last year: 12-2 (8-1 ILH)
On paper: The Raiders won their fourth HHSAA D-II state crown last season with strength up the middle, but lost that strength to graduation.
The cupboard, of course, is never bare for 'Iolani. Kevin Barayuga (57 receptions, 645 yards, 13 touchdowns) is back to give an inexperienced crop of quarterbacks a capable target. Trevyn Tulonghari (77 catches, 1,049 yards, 10 TDs) is recovering from an offseason ankle injury.
Linebacker Cody Petro-Sakuma, a tackling machine, and cornerback Reid Saito are playmakers on defense.
"We have talent. It's just a matter of them getting that talent together," Look said.
The skinny: The good news is that the Raiders' no-huddle, run-and-shoot offense is in good hands. Whose hands, exactly, remains to be seen as Reece Foy and Josiah Situmeang have gotten snaps through 'Iolani's 2-1 nonconference slate.
Foy (552 yards, 37-for-60, 6 TDs) has the statistical edge so far, but went down with a knee injury in a win over Kaiser. Projected starter Josh Hannum had already been sidelined with an injury to his shoulder injury and could possibly return this season.
If Situmeang starts by default, he'll have an experienced offensive line and a seasoned running back in Ammon Baldomero to rely on.
X factor: Without their interior defensive linemen of a year ago, the Raiders will have to get creative. With defensive coordinator Delbert Tengan, the former Saint Louis coach, drawing up the schemes, 'Iolani is in for an adventure.

Kamehameha

Coach: David Stant
Last year: 12-1 (7-1 ILH)
On paper: Quite a bit of talent remains for the defending state champions, with defensive end Koa Ka'ai and defensive back Walter Santiago. Blaze Ryder leads another stout offensive line.
Quarterback Christian Akana and running back Jason Muraoka, both reserves last season, are prepared to step up. Defensively, middle linebacker Kawika Stant is out with an elbow injury, but is expected to return this month.
The skinny: Experience is vital to this program, especially in the multidimensional pistol sets. Campbell needed a half season to find his groove in the pocket, and once he did, the Warriors went on scoring tears of 44, 50, 21, 45, 40 and 34 points to close out their championship season.
A 21-12 loss to Farrington on Friday was a surprise, but not a shock. How soon can the Warriors develop a balanced offense? It's tough to expect the progress that they got from Campbell a year ago, but that's the standard this coaching staff has achieved.
X factor: Kamehameha loves to utilize the tight end, and they have a potentially great one in Keoni Bush-Loo (6-3, 230), who is just a junior.

Pac-Five

Coach: Kip Botelho
Last year: 7-5 (4-5 ILH)
On paper: There may never be a passer as proficient and prolific at Pac-Five again. Shifty P.J. Minaya passed for 3,721 yards and 45 touchdowns as a senior, while playmakers including Darin Kamealoha and London Amorin graduated as well.
The skinny: The return of Everett Kim, perhaps the grittiest receiver in the state, is a big boost for the Wolfpack. Last season, Kim filled in for injured teammates and racked up nearly 40 receptions in half a season before suffering a neck injury. He's back stronger and had seven catches for 72 yards against Campbell.
Pac-Five also returns Chalson Baition and Jordan Doi offensively, while running back Darius Anderson and quarterback Jack Foster are the new starters.
X factor: The addition of players from Word of Life, which closed its school after the spring, is a lift for the Wolfpack. Among them is linebacker Richard Landford (5-11, 217).

Punahou

Coach: Kale Ane
Last year: 5-5 (5-3 ILH)
On paper: Most programs can't keep pace after losing all-state players like safety Brian Suite (Utah State), offensive lineman Kaimi Crabb (Colorado) and defensive back Jeremy Ioane (Boise State).
The Buffanblu just go back to work. Defensive end DeForest Buckner (6-foot-7, 230 pounds) spent part of his offseason learning how to cover receivers as a linebacker. The offensive line, led by senior Keenan Faatea, has few peers in terms of talent and experience.
The skinny: Can Liloa Travis return and be effective at quarterback after sitting out the first month of the season (knee)? Or is Lopaka Matsuo (6-1, 235), who was a tight end two seasons ago, ready to guide the pistol offense?
Third-stringer Kale Dyas was solid in a 10-0 win over Moanalua on Saturday, but the bulk of the work was done by the O-line and running back Steven Lakalaka, a dual threat who runs with ferocity. Mountain Mitchell, who caught a 73-yard touchdown, shows glimpses of potential, but without a regular starter at quarterback, Punahou's passing game may not get into sync for a while.
Defensively, Punahou has experience in the secondary with returnees like Kevin Tongg. Linebacker K.T. Tuumalo (6-3, 210) and nose guard Fetelini Sekona (6-1, 290) will be tested regularly in a league featuring many of the state's top blockers.
Kaimi Fairbairn rates among the top kickers in the islands.
X factor: Luke Kaumatele (6-7, 245) continues to be a work in progress in his first stint of organized football. The speedy defensive end had 1 1/2 sacks in the Moanalua game.

Saint Louis

Coach: Darnell Arceneaux
Last year: 7-4 (4-4 ILH), John Hao
On paper: As much as anyone else who has worn the Crusaders' blue and red, Arceneaux understands what football success means at Saint Louis. Two winning seasons weren't enough for John Hao, who was released in the offseason. Arceneaux wound up returning to his alma mater and instilling a new vigor into the program, from summer workouts to his natural affinity for camaraderie with everyone from assistant coaches to players.
The Crusaders are balanced and loaded at nearly every position. Quarterback Marcus Mariota's speed is matched by no other passer in the state, as his 52-yard touchdown jaunt against Kahuku on Friday demonstrated.
The defensive unit, with the return of linebacker Starr Sua-Passi, is equally formidable. The return of defensive back Kalei Contrades from last year's injury is a big plus.
The skinny: Depth at the slotbacks, receivers and offensive line make this unit formidable. Running backs Derek Nakasato and Keanu Mook-Garcia are scatback-type athletes.
This makes for long, painful nights when unprepared defenses meet the Crusaders, though: Mariota can utilize as many as five speedy targets at any time on any play.
X factor: Special teams, with some snap issues on punts, was a factor in the 49-27 loss at Kahuku. Once that's cleaned up, the Crusaders will get an edge back. Jesse Correa is among the finest place-kickers in the state.


Read more: http://www.staradvertiser.com/sports/20100901_As_usual_ILH_fierce_struggle_expected.html#ixzz0yMUeRmyo

Mosi Tatupu remembered

Mosi Tatupu will be remembered with a 30-second video tribute tomorrow before the Hawaii-USC football game.
Tatupu, a multi-sport standout at Punahou, Trojans blocking back and 14-year NFL player, died Feb. 23 at age 54.

2010 Preseason All Redwood Empire

First Team

RB/DB/LB Sam Atoe (Maria Carrillo, Santa Rosa) 6-0, 206, Sr.
DB/WR/P Makana Garrigan (Casa Grande, Petaluma) 5-10, 185, Sr.

RB/LB J.T. Peleki (Novato) 6-2, 225, Jr.

Second Team
QB Poueu Peleti-Gore (Rancho Cotate, Rohnert Park) 5-10, 185, Sr.
DE/TE Mike Tuaua (Rancho Cotate, Rohnert Park) 6-2, 215, Sr.

2010 Preseason All-CIFSS Ventura/Santa Barbara/San Luis Obispo Football Team

First Team
DB Brian Fifita (Oaks Christian, Westlake Village) 5-10, 175, Sr.

Second Team
TE Jeremiah Valoaga (Channel Islands, Oxnard) 6-6, 200, Jr.

Bay Area's 25 top prep football players

East Bay: Freddie Tagaloa (Salesian)
As good as Cal All-American Jahvid Best was at Salesian-Richmond, he wasn't as highly touted as Tagaloa, a 6-7, 318-pound junior lineman with nimble footwork to complement his hulking frame.
Tagaloa had 13 Division I offers before he played on varsity as a sophomore. A starting center on Salesian's 2009 state championship basketball team as a freshman, Tagaloa should be one of the nation's top 10 2012 football recruits.
"He's got everything you can't coach," Salesian coach Chad Nightingale said.

2. Freddie Tagaloa OL Salesian 6-7 318

12. Sam Atoe RB Santa Rosa 5-11 206

Seattle Times preseason all-state football team

OL Danny Shelton
Auburn, Sr., 6-3, 300
Huskies would like to add the state's top offensive line prospect to an already impressive recruiting class.

ATH Tana Pritchard
Clover Park, Sr., 6-3, 201
Brother of former Stanford quarterback Tavita Pritchard frequently works out with former NFL quarterback and WSU legend Jack Thompson.

DL Taniela Tupou
Archbishop Murphy, Sr., 6-2, 275
CBS recruiting analyst Tom Lemming said Tupou could be a "devastating defensive tackle" at the next level.

DL Jarett Finau
Juanita, Sr., 6-3, 235
UW commit can play either defensive end or linebacker and lines up at tight end on offense.

Cousins Julius Tevaga, Tani Tupou lead Archbishop Murphy

Special to The Seattle Times

It's called the "Haka."
And for attendees of Archbishop Murphy football games, the sight might evoke a scene from the Denzel Washington film "Remember the Titans" — the one where the team first enters the stadium dancing together.
For the Wildcats, like the Titans in the movie, the "Haka" is about team unity.
But the Hawaiian war chant and dance is so much more.
"It's a war dance. It gets us hyped up on game nights," Wildcats senior offensive and defensive lineman Julius Tevaga said. "We do it facing the opponents."
Tevaga, along with his cousin and fellow senior lineman Tani Tupou, introduced the Hawaiian tradition to their team.
"Tani really developed it," Archbishop Murphy coach Dave Ward said. "He and Julius taught the team to do the dance. They both just play with a lot of passion and emotion."
A week before the season was set to kick off, against Ellensburg on Friday, the team welcomed some 400 people to a fundraising luau, another Hawaiian import. But in the "Haka" the Wildcats can find so many pieces that translate onto the football field.
"It's originally from New Zealand," said Tupou, who was the first in-state recruit to commit to the Washington Huskies' 2011 class. "From the Maori people. They'd do it before they'd go out to war. It's saying we're here to fight, to give it our all for family, community."But it's more. It has to do with duty and honor, too."
For Tupou, Tevaga and the rest of this year's Archbishop Murphy senior class, honor and duty ring very true. They are the final class to have played for coach Terry Ennis, who passed away early in their freshman season.
"We want to be able to go all the way," Tupou said. "Everyone in this class really wants to do it for him."
Don't get these two seniors wrong. They really appreciate their current coaching staff.
"Coach Ward is a great coach," Tupou said. "He has done such good things carrying on here."
Both just see this season as a way to honor and pay tribute to Ennis.
"One of the reasons we came here was coach Ennis," Tevaga said. "What he did in the past. He was a big role model for us. This is special for us and for Murphy."
If 2010 is to be that special season for the Wildcats, it will start up front with Tupou and Tevaga. The cousins anchor the left side of the offensive line, protecting senior quarterback Austin VanderWel.
For most of last season, Ward actually had the two on opposite sides. But by playoff time, he'd moved them together.
"We wanted to have teams forced to compensate for them," Ward said. "I just love watching them block. They finish guys off, drive guys into the ground."
Ward isn't the only one who enjoys the sight. So, apparently, do the cousins' teammates.
"Our blocking schemes are like synchronized," Tupou said. "We were watching film the other day, and we had a zone block. On the film, both of our hands came up at exactly the same time. Everyone was laughing at it."At least for this season, Tupou and Tevaga will continue to wreak havoc with opponents together. After that?
Tupou already is set at the UW, along with another cousin, Jarett Finau of Juanita. Tevaga has yet to receive any college offers, though the letters continue to arrive.
"I just want to get to college, and get my degree," Tevaga said. "Wherever I go, football will hopefully be a part. If I do get to play at the next level, it would be fun to play with Tani. We've been playing together for so long."
If that happens, who knows? Maybe Tupou and Tevaga can add the "Haka" to the tradition at Washington.

If You're TCU, You Are Constantly Aware Of ... Stephen Paea, NT, Oregon State

Yes, yes, we’re all going to watch Oregon State running back Jacquizz Rodgers on Saturday against TCU. Apparently, the ESPN crews have shadowed him as the Four Lettered crews compile pre-game footage.
But if you’re looking for the one player who is just about guaranteed to play on Sundays next year look at the 6-foot-1, 311 pound monster who occupies the middle of Oregon State’s defensive line.
He’s good enough to be in the NFL today, but elected to return for his senior season. He’s projected as a high first round pick next year.
(Watch his workout here - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aReOloBmRkQ )

A native of Auckland, New Zealand, Paea (pronounced Pie-uh) only began playing organized football in his senior year of high school. He had been a rugby player. He’s only spoken English for about five years. Paea didn’t come to the U.S. until he was 16.
He spoke with me on the phone on Wednesday to talk about the game on Saturday, his matchup against TCU center Jake Kirkpatrick.
ME: Oregon State is in a BCS conference so it doesn’t exactly need a beefy pre-conference schedule; were you surprised when you all added TCU to your schedule?
PAEA: We knew were playing Boise State already, and adding TCU on top of it was surprising. It was amazing. This is a hard schedule. But if we’re to have a chance at a national title you start from the preseason.

ME: What do you know about TCU?
PAEA: They have a pretty big offensive line; that is the challenge. Up front is the key.

ME: Do you plan on seeing a lot of Jake Kirkpatrick?
PAEA: Yes. That will be a tough matchup. Other than that, I should be OK for us.
ME: Do you expect to be double teamed nearly every play?
PAEA: I have no idea. I think if I get double teamed like last year it’s a good way for other defensive linemen to step up. We’re running a 4-3 defense that means the other three defensive linemen are getting one on ones. If they are a threat they can’t double team one person it will free me up. So I won't be surprised if I do get doubled.
ME: What was your first reaction to playing football?
PAEA: It was weird at first to play because you had to stop all the time. When the ball is incomplete the play ends. The thing that affected me was the facemask and the helmet. It’s weird running in heavy hats.
ME: What’s harder, rugby or football?
PAEA: I would say rugby as far as running a lot. The whole time you just run. As far as being physical, football. I had never experienced anything like that before.
 ME: You’re native language is?
PAEA: Tongan. I didn’t speak English until five years ago. When I first got here I couldn’t explain anything. This interview wouldn’t happen six years ago. I think interacting with all the athletes and students at school and my friends helped because I practiced speaking a lot.
ME: Are you familiar with the Euless Trinity football team here in Texas that has a large Tongan presence?
PAEA: Oh yeah, I’ve heard of them.
ME: Do you do a Haka dance or anything like that at all, similar to what Trinity does?
PAEA: We do that little thing during our pregame warmups. Ours take about 30 seconds to get everybody pumped up. It’s nothing as big as the Haka, though. That would take a minute or two to do.
ME: You could easily be a pro right now playing in the NFL; why come back?
PAEA: I didn’t think I was ready for the pros. I know what the scouts say, but I didn’t think I was ready. Second, I wanted to get my degree. It’s going to be an honor to get that degree.


Read more: http://sportsblogs.star-telegram.com/colleges/2010/09/if-youre-tcu-you-are-constantly-aware-of-.html#ixzz0zlAH0xf5

Hilltopper linebacker staying on the move

By NICK BAUMGARDNER, The Daily News, nbaumgardner@bgdailynews.com/783-3239
Wednesday, September 1, 2010 11:19 AM CDT


Orlando Misaalefua has been around the block a time or two.

Actually, seven times to be exact.

A child with two military parents, Misaalefua had living stops in Germany, Washington, American Samoa - twice - Panama, Texas and Kentucky, all before finishing high school.

Misaalefua is quick to explain that moving at such a high frequency is just a way of life for a military family. But at the same time, it didn’t come without difficulties.

“Moving around like that was tough because you had to be good at meeting new people,” he said. “And I was always a shy kid back then so it was pretty tough for me. I didn’t talk much to anybody really.

“So it was hard, always moving schools, moving overseas and then back to the United States. Making friends was tough.”

A shy kid with no tangible home to speak of, Misaalefua really didn’t know what to make of football when his father introduced it to him as a middle schooler in Texas.

The game that featured boisterous enthusiasm and over-the-top personalities just didn’t seem like the right fit. But Misaalefua, who finished his prep career at Fort Campbell High School, did what any good military child would do - he listened to his parents.

“It was just something my parents wanted me to do to keep busy, so I really didn’t have much of a choice,” Misaalefua says. “But football got me to open up. It helped me become more vocal, and it really helped me start talking to people. And when you play football, you have teammates, so there were always people around and it was just easy to start making friends.

“So it really just kind of grew on me.”

Having had a home on the football field for years now, the Western Kentucky senior is on the move again, but this time he won’t have to change addresses, just positions.

Misaalefua is slated to start at outside linebacker this season after spending the previous two years in the defensive backfield. And for once, this move won’t send him into unfamiliar territory.

“I’ve always felt like a linebacker at heart,” Misaalefua said. “My dad always agreed, and I feel like it’s just the right spot for me to play.”

First-year WKU defensive coordinator Clint Bowen agrees, saying it didn’t take him long to realize that the 5-foot-10, 220-pound Misaalefua has the physical tools to be a factor on defense and some qualities that can’t be taught.

“The best thing about Orlando is that he’s a very instinctual guy that really understands football,” Bowen said. “Now I know you say, ‘all these kids are Division I football players, they all should be like that,’ but that’s not always the case.

“Things slow down for him easier and he’s one of those guys who you ask ‘why’d you do that,’ when he makes a good play. And he’ll say, ‘I don’t even know.’ He just does it, and those are the type of guys that always seem to have success.”

Despite possibly playing out of position, Misaalefua recorded 48 tackles in eight games at safety last season. Though he’s changing spots on the field once again, some things never change.

“He’s a quiet guy, the same mannered kid every time you see him - not a lot of juice, never really down,” WKU coach Willie Taggart said.

“But he’s a really good kid and a good competitor who is really happy with where he’s at now.”

Misaalefua is undecided about his future. He’s majoring in physical education at WKU, but the call of civil service is something that’s been in his blood since birth - and something he may take a shot at after graduation.

“I’ve talked a lot about it with my parents,” Misaalefua said. “My dad’s retired now and he was in the Army for 20-plus years. My mom is also retired and had 20-plus years in. It’s kind of hard for me to stray away completely from that military lifestyle because when you grow up around it, it’s hard to think about living life any other way.”

Before any further life decisions are made, however, Misaalefua has one last season on the football field - a season that he hopes will be more fruitful than the Hilltoppers’ 0-12 campaign of 2009.

However things turn out on the field this season, the shy army kid who really never wanted much to do with football in the first place, will always have a home inside the game that’s been a complete contrast to his personality.

“It’s something I’ve been doing for a long time now, and I guess it’s just attached to me now,” Misaalefua said, laughing. “Football’s a part of me now and I love it, it’s become a passion of mine and it probably always will be.”

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Southern California high school linebackers to watch in 2010

Butch Pauu, Servite, 5-11, 215, Sr. Was standout on Pac-5 title team

Making an impact

SANTA CLARA, Calif. » The San Francisco 49ers have been bringing along newcomer Travis LaBoy slowly this summer, but the sixth-year veteran is now accelerating the process.
After missing more than two weeks of training camp with a concussion earlier this month, LaBoy has returned to the field and made his mark at outside linebacker during San Francisco's past two preseason games.
LaBoy recorded sacks in both games and leads the team in that statistic entering Thursday's exhibition finale against San Diego. And recording sacks is pretty much the reason the 49ers signed LaBoy to a one-year deal in April after he missed the entire 2009 season with a foot injury.
"As long as I get to the quarterback, I guess everybody's happy, right?" LaBoy said yesterday as the 49ers returned to practice after an off day Sunday.
LaBoy collected a sack and three hits on Minnesota quarterbacks in his 49ers debut Aug. 22 during a 15-10 victory over the Vikings. But his second-quarter sack that knocked Oakland quarterback Jason Campbell out of the game during Saturday's 28-24 victory over the Raiders was his most impressive play yet in a San Francisco uniform.
The 250-pound LaBoy used his power to engage and push back Oakland left tackle Mario Henderson, then used his speed to beat Henderson around the edge and blast Campbell from the blind side. Campbell was down on the turf for more than 5 minutes with a shoulder stinger before leaving the field on a cart.
The 49ers are looking for that kind of effort this year from the edge rushers in their 3-4 system. With 23.5 career sacks, LaBoy is showing the skills to fit nicely into that scheme as a situational pass rusher.
"That's what they expect from me," LaBoy said. "It's still baby steps for me at this point. I'm just trying to improve from one day to the next and hopefully carry that over into the season."
LaBoy got a late start on his summer progress after suffering a concussion just days into training camp. He didn't return to full practice until Aug. 19, but has made up for lost time since getting back on the field.
LaBoy has an immediate opportunity for a prominent role in San Francisco's rotation on the edge because of an injury to Ahmad Brooks, who suffered a lacerated kidney Aug. 6 and has not practiced since. Brooks' condition is still being evaluated and he is unlikely to be ready for San Francisco's regular-season opener Sept. 12 at Seattle.
The 49ers were expecting Brooks to play a major role in their pass rush this year as a complement to starting outside linebackers Manny Lawson and Parys Haralson. Brooks had five sacks in San Francisco's final five games last year during a surge in which the 49ers led the NFL with 27 sacks over the final eight games of the season.
With Brooks out and his return uncertain, LaBoy and youngster Diyral Briggs are the top candidates for the role. Briggs, an undrafted free agent who played in four games for the 49ers last year as a rookie, had a sack against Minnesota and also has looked good this summer.
But LaBoy has looked better. Despite his steady progress, the 49ers appear inclined to gradually work LaBoy into their system.
"With Travis LaBoy, he's a work in progress," 49ers coach Mike Singletary said. "He was all banged up and beat up when he got here, and we're just trying to nurse him back and get him back to having fun being on the field. As he gets back to being himself, we'll try to create some places for him to be a part. The value that he does bring when he's on the field makes a big difference."


Read more: http://www.staradvertiser.com/sports/20100831_Making_an_impact.html#ixzz0yMU8Gwvo

Honolulu Star Advertiser Players of the Week

ATHLETES OF THE WEEK
» Trent McKinney Mililani football The senior rushed for 102 yards, passed for 242 more and accounted for five touchdowns (three by air, two by ground) in a win over Radford.

» Tyrone Brown, Kahuku: rushed for 84 yards and two touchdowns against then-No. 2 Saint Louis
» DeForest Buckner, Punahou: deflected two passes in a new role at outside linebacker against Moanalua
» Duke Bukoski, Saint Louis: six catches for 102 yards and a TD against Kahuku
» Jesse Carney, Kalaheo: rushed for 240 yards and three TDs against Nanakuli
» Solomon Dixon, McKinley: the Idaho-bound cornerback rushed for 96 yards on nine carries and caught two passes for 28 yards vs. Waipahu
» Reece Foy, 'Iolani: passed for 299 yards and two touchdowns against Kaiser
» Blaine Furtado, Leilehua: rushed for 102 yards and a score against Kapolei
» Alex Ironside, McKinley: passed for 196 yards and ran for two touchdowns against Waipahu
» Steven Lakalaka, Punahou: rushed for 98 yards and caught five passes for 55 yards vs. Moanalua
» Marcus Mariota, Saint Louis: passed for 277 yards and rushed for 82 against Kahuku
» Victor Moananu, Waipahu: rushed for 97 yards and a score vs. McKinley
» Justin Pagan, Kalaheo: rushed for 120 yards and two touchdowns vs. Nanakuli
» Scotland Smith, Farrington: 140 rushing yards and a touchdown against Kamehameha
» Justin Tago, Campbell: completed 83 percent of his passes (24-for-29) for 165 yards and two touchdowns in an upset of Waianae
» Punga Vea, Kahuku: five receptions for 121 yards and a score against Saint Louis
» Aofaga Wily, Kahuku: rushed 21 times for 85 yards and a TD vs. Saint Louis

Read more: http://www.staradvertiser.com/sports/20100831_Prep_World.html#ixzz0yMTVW5bd

Asiata among top 100 recruits

Paulay Asiata, a Saint Louis School tackle, was picked as one of the Associated Press' top 25 football recruits for the 2011 class from the West.
The 6-foot-5, 300-pound Asiata was one of six offensive lineman chosen from the West.
Top-25 lists are also being compiled for the East, Central and South regions as part of the AP's top 100 recruits.
The lists were compiled from reporting done by AP writers over the past several weeks.
Asiata's Crusaders are ranked third in today's Star-Advertiser Football Top 10. They're off to a 2-1 start after a 49-27 loss to Kahuku last Friday.


Read more: http://www.staradvertiser.com/sports/20100831_Hawaii_Beat.html#ixzz0yMSxUbXO

Westlake quarterback shines after move from Hawaii

Saratoga Springs • One of the most difficult things a teenager can do is make a major move while still in high school.
But Westlake junior quarterback John Ursua seems to have made the transition quite well from spending his freshman year on the Big Island of Hawaii and then moving to Utah to be with his mom.
“It was tough,” he said. “Mostly, it was leaving my dad, who is someone so huge in my life, and my friends. It was tough for them. I didn’t get an opportunity to say goodbye to anyone. It happened quick.”
The 5-foot-9, 165-pound all-around athlete is one of the hottest quarterbacks in the state early in Utah’s high school football season. After throwing for 1,376 yards and 13 touchdowns last year as a sophomore when the Thunder went 4-6 in the school’s first year, Ursua has been outstanding in his team’s two easy victories over Delta and Maple Mountain to open the season.
He has thrown six touchdowns and rushed for two others. There is talk that the new school on the west side of Utah Lake could figure into the Class 4A state tournament mix this season, something that didn’t happen a year ago.
Ursua said that while the amount of talent in Utah and Hawaii is similar, he feels the coaching is better on the mainland and that there are more opportunities to get known here.
He said his natural position is as a slotback — a position he hopes to play in college. He was surprised when coach Jason Walker moved him to quarterback.
“I was familiar with this offense [a shotgun spread],” said Ursua. “I have been running it for three years now, though I was uncomfortable in the beginning.”
The fact that he has good receivers in Brandon Allstead and Nate Jensen and some strong offensive linemen in Manny Teoalii and Andy Toala does not hurt, either.
“He’s a good quick kid with a good sense of the game,” said Walker about his quarterback. “He is a gifted athlete.”
The quarterback who plans on going on a Mormon mission when he graduates “so I can stand up for something,” enjoys playing football.
“When it is the game you love, everything is so fun,” he said. “I like the intensity, everything going on and the crowd. I love hearing people screaming and yelling. It’s great to be out there on the field.”
Ursua might hear cheering for other sports as well. He also plays basketball, soccer and volleyball and runs the speed events in track.
In the rare times when he is not participating in sports, he enjoys simply hanging out with his friends and relaxing.
For now, though, Ursua is playing so well that opponents are not going to be able to relax when he’s on the field.

Senior Tavai leads by example for Mira Costa

By Dave Thorpe, Staff Writer

J.R. Tavai has pretty much done it all as a young player on the Mira Costa football team. He has been a big part of the Mustangs' resurgence after a 2-7-1 season in 2007 that now seems a distant memory, considering what the team has accomplished since then.
Tavai was in on 93 tackles his sophomore year, when Mira Costa won the Bay League and reached the CIF Southern Section Western Division title game, where it lost to Quartz Hill, 14-0.
Last year, Tavai had 92 tackles as a nose guard to tie for the team lead with linebacker Kellen Lockwood, and he added seven sacks for a team that captured the Bay League title and the CIF-SS Western Division championship.
Mira Costa beat Alemany in the championship game, 24-21.
Tavai was named the CIF-SS Western Division Defensive Player of the Year as a penetrating, aggressive, fearless nose guard.
"He combines great quickness with explosiveness and he won't stop chasing the ball," Mira Costa coach Don Morrow said. "And he is screaming for everyone else to do the same."
Now Tavai looks around and he's the elder statesman as a third-year varsity starter. His older brother, Jordan, is now playing for El Camino College after helping Mira Costa win the CIF title last year, and most of the players who helped make last year's team a juggernaut have moved on.
But Tavai and his senior classmates, like Sam Stekol, Jimmy Lee and Bret Darragh, are looking forward to the challenge of keeping Mira Costa among the elite.
"This is my class, we enjoy life together, we've been talking about our senior year since we were freshmen," Tavai said. "Now that it's here, we can't just talk the talk, we need to walk the walk."
As a senior captain and returning star, Tavai's responsibilities have increased. Besides his usual duties of dishing out punishing hits, wrecking havoc in the backfield and breaking tackles on those few occasions he gets to run the ball, Tavai will have even more on his plate.
This season, Tavai is charged with helping along first-year varsity players, showing them the way and being a leader of a team many expect will slide back to the pack after losing so many seniors.
Tavai said he has a message for those doubters.
"I just say, play us first, then talk," Tavai said. "We like talkers, because we like to shut them up on the field."
After getting the call on some key short-yardage situations last year, Tavai is slated to play a bigger role in the offense this year. He had 18 carries for 61 yards and a touchdown last season, and is looking to build on that.
"I'll switch between fullback and running back, and hopefully I'll be a factor as a running back this season," Tavai said. "But we have others guys who are strong. But I hope to get the call in the red zone. I'm just an extra-yarder. I'll get that extra yard."
He'll also prevent opponents from getting that extra yard. The 6-foot-2, 260-pound Tavai returns at nose guard, despite hoping he'd get a chance to move to linebacker.
"I'm playing nose guard because it's best for the team," Tavai said. "I wanted to play linebacker, but I was needed on the D-line and I'll have two fresh guys around me. It's a new beginning. I have to lead."
Tavai figures to be a huge nuisance behind the line of scrimmage.
"I just have to do what I do best, make tackles in the backfield," Tavai said.
And on offense?
"Break tackles and put up some numbers," Tavai said. "Let it all out."
Morrow said Tavai is so good and powerful, at times he appears to be a man among boys.
"He's our special player on defense," Morrow said. "I think he'd be special on anyone's team. Of all the top players around, throughout Southern California, he's got to be one of the top guys."
Tavai already has proven he's a dominant defender, but his impact on offense remains to be seen, if only because he may not be used a ton on offense.
"I'm tempted to use him at tailback, but I feel I have to watch his reps, I don't want to tire him out for defense," Morrow said. "But he will be in our offensive plans."
Tavai said the more carries the better, and that he's eager to get into the end zone more this season.
"He'd play all night long if you let him," Morrow said. "But the No. 1 thing is don't burn him out."
Tavai's ability on defense already has drawn the attention of NCAA Division I recruiters. USC, UCLA, Oregon, Utah State and San Diego State all have shown interest.
"I think he'll wind up with a firm offer from a top college," Morrow said.
"His versatility, passion and love for the game is awesome, and he's really become take-charge now. He was always a leader with his work ethic, now he's out in front of the team, doing it verbally as a captain. It will especially be effective with a young cast around him, they will see his approach and it will benefit them."
Mira Costa opens its season Friday night at home against Loyola, a team it has never beaten under Morrow. The private school usually has several South Bay players on its roster.
"Coach Morrow is something like 0-5 against Loyola, so we know it's going to take a lot of heart from the sophomores and juniors we have on the team, who need to show they belong," Tavai said.

Southern California high school linebackers to watch in 2010

Butch Pauu, Servite, 5-11, 215, Sr. Was standout on Pac-5 title team
Josh Fasavalu, Long Beach Poly, 5-10, 210, Sr. Makes plays, causes havoc

Football star Troy Polamalu's hair insured for $1 million

(Reuters Life!) - American football star Troy Polamalu has a price on his head -- with an anti-dandruff shampoo brand taking out a $1 million insurance policy on his trademark mane of black ringlets.Head & Shoulders said on Monday it had taken a $1 million Lloyd's of London policy on the locks of Pittsburgh Steelers' Polamalu, the Super Bowl-winning safety.
Polamalu, 29, who was born in the United States but is of Samoan descent, says he has not cut his hair since 2000. He has been a spokesman for the Procter & Gamble Co brand for two years.
"They've created the first ever insurance policy to protect his iconic mane for the entire NFL season," Procter & Gamble said in a statement.
Polamalu, a five-times Pro Bowl selection, suffered some injuries last year but is back in the game and expected to be the backbone of his side's defense this season.
His hair has come under attack on the field before, with Larry Johnson of the Chiefs tackling Polamalu by the hair in a 2006 game, but no details were given of exactly what damage to his hair would trigger a claim on the insurance policy.

Bears waive Will Ta'ufo'ou

Chicago Bears fullback Will Ta'ufo'ou was waived/injured.

Monday, August 30, 2010

Southland's top high school defensive linemen

Ma'ataua Brown, Paramount, 6-5, 295, Sr. He's an imposing run stopper

Faitele Faafoi, Tustin, 6-4, 315, Sr. He can smother running backs

Sola Hala, St. John Bosco, 5-10, 250, Sr. All-Trinity League

J.R. Tavai, Mira Costa, 6-2, 260, Sr. Defensive player of the year in Western Division

Rookie Iupati is the hole package

Throw all the small-school talk out the door. Niners left guard Mike Iupati is as NFL-ready as any rookie offensive lineman in the league.
Just ask Raiders coach Tom Cable, who went out of his way to congratulate Iupati after the 49ers' 28-24 victory over the Raiders in Saturday night's exhibition game at the Coliseum.
"He's going to be a good one," said Cable, a former Idaho offensive lineman, just like Iupati.
Pro Bowl running back Frank Gore agrees, citing the monstrous hole Iupati forged on his 49-yard carry up the middle on his first touch of the preseason.
Iupati chip blocked a defensive tackle, charged upfield and wiped a linebacker out of the way as Gore sprinted up and away.
It's the sort of hit-and-run combination of strength at the line of scrimmage and speed downfield that's allowing Iupati, all 331 pounds of him, to make the instant transition into the NFL.
So much for the notion No. 17 overall is too high a spot to draft a guard.
"It's getting a lot better," Iupati said. "From when I first got out here, I didn't even look like a football player."
So, what advice did Cable give Iupati after their postgame man-hug?
"He said to work hard. It's going to be a long season, so take care of your body," Iupati said. "I really like the guy."
In and out: Running back Brian Westbrook was limited to two carries for 17 yards in his 49ers debut before sitting out with a hamstring cramp.
Westbrook gained all 17 yards on a draw.
Three cut: The 49ers released three undrafted rookies to meet Tuesday's 75-man roster deadline.
Gone are wide receiver Bakari Grant, outside linebacker Brandon Long and cornerback Patrick Stoudamire.
The final 53-man roster is due Saturday.
Vote of confidence: Head coach Mike Singletary named David Carr the No. 2 quarterback, not that this was exactly breaking news.
Carr has run the second-team offense ever since he signed as a free agent in March. The only exception was the exhibition game against Minnesota on Aug. 22, when Nate Davis played the entire second half - then got ripped by Singletary for not being ready to compete for the backup job.
Carr led the game-winning drive Saturday, launching in the air past the first-down marker and into a high hit. He has a name for the play.
"It's called stupid," Carr said with a smile.


Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/08/29/SPKB1F5GPK.DTL#ixzz10FLur2xv

Cal's Eselu kicks back with friends and ukulele

Although reserve tight end Savai'i Eselu doesn't figure to play much for Cal this season, he's still going to play. He's always going to play. It's a family thing.
After all, the smooth, honey-brown ukulele was handed down from his grandmother to his uncle to him.
"I've been playing since I was 10 years old," the now 21-year-old said. "I actually took lessons in Hawaii but for me, I just go by ear. We used to jam a lot. I used to play a lot with my dad and uncle. I come from a family of musicians."
Eselu's uncle, O'Brian Eselu, is a celebrated local singer who was nominated for Hawaii's male vocalist of the year. His performing troupe, Ke Kai O Kahiki, regularly wins top honors in Hawaii's Merrie Monarch festival.
Unlike his performer uncle, the nephew said he's too scared to sing in front of an audience, but that doesn't stop him from busting out impromptu jam sessions, as he did the other day after practice at Memorial Stadium.
Eselu flipped the latches on a battered black case, withdrew his handcrafted KoAloha ukulele and settled onto a splintered bleacher seat nearly three times as old as his instrument. Joining him were teammates Aaron Tipoti and Solomona Aigamaua, Hawaiians like Eselu.
"My youngest brother, he's actually killing it. He's better than me," Eselu said while fingering out a tune. "I (play it) to wind down. Everything is so upbeat, so then you hop on the uke and it's chill time. I usually play by myself, sometimes in the locker room."
Eselu got a taste of the big time in 2007 when the music department at Moanalua High School in Oahu was invited to play in Carnegie Hall. He left his uke at home in favor of his upright bass.
"It was crazy," Eselu recalled. "Everything was all gold and velvet. You could hear everything come back to you when you played. We had one of the top music departments in the nation."
These days, Eselu jams mostly at the Albany apartment he shares with Tipoti, a defensive lineman, Aigamaua, a tight end, and freshman linebacker Steven Fanua, the only Californian in the bunch.
Several years ago, Cal's Polynesian players got in the habit of gathering in the bleachers after practice to socialize for a few minutes before continuing with their daily schedules. The current players continue the practice, although they are joined by some of their non-Polynesian teammates, an example of team-building of which coach Jeff Tedford would approve.
"It's more like a family thing," Tipoti said. "In practice, we focus on our own things and after practice, we gather and socialize. It started with just us (Polynesians) but it grew to teammates in general. We talk about football but more so funny little things that happen. We leave football on the field and clear our minds."
Added Aigamaua, known as Mona to his teammates, "We share funny moments that happen in practice. After each practice, we always sit there and talk. We're always the last ones to come off the field."
The personable Eselu was asked if he ever used his uke to meet girls.
"Once upon a time," he said.
Only once?
"Locked up, brother," he said, mentioning a girlfriend back in Hawaii.
Starter Anthony Miller and backup Spencer Ladner are slated to get most of the tight- end snaps for the Bears this season, but Eselu still will find a way to play as he maintains a family tradition, one plucked string at a time.


Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/08/29/SPAE1F4QP6.DTL#ixzz10FKBnS8d

Southland's top high school defensive linemen

Ma'ataua Brown, Paramount, 6-5, 295, Sr. He's an imposing run stopper

Faitele Faafoi, Tustin, 6-4, 315, Sr. He can smother running backs

Sola Hala, St. John Bosco, 5-10, 250, Sr. All-Trinity League

Juco transfers will have to wait to make impact

By ERIC SCHMOLDT - Star-Tribune staff writer trib.com | Posted: Monday, August 30, 2010 12:00 am

Kurt Taufa'asau and B.J. Sumter admit they aren't quite ready for the season opener yet.
The pair of junior college transfers were seemingly recruited to Wyoming to help play an immediate role at defensive tackle in the Cowboys' new 4-3 defensive scheme.
But with just a few weeks of fall camp to acclimated to Division I football, Taufa'asau and Sumter will likely have to wait a little longer.
"We're just trying to get used to the altitude and the speed of the game," Taufa'asau said this past week. "In Division I football, the game tempo is way different from junior college, where we were, so we're still trying to get used to it for our first game.
"We're getting closer."
Taufa'asau, a 6-foot-2, 285-pound junior from American Samoa, is expected to be listed as a second-string tackle when the depth chart is released this afternoon.
Sumter, listed as 6-foot-1 and 310 pounds, likely won't be on it, unless they list the position three deep.
"They've come a long ways," UW defensive line coach Jerry Montgomery said. "They're both working hard and doing the right things. B.J.'s a kid that we want to get his weight down a little bit and when he gets that I think he's going to get better off. Kurt's just still understanding the defense a little bit.
"But they're both good kids and they're going to help us out big-time."
While they might not be completely up to speed yet, the fact that they're in Laramie together has certainly aided their progress.
While still at New Mexico Military Institute, the two took separate visits before deciding they would like to transition to the Division I level together at UW.
"It's been good to have somebody you know who's real close to you," Sumter said. "It makes it a lot easier, the transition."
The fact that they would be competing for playing time right away helped make that decision as well.
The 4-3 scheme meant the Pokes needed more defensive tackles, especially because mainstay Fred Givens was a senior last season.
"On the recruiting trip, they told us we had a good chance to come in and compete for a starting spot," Taufa'asau said.
That opportunity was magnified when UW lost Alex Stover, whose career is over after a recurring groin injury.
"He practiced the first three or four days and had me pretty excited," Montgomery said. "Then it was just like, 'OK, I've gotta get another guy ready."
Sophomore Mike Purcell and redshirt freshman Patrick Mertens have a solid hold on the top spots heading into the season.
Ben Durbin and Taufa'asau will likely be the first two into the rotation behind them.
"Over the summer and during the fall camp, we have been competing our [butts] off," Taufa'asau said. "We're getting there, but we're still not quite there yet.
"But oh yeah [we'll contribute this season]. That's what we're for. They didn't bring us here for nothing."