By Eric Sondheimer
August 22, 2013, 6:59 p.m.
If all goes well, 17-year-old senior defensive tackle Ainuu
Taua of Lompoc will one day have so many shampoo companies offering him
their products that he'll never have to spend another penny washing the
hair he hasn't cut since second grade.
When his frizzy black hair isn't curled up in a football
helmet, it falls to the middle of his back. An offensive lineman trying
to block the 6-foot, 284-pound Taua might have a better chance trying to
stop him by grabbing his hair and seeing if an official calls holding.
"It takes two guys to block him," Coach Andrew Jones said.
As a junior, Taua had nine sacks, and his presence enabled teammates on defense to have a much easier time.
"It's a good time to be a linebacker in our defense, because you're usually going to be unblocked," Jones said.
In a Western Division that is loaded with top teams, from Gardena
Serra to West Hills Chaminade, Lompoc has a player who's a difference
maker.
"He's something else," Serra Coach Scott Altenberg said. "You can't coach the motor he has."
When La CaƱada St. Francis played Lompoc last season, opposing Coach
Jim Bonds said the then-16-year-old Taua was talented beyond his years.
"He's doing everything and doesn't have his man strength yet," Bonds said. "He has an unbelievable set of skills."
Taua, who has Samoan roots and grew up in a family of football
players, is more than just tough. There's a passion that comes out each
time he steps onto a field.
"It's fun," he said. "You get to be out here with your friends. All
of my friends from school are from football. Football is everything,
pretty much. However my body holds up, that's how long I'll be playing."
His oldest brother, Vai, was a standout running back with Nevada.
Another brother plays junior college football. He has a 12-year-old
brother, Toa, who's also considered a huge talent and has a YouTube
video with thousands of views.
"He's doing push-ups, pull-ups, air squats," Taua said.
Physicality is what defines Taua.
"He looks like he's 35 years old and a six-year veteran in the NFL," Jones said. "He's extremely talented. He's relentless."
But not everyone is convinced about Taua's future. Despite having
more than 15 scholarship offers, Taua has seen some schools take a pass,
questioning whether he's not tall enough to play on the defensive line.
"I think anybody who doesn't recruit him because of size will seriously regret it," Bonds said. "He's a football player."
Taua is motivated by the skeptics.
"Some people are going to like it, some people aren't," he said of his size. "It doesn't affect me much."
Yes, he has been stopped on occasion, particularly when he's triple-teamed.
"All three try to push you backwards," he said. "Sometimes it works. Sometimes I get through somehow and make the plays."
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