CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) -
Manti Te'o
got a call from Dick Butkus on Monday morning, letting him know he was
voted the nation's best linebacker. A few hours later, the Notre Dame
star accepted the Bronko Nagurski Award as the nation's top defensive
player.
Oh yeah, he also picked up a trip to New York as one of the finalists for the Heisman Trophy.
Not a bad day at all.
The energetic senior from Hawaii helped put Notre Dame back in the
spotlight this season, leading the top-ranked Fighting Irish to an
unbeaten regular season and a date with Alabama in the BCS championship
game Jan. 7.
Te'o says being mentioned along with former Nagurski winners such as
Charles Woodson, Terrell Suggs, Warren Sapp and Champ Bailey is
"something very special to me."
Te'o led the nation's top-ranked defense with 103 tackles and seven interceptions.
He beat out four other finalists: South Carolina end Jadeveon
Clowney, Georgia linebacker Jarvis Jones, Alabama cornerback Dee
Milliner and Florida State end Bjoern Werner.
Notre Dame coach Brian Kelly
was on hand as the event's keynote speaker at a downtown Charlotte
hotel Monday night and said it's impossible to describe what Te'o has
meant to the program.
"It takes time to move from not being part of the national
championship discussion for over 20 years to be right at the point of
being able to be a national champion," Kelly said. "You need somebody
that can galvanize the team and somebody to get them to believe that
they can do it. His actions, the way he played and the way he led did
incredible things for our football program."
Te'o said this will be a season he'll never forget, but first he'd like to see the Fighting Irish get one more win.
"It's something that you dream of when you're a little kid," Te'o
said. "You never think it could happen, then it finally hits you in the
face and it's a dream come true."
When asked what he'd rather win - a national championship or the
Nagurski Award - Te'o smiled and laughed as if it's the easiest question
he's ever answered.
"Hey, all these awards are great, but football is a team sport," he
said. "If you ask people who the Butkus Award or the Bednarik Award
winners are, or even the Heisman Trophy winner some years, they probably
don't remember them. But they remember who won the national
championship. They remember that. That's the trophy everybody wants."
Te'o said he's anxious for the BCS title game, although it's still a month away.
As for the 45-day layoff, he doesn't believe it will be a factor once the game begins.
"It can be good or bad, depending on the player and team," Te'o said.
"It depends on how badly you want it. You can approach those 45 days as
a pro. But if you just want to be in the national championship game and
that's enough, you're obviously in trouble. Alabama has obviously been
there a lot recently. You've got to act like you've been there, even if
we haven't."
Kelly said he doesn't see the Fighting Irish losing focus as long as Te'o is in the locker room leading the way.
"He's a great student and he's really been a role model for everybody
in our program," Kelly said. "When you put all of those things together
he's more than just a football player and I'm blessed that I had an
opportunity to coach him."
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