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Page 1: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2.00

Page 2: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

touchdown ilki/trotod

Magaz ine A joint publication of the University of

Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications.

November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah

-HAWAII-Athletic Director Slan Sheriff

Assoc Athletics Director Hugh Yoshida

tai Athletics Director/Sr Women's Administrator

Marilyn Moniz-Kohoortanonano

Ant AD./Student Services Kala Hedlund

Assl A D.facilities Doug Ramev

Sports Information Director Ed Inouye

Business Manager Michael Nagafuchi

Ticket Manager Edith Tanida

Marketing Director Jim Donovan

—PROFESSIONAL SPORTS PUBLICATIONS -President Jarred R Metze

Publisher Pamela L Biawie

VP Operations Robert L Fulton

Associate Publisher Peggy Kearney

Managing Editor Arlys Warfield

Copy Editor Marlene Drebiat

Director, Production and Manulacturing

Gtona Yosruda

Production Managers

Oaudette Keane. Aetna Dowst Brennan

Art Director Cynihia Rhett

Vending Manager Vmce Barsolo

Advertising Traffic

Mary Powell. Manager—National Sales.

NawLeon. Manager—Local Sales.

Shanaz Airy Kahn. Mane Boyd

Systems Manager

Christopher Hyams Had

Assistant to the President Fran Ajrjnowitz

Administralive Staff Melissa Maylield

(San Francisco). Gloria Migdal (New York)

VP, Local Sales Director Barry N Gottlieb

It., National Sales Director Joel Fisher

Sales Offices

Atlanta Dave Thomas, (404) 594-0482

Chicago: Dawn Mikoola, (312) 951-5593

Dallas: John Daniel, (214) 351-3471

Detroit: Joseph J Colucci. (313)626-9918

Los Angeles: Barbara Nelson,

013)578-7656. Dan Parker. (213) 557-1520

New Toric: Cecil D Lear Vice President

NWFarber, Vice President, Thorn Hermg

Vw President Paul Abramson.

Gewge Payne (212) 697-1460

Sports Marketing Manager

•WeCorpuz (808) 956-7523

Wwtising Assistants Gretha Boston

Ln<Ja Newman, Kathy Domihci

"P Marketing Craig A Simon

Erector, Sales Promotion

WcHae! D Ritz

Special Events Manager AmyFassier

Jkrthandising 4 Marketing Services Manager E"ca Ritzer

"irketing Administrator Maribei RU I Z

*ccounl Executive John Curt,

Stroller Jim Wicks

distant Controller Anne Klimeczko

Operations Peggy verderber

^ H D O W N ILLUSTRATED m a g a z i n e is pub l ished weekly

" * * * * the first week of Sepiember and the first week of December

Al c o n S . 3 ^ ° " J a n U a f V 1 S l a l 3 5 5 L e x i n 9 l o n Ave , N Y. N Y 10017

P u b k J ™ ° * ^ e s u e are copyrighted 1991 by Professional Spods spGhfc-rf l n c A l1 ighfs reserved Reproduction m whole or in pad

INSIDE FEATURES

Starting Lineups

Today's matchups show Hawaii's offense against the Utah defense and the Utes' offense against the Rainbow defense.

Game Notes The Rainbows take on the Utah Utes for their 1991 Homecoming Game. See how the teams match up on paper.

Meet the 'Bows Take a closer look at Johann Bouit, Nalei Cox, Taase Faumui, Kendall Goo and Daryl Green.

Senior Profiles Seniors Akili Calhoun, Tom Heffernan and Delmar Johnson are featured in this issue of Hawaii Football.

Sports Review Men's Basketball will enjoy one of the tallest recruiting classes in UH history at it tips-off its season later this month, by Tom Yoshida

Rainbow Profile New Women's Sports Information Director Lois Manin brings a fresh perspective to the UH Athletic Department, by Dara Young

COSIDA/GTE Academic All-America Team The nation's top football student athletes are honored as members of this prestigious team.

H-2

H-4

H-5

H-6

H-16

H-17

H-19

ON THE FIELD

The 1991 Rainbows UH Alphabetical Roster Numerical Rosters Spotting the Utes

92-93 Utah Alphabetical H-8 Roster

H-10 University of Utah H-14 UH Sports Calendar

H-13 H-15 H-20

Credits:

The University of Hawaii football programs are published by the University of Hawaii Athletic Department/Sports Information Office: Ed Inouye, Director; Thomas Yoshida and Lois Manin, Assistant Directors, and Nancy Nahas, Publications Specialist.

Executive Editor Ed Inouye; Editor Nancy Nahas; Contributing Writers: Thomas Yoshida, Lois Manin, Dara Young, Keli Lee, Reid Watanabe and Darryl Arata. Photographers: C. W. Pack Sports, Herb Lauw, Lynn Tomiyama and Eugene Hopkins. Clerks: Rick Agan, Troy Anderson, Katy Leahey Jennifer Osborn, Kiana Pepper, Lili Ann Sora and Lehua Woo. Printing: Hawaii Hochi. Football Stats Crew: Jessie Freebie, Ceorge Hara, Jonathan Holmes, Alan Konishi, Walter McFarland, Brian Moon, Bob Nagatani, Ross Smith, Gene Tokuhama, Nelson Tokuhama and Mike Tsui.

H - l

Page 3: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

Offense

m RUNNING BACK 33 STEVENSON 30 SIMS

IfcS

&s f RIGHT SLOT BACK 38 KEALOHA 8 D. LEWIS

19 M. LEWIS

QUARTERBACK 3 CARTER 4 JASPER

A LEFT SLOT BAC 26 SYDNER 17 HEFFERNAN

» | | S | I; % ,-j, T *r i y ? ^ RIGHT

WIDE RECEIVER 15 GORDON 35 HIROTA

RIGHT TACKLE 57 KAAIALII 62 McGILL

RIGHT GUARD 67 VAIOLETI 63 GOO

C

CENTER 68 AMOSA 74 PALIMOO

LEFT GUARD 70 PALE 58 MAUGA

LEFT TACKLE 73 FONSECA 76 MANERA

LEFT WIDE RECEIVER 87 BRANCH 80 BOUIT

£*>

DEFENSIVE TACKLE 47 CHAYTORS 83 ELLISS

DEFENSIVE TACKLE 93 BERGER 83 ELLISS

DEFENSIVE END 95 EMBRAY 90 LEWIS

<k§> y fi It DEFENSIVE END 59 BELLAMY 57 BURTON

INSIDE LINEBACKER 43 DAVIS 39 MANLIGUIS

NICKEL BACK 41 CASTAIN

INSIDE LINEBACKER 45 MARTIN 48 CHRISTENSEN

RIGHT CORNERBACKER 22 EDWARDS 18 ODUM STRONG SAFETY

33 SHAH 15 CRAWFORD

FREE SAFETY 42 LAWSON 26 KIRKMAN

LEFT CORNERBACKER

5 SWANSON 37 MILLER

§

Defense H - 2

Page 4: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

M A. W A

TAILBACK 20 WILLIAMS 23 BROWN

Offense

! $

FULLBACK 31 ABRAMS 9 LUSK

SLOT BACK 29 HUTSON 81 WHIDDON

WIDE RECEIVER RIGHT TACKLE RIGHT GUARD QUARTERBACK LEFT GUARD 19 ROWLEY 63 DAILEY 60 McNITT 12 DOLCE 68 MA'AFALA

i 29 HUTSON 73 MOORE 75 ABSHER 7 RICHMOND 63 DAILEY

£>

CENTER 70 BARTON 56 SCOTT

LEFT TACKLE WIDE RECEIVER 61 DeHOOG 3 WILLIAMS 69 THOMAS 1 SHAVER <r

a *&

&

STRONG OUTSIDE LINEBACKER 99 STEWART 42 TALLEY

LEFT TACKLE 96 TANUVASA 97 FAUMUI

DEFENSIVE END 98 KAHOANO 59 MANSFIELD 52 SIAOSI

NOSE TACKLE 59 MANSFIELD 98 CALHOUN 91 TAGOAI

WEAK OUTSIDE LINEBACKER 66 WILLIAMS 82 DUNCAN

«** W W W fhA m 1 1 H m

™ INSIDE LINEBACKER 44 LIILII 40 FAAVAE

ik ill

^

ROVER 51 RANDALL 12 SANTIAGO m

LEFT CORNER BACKER 6 HARPER

11 NAKAGAWA

d ^R

STRONG SAFETY 24 GREEN 48 PANG-KEE 39 SALVADOR w FREE SAFETY

48 PANG-KEE 20 AUTELE 4 DAVIS

RIGHT CORNERBACKER 31 ANDERSON 9 ODOM

"\r=

Defense

Page 5: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

GAME NOTES THE COACHES: Utah's RON

MCBRIDE is in his 2nd year as Ute head coach and owns a 9-10 record. He is 0-1 against the Rainbows. Hawaii's BOB WAGNER is in his 5th season as head coach of the Rainbows and owns a 33-22-1 career mark. He is 4-0 against Utah.

SERIES RECORD: The series, which began on Dec. 18,1926 when the Utes defeated the Rainbows 17-7 in Honolulu, is led by Utah 12-10. In WAC games, the Rainbows lead 7-3. In games played in Honolulu, the series is tied 7-7. In WAC games played in Honolulu, the Rainbows lead 4-2.

LAST MEETING: Sept. 22, 1990 at Utah. Coming off two straight season-opening losses, the 'Bows were hard-pressed by a young Utah team, but won 19-7.

A KICKER: Junior PK Jason Elam has now kicked 91 consecu­tive PATs, four shy of the WAC record of 95 set by Andre Guardi of Utah. He is still a long way off the NCAA mark of 157 held by Carlos Huerta of Miami (Fla.) this season.

BRANCH STRING: WR Darrick Branch is the only UH receiver to catch a pass in every game this season. Going back to 1989, he has caught a pass in 20 straight games. His 4 receptions for 130 yards against BYU was a career high. It was his 3rd 100-yard receiving game and the first by a Rainbow player this year.

CARTER INKS: In the first four games this season, QB Michael Carter rushed for 507 yards. In the last three games, he has rushed for 91 yards and a 598 total. The UH record for most rushing yards by a QB in a season is 669 set by Warren Jones in 1988. Carter also has 852

career rushing yards and needs only 148 to become the 15 th player in school history to rush for more than 1,000 yards in a career.

TID-BITS: The Rainbows have still yet to score a TD in the first quarter this season, having put up only 3 points in the opening period. The fewest points scored in the opening quarter was in 1976 when only 20 points were put on the board.

INJURY REPORT: There were no major injuries in the BYU game. Maa Tanuvasa played his first game at BYU since being injured at Wyoming in the season opener. C Shawn Ching, who injured his knee at Iowa in the 2nd game; SB Jeff Newman, who was injured in fall camp, and DL Delmar Johnson, who underwent arhtroscopic knee surgery about a month ago, all will miss this game.

ABOUT THE UTES: Utah is off to its best start in six years with a 5-3 mark. In 1985, the Utes jumped off to a 6-1 start and ended up 8-4. The 2-2 WAC record is also the best since that year when it went 3-0. The Utes own wins over Utah State, Oregon State, Oregon, Wyoming and Colorado State while dropping close games to Air Force, Arizona State and San Diego State. The three losses came by a total of 12 points. Utah is outscoring its opponents in the first quarter, 50-30, and overall, 193 to 161. Utah has lost five straight against the Rainbows, including the last two in Honolulu.

WAGNER ON UTAH: "Utah is the most improved team in the conference. They're solid on offense and outstanding on defense. Their losses have all been close ones. If s going to be a challenge."

H - 4

STATISTICS

1991 HAWAII STATS

Rushing Att Net Avg TD Michael Carter 139 598 4.3 7 Travis Suns 36 183 5.1 1 JeffSydner 22 177 8.0 0

Passing PA PC I Yds TD Michael Carter 81 35 3 455 1

Receiving No Yds Avg TD JeffSydner 17 171 10.1 0 Darrick Branch 12 293 24.4 1 Brian Gordon 7 145 20.7 0

Tackles UT AT Sck TFL Tony Pang-Kei: 37 10 0 1 MikaLiilii 28 15 3 1 Louis Randall 19 11 2 2

1991 UTAH STATS

Rushing Att Net Avg TD Keith Williams 129 595 4.6 4 Charlie Brown 49 243 5.0 1 Steve Abrams 31 113 3.6 1

Passing PA PC I Yds TD Frank Dolce 262 146 81971 12

Receiving No Yds Avg TD Bryan Rowley 40 613 15.3 5 SeanHutson 24 372 15.5 2 Sean Williams 19 211 11.1 1

Tackles UT Reggie Alston 53 Anthony Davis 56 Todd Lawson 43

AT 49 24 29

Sck TFL 0 o 5 2 1 0

Page 6: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

•3 • *

PRESIDED ALBERT J. SIMONE

President Albert J. Simone

SSjiB"^^^^ r. Albert J. Simone, the 9§f B 1 Oth president of the Uni-

- 1 H - ^ ^ versity of Hawaii, is a man who is familiar with athletics.

A former youth b a s e b a l l coach , Simone knows the part athletics play in the overall development of an individ­ual. In keeping with that, Simone plays an active role in making sure that the needs of the student-athlete a re met.

He is also one of the Rainbows' biggest fans a n d tries to make it to sporting events whenever possible.

Simone, who began his seventh year in office in March, received his under­graduate degree from Tufts University in economics and mathematics in 1957, and his Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1962, special­izing in mathematical economics, oper­ations research, statistics and industri­al organization.

Prior to coming to UH, he was dean of the College of Business Administra­tion at the University of Cincinnati, and before that was head of the Depart­ment of Quantitative Analysis at the same institution.

He has taught numerous courses in operations research, mathematical eco­nomics, statistical forecasting and deci­sion sciences at MIT, Tufts, Boston Col­lege, Cincinnati and UH.

Simone was the founding editor of the journal Decision Sciences, and has served as the advisory editor for a major publishing company. In addition, he has been a consultant to a number of major companies and to state govern-

ments. He was a member of the Coun­cil of Economic Advisors to the governor of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, and he has also served on numerous community and professional boards and is an active participant or chair­person in numerous conferences.

Along with being a member of Phi Beta Kappa and Beta Gamma Sigma, he is a fellow of the American Institute for Decision Sciences and served as its president in 1974-75.

He is a member of a dozen profes­sional associations and is listed in such publications as Who's Who in America, Who's Who in the East, American Men of Science, Contemporary Author, Inter­national Registry of Who's Who, Com­munity Leaders of America, Outstand­ing Educa-tors of America, International Scholars Directory and Who's Who in Computer and Data Processing.

Simone's publications include five books in the field of mathematics, statis­tics and computers applied to the social and management sciences and well over 100 papers.

He still manages to find time to serve on the Stadium Authority for Aloha Sta­dium, the executive committee of the Board of Governors for the East-West Center, the Board of Directors for Aloha United Way, the Board of Directors for the Hawaii Joint Council on Economic Edu­cation and more than a dozen others.

Simone and his wife, Carol, have four children. ••»

Student apartment complex overlooks the athletic facilities.

U H l > H I O M I I » K \ ' l ' M

John Gilmore, 1908-1913 Arthur L. Dean, 1914-1927 David L. Crawford, 1927-1941 Gregg M. Sinclair, 1941-1955 Paul S. Bachman, 1955-1957 Laurence H. Snyder, 1958-1963 Thomas H. Hamilton, 1963-1968 Harlan Cleveland, 1970-1975 Fujio Matsuda, 1975-1985 Albert J. Simone, 1985-present

Page 7: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

E •*

BOARD OF REGENTS

Momi W. Cazimero Lee Ohigashi

Ruth Ono Diane J. Plotts Herbert M. Richards Howard Stephenson

Roy Y. Takeyama John Ushijima Dennis R. Yamada

ATHLETIC ADVISORY BOARD Dr. Richard T. Mamiya, Chairman Dr. Charles Araki, Faculty Dr. Duane Bartholomew, Faculty Dr. Donald Char, Faculty Dr. Arnold Edelstein, Faculty

Dr. Paul Heinberg, Faculty Dr. Edward Kaneshige, Faculty Dr. Anthony Lenzer, Faculty Mr. John Mount, Faculty Dr. Nelson Marita, Faculty

Sam Slom, Alumni George Kaahanui, Staff Elmer Yuen, Staff I

Paul Isono ASUH President

Page 8: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

ISLAND HOVERS

WE CAN MOVE YOU... ANYWHERE

(808) 848-5200 P.O. Box 17865 Honolulu, HI 96817 Telex 743-1358 FAX (808) 842-3854

(808)871-7755 172 Alamaha Street

Kahului, Maui, HI 96732 FAX (808) 877-2658

Put Down Roots You can make special

moments in your life, too. Join me and plant a tree. For your free brochure, write: Trees For America, The National Arbor Day Foundation, Nebraska City, NE 68410.

The National Arbor Day Founda t ion Nebraska City. Nebraska 68410

1 .X' I "V UZ • * ! - * 1 TT W C» V I I .*. W % • I

FUTURE (TENATIVE AND SUBJECT TO CHANGE)

Sept 5 Sept. 19 Sept. 26 Oct. 3 Oct. 10 Oct. 24 Oct. 31 Nov. 7 Nov. 14 Nov. 21 Nov. 28 Dec. 5

1992

CAL STATE FULLERTON *at San Diego State *BRIGHAM YOUNG LONG BEACH STATE ' a tUtah *at Air Force "COLORADO STATE *at Texas-El Paso FRESNO STATE 'WYOMING TULSA PTTTSRTIRGH

1993

Sept. 4 Sept. 11 Sept. 18 Sept. 25 Oct. 9 Oct. 16 Oct. 23 Oct. 30 Nov. 6 Nov. 20 Nov. 27 Dec. 4

Sept. 10 Sept. 17 Sept. 24 Oct. 1 Oct. 15 Oct. 22 Oct. 29 Nov Nov. 12 Nov. 19 Nov. 26 Dec. 3

LONG BEACH STATE "at Brigham Young KENT STATE "at Wyoming 'UTAH *at Colorado State *TEXAS-EL PASO *SAN DIEGO STATE *at New Mexico *AIR FORCE CALIFORNIA RICE

1994

SAN JOSE STATE at California LONG BEACH STATE 'at Utah *SAN DIEGO STATE 'WYOMING 'NEW MEXICO

'BRIGHAM YOUNG 'COLORADO STATE MISSOURI 'AIR FORCE

*WAC conference g a m e

Page 9: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

K • * SPS

DIRECTOR OF INTERCOLLEGIATE ATHLETICS STM SHERIFF t an Sheriff is a m a n of

kaction a n d just can ' t seem to sit still. A m a n

who was born in the Islands but left at a young age and returned to become athletics director in 1983, Sheriff has guided the Uni­versity of Hawaii through much success in the 1980s and to a higher note in the '90s.

The Rainbow athletics p r o g r a m con t inued its amazing streak of success­es both on and off the field the past year and things continue to look promising, thanks to the leadership of Sheriff, who will be 60 next March.

In March, Sheriff a n d KHNL-TV extended a cur­rent three-year contract for five years in which the UH would rece ive approx i ­mately $7.5 million over the next six years. The $7.5 million will be in cash, air time and production ser­vices.

Ra inbow t e a m s h a v e not only tasted success on the playing fields, but also in the classrooms. The UH football team led the WAC and was 6th in the nation in graduation rate for foot­ball players.

And USA Today report­ed this past summer that Hawai i ' s men ' s a n d women's basketball teams have grad­uation rates at or above the national average for Division I schools.

Sheriff serves on the NCAA Men's Committee on Committees, the pow­erful group which nominates replace­men t s for v a c a n c i e s on all m e n ' s

sports committees. He also serves as the Western Athletic Conference rep­resentat ive to the Col lege Football Association Board of Directors.

Sheriff came to the University from

the Univers i ty of Nor the rn Iowa, where he became the h e a d football coach in 1960 and athletic director in 1970.

As a football coach, he led UNI to a 129-101-4 record, six conference titles, 15 winning seasons a n d four bowl

appearances . He won two Coach-of-the-Year honors and produced 88 all-conference performers, of whom eight were named as the league's most out­s t and ing back or l ineman. He also

produced eight first team Little AU-Americans.

Sheriff graduated from Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo in 1953 after being a first team Little All-American. An offensive lineman who stood just six feet and 200 lbs., Sheriff was his l e a g u e ' s most valuable player and played in the East-West Shrine game a n d the Hula Bowl. He was accorded the institu­t ion 's h ighes t honor in 1987 when he was among the first g roup to be inducted into the Sports Hall of Honor.

Sheriff went on to play-in the National Football League (NFL) for the San F r a n c i s c o 49ers, Pitts­b u r g h Steelers and the Los Angeles Rams.

In January, after return­ing from a much publi- . cized NCAA convention, Sheriff was hospitalized with a minor heart attack. In 1985, Sheriff had suf­fered a heart attack and underwent eight-bypass surgery.

Despite these setbacks, he still keeps on moving,

h o p i n g to l e a d the University of Hawaii's athletic programs to be the "Best in the West."

He and his wife Jane, have three sons ; P a u l , 32; Michae l , 30 and Richard, 28. •••

1 3

Page 10: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

• : • * « - >

HEAD FOOTBALL COACH BOB WAGNER

I ake a cup of the "Run 'n' Shoot," add a tablespoon of the "Triple Option," mix

it well with the "Veer" and some other "wrinkles" and you come up with "The Spread."

Although Bob Wagner won't win any awards for his culinary exploits, what he has concocted in his four years as head football coach at Hawaii has shown up on the menus of NCAA statistics and on the recipes of UH opponents.

Wagner, who turned 44 in May, is com­ing off three consecutive winning seasons and last fall made Hawaii the only team to score a total of 115 points against BYU in two straight years.

With a career record at Hawaii of 30-18-1, he is ranked 19th nationally for win­ning percentage among all Division I head coaches with four or more years ex­perience. In addition, Hawaii's winning percentage over the past three years is 71 percent, ranking the Rainbows 13th in the nation. Since he has been head coach, the Rainbows have broken over 150 team

and individual school records. The football team is showing im­

provement in the classroom as well as on the field. Since Wagner came to Hawaii, the football team has shown a marked increase in its graduation rate. Last year, Hawaii graduated 84 percent of its foot­ball players, ranking the school sixth in the nation.

Wagner was named Honolulu Ad­vertiser Sportsman of the Year in 1988 and 1989, becoming the first two-consecutive-year recipient in the history of the award. He also made a mark on UH history when he was head coach of the West team in the 1991 Hula Bowl, the first time a Hawaii coach earned such an honor. In 1989, he led the Rainbows to their first ever NCAA-sanctioned bowl game, taking on Michi­gan State in the Eagle Aloha Bowl.

Wagner was promoted to head coach in 1987 after serving as defensive coordi­nator for four years under then-head coach Dick Tomey. Under his leadership, the team was ranked 6th in the nation in total defense in both 1984 and 1986.

As Hawaii special teams coordinator from 1977-1983, Wagner led the team to a 6th place national ranking in net punt­ing and punt returns in 1977, his first year at Hawaii.

Wagner earned his bachelor's degree in business administration from Witten­berg University in 1969. At Wittenberg, he was football team co-captain and two-time all conference selection. He was also a four-year letterman and two-time all-Midwest lacrosse selection.

He earned his master's degree in physical education at Ohio University in 1971 and has completed two years of work toward his doctorate at Ohio State University.

Prior to coming to Hawaii, he was grad­uate assistant under Don James at the Uni­versity of Washington from 1976-77. Wag­ner, who worked with the comerbacks, coached two players—Mark Lee and Nes-by Glasgow — who went on to profes­sional careers.

He served as offensive coordinator at the College of Wooster in Wooster, Ohio from 1975-1976. He also coached the swim team, which broke 18 of 22 school records under his leadership. In addition to serv­ing as defensive coordinator at Musk­ingum College in New Concord, Ohio from 1972-75, he inspired the swim team there to break 20 of 22 school marks.

From 1971 to 1972, Wagner coached the football team at River View High School in Warsaw, Ohio to the best record in school history (8-2) and garnered the ti­tle of District Coach of the Year.

He began his coaching career at Galia Academy High School in Gallipolis, Ohio in 1969. He served as defensive coach and head track coach until 1971. He coached the track team to their first league cham­pionship, breaking a 14-year domination by a league rival.

Wagner is married and he and his wife, Gloria, have a three-year-old daugh­ter, Christine Aolani. •••

J.4L-

Page 11: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

THE ASSISTANTS RICH ELLERSON Associate Head Coach Defensive Coordinator Inside Linebackers O n e of four former UH

football p l a y e r s on the coaching staff, Rich Eller-son is in his fifth yea r a s

f associate head coach and V ^ _ m de fens ive coord ina to r . V ^f J J Ellerson, w h o p l a y e d

l inebacker a n d center for the Rainbows from 1973-77, will hand le the inside linebackers this season.

Ellerson began his coaching career as a graduate assis­tant under then-head coach DickTomey in 1977. Upon receiving his master's degree in educational psycholo­gy, Ellerson returned to his home state of Arizona to serve as a full-time assistant at Arizona Western. He went to Idaho the following year and then to Fullerton State in 1980. After returning to Hawaii in 1981, Ellerson had the urge to try and coach pro football. He moved to Vancouver, B.C., where he coached the British Columbia Lions of the CFL. After two years at B.C., he moved to Calgary, where he was when Wagner asked him to return to Hawaii.

Rick and his wife Dawn have three children, Sean, Shea and Leta.

PAUL "ROCKY" ALT Slot Backs In his first season with the

Rainbows, Paul "Rocky" Alt will be in charge of the slot backs.

He comes to Hawaii after serving as head football coach

' f at Center Grove High School 1 | > , i j j in Greenwood, Indiana, the B / ^ J ' , JM past two seasons. At has also

had coaching experience in the Big Eight at Kansas where he served as running backs coach for three years.

He received his bachelor's degree from Wittenberg Uni­versity in Ohio in 1971 and his master's degree from Bowl­ing Green in 1972.

At, 42, is married and he and his wife, Brenda, have two children, Traci Lynn, 21, and Brian Paul, 14. He enjoys golf and sporting events in his spare time.

PAUL JOHNSON Offensive Coordinator Quarterbacks Running Backs Paul Johnson gives the impres­

sion that he is laid-back. But those who know him can attest to the fact that he is an earnest, hard work­er.

Johnson has given the Rain­bows significant improvements in their offense while serving as

offensive coordinator. However, he isn't one who dwells on past performances and is looking ahead to 1991.

Johnson, 33, served as offensive coordinator at Georgia South­ern where he led the Eagles to the national Division I-AA title. His team led the nation in rushing, total yards and points per game before he came to UH-Manoa.

A 1979 graduate of Western Carolina, he coached at var­ious high schools in North Carolina before landing an assis­tant coaching position at Lees-McRae Junior College in Ban­ner Elk, NO. In 1983, he left for Georgia Southern.

Johnson is married (Susan).

AL KALANI BEAVER Defensive Line Al Kalani Beaver begins his

second year as a full-time assistant after serving several years as a vol­unteer coach. A 1972 graduate of Hawaii, he is the fourth former Rainbow to join the UH coaching

'^^f staff. Beaver will be in charge of the ~M J m J defensive line, a position he assist-

M ^ k M ^k ed during his years as a volunteer staffer.

A 1962 graduate of Waianae High, Beaver won letters in football, baseball, basketball and track. He won all-star hon­ors in football and baseball as well as MVP honors and aca­demic honors.

He played football for Hawaii in 1964 as a halfback and defensive back, but saw his career cut short as a result of a shoulder injury.

After getting his bachelor's degree and professional cer­tificate in 1972, he received his master's degree in Educational Administration from Pepperdine in 1978.

After holding various jobs, including a stint as a police offi­cer and teaching at Waianae High where he served on the football coaching staff of Larry Ginoza, he went into insurance work and served as a volunteer assistant at Hawaii until March 1, 1990, when he was hired as a full-time assistant.

1 6

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T H E A S S I S T A N T S

GEORGE LUMPKIN Defensive Backs Beginning his 18th season as a

full-time assistant, George Lump­kin is the senior member of the UH coaching staff. The 40-year-old na­tive of Los Angeles will be handling the defensive backs, a position he held when he first became an as­sistant.

Lumpkin, who is the third former Rainbow player on the coaching staff, dazzled fans as a defensive

back from 1970-71 setting a career interception record at that time with eight.

After his playing career, he served as a graduate assistant under then-head coach Dave Holmes in 1972, and in 1973, be­came a full-time assistant. Subsequently, he served under Lar­ry Price and Dick Tomey and is now working under his fourth head coach in Bob Wagner.

Lumpkin, who has a master's degree in educational psy­chology, is married. He and his wife, Valorie, have three chil­dren, Monique, Shawn and Shalei.

MIKE SEWAK Offensive Line Mike Sewak starts his fourth

year as a UH assistant and again will be splitting the duties of the of­fensive line with Kanani Souza.

The 30-year-old Sewak was an offensive lineman at Virginia where he won All-Atlantic Coast Confer­ence honorable mention honors. After receiving his bachelor's de­gree in economics and psychology in 1981, he earned tryouts with the

Baltimore Colts and Pittsburgh Steelers. He began his coaching at Hobart College by handling the

offensive line and doubled up as baseball coach from 1982-83, the last year as offensive coordinator. In 1984, Sewak moved to Georgia Tech where he was a grad assistant in charge of the tight ends.

In 1985, Sewak went to Georgia Southern and assisted the offensive backs on a part-time basis, and the defensive backs as a full-time assistant in 1986. He came to Hawaii in 1987 with of­fensive coordinator Paul Johnson.

Sewak and his wife, Robin, have a son, Michael Robert Makani. He enjoys golfing and fishing in his spare time.

AL "BUZZY" PRESTON Wide Receivers Al "Buzzy" Preston, another

former UH football player on the coaching staff, begins his fourth season as a full-time assistant.

After handling the defensive backs during his first year, he shifted to the wide receivers two seasons ago.

After playing for the 'Bows from 1978-79 as a defensive back, Preston obtained his bachelor's

degree in speech and served as a grad assistant under Dick Tomey for two seasons. He then became a graduate assistant at Washington for one year.

In 1984, Preston moved to South Illinois as a full-time as­sistant, working with the wide receivers for three years and the last year with the secondary. He returned to Hawaii in 1987 when Wagner was appointed head coach.

The 34-year-old Preston and his wife, Audrey, are parents of Evan Keanu, 1, and Amber, 3.

CHRIS SMELAND Outside Linebackers

K A N A N I SOUZA Offensive Line Kanan i Souza, a Kame-

hameha Schools product, will split the duties of the offensive line with Mike Sewak in his fifth year as a UH assistant.

The 46-year-old Souza, who spent most of his collegiate play­ing and coaching career on the mainland, joined the Rainbow staff in 1985. Prior to this, he was an assistant at Northern Col­

orado, his alma mater, for five years. After a year at Col­orado, he returned to Hawaii to join Dick Tomey's staff.

Souza played collegiate football at Bemidji State in Minnesota for a year and at Northern Colorado where he earned his bachelor 's degree in physical education in 1969 and his master's degree in 1980. After getting his bachelor's degree, he returned to Hawaii where he worked for the Department of Education until 1979. He returned to Northern Colorado to obtain his master's degree in education.

At Kamehameha, Souza won second team all-star hon­ors in football. He also lettered in baseball and basketball.

Souza and his wife, Sharon, have four children, Alika, Chris, Sandy and Keoni. He enjoys playing softball and golf in his spare time.

New to the Rainbow staff this season is Chris Smeland, who will be working with outside linebackers.

Smeland, 40, comes to Hawaii from Kent State, where he was defensive coordinator for three years. Prior to Kent State, Smeland was the defensive coordinator at Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo and the offensive line coach at the University of Nevada-Reno. He also coached in the Big Eight Conference as the outside linebackers coach at Colorado.

He received his bachelor's degree from Cal Poly-SLO in 1974 and his master's degree in business administration from the University of Colorado in 1976.

Smeland and his wife, Barbara, have two children, Jamie Christine, 7, a n d Kathleen Nicole, 5. He enjoys golf, sailing, skiing and all outdoor activities.

I S

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ilhi/ticrtod Magazine

President Jarred Metze

Publisher Pamela L. Blawie

V.P. Operations Robert L Fulton

Associate Publisher Peggy Kearney

Managing Editor Arlys Warfield

TDI Editors Scott Van Camp, Charles Sabatino

Copy Editors Jon Cooper, Diane Finger

Director, Production and Manufacturing Gloria Yoshida

Production Managers Claudette Keane, Aetna Brennan

Traffic Coordinators Mary Powell, Navi Leon

Art Director Pat Voehl

V.P. Director Local Sales Barry N. Gottlieb

V.P. Director National Sales Joel Fisher

V.P. Marketing Craig A. Simon

Director of Marketing Michael D. Ritz

Sales Offices: Atlanta: Dave Thomas, (404) 594-0482 Chicago: Dawn Mikoola, Ray O'Connor, (312)951-5593 Dallas: John Daniel, (214) 351 -3471; Bob Jameson, (214)361-3232 Detroit: Joseph J. Colucci, (313)626-9918 Los Angeles: Barbara Nelson, (213) 578-7656; Dan Parker, (213) 557-1520 New York: Cecil D. Lear, Vice President; Neil Farber, Vice President; Thorn Hering, Vice President; Paul Abramson, George Payne (212) 697-1460

TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED is published six times between September 1 and December 1 each year by PSP Inc., 355 Lexington Ave., New York. NY. 10017. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without written permission is prohibited.

No.4

In This Issue

Next Issue: * BETTER TO GIVE THAN RECEIVE Sometimes a wide receiver doesn't have to catch the ball to be a big play threat.

=• "OH YEAH?" "YEEEEAH!" Meet a couple of feuds, outside of Division 1 no less, that would make the Hatfields and McCoys proud.

WINNING EM OVER Mike Nguyen has overcome tremendous odds to be the first Vietnamese-born college football player.

* DIVISIONS II & III HOOP PREVIEW Here are the eight teams to beat in the race to join the "Elite Eight."

' • 'H ITT ING THE LITTLE TIME Small-college football may not be as glam­orous as 1-A, but everyone agrees that it's fun and just as rewarding.

'** SNATCHING DEFEAT FROM THE JAWS OF VICTORY The defensive scheme that's an offensive dream; that's the widely practiced yet equally criticized Prevent Defense.

UPPER LB/EL

" - " " " t 2:00 p.m.

Preventable Medicine: Is the Prevent Defense a cure-all for those last minute offensive big plays?

TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED

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nm §am 1991 SCHEDULE RATINGS

(Final Associated Press Top 25 teams from 1990)

The 1991 schedule ratings are based on the opposition's 1990 winning percentage, games scheduled against 1990 bowl teams and this season's key opponents.

Team

Colorado Georgia Tech Miami (Fla.) Florida St.

Washington Notre Dame Michigan Tennessee Clemson Houston Penn St.

Texas Florida Louisville Texas A&M Michigan St. Oklahoma Iowa Auburn Southern Cal Mississippi BYU

Virginia Nebraska Illinois

Opp. '90

Win. Pet.

.529

.557

.537

.662

.533

.574

.576

.585

.555

.558

.565

.521

.590

.559

.475

.508

.559

.487

.625

.580

.393

.540

.525

.538

.504

Games vs. '90 Bowl Teams

2 5 3 5

5 7 7 5 4 5 6

2 6 4 1 6 3 4 6 6 2 4

4 3 4

Key Opponents

Wyoming, ©Oklahoma, ©Stanford, Nebraska vs. Penn St. (Kickoff Classic). Virginia, @Clemson, Georgia Houston, Penn St., ©Arizona, ©Florida St. vs. BYU (Disneyland Classic), ©Michigan. ©Louisville, Miami, ©Florida ©Nebraska, ©California, Oregon, ©Southern Cal ©Michigan, Michigan State, Southern Cal, Tennessee, ©Penn State Notre Dame, Florida State, ©Iowa, ©Illinois, Ohio State ©Louisville, Auburn, ©Alabama, ©Notre Dame Georgia Tech, ©Georgia, Virginia, N. C. State ©Miami, ©Illinois. ©Texas A&M, Texas vs. Georgia Tech (Kickoff Classic), ©Southern Cal, BYU, ©Miami, Notre Dame Auburn, vs. Oklahoma (©Dallas), ©Houston, ©Texas A&M San Jose State, Tennessee, ©Auburn, Florida State Tennessee, ©Ohio State, Southern Miss., Florida State Houston, Texas ©Notre Dame. Michigan, ©Ohio State, Illinois vs. Texas (©Dallas), Colorado, ©Nebraska Michigan, Illinois, ©Ohio State, Indiana ©Texas, ©Tennessee, Southern Miss., ©Florida State, ©Alabama Penn State, ©Oregon, ©Notre Dame, ©Cal, Washington ©Auburn, ©Tennessee vs. Florida State (Disneyland Classic), ©Penn State, ©Colorado State Wyoming ©Maryland, ©Georgia Tech, ©Clemson, @N. C. State Colorado State, Washington, ©Colorado, Oklahoma Houston, Ohio State, ©Iowa, Michigan, ©Michigan State

Page 15: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

HITTING THE LITTLE

TIME Small-college football may not be as glamorous as l-A,

but everyone agrees that it's fun and just a§ rewarding

In choosing the smaller, quieter North Dakota State campus, Dan Reszka found out that the gridiron action was just as loud as Division I.

BY MICHAEL BRADLEY

Dan Reszka's childhood football dreams were always a little crowded. Surrounding his electrifying touchdowns and game-sav­ing interceptions were 75,000 or so specta­tors, providing a loud soundtrack to his hopes. When you grow up in suburban Milwaukee, that's the way it is. Your fan­tasies have a Big 10 flavor.

When Northern Illinois offered him a scholarship and a chance to play against Wisconsin, Michigan State and even Nebraska, with their loud crowds, televi­sion cameras and football traditions, Reszka grabbed it. Sometimes dreams do come true.

And sometimes they don't. After red-shirting a year, Reszka saw limited action on special teams for the Huskies as a fresh­man. But the future didn't look promising. Ahead of him on the defensive backfield depth chart were other freshmen and a sophomore or two. It appeared much of Reszka's next three years would be spent

| as part of the soundtrack, not the action. So he transferred from the big-time down

to Division II and North Dakota State—one of the schools that originally recruited him. They play before about 12,000 each Saturday in Fargo, and the TV crews—save the local affiliates—don't pay much attention. Reszka had to readjust his dreams.

"When you grow up where I did, you get excited by the hype of Big 10 football," Reszka said. "When we played Wisconsin and Nebraska in front of 75,000 fans, it was exciting.

"But in North Dakota, they don't have any pro teams, so they treat us like pro ath­letes. Sometimes when I go to a supermar­ket, people ask for my autograph. That's kind of nice."

Playing on the Bison's 1990 national championship team wasn't too bad, either. Reszka has two more years of football ahead of him, and he doesn't mind spend­ing them far from the glamour and hype of the big-time college game. Like many small-college athletes who play Off-

Michael Bradley is a freelance writer liv­ing in Drexel Hill. Pa.

TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATE'

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Runningback Tim Lester plays to a full house at Eastern Kentucky.

THE LITTLE TIME

"There's a great campus atmosphere. It's Saturday afternoon America."

—Walter Juliff

Broadway, he'll enjoy the chance to com­pete, trading national attention for a little more of the collegiate experience.

"I'm not unhappy with my decision." he said. "I'm glad I played Division I, and now I'm glad to be in Division II. I got a taste of both."

Small-college football is filled with sto­ries like Reszka's. Some players have been recruited by I-A schools and elected to go where they knew they'd play three or four years. Others transfer down from large pro­grams, seeking a starting job or just a dif­ferent attitude toward the game. The bulk haven't turned down big-time offers or harbor professional dreams. They just want to play football.

"I get to see a few Division II or III games each year, and that's where the foot­ball is played for fun," said Walter Juliff, a scout for the Dallas Cowboys. "There's a great campus atmosphere. It's Saturday afternoon America."

Of course, there is a drastic talent drop­off away from Division I-A. The smaller the school, the smaller and slower the play­ers. There are exceptions, of course, but

they do not predominate. "I can really tell the difference between I-

A and II at the skill positions," Reszka said. "Everybody on the Division II level is a great athlete, but the big-time players are a step or two ahead, and the linemen are bigger. The skill levels are the same, it's just a matter of size and speed."

Though big-time fans and players may not believe it, NCAA Division I-AA, II and III and NAIA Divisions I and II do not toil in a vacuum. Pro aspirations are real­ized by small-college players, though no one would ever claim NDSU's North Central Conference to be a farm system for the pros. Still, 246 (19.5 percent) players on the 1990 professional rosters played at small colleges, as did the 75 more selected in last April's draft.

And we're not just talking courtesy calls, here. Just ask All-Pros like Jerry Rice of the 49ers (Mississippi Valley State), Andre Reed of the Bills (Kutztown University) and the Bears' Richard Dent (Tennessee State). Or all-time greats like Walter Payton (Jackson St.), Bob Hayes (Florida A&M) and Joe Greene (North Texas St.). Small-college football is not played in slow motion by big-time rejects.

"About one-third of the guys drafted played I-AA or below," said Tom Gamble, assistant director of player personnel for the Philadelphia Eagles. "When you're talking about I-AA, you're talking about some schools, like Jackson State or Arkansas State, that are equal to some I-A teams. That's some pretty good small-col­lege football."

Anybody who played Dayton last season

knows just how good. Anchoring the Flyers' offensive line was hulking guard Dave Postmus, a 6-foot, 3-inch senior transfer from the University of Illinois. Postmus started as a junior for the Illini but had a "little controversy" with coach John Mackovic and bolted the team. Since he had redshirted his freshman year. Postmus could not go to another I-A school, because the mandatory year he would have sat out would have completed his eligibility.

After a brief search, he wound up at Dayton, determined to continue progress toward a professional career. Though he disliked the football team's second-class status on campus—"It's really a basketball school," he said—Postmus worked hard and earned an invitation to the NFLs scout­ing combine in Indianapolis in March. Once there, he shined. Postmus bench-pressed 225 pounds 36 times, tops among all prospects, and registered a 33-inch verti­cal leap, the best of all the linemen.

"I knew what I had to do, and I kept it in perspective," Postmus said. "The pro scouts know if you're out there. If you're good, they'll find you." (Unfortunately none of the 28 NFL teams found Postmus in the 1991 draft, but you best believe someone will take advantage of his free agent status.)

Gamble concurs. "There really aren't any secrets," he said. "The combines, scouts and coaches do a good job. It's tough not to know about a guy who can play."

After spending four years as part of a major-college program. Postmus' journey to Division III had to include a few shocks. He noticed a little more attention from ref-

TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATE!

Page 17: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

THE LITTLE TIME

erees and a little less emphasis on practice and film time. Though he played against smaller players, he believes the experience helped him.

"I had to stay lower against the little guys, and when I played against bigger guys, I was so used to staying low, I had an advantage," he explained. "The smaller players are quicker, so that helped me with my hand placements and my footspeed."

Despite his success, Postmus is a bit of a rarity among small-college players. The majority that make it to the pros play the skill positions, like running back, wide receiver or defensive back. Beefy high schoolers get major-college attention, leav­ing the smaller prospects for the rest. In order to get professional attention, a small-college lineman must dominate nearly every play and then wow the scouts at a combine. That should earn a low-round draft selection or free-agent signing. "It's a two, three or four-step process," Juliff said.

For backs and receivers, there's only one main criterion—speed. Run a consistent 4.3-second 40-yard dash, and you'll find work. Of course, the professional develop­ment process may take a little longer, due to level of competition, but the message is clear: the pros want speed.

"Jeff Query of Millikin University was drafted in 1990 by the Packers in the fifth round, and you could wake him up in the middle of the night, and he'd run a 4.3," said Dan Shonka of the National Football Scouting Organization in Tulsa, one of the NFLs main talent evaluators. "When the smoke clears, the fast guys are left."

Despite the occasional Postmus or Query, small-college rosters are short on behe­moths and burners but long on desire. Some players receive some I-A interest as high school seniors but don't get the same "can't miss" billing as some blue-chip recruits. They choose the smaller school route to get more playing time and escape some of the demands of life at a factory.

Redshirt freshman linebacker Chad Pundsack chose North Dakota State over Wyoming, Western Michigan and Northern Illinois because of its proximity to his home in Albany, MN. His brother, Dick, is a defensive lineman for the Bison and his sister, Cheri, plays volleyball there. Chad will see some playing time this year and anticipates starting during his final three seasons.

"I don't want to go somewhere and just watch others play," Pundsack says. "I talked to a couple of guys on our team who've transferred from big schools, and they said the big-time isn't worth it. You don't have much time to yourself, and foot­ball isn't fun."

Small-college football isn't a parade of laughs. Practices are tough, players have

ttf ft ' 1* *

A &. //•

*f« • > v

> ' A * ,*

pJmFl

Jackson State put Walter Payton on the map, or was it the other way around?

plenty of responsibilities, and no matter what the level, the fans want to see win­ners. "Our coaches have a lot of pressure on them," NDSU's Reszka said. "The fans expect us to win all the time."

The winning isn't done on such a grand scale. Ascend to the Division II or III title game, and you'll get on television. That's about the extent of it. As a result, there isn't as much money available. That means smaller weight rooms, less-extravagant trav­el and few of the amenities found in I-A.

"I have a lot of friends who play at the University of Miami," said Tim Lester, an Eastern Kentucky senior running back who grew up in Miami. "The main difference between Eastern and there is money. We win just as much as they do."

Lester, who overcame knee surgery as a sophomore to rush for more than 1,100 yards last season, is a big part of that suc­cess. The 5-10, 210-pounder has already attracted the interest of pro scouts, thanks to Eastern Kentucky's winning tradition (five EKU players were on the 1990 pro roster), and looks forward to earning a spot in next year's NFL draft.

"We're going to play Louisville this year, and I want to show everyone I could have played Division I-A football," Lester said. "But I'm enjoying myself here. I wouldn't change for anything."

And that seems to be the overriding

"The coaches here are more open... you can go into their offices and just shoot the breeze, talk about football or life."

—Dan Reszka

theme among small college players. Sure, many of them yearn for a shot at the big time, and some hope to continue on to play professionally. But football isn't a job to the majority; it's part of the collegiate experience.

"One of the things I like most about play­ing here is my relationship with the coach­es," Reszka said. "At Northern Illinois, we knew the coaches on a professional basis. We'd see them at practice or at meetings, and that was it. The coaches here are more open. Sure, they want to win, but you can go into their offices and just shoot the breeze, talk about football or life."

Away from the screaming crowds. '• '

TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATE

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THE LITTLE TIME

Doug Dennison's hard work at Kutztown paid off with a job in Texas.

Okay, name the only Pennsylvania Conference school to have three players make the NFL.

Need some help? How about this: they have had at least one player in the pros since 1974, and one of them even played in last year's Super Bowl.

Give up? The answer: Kutztown University. Okay, so Notre Dame they're not, but for a

small school, playing in the shadows of Penn State and Pittsburgh, Kutztown University certainly can hold its head up high as far as its list of alumni that have been or still are in the National Football League is concerned.

Their three alumni to have made the pros are running backs Doug Dennison (Dallas Cowboys) and Bruce Harper (New York Jets), and wide receiver Andre Reed (Buffalo Bills).

But why Kutztown? What is the secret'.' Is it something in the water? Perhaps it's something in the coaching. George Baldwin, now coaching semi-pro ball in England, was the head coach at Kutztown from 1973 to 1987. He coached all three players. Well, coach?

"When you come from a small school, you've got to have that something extra," Baldwin suggested.

Doug Dennison was in his senior year when Baldwin started at K.U., but it was obvious that that 'something' was there. In

PENNSYLVANIA'S LITTLE GUY SPEAKS UP!

Dennison's case it was the diligence and work ethic. That ethic was typified early that year.

"It was the fifth game of the season and Doug broke off a nice run of about 6 or 8 yards, but then he busted his knee up," Baldwin remembered. "Everyone thought it was over, but Doug was determined to make it back." He did, and in fact was signed by the Dallas Cowboys as a free agent the following season. He played with the Cowboys from 1974 until 1979.

Bruce Harper not only had to overcome the plight of the small college, but also the plight of just plain being small.

"He was a great talent," recalled Baldwin, "but he was only 5-foot-7."

Harper was one of the most popular play­ers on the Kutztown campus, being a local boy, from Englewood, New Jersey, as well as having a magnetic personality, and appearing as the underdog, the little man in the land of the giants. Another reason he was so popular was his effectiveness, which often goes unnoticed in a small-sized small-college player (see Meggett, David; Towson State).

Bruce was a part of at least seven school records between 1974 and '76. including rushing yards in a season (1,132), rushing yards in a career (2,169), TDs in a season (14), and TDs in a career (23).

"We always suspected that no one would give him a chance." said Baldwin, "but knew he would make it if given a chance."

Well, Harper did indeed make it, signing with the New York Jets in 1977 as a free agent.

He became their kickoff and punt return specialist, even setting an NFL record for combined punt and kickoff return yardage in 1978 (1,658 yards). Harper also became only the fifth player in NFL history to total 2,000 yards of total offense in a season twice in his career. He also became a dan­gerous third-down threat coming out of the backfield. However, injuries eventually slowed Harper, and in 1984 a knee injury finally ended his career. Harper is now retired and living in New Jersey, and is tak­ing it easy, after suffering a massive heart attack in late March.

Perhaps the best of the three pros that Coach Baldwin had during his tenure at Kutztown was Andre Reed.

Reed was a quarterback in high school, but was moved to wide receiver. According to Coach Baldwin, there was never any doubt about what Andre Reed wanted to become.

"From his freshman year, when he met with an assistant coach, he told him he wanted to play in the National Football League." Baldwin remembered that Andre was a dedicated athlete, who did every­thing from uphill and downhill sprints (Andre also worked excessively with the track and field coach), to weightlifting (Baldwin describes him as an avid weightlifter), to even going as far as jug­gling, in order to improve his hand-eye coordination.

"Andre was quite accomplished by the time he was a senior," stated Baldwin.

In becoming an accomplished high draft pick of the Buffalo Bills—in fact, he was the only one of the three not to be signed as a free agent—Reed set as many as nine school records. He still holds the school records for yards in a game (154), yards in a career (2002), TD catches in a season (seven), and TD catches in a career (14).

Reed has reached his goal of playing in the National Football League, and in fact is the star wide receiver of the AFC champi­on Buffalo Bills, and quarterback Jim Kelly's favorite target.

But back to the original question: Why Kutztown University? Is it in the coaching?

Baldwin nixes that idea. "Coaching has had very little to do with it," he modestly said. "But what we did give the kids was an opportunity.

"There was nothing unusual about Kutztown University. There were good kids with good character and a strong work ethic. If you're good, small school or not, the scouts will find you."

Maybe there was something they didn't do?

"Well." Baldwin firmly states. "We didn't pamper our athletes. We were a small school, and the players were no more special than anyone else."

So there you have it, Kutztown University, a small school with a big (and getting bigger) NFL tradition.

—JON COOPER

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It'

The defensive scheme that's an . offensive dream; : \ that's the widely

practiced yet equally

\ criticized Prevent Defense.

How many times have you heard the TV color man say: "Uh-Oh. They're in the Prevent defense."?

SNATCHING DEFEAT

FROM THE JAWS OF VICTORY

BY LARRY BORTSTEIN

Five seconds left. Five receivers fan out down the field. The quarterback, his team losing by six

points, throws a spiral as secondary defenders, two of them sent into the game for this one play, race wildly to cover everybody.

Well, not quite everybody. The ball majestically lands in the out­

stretched hands of one receiver who lopes untouched into the end zone.

Score one for the prevent defense. Yes, another seemingly certain victory

has been prevented. Everyone has seen or attended a

"cliffhanger," or has a favorite story about one.

The NCAA applies that label to games won on the final play and since 1971 has officially kept tabs on each major college game decided that way.

Of the 90 "cliffhangers" in Division 1-A games between 1971-90, 22—nearly 25 percent—were won on a last-ditch pass play—most recently the Nov. 3, 1990, game between Southern Mississippi and Southwestern Louisiana.

In that game, Southern Miss quarterback Brett Favre connected on an 11-yard scor­ing pass to Michael Welch on the final play to tie the score 13-13. Jim Taylor won it with his extra point kick.

That's interesting enough, but consider that 59 of those cliffhangers—nearly two-thirds—were won by field goals on the last play.

How many of those field goals, asks Chris Allen, USC's associate head coach and defensive coordinator, were the result

Larry Bortstein is a sportswriter for The Orange County (Calif.) Register.

TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATE

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SNATCHING DEFEAT of teams employing the so-called prevent defense?

"That term 'prevent defense' is a mis­nomer," Allen alleged.

"If you're succeeding on defense and then change what you're doing to suit a certain game situation, you're not doing the smart thing," Allen said.

Actually, Allen, along with defensive coordinators at two other major programs, believes there is a place for the prevent.

"Sometimes you have to rush an extra man or put in a nickel man on the sec­ondary," said Allen, who has worked for Trojan Head Coach Larry Smith at both Arizona and USC, moving with him to Los Angeles in January, 1987.

"It depends on what you're trying to pre­vent—a team from getting into field goal range to win the game or a long pass to win it," Allen said.

At Florida State, defensive coordinator Mickey Andrews said, the offense and defense practice hurry-up drills several times each week.

"We line up like time is running out in a game and we ask the offense to try to score in one minute or two minutes," Andrews said.

"The defense will rush the passer with an extra man and we'll have an extra man going back deep on pass coverage," he

"We don't call it a 'prevent defense.' That sounds negative. We call it our 'victory defense.'"

—Chris Allen

went on. "That's what that kind of defense is all about—either try to stop the quarter­back from getting the pass off or, if he does get it off, keep a receiver from catching it."

At Penn State, Jerry Sandusky said, "We try to tell our people in those situations to try to keep the ball out of the air. By that I mean even if the quarterback throws, we want to knock the ball down and we'll try to do that instead of going for the intercep­tion. A lot of funny things—deflections, tipped balls, and all that—can happen when the ball is in the air and a lot of peo­ple are going after it."

USC's Allen points to the final seconds of the Trojans' 1990 game against Pac-10 rival Arizona State as an example of how his team plays the prevent defense.

USC was leading 13-6 and the Sun Devils had the ball for one last series starting from their 18. A tough job for Arizona State, but

not impossible with their fine quarterback, Paul Justin, directing the attack.

Justin immediately got his team out of a hole by completing a pass to Eric Moss to the Sun Devil 45.

"With time running out, we knew he'd have to keep throwing, but instead of mak­ing switches in personnel we kept our reg­ular people in the game," Allen recalled.

"They're the ones that have been playing well for us all day, so we just ask them to keep doing what they've been doing. Except maybe we'll go after the passer a little harder."

Justin's next pass was incomplete. Then, with 12 seconds to go and pressure coming at him from both sides, Justin was hit just as he let go a wobbly pass, which easily was broken up by Terry McDaniels.

With eight seconds left, the Trojan line again came after Justin, who this time tried to go deep. But Stephon Pace in the Trojan secondary knocked the ball away.

The Sun Devils were penalized for illegal procedure back to their 40, the origin of their final play of the afternoon.

This time Justin cut one loose for Kevin Snyder, but Matt Gee broke it up and USC held on to its seven-point victory in a key Pac-10 matchup.

"We don't call it a 'prevent defense,' ' Allen said. "That sounds negative. We call it our 'victory defense.' And that's what it turned out to be in that game."

At Penn State, the Nittany Lions' Sandusky, a veteran of 20 years under Joe Paterno, pointed out, "We haven't usually had big people in our secondary so we've always stressed good, solid coverage.

"Sure, we'll use the nickel back, a fifth man back there, when the situation war­rants. We just don't believe the situation warrants it that often. If we're in our regu­lar coverage all day and it's doing well, we just won't change it just to be changing it."

An exception to that practice, Sandusky said, might be when it's the last play of the game and victory or defeat is at stake.

"Then you'll try to rush everyone you can and cover everyone you can because there's no margin or mistake," Sandusky said.

"The whole thing is you try to avoid get­ting into that situation in the first place. But there's no way you can always prevent it, so you have to be ready for it."

Florida State's Andrews, who's been on the job in Tallahassee for eight years, said game situations are the chief factor in determining what kind of defense is employed—and who'll be on the field.

"If the other team needs a field goal to tie or win, that's a different matter than them needing a touchdown, so you play accord­ingly," Andrews said.

"In either case, you don't want them to be in position to win the football game. But if a field goal will win it, field position becomes a real important factor. Sometimes, you'll let the other team have the short gainers, but when a field goal can win the game, those short gainers can add up and get their kicker into his range."

The ideal situation, Andrews said, is to get the opposing offense into a situation where they have to try to do something they don't really want to try.

"If their passing game isn't that strong or

THE BASIC 3-5-3 PREVENT DEFENSE

© ©

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Variations on the 3-5-3 include the 4-5-2 (extra pass rusher), the Nickel (safety man replaces a linebacker) and the Dime (two safeties replace both outside 'backers).

Page 21: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

SNATCHING their quarterback is having a bad day, well, you might not get hurt if the game comes down to them having to complete a pass or two," Andrews said.

"Maybe their fullback has been running on you all day, but with the football game on the line and time running out, it's unlikely they'd be trying to run the ball. So they just about have to throw and you've got them where you want them."

"If we're in our regular coverage all day and it's doing well, we just won't change it just to be changing it."

—Jerry Sandusky

In last year's Southern Miss-Southwestern Louisiana game—the one the former won on the final play—the win­ners couldn't have cut things any closer.

Favre's final pass to Welch—a substitute who made a circus catch deep in the end zone over defenders—came on fourth and six from the 11.

"I don't know if they were in a prevent defense or not," recalled a Southern Miss spokesman.

"They didn't really have to be since they were stopping us pretty easily already. It was a great pass and a great catch that won that game for us, not our taking advantage of a different defense." •••

Two things that make the Prevent work: Smart coverage by the backs and a disruptive pass rush.

TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED

Page 22: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

Palmolive Softest Hands A Six-Part Series Saluting College Football's Greatest Receivers

SOFT-HANDED UPSETS By Bert Randolph Sugar The word "upset" is defined by Noah

Webster as: "To defeat unexpectedly." And so, the word "upset" has been appropriated by the world of sports; and nowhere has the usage been invoked more than in the world of collegiate football.

Take the 1961 Texas-TCU game, for instance. Texas was on the verge of becoming the first national champion from the Southwest Conference since 1939, a 25-point favorite to beat outmanned and outgunned TCU. But even though the Horned Frogs were outmanned and outgunned, they weren't outgutted, as quarter­back Sonny Gibbs and end Buddy lies proved.

The story line of the game was, simply stated, that TCU made the big plays and Texas didn't, including one plumb-per­fect flea-flicker of a play in the second quarter. The play saw Gibbs take the ball from center and hand it off to halfback Larry Thomas, who, in turn, tossed it back to Gibbs while end lies feinted a block at some orange-jerseyed Texas lineman and scurried off downfield. Gibbs retreated, far behind the original 50-yard line of scrimmage and managed to release the ball some­where in the general direction of lies before he was slammed to the * turf by an orange blur of jerseys. p lies, streaking downfield, engulfed the perfect spiral, shook off the last desper­ate attempt by the defender and tum­bled across the Longhorn goal line with the only score of the game safely cra­dled in his soft hands for a 6-0 TCU "upset."

College football has produced other never-to-be-forgotten "upsets." There was UCLA's unbelievable "upset" of unbeaten Ohio State in the 1976 Rose Bowl after losing to the Buckeyes 41-20 during the regu­lar season, as quarterback John Sciarra and receiver Wally Henry combined for two crucial TD's to beat the Archie Griffin-led Buckeyes 23-10.

And then there was the

1939 version of the same game when a Duke team that was undefeated, untied and unscored upon went into the Rose Bowl to face a Southern Cal team that had lost two

games during the '38 season. Duke came out on the short end of a 7-3 score when, with less

than a minute to play in the game, reserve quar­terback Doyle Nave hit reserve end Al Krueger

ith a 14-yard touchdown pass. But the greatest "upset" of all time, hands

down—or is that soft hands down?—occurred back in 1947 when little Columbia faced a mighty Army team, proud possessors of a 32-game undefeated streak which had seen them score an average of almost 40 points a

game while holding their opponents to fewer than five points a game. True to their press clippings, the Cadets

jumped off to a 14-0 lead. But with Columbia quarter­back Gene Rossides

throwing and left end Bill

Swiacki catch­ing, the Lions came to life, and by the end of the third

quarter, although behind

20-7, had Army on the run with their pass­

ing game.

Rossides and Swiacki teamed up for a 28-yard touch­

down pass, made possible by a div­ing, acrobatic catch by Swiacki, to

move Columbia to within six, 20-14. Then, with the sand in their hour­

glass beginning to dwindle, Lion quar­terback Rossides found a twisting, turning

Swiacki far downfield. Looking for the pass over his right shoul­

der, Swiacki turned his head and body at the last minute and reached out in the opposite direction for the ball, which he snared just as it began to tumble groundward.

The jubilant Lions rode the strong arm of Rossides and the soft hands of Swiacki for a total of nine catches and 148 yards to beat Army 21-20 and pull off the "Upset of the Century" by anybody's definition.

Ralmolive Softens Hands While You Do Dishes

Page 23: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

CAREER PASSING

YARDS

• Doug Flutie

NCAA Division I-A Player, Team Years T. Santos, San Diego State 1984-87. T. Detmer, Brigham Young 1988-90. K. Sweeney, Fresno State 1982-86. D. Flutie, Boston College 1981-84. B.McClure, Bowling Green 1982-85. B. Bennett, Duke 1980-83. J. McMahon, BYU 77-78; '80-81. T. Ellis, South Carolina 1986-89. E. Wilhelm, Oregon State 1985-88. J. Elway, Stanford 1979-82.

All Divisions Player, Team (Division[s]» Years N. Lomax, Portland State (II; I-AA) '77; '78-80. K. Baumgartner, Wis. Stevens Pt. (in) 1986-89. W. Totten, Mississippi Valley St. (I-AA)..1982-85. T.Santos, San Diego State (I-A) 1984-87. T. Detmer, Brigham Young (I-A) 1988-90. S. Payton, Eastern Illinois (I-AA) 1983-86. K. Sweeney, Fresno State (I-A) 1982-86. E. Harvey, N.C. Central (II) 1985-88. D. Flutie, Boston College (I-A) 1981-84. T. Ehrhaidt, LIU-C.W. Post (II); '81-82; '84-85.

R.I. (I-AA)

Source: NCAA

Att. Comp. Yards ..1,484 910....11,425 ..1,127 709....11,000 ..1,336 731....10,623 ..1,270 677 10,579 ..1,427 900....10.280 ..1,375 820 9,614 ..1,060 653 9,536 ..1,266 704 9,519 ..1,480 870 9,393 ..1,246 774 9,349

Att. ..1,606. ..1,696. ..1,555. ..1,484. ..1,127. ..1,408. ..1,336. ..1,442. ..1,270. ..1,492.

Comp. 938. 883. 907. 910. 709. 756. 731. 690. 677. 833.

Yards ..13,220 ..13,028 ...12,711 ...11,425 ...11,000 ..10,655 ..10,623 ..10,621 ..10,579 ..10,325

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Page 24: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

HOWS ARE YOU?

NICKNAMES

1Famous for baseball as well as football, Boston University's Harry Agannis

threw for 34 touchdown passes in the 1951 & '52 seasons. He later starred with the Boston Red Sox, but was stricken by illness and died in 1955. He was known as the;

3 In 1935-37, Fordham's Al Babartsky was one of the "Seven Blocks of

Granite," a defensive line that did not allow one score in 1937. His nickname had a mysterious, Eastern ring. He was known as:

4 Madison Bell coached at TCU, Texas A&M and SMU in the 1920s, '30s and

'40s, compiling a 154-87-17 lifetime record. He was known for making predic­tions of doom for his team each week, to gain a psychological advantage. His nick­name was:

5Army's Felix Blanchard won every trophy imaginable in 1945, including

the Heisman. A great blocker and tackier, as well as a runner, Blanchard was called the "greatest fullback ever" by Pappy Waldorf. Interestingly enough, he never played pro ball. His two nicknames were:

7 One of the true legends of football, Charles Justice could do it all as a

North Carolina halfback. An All-America in 1948-49 and Heisman runnerup in '49, Justice's feats on the gridiron drew nation­al attention and made him a coverboy on several magazines. He ran as strong and fast as a locomotive. His nickname is:

8 Earle Neale was a three-sport star at West Virginia Wesley an from 1912-14.

An end in football, Neale led his team to three straight wins over West Virginia. Later, as a coach, he would be responsible for many football innovations, including man-to-man defense and the fake and triple reverse. His nickname was acquired when a boyhood friend saw him eating bread with butter running down his face. He was known as:

9 A halfback on three unbeaten Notre Dame teams in 1946-48, Emil Sitko's

nickname had a lot to do with his per-carry average. He was known as:

2 A teammate of George Gipp on Knute Rockne's 1919-20 teams, Heartley

Anderson uttered the famous line at a 1921 pep rally "You do the best you can and I'll do the best we can." Also coached The Irish from 1931-33. He was known as:

6 As a tough tight end from Pittsburgh, Michael Ditka was a unanimous All-

America in 1960. He then went on to the NFL for an illustrious career, first as a player and later as coach of the Chicago Bears. The nickname nails his personality right on the head:

1 f\ As a coach at Michigan from 1901-1 Vy 25, Fielding Yost was famous for his point-a-minute teams. Yost acquired his nickname early in his career, as he yelled at his players to get moving after each play. He was known as:

ANSWERS

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dn^JJrvHtOI /(llBj\ .utuBoiAi (t? eqeg t[v (£ ^unH (I >|33JO U3PI°D (1

The Sharp Electronics Sports Trivia Quiz

®

FROM SHARP MINDS COME SHARP PRODUCTS

Page 25: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

TIPS ON SHOOTING SPORTS

What's the difference between a good sports photo and an outstanding sports photo? Most often, it's the equipment. Today's sophisticated camera technology can capture the thrill of sports action like never before, but choosing the right lens or accessory can make all the difference in the world.

For a 35mm autofocus SLR camera, there are four major types of lenses: normal, wide angle, telephoto, and zoom. A 50mm normal lens sees just about the same as your eyes see, with little difference in magnification. For general photography it's great, but for

sports action you need more versatility. A wide angle lens takes in a much

greater field of view. A 24mm, 28mm. or 35mm lens is essential if you're working in tight quarters and want to photograph the whole team. Wide angle lenses are also ideal for land­scape and scenic photography.

A telephoto lens of 200mm or 300mm has a high magnification and is great for pulling in closeups from a distance. It lets you isolate your sub­ject and provides an additional benefit —a shallow depth of field which can render a distracting background as a soft blur. With a telephoto lens, you

could fill the frame with Joe Montana as he fades back for a pass. When using telephoto lenses, it's best to steady the camera as much as possi­ble, or use a tripod. The drawback of a telephoto lens is its fixed focal length.

For the greatest overall versatility at the game, you can use zoom lenses. Today's autofocus zoom lenses give you unparalleled convenience in a compact and lightweight design. They're available in focal lengths from wide angle to short telephoto (28 -80mm), midrange (80-200mm), or long telephoto (100-300mm). A cou­ple of these in your bag will give you incredible focal length coverage. You could shoot the entire winning play with wide angle group shots, mid-range action shots, and closeup full-frame shots. All without leaving your seat!

But here is some real news in sports photography. A major manufacturer's recent advancements in photo tech­nology have created a computer-con­trolled 35mm autofocus SLR camera that uses motorized autozoom lenses. This remarkable camera/lens combi­nation eliminate the need for manual lens adjustments by automatically zooming to an ideal picture composi­tion the instant the camera is brought to your eye! The eye-start operation and autozoom functions save pre­cious seconds and allow you to cap­ture a split-second expression or play that might otherwise be missed.

If the possibilities of instant picture composition seem amazing, add to that the creative flexibility of camera-programming software cards1

Available as optional accessories, one particular card programs the camera to select the highest shutter speed possible for each shot, to freeze sports and other fast action without a blur.

With this kind of unparalleled com­puter-powered performance now offered in AF SLRs, sports action will be easier than ever to capture in all its glory. And when you think about it, this means you can now get the kind of expert results that used to be limit­ed only to professionals.

TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED

Page 26: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

H A. W A

MEET THE BOWS

KENDALL GOO

Freshman Kendall Goo is a very good offensive lineman from the island of Kauai who may see some playing time this year. Goo graduated from Kapaa High and Intermediate School where he lettered in soccer, football and track. He was named to the KIF all-star and all-state honorable mention teams. Goo hopes to enter the field of sports medicine after graduation.

JOHANN BOUIT

Redshirt sophomore Johann Bouit was a walk-on in 1990 and is hying to earn some playing time as a wide receiver this season. Bouit is a 1989 graduate of Pearl City High School where he lettered in football, wrestling and track. He was an

OIA west all-star and he was named to the all-state honorable mention team. He graduated Magna Cum Laude with a 3.70 GPA.

DARYL GREEN

Sophomore defensive back Daryl Green will be in the running for one of the starting cornerback positions this year after redshirting last season. He is a 1989 graduate of Nogales High School in California where he lettered in football, basketball and baseball. Green was named San Gabriel Valley Player of the Year and Super Prep ail-American.

NALEI COX

Redshirt freshman Nalei

H - 5

Cox worked hard on the scout team last fall and was named Defensive Scout Team Player of the Year. This year he has a good chance of seeing time on the defensive line. Cox is a 1990 graduate of St. Louis High School where he lettered in football and basketball. He was selected to the all-state second team and played on three state championship football teams.

TAASE FAUMUI

A fractured foot kept redshirt sophomore, Taase Faumui out all of last season. This year he could see some time on the defen­sive line if he stays healthy. Faumui is a 1989 graduate of Farrington High School where he earned an all-league selection and was named to the all-state team, even though he only had two years of organized football experience. Faumui also won the OIA shot put championship.

Page 27: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

U N M A W

SENIOR PROFILES

TOM HEFFERNAN Slot Back 5-8 195 Sr. Hauula, Oahu

A, l-around athletic skills have taken Tom Heffernan from the football field to the baseball diamond and back during his athletic career with the Rainbows.

An all-star and all-league selection in both baseball and football in high school, Heffernan was recruited by the Rainbow football team.

While redshirting his freshman year, Heffernan was inspired by fellow football teammate Brian Belcher, who went out and played for the Rainbow baseball team.

Belcher encouraged Heffernan to give baseball a try, but because it was his first year on the football team, Heffernan

decided that it would be better to give all his attention to the sport.

The next season, Heffernan saw his first action with the football team as a slotback. Then, less than three months later, he started his baseball career with the baseball team. It was a promising start as Heffernan went two for four, had three runs batted in and also scored in his first game.

His first season with the baseball team was a promising one, but it took up all of his time trying to juggle the two sports. Both his grades and his time with his family were affected.

Heffernan felt that he needed to make a choice be­tween the two sports and de­cided to concentrate on baseball. It was a very difficult decision, especially because he had to give up his football scholarship.

The season was a learn­ing experience. Heffernan saw only limited action, but did manage to earn 2nd Team WAC all-academic honors.

Now Heffernan is back on the football team again with peace of mind and a new focus, and he hopes that he can take his baseball experience and translate it into a big hit with the football team.

H - 6

AKILI CALHOUN Defensive Line 6-3 275 Sr. Los Angeles, CA

-^TLkil li Calhoun stands out among the Hawaii defensive linemen — in both size and strength. At 6-3, 275 pounds, he is neither the tallest nor heaviest of the Rainbow football players. But his overall size poses a very menacing figure for opposing linemen. He also bench presses a hefty 570 pounds, making him one of the strongest defensive linemen on the team. Unfortunately, inju­ries have plagued the talented senior out of Los Angeles.

Calhoun graduated from John F. Kennedy High in Granada Hills, Calif, in 1987. He won three letters in football and was selected to the Daily News all-star football team. He was

Page 28: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

o rc M A W A

SENIOR PROFILES also chosen to play in the San Diego all-star football game. After graduating from Kennedy, Calhoun chose to come to Hawaii over two collegiate football powers, Southern California and Nebraska.

He earned his first Rainbow letter in 1989 recording nine tackles and one quarter­back sack. Last year, Calhoun played in 11 of 12 games tallying 33 tackles, including two for losses. He also had four sacks.

Following the game against Brigham Young two weeks ago, Calhoun is the 10th leading tackier on the Rainbow defense with 19 tackles. He also has one quarterback sack for a five yard loss to compliment his tackles.

After he graduates from the university, Calhoun would like to play football profession­ally. He also aspires to enter the criminology field one day.

As far as his football career is concerned, Calhoun is looking forward to ending his career on a high note this year by helping his teammates shut down the potent Notre Dame offensive attack.

DELMARJOHNSON Defensive Line 5-9 245 Sr. San Francisco, CA

A, lthough his height doesn't measure up to most collegiate players, the size of Delmar Johnson's heart far surpasses all others. Last sum­mer, Johnson injured his knee after being involved in a motor­cycle accident. He was forced to sit out all of last season because of the injury. About a month ago, Johnson underwent a second arthroscopic knee opera­tion and is again on the road to recovery trying to regain his old form of 1989 which made him one of the defensive line's mainstays.

After graduating from Riordan Catholic School in San Francisco in 1987, Johnson

attended San Francisco City College for two years where he earned first team all-conference and all-American honors.

In his first season at Hawaii, Johnson recorded 44 tackles and three quarterback sacks. This year, he has played in all of the seven games prior to tonight and has recorded 11 tackles. He also has one quarter­back sack for a one yard loss.

Johnson hopes to make up for the frustrating year he has had with his play on the field. He has already shown that he although he lacks in size, his ability and perseverance are traits that will carry him to new heights for the remainder of his collegiate career and throughout the rest of his life.

Page 29: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

U N M A W A

Hawaii Alphabetical Roster

NO PLAYER 82 93 68 31 20 27 13 66 18 36 28 80 87 12 71 98 34 3

72 42 92 41 5

53 82 7

10 40 97 73 18 63 15 85 24 20 11 81 75 14 23 6

65 10 17 56 35 35 58 4

52 49 64 75 60 30 57 95 34 90 84

Agullana, Ted Albinio, Peter Amosa, Lene Anderson, Carlos Autele, Tasi* Awai, Garrett Banks, Greg Barnwell, Geoff Bennett, Mike Bento, Martin Blankeney, Robert Bouit, Johann Branch, Darrick** Branch, Fred Burke, Gemini Calhoun, Akili** Carson, Glenn Carter, Michael* Ching, Shawn*** Clark, Nate Cox, Nalei Cunningham, Phil Davis, Joe Dreisbach, Jude Duncan, Dan** Elam. Jason** Ellis, Agenhart Faavae, Junior Faumui, Taase Fonseca, Travis* Glover, Rodney Goo, Kendall Gordon, Brian* Grant, Warren Green, Daryl Gregory, Mike Grissam, Walter Grossini, Jason Hanson, Deacon Hao, John Harding, Matthew Harper, Kenny* Harrington, Jack Haynes, Winston* Heffernan, Tom** Higgins, John Hi rota, Cy Hitzeman, Kevin James, Rusty Jasper, Ivin Jay, Alika Jeremiah, Byron Johnson, Delmar* Johnson, Sean Johnson, Shavondi Jones, Peter Kaaialii, Mitch** Kahoano, Haku*** Kaiwi, Hank Kama, Reynolds Kamai, Sean

'letters earned

POS WR DL OL DB DB DB DB OL DB DB DB WR WR SB OL DL RB QB OL WR DL RB DB OL

OLB PK/P DB OLB DL OL QB OL WR WR DB SB RB ILB OL QB WR DB OL

P/WR SB OL WR OLB DL QB OL RB DL DL

OLB OLB OL DL ILB DL WR

HT 5-10 6-3 6-0 5-7 6-3 5-11 5-11 6-3 6-0 5-10 6-1 5-10 6-0 5-8 6-3 6-4 6-1 5-10 6-0 6-0 6-1 6-1 5-9 6-6 6-5 6-0 5-11 5-11 6-4 6-3 6-2 6-7 6-1 5-9 5-11 5-11 5-7 6-3 6-0 5-10 5-9 5-9 6-0 6-0 5-8 6-4 6-1 6-1 6-4 6-1 6-1 5-8 5-9 6-2 6-0 6-0 6-4 6-2 5-11 6-0 6-0

WT 183 233 276 166 205 187 152 226 188 179 193 170 201 171 264 275 207 208 270 177 230 198 161 231 208 194 190 204 258 270 206 275 190 182 177 215 163 228 246 193 155 174 297 184 192 248 187 211 244 192 270 210 241 230 210 187 276 217 199 213 171

CL Fr. Jr. So. Fr. So. Sr. Fr. Fr. Fr. Sr. Fr. Fr. Jr. Fr. Fr. Sr. Fr. So. Sr. Fr. Fr. Fr. Fr. Fr. Sr. Jr. Fr. Fr. So. So. Fr. Fr. So. Fr. So. Fr. Fr. Fr. So. Fr. Fr. Sr. So. Sr. Sr. Fr. So. Fr. Fr. So. Jr. So. Sr. Fr. Fr. So. Sr. Sr. Fr. Fr. Sr.

HOMETOWN Kaneohe, Oahu Waimanalo, Oahu Ewa Beach, Oahu Wahiawa, Oahu Boise, ID Pearl City, Oahu Honolulu Honolulu Kahuku, Oahu Hilo, Hawaii Santa Barbara, CA Pearl City, Oahu Dallas, TX Alamogordo, NM Fayetteville, NC Los Angeles, CA Oakville. Ont., Canada Long Beach, CA Honolulu Columbus, OH Kaneohe, Oahu Honolulu DeSoto, TX Palm Springs, CA Springfield, OH Snellville, GA Honolulu Oceanside, CA Honolulu San Jose, CA San Francisco, CA Kapaa, Kauai Columbus, OH Montreal, Queb. Can. West Covina, CA Portland, TN Inglewood, CA Lompoc, CA Kekaha, Kauai Honolulu San Dimas, CA Compton, CA Oceanside, CA W. Vancouver, BCCan. Hauula, Oahu Kaneohe, Oahu Waipahu, Oahu Makaha, Oahu Mesa, AZ Los Angeles, CA Aiea, Oahu Kahuku, Oahu San Francisco, CA Dallas, TX Long Beach, CA Waimanalo, Oahu Las Vegas, NV Honolulu Kaneohe, Oahu Mililani, Oahu Kailua, Oahu

NO PLAYER 94 38 22 46 88 8

19 61 44 47 76 59 58 62 54 83 11 1

60 9

70 74 48 13 16 86 41 51 79 55 39 45 53 12 89 21 62 23 25 47 52 30 9 2 1

33 99 26 91 42 96 77 37 54 67 29 22 55 78 66 50 59

Kaulia, Nuuanu*** Kealoha, Eddie** Keawekane, Amos Kilbey, Keoni* Kowalski, Beau Lewis, Danney* Lewis, Marlowe Liilii, Jeff Liilii, Mika Lyons, Harry Manera, Paul** Mansfield, Jim Mauga, Ivan McGill, Kelly Morrow, Jeff Myrick, Ollie* Nakagawa, Dean* Newman, Jeff** Nihipali, Datsun Odom, Zack Pale. Peter* Palimoo, Hiram Pang-Kee, Tony* Perez-Sandoval, Omar Pimentel, Tom Pittman, Grant Prohm, Benjamin Randall, Louis** Reed. Tanoai Ripley, Ed Salvador, Keahi* Samana, Lyno** Santa Cruz, Victor Santiago, Walter** Sarcevich, Blazo Sardo,Joe** Satele, Tama Saturnio, Jason Senter, Erik Shaw, Joe Siaosi, Ed Sims, Travis** Smiley, Marlon Stallworth. Emmitt Stant, Daryl Stevenson, Rich*** Stewart, Coby Sydner, Jeff** Tagoai, Junior Talley, Herman* Tanuvasa, Maa* Tatupu,John Toeaina, Andrew Tupuola, George Vaioleti, Doug* Veneri, John Voskeritchian. Neil Wengler, Rob Williams, Ghana Williams, Manly** Williams, Stewart* York, Rod

POS DL RB RB DB

HT 6-1 5-9 5-10 6-2

WR/DB 5-7 WR RB OL

ROV RB OL DL OL OL OL WR DB SB OL DB OL OL DB SB QB WR ROV ILB OL OL DB DL

ROV DB ILB ROV OLB DB SB ILB DL RB SB RB DB RB OL SB DL

OLB DL OL

OLB DL OL WR PK ILB DL

OLB OLB OL

5-8 5-10 6-3 6-1 5-7 6-4 6-1 6-3 6-1 6-5 6-0 5-9 5-11 6-3 5-9 6-3 5-10 5-8 5-6 6-1 5-10 6-1 5-10 6-1 5-10 5-10 6-1 6-0 5-10 6-3 6-2 5-11 5-7 5-7 6-1 6-1 5-10 5-10 5-6 5-10 5-9 6-3 5-8 6-0 6-4 6-3 5-11 6-2 6-2 6-2 6-1 5-9 5-10 6-4 6-1 5-11 5-11

WT 247 197 198 206 185 175 166 305 228 201 251 232 306 252 261 182 160 191 237 175 275 244 187 163 223 181 216 215 273 269 179 241 206 197 222 211 229 176 176 212 241 224 167 189 196 218 200 171 263 245 270 259 221 243 261 195 153 193 251 235 227 247

CL Sr. Jr. So. Jr. Fr. Sr. Fr. So. So. Jr. Sr. Jr. Jr. Fr. Jr. Jr. Sr. Sr. Fr. Fr. So. So. Sr. Sr. So. Jr. Jr. Jr. Fr. Fr. So. Sr. Fr. Jr. Fr. Jr. So. Jr. Jr. Fr. Fr. Jr. Fr. Fr. Fr. Sr. Fr. Jr. Jr. Sr. Jr. Fr. Jr. Fr. Jr. Fr. Fr. Jr. So. Sr. So. Fr.

HOMETOWN Waianae. Oahu Honolulu Wailuku, Maui Kaneohe, Oahu Wailuku, Maui Inglewood, CA North Hollywood, CA Kaneohe, Oahu Kaneohe, Oahu Ewa Beach, Oahu Sydney, Australia Pittsburgh, PA Honolulu San Jose, CA Cincinnati, OH Sarasota, FL Waipahu, Oahu Pacoima, CA Hauula, Oahu Hawthorne, CA Kaunakakai, Molokai Honolulu Kaneohe, Oahu Honolulu Honolulu Los Angeles, CA Kailua, Oahu Los Angeles, CA Hauula, Oahu Honolulu Honolulu Kailua, Oahu Vista, CA Hauula, Oahu Farmington Hills. MI Hamilton, Ont. Canada Pago Pago, A.S. Hilo, HI Honolulu Seattle, WA Honolulu Federal Way, WA Benicia, CA Denver, CO Laie, Oahu Laie, Oahu Denver, Co Columbus OH Seattle, WA Philadelphia MS Wahiawa, Oahu Honolulu Honolulu Honolulu Kahuku, Oahu Honolulu Arcadia, CA Honolulu Lakewood, CA Honolulu Honolulu Waimanalo, Oahu

H-8

Page 30: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

O 1 1-1 A W A

Hawaii Numerical Roster

NO PLAYER POS 1 Jeff Newman SB 1 Daryl Stant DB 2 Emmitt Stallworth RB 3 Michael Carter QB 4 Ivan Jasper QB 5 Joe Davis DB 6 Kenny Harper DB 7 Jason Elam PK/P 8 Danney Lewis WR 9 ZacOdom DB 9 Marlon Smiley SB

10 Winston Haynes P/WR 10 Agenhart Ellis DB 11 Walter Grissam SB 11 Dean Nakagawa DB 12 Fred Branch SB 12 Walter Santiago DB 13 Omar Perez-Sandoval SB 13 Greg Banks DB 14 JohnHao QB 15 Brian Gordon WR 16 TomPimentel QB 17 Tom Heffernan SB 18 Rodney Glover QB 18 Mike Bennett DB 19 Marlowe Lewis RB 20 Mike Gregory SB 20 TasiAutele DB 21 Joe Sardo ROV 22 Amos Keawekane RB 22 Neil Voskeritchian PK 23 Mathew Harding WR

NO PLAYER POS 23 Jason Saturnio DB 24 Daryl Green DB 25 Erik Senter SB 26 JeffSydner SB 27 Garrett Awai DB 29 John Veneri WR 30 Peter Jones OLB 30 Travis Sims RB 31 Carlos Anderson DB 33 Rich Stevenson RB 34 Glenn Carson RB 35 Cy Hirota WR 35 Kevin Hitzeman OLB 36 Martin Bento DB 37 Andrew Toeaina OLB 38 Eddie Kealoha RB 39 Keahi Salvador DB 40 Junior Faavae OLB 41 Phil Cunningham RB 41 Benjamin Prohm ROV 42 Nate Clark WR 42 Herman Talley OLB 44 Mika Liilii ROV 45 Lyno Samana DL 46 KeoniKilbey DB 47 Harry Lyons RB 47 Joe Shaw ILB 48 TonyPang-Kee DB 49 Byron Jeremiah .. -, RB 50 Stewart Williams OLB 51 Louis Randall ILB 52 AlikaJay OL

NO PLAYER POS 52 Ed Siaosi .- DL 53 Jude Dreisbach OL 53 Victor Santa Cruz ROV 54 Jeff Morrow OL 54 George Tupuola DL 55 Ed Ripley OL 55 Rob Wengler ILB 56 John Higgins OL 57 Mitch Kaaialii OL 58 Ivan Mauga OL 58 Rusty James DL 59 Rod York OL 59 Jim Mansfield DL 60 Datsun Nihipali OL 60 Shavondi Johnson OLB 61 Jeff Liilii OL 62 Kelly McGill OL 62 Tama Satele LB 63 Kendall Goo OL 64 Delmar Johnson DL 65 Jack Harrington OL 66 Geoff Barnwell OL 66 Manly Williams OLB 67 DougVaioleti OL 68 Lene Amosa OL 70 Peter Pale OL 71 Gemini Burke OL 71 Hank Kaiwi ILB 72 Shawn Ching OL 73 Travis Fonseca OL 74 Hiram Palimoo OL 75 Deacon Hanson OL

NO PLAYER POS 75 Sean Johnson DL 76 Paul Manera OL 77 John Tatupu OL 78 Ghana Williams DL 79 TanoaiReed OL 80 Johann Bouit WR 81 Jason Grossini [LB 82 Ted Agullana V/R 82 Dan Duncan OLB 83 Ollie Myrick WR 84 Sean Kamai WR 85 Warren Grant WR 86 Grant Pittman WR 87 Darrick Branch WR 88 Beau Kowalski WR/DB 89 Blazo Sarcevich ILB 90 Reynolds Kama DL 91 Junior Tagoai DL 92 NaleiCox DL 93 Peter Albinio DL 94 Nuuanu Kaulia DL 95 Haku Kahoano DL 96 Maa Tanuvasa DL 97 Taase Faumui DL 98 Akili Calhoun DL 99 Coby Stewart OLB

Utah Numerical Roster NO PLAYER POS

1 Vernon Shaver WR 2 Pierre Jones RB 3 Sean Williams WR 4 Hank Dorner WR 5 Mark Swanson DB 6 Keith McDonald QB 7 Mike Richmond QB 8 Jason Woods QB 9 Henry Lusk DB 9 Stewart Hansen QB

10 Steve Young P 11 Chris Yergensen K 12 Frank Dolce QB 14 Dave LaVetter P 15 Cedric Crawford DB 16 Andy Bown RB 17 Jason Jones K 18 Derrick Odum DB 19 Bryan Rowley WR 20 Keith Williams RB 21 Jimmie Pryor DB 22 LaVon Edwards DB 23 Charlie Brown RB

NO PLAYER POS 24 Reggie Alston DB 25 Demere Smith RB 25 Tony Tanara LB 26 JeffKirkman DB 26 Jason Cunningham WR 27 Sam Rhodes DB 28 Shane Larsen DB 29 Sean Hutson WR 31 Steve Abrams RB 32 Lloyd Rokeni RB 33 Sharrieff Shah DB 34 Brad Foster RB 35 Loren Due DB 36 Marcus Moran RB 37 Ed Miller DB 38 Devo Fineanganofo RB 39 Keoni Manliguis LB 40 Daniel Pulsipher K 41 Daren Castain LB 42 Todd Lawson DB 43 Anthony Davis LB 44 James Williams LB 45 Errol Martin DB

NO PLAYER POS 46 Kelvin Lambert LB 47 Dave Chaytors DT 48 Preston Christensen LB 49 Pita Tonga LB 50 Anthony Hall DL 51 Matt Fosdick LB 53 Rick Verbalaitis OL 55 Adam de'Malignon DL 56 Lance Scott OL 57 Willie Burton DL 58 Jeff Harkless DL 59 Jimmy Bellamy DL 60 Tom McNitt OL 61 Mike DeHoog OT 62 Jason Emerick OL 63 Russ Dailey OL 64 Vince Lobendahn OL 64 Bob Garrow DL 65 Gary Potts OL 67 Dave Anderson OL 68 Roy Ma'afala DL 69 Decil Thomas OG 70 Mark Barton OL

NO PLAYER POS 71 Brian Anderson OT 72 Derek Barton OL 73 Jesse Moore OT 75 WadeAbsher OL 76 Raphael Molle OT 76 Louie De Castro DL 77 AlDolan OL 78 Aaron Hansen OL 79 Ed Castillo OL 80 Royal Wilbon WR 81 Derek Whiddon SL 82 Kurt Haws TE 83 Luther Elliss TE 86 Scott Murry TE 87 Joe Welch WR 88 Greg Hoffman TE 89 Matt Fankhauser WR 89 MarkWalejko DE 90 Mike Lewis DL 93 Blaine Berger DT 95 Keith Embray DE

H-IO

Page 31: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

M A XV A

Utah Alphabetical Roster

PLAYER POS HT WT CL HOMETOWN

Abrams, Steve Absher, Wade Alston, Reggie Anderson, Dave Anderson, Brian Barton, Derek Barton, Mark Bellamy, Jimmy Berger, Blaine Bown, Andy Brown, Charlie Burton, Willie Castain, Daren Castillo, Ed Chaytors, Dave Christensen, Preston Crawford, Cedric Cunningham, Jason Dailey, Russ Davis, Anthony De Castro, Louie DeHoog, Mike de'Malignon, Adam Dolan, Al Dolce. Frank Dorner, Hank Due. Loren Edwards, LaVon Elliss. Luther Embray, Keith Emerick, Jason Fankhauser, Matt Fineanganofo, Devo Fosdick, Matt Foster, Brad Garrow, Bob Hall, Anthony Hansen, Stewart Hansen,Aaron Harkless.Jeff Haws, Kurt Hoffman, Greg Hutson, Sean Jones, Pierre Jones, Jason Kirkman. Jeff

RB OL DB OL OT OL OL DL DT RB RB DL LB OL DT LB DB WR OL LB DL OT DL OL QB WR DB DB TE DE OL WR RB LB RB DL DL QB OL DL TE TE WR RB K

DB

6-0 6-414 6-2 6-5 6-6% 6-8 6-3 6-3 6-5 6-0 5-8% 6-4 6-3 6-4 6-2 6-1 5-9 5-11 6-5 6-1 6-3 6-5 6-2 6-3 6-0 6-2 5-10 5-10 6-5 6-5 6-4 5-8 5-10 6-4 5-9 6-6 6-2% 6-4 6-3 5-11 6-5 6-4 6-1 5-8 6-0 6-2

206 255 212 240 275 268 280 246 261 190 190 230 195 287 251 225 198 185 271 230 267 282 253 256 199 190 175 177 258 252 280 163 238 203 201 249 260 213 265 228 240 221 185 180 170 190

Jr. Danville, CA Sr. Medford Lakes, NJ Jr. Myrtle Beach, SC Fr. Nephi, UT Sr. San Bruno, CA Fr. Riverside, CA Fr. Riverside, CA Sr. Inverness, FL So. Idaho Falls. ID So. Salt Lake City, UT So. San Diego, CA Jr. Hollywood. FL Jr. Riverside, CA Jr. Union City, CA Jr. Calgary. Alberta, Can. Jr. Salt Lake City, UT So. Dallas, TX So. Lehi, UT

Salt Lake City, UT Pasco, WA Honolulu, HI Chino, CA Laguna Hills, CA Bronx, NY Culver City, CA El Central. CA San Jose, CA Riverside, CA Mancos, CO San Diego, CA Ramona, CA Salt Lake City, UT San Mateo, CA Seal Beach, CA Idaho Falls. ID Tiburon, CA Lake View Terrace, CA Danville, CA Salt Lake City, UT

Sr. Tucson, AZ Jr. Mesa, AZ

Pocatello, ID Sacramento, CA San Diego, CA Salt Lake City, UT Syracuse, UT

Jr. Sr. Fr. Jr. Jr. So. Jr. Fr. Jr. Sr. Fr. Sr. Fr. Fr. So. Jr. So. Jr. Jr. Jr. Fr.

So. Jr. Jr. Fr. Fr.

NO 46 28 14 42 90 64 9

68 98 39 45 6

60 37 76 73 36 86 18 65 21 40 27

7 32 19 56 33

1 25 5

25 69 49 85 89 87 81 80 44 20 3 8

11 10

PLAYER Lambert, Kelvin Larsen, Shane LaVetter, Dave Lawson, Todd Lewis, Mike Lobendahn, Vince Lusk, Henry Ma'afala, Roy Mahe, John Manliguis, Keoni Martin, Errol McDonald. Keith McNitt, Tom Miller, Ed Molle, Raphael Moore, Jesse Moran. Marcus Murry, Scott Odum, Derrick Potts, Gary Pryor, Jimmie Pulsipher, Daniel Rhodes, Sam Richmond, Mike Rokeni, Lloyd Rowley, Bryan Scott, Lance Shah, Sharrieff Shaver, Vernon Smith. Demere Swanson, Mark Tanara, Tony Thomas, Cecil Tonga, Pita Verbalaitis, Rick Walejko, Mark Welch, Joe Whiddon, Derek Wilbon, Royal Williams, James Williams, Keith Williams, Sean Woods, Jason Yergensen, Chris Young, Steve

POS LB DB P

DB DL OL DB DL LB LB DB QB OL DB OT OT RB TE DB OL DB K

DB QB RB WR OL DB WR RB DB LB OG LB OL DE WR SL WR LB RB WR QB K P

HT

6-2% 6-0 5-11 5-11 6-6 6-5 6-1 6-3 6-0 5-10 6-2 6-2 6-3 6-3 6-5 6-7 5-10 6-4 5-11 6-4 6-0 6-1 6-11% 6-0 5-9 5-10 6-3% 5-11 5-11% 5-11 5-10 6-3 6-4 5-10 6-8 6-4 5-10 6-4 5-10 6-0 5-8 5-9 6-5 6-1 6-3

WT

245 202 168 171 264 260 216 250 207 214 214 200 264 219 295 248 179 218 170 272 182 166 195 201 212 175 250 191 177 235 180 225 226 218 265 242 178 221 175 184 180 195 235 163 187

CL HOMETOWN

Jr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Jr. Jr. Fr. Fr. Jr. Jr. Jr. Fr. Jr. So. So. Sr. Jr. Jr. Jr. Jr. Fr. Fr. Jr. Sr. Sr. Jr. Fr. So. Fr. Sr. So. Fr. So. Sr. So. Jr. Sr. So. Jr. Fr. So. Jr. Jr. So. Jr.

Rosedale, MS Salt Lake City, UT Tucson, AZ Ft. Worth, TX Orem, UT Carson, CA Seaside, CA Honolulu, HI Millbrae, CA Stanton, CA Oakville, Ontario, Can. Yorba Linda, CA Spokane, WA Federal Way, WA Irvine, CA Chicago Park, CA Bethany, CT Salt Lake City, UT Irvine, CA Banks, OR San Mateo, CA Carlsbad. CA Greenville, MS Reedley, CA Carson, CA Orem, UT Salt Lake City, UT Los Angeles, CA San Diego, CA San Francisco, CA Fremont, CA Las Vegas. NV Hammond, LA Salt Lake City, UT Phoenix, AZ Placentia, CA San Diego, CA Missoula, MT Santa Ana, CA Las Vegas, NV San Jose, CA Lakeview Terrace, CA Orange, TX Lancaster, CA Rexburg, ID

H-13

Page 32: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

SPOTTING THE UTES

Steve Abrams

Charlie Brown

Frank Dolce

Kelvin Lambert

**? V*

Reggie Alston

<9MK>

Brian Anderson

Da^e Chaytors Cedric Crawford

m *

Keith Em bray Lavon Edwards

Jimmy Bellamy

Anthony Davis Mike DeHoog

M 4 " L% Anthony Hall Greg Hoffman

" Hi&tfk Mike Lewis Scott Murry Bryan Rowley

• • * > f

Sharrieff Shah

Cjj

Mark Swanson Keith Williams tf^l

Sean Williams Chris Yergensen Steve Young

Page 33: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

n a H A XV A

UNIVERSITY OF UTAH HEAD COACH RON MCBRIDE

R o n McBride is living proof of

the "you play the way you practice" adage. McBride spent 25 years practic­ing for last year's head coaching debut. His practice consisted of assisting the likes of Utah, Arizona and Wisconsin, to name just a few — and it concen­trated on coaching inspired, physical football.

The drills paid off. Under McBride's leadership the 1990 Utes played with abandon. Defense, crisp tackles and hard hits — long forgotten in Utah football — returned with McBride, who served two separate stints as a Utah assistant coach in the late 70s and mid-'80s. His 1990 club opened the season with the first U. shutout in 10 years (19-0 at Utah State). A week later in Minneapolis, the McBride-coached Utes upset Minne­sota, 35-29, aided by a 91-yard return of a blocked field goal as time expired.

His rookie campaign ended with a 4-7 record, a revived defense and high hopes for the future. But then, McBride, who landed his current post after three years as assistant head coach and offensive line coach at Arizona, always saw Utah' in his future.

On the field McBride's first priority went to Utah's downtrodden defense. His work paid off, as the Utes rose 25 places from their 1989 last place national standing on defense (106th in NCAA Division I). One of McBride's new recruits, Anthony Davis, became the first Ute linebacker in six years to make the all-WAC first team.

Known as a players coach, McBride coined the acronym MAFU while at Arizona to explain his philoso­phy - Mental toughness, Aggressive­ness, Fanatical effort and Unity.

Dr. Chris Hill Director of Athletics

r> r. Chris P. Hill has established himself as a highly-respected administrator in his four years as director of athletics at Utah. Hill is a member of the College Football Association (CFA) Athletic Direc­tors' Committee and is also on the Executive Com­mittee of Division I-A Athletic Directors.

Under Hill's direction, Ute athletics have become a national force. The women's gym­nastics team won the 1990 NCAA Championship and the men's basketball team reached the 1991 "Sweet Sixteen." And Hill's insistence on academic performance has improved Utah's athlete-graduation rate dramatically. He was instrumental in the completion of the George S. Eccles Tennis Facility and the Dee Smith Football Facility — two of the finest of their kind in the entire nation.

The former director of development at the U. instigated tremendous growth in his two years as an athletic department fund-raiser. Hill's appointment as development director in 1985 marked a return to the University of Utah for the New Jersey native. He first came on board as a gradu­ate assistant basketball coach for Bill Foster (1973-4), and later served as assistant Ute basketball coach under Jerry Pimm (1979-81).

Between his two stints in

H - 1 5

the Utah athletic department, Hill was executive director of United Cerebral Palsy of Utah (1981-85). Under his leadership, the service agency attracted $750,000 in federal, state and private funding to de­

velop a critically needed housing project for the severely handi­capped. IN 1984, Hill received an

( Outstanding Service Award from the Utah Recreation Therapy Associa­tion. He was awarded a Milton Bennion Fellow­ship in 1981. Hill continues to remain active on

issues concerning people with handicaps.

As an undergraduate, Hill lettered three years and was co-captain of the 1971-72 Rutgers basketball team. In 1972, he gradu­ated from Rutgers with a bachelor's degree in mathematics. A master's of education degree (1974) and a Ph.D. in educational administration (1982) — both from Utah — fol­lowed. He taught in the University's special education department from 1983-85. Hill coached boy's basketball at Granger High (Utah) from 1975-79, winning class 4A Coach of the Year honors his first year.

Hill is married to the former Kathy Cronin, who is a clinical instructor in the U of U special education department. They have two children, Alyson (13) and Christopher (9).

Page 34: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

U N H A XV A

SPORTS REVIEW M E N ' S B A S K E T B A L L

by Tom Yoshida

THE OUTLOOK

When Riley Wallace went on the recruiting trail during the off-season, he hunted for tall men. What he got was a group of recruits that makes up one of the tallest teams in UH basketball history.

Wallace, who begins his firth season with the Rainbows, recruited seven junior college players, three of whom are 6-8 or bigger. Along with the added size, Wallace said athletic ability was why he recruited such a big class.

"We tried to recruit guys who can play more than one position," Wallace said. "It helps when one guy gets into foul trouble and another one can help at that position."

The breakdown of the squad by positions:

POINT GUARD

Gone is Hawaii's all-time assist leader Troy Bowe who was a second team all-conference selec­tion last year. Wallace feels that ifll come down to one of three candi­dates: Kurt Taylor or Jarinn Ak ana

Taylor, a junior, transferred from Miami Dade JC where former Rainbows Terry Houston, Cliff Beaubrun and Reggie Cross played. He averaged 9.4 points and 2.0 rebounds per game last year.

Akana served on a two-year church mission in Peru and has not played basketball since 1988. As a freshman at BYU-Hawaii, Akana averaged 11.5 points and 5.9 rebounds.

"With those three guys, we'll get what we'll need to replace Troy (Bowe)," Wallace said. "The

talent is there so the position is wide open."

SHOOTING GUARD

Phil Lott returns for his senior season and his second year as the starting off guard. Lott was the Rainbows second leading scorer averaging 14.5 points. He will be pushed by junior college transfer Bert Woodard from Neosho County CC and returnee Andre Stovall.

"Woodard is a really good defensive player. He's a good prospect," Wallace said.

"I'm hoping Stovall will contribute like how (Mike) Gilless and (Cliff) Beaubrun did a few years ago where he'll just relax and play the game like he's expected to. He shoots the basketball, he's a hard worker, and well liked within the program."

SMALL FORWARD

With the loss of Ray Reed, Wallace will look upon highly-talented Fabio Ribeiro to provide the scoring punch. Ribeiro, a 6-9 junior who played last year at Chaffey College, led the team in scoring averaging 18.5 points and grabbed six rebounds per game.

Wallace said Ribeiro has the skills to be an impact player.

"Ribeiro has great range and has worked on his defense over the summer. He definitely can be one of best players to come out of our program."

Sir McBryde, a 6-4 transfer from Hagerstown Junior College, will serve as Ribeiro's backup.

POWER FORWARD

Junior Tim Shepherd

H - 1 6 —

returns as the starting power forward for the Rainbows. At 6-5, Shepherd defended WAC giants Luc Longley (New Mexico) and Shawn Bradley (BYU) last season while averaging 7.5 rebounds to lead the team. He ranked sixth in the WAC in rebounding behind five centers and stood as the shortest guy among the WAC's top 10 rebounders.

"Shepherd had some great nights for us. He just needs to be more consistent every night for us. He has the potential to be an All-WAC player for us."

Junior college transfer Terrence Phillip, who averaged 7.7 points at Mattatuck CC in Water-bury, Conn, and returnee Courtney Rosegreen will backup Shepherd.

CENTER

The Rainbows' Achilles heel was at center but with a year experience and a 6-11 recruit, this position could be a strong point.

Chris Walz returns as the leading candidate at center. Walz, who played baseball for two years before switching to basketball last fall, averaged 9.1 points and 3.9 rebounds. During the summer, he has worked on the weights and has gained nearly 10 pounds entering the fall.

Walz will be supported by 6-11 Gerry Holmes. Holmes, a transfer from Independence JC in Kansas, averaged 7.6 points and 7.9 rebounds last year. He was rated one of the top 15 junior college big men according to a major scouting service. Wallace believes Holmes can be a solid addition to the program.

(Continued on page H-18)

Page 35: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

BY NICK PETERS There is a popular misconception,

enhanced by a television commercial, that Western Pennsylvania is the cradle for great quarterbacks, producing the likes of Joe Namath (Beaver Falls), Joe Montana (Monongahela). Dan Marino (Pittsburgh) and Jim Kelly (East Brady).

Nick Peters covers baseball and college sports for the Sacramento Bee after spe­cializing on Cal football and basketball during his days as sports editor of the defunct Berkeley Daily Gazette and later with the Oakland Tribune. He has authored " 100 years of Cal Football" and "Giants Almanac."

That's an imposing lot, to be sure, yet the genesis of the passing game is better traced to Northern California, where outstanding quarterbacks have been cultivated over the last 50 years along with the agricultural riches of the Golden State.

It's pure coincidence that Montana became part of the Bay Area quarterback heritage when he joined the 49ers, but it's absolutely no accident that a region abun­dant with wine, redwoods, fruits and vegeta­bles is also an incubator for premier passers and coaches expert in the aerial game.

Northern California's dominance in pass­ing has waned in recent years because the entire nation is throwing the football—wit-

Not since 1849 has so much treasure been discovered in Northern California, thanks to a trove of great passing quarterbacks.

During the 1970s, the University of California turned out super QBs Steve Bartkowski (left) and Vince Ferragamo, who played as a freshman and then transferred to Nebraska.

TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED

Page 36: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

THEY SAID IT COULDNT BE DONE Great Comebacks and Other "Against All Odds" College

Football Stories — presented by Rogaine.

Miraculous Finishes

T he Leland Stanford Junior University Marching Band has

always marched to another drum-mer-another trombone player, anoth­er tuba player, another bugler

terback, the redoubtable John Elway, engineered one of his patented last-second drives

and others too numerous to mention. And when they marched they marched in any direction they chose, often in the wrong direction. And there was at least one time when they marched at the wrong time. That time came in the 86th annual game between Stanford and its archrival, the University of California at Berkeley, back in 1982. Called the "Big

Cal's Kevin Moen, who scored the winning TD

Game," the Stanford-Cal game was played not only for the symbolic trophy given the winner, "The Axe," but also for bragging rights to the entire Bay Area.

On this day those bragging rights belonged to Cal as the underdog Golden Bears took a 19-17 lead into the closing minu te s for an a p p a r e n t upset. But Stanford's quar-

and positioned his team for the go-ahead — and appar­ently game winning — field goal. As the ball shot through the uprights, the Stanford fans shot out of their seats and the Stanford Band got ready to tottle their way onto the field to celebrate the hard-earned, come-from-behind vic­tory. But six ticks remained on the clock, and that was enough for the Cal Bears to pull out one of those "They-said-it-couldn't-be-done" fin­ishes, with the help of the Stanford University Marching Band and an old rugby play concocted by their coach, Joe Kapp.

The ensuing short-hop kickoff was fielded by Cal back Kevin Moen, who picked it up and tossed it backwards , in a rugby-like lateral, to a team­mate, who, in turn, did like­wise, all the while advancing the ball downfield. At least five Cal players handled the ball like a hot potato. Then the first man to touch the ball, Moen, caught the last lateral and crashed into the end zone — and into an onrushing trombone player still adjust­ing his music and hurrying to make sure he didn't miss out on Stanford band's victory cel­ebration — to score the w i n n i n g

Doug Flutie celebrates his game-winning throw.

sawed back and forth all after­noon. But there was one more

touchdown in what will for­ever be known as 'The Play." And as one of football 's strangest moments.

I t was unbelievable. It was impossible. The "it" was

Boston College's Doug Flutie throwing a "Hail Mary" pass over the heads of the assem­bled Univers i ty of Miami defenders on that magic 1984 afternoon to beat the top-ranked Hurricanes.

Miami had just taken the lead — and seemingly won the game — in the closing seconds as quarterback Bernie Kosar engineered his t eam into B.C.'s end zone for a 45-41

lead in a game that had see-Rogaine

SOLUTION * - * m i n o x i d i l 2%

see to be seen (sawed?), and that belonged to Flutie, who, with scant seconds left on the Orange Bowl clock, unhinged his arm and threw one last-gasp pass somewhere in the direction of his favorite receiv­er, Gerard Phelan, standing in the end zone—but blanket­ed by a suffocating horde of Miami defenders. As the final seconds ticked off, the ball took flight and, in a one of those "they-said-it-couldn't-be-done" moments that con­tinually abound in college football, threaded its way through, over and around the grasping hands of the Miami defenders into Phelan's out­stretched arms for a mirac­ulous 47-45 Boston College victory.

Page 37: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

Rogaine I S "minoxid i l

The only product proven to grow hair.

What Is R06AINE7

ROGAINE Topical Solution, discovered and made by The Upjohn Company, is a standardized topical (for use only on the skin) prescription medication proved elective tor the long-term treatment of male pattern baldness ot the crown.

ROGAINE is the only topical solution ot minoxidil Minoxidil in tablet torm has been used since 1980 to lower blood pressure The use ot minoxidil tablets is limited to treatment ot patients with severe high blood pressure. When a high enough dosage in tablet torm is used to lower blood pressure, certain effects that merit your attention may occur These effects appear to be dose related

Persons who use ROGAINE Topical Solution have a low level ot absorption ot minoxidil, much lowBr than (hat ot persons being treated with minoxidil tablets tor high blood pressure Therefore, the likelihood that a person using ROGAINE Topical Solution will develop the effects associated, with minoxidil tablets is very small In tact, none ot these effects has been directly attributed to ROGAINE in clinical studies Now toon can I eipacl m a l t s from aslna HMJUNE?

Studies have shown that the response to treatment with ROGAINE may vary widely. Some men receiving ROGAINE may see faster results than others, others may respond with a slower rate ot hair growth You

should not expect visible growth in less than tour months If I rasaaad to ROBAIKE, what will the hair look iiha?

It you have very little hair and respond to treatment, your first hair growth may be soft, downy, colorless hair that is barely visible After lurther treatment the new hair should be the same color and thickness as the other hair on your scalp. If you start with substantial hair, the new hair should be of the same color and thickness as the rest of your hair.

Bin d ta asa ROGAINE is a treatment, not a cure If you respond to treatment, you will need to continue using ROGAINE to maintain or

increase hair growth If you" do not begin to show a response to treatment with ROGAINE after a reasonable period of time (at

least tour months or more), your doctor may advise you to discontinue using ROGAINE

What haaaaai It 1 staa islag ROQAME7 Will I haaa tha aaar hair?

If you stop using ROGAINE, you will probably shed the new hair within a few months after stopping treatment.

What Is tha dotage of ROMINE? You should apply a 1 mL dose ot ROGAINE two times a day, once in the morning and once at night, before bedtime. Each

bottle should last about 30 days (one month). The applicators in each package of ROGAINE are designed to apply the correct amount ot ROGAINE with each application. Please refer to the Instructions for Use What If I m in a dote or forgai ta asa ROGAINE?

If you miss one or two daily applications of ROGAINE, you should restart your twice-daily application and return to your usual schedule. You should not attempt to make up tor missed applications. Can I asa ROGAINE mora thaa twice a day? Will It work tastarT

No Studies by The Upjohn Company have been carefully conducted to determine the correct amount ot ROGAINE to use to obtain the most satisfactory results. More frequent applications or use of larger doses (more than one mL twice a day) have not been shown to speed up the process of hair growth and may increase the possibility of side effects. What are th i mo»t common tide affacts raportad la cl inical stasias with ROGAINE?

Studies ot patients using ROGAINE have shown that the most common adverse effects directly attributable to ROGAINE Topical Solution were itching and other skin irritations of the treated area of the scalp. About 5% of patients had these complaints.

Other side effects, including lightheadedness, dizziness, and headaches were reported by patients using ROGAINE or placebo (a similar solution without the active medication). What ara u n a sf tha slda affacts paopia have raportad?

The trequency of side effects listed below was similar, except for dermatologic reactions, in the ROGAINE and placebo groups Respiratory (bronchitis, upper respiratory infection, sinusitis), Dermatologic (irritant or allergic contact dermatitis, eczema, hypertrichosis, local erythema, pruritus, dry skin/scalp flaking, exacerbation of hair loss, alopecia), Gastrointestinal (diarrhea, nausea, vomiting) Neurology (headache dizziness, faintness, lightheadedness), Muscu/osfre/eM/(fractures, back pain, tendinitis); Cardiovascular (edema, chest pain, blood pressure increases/decreases, palpitation, pulse rate increases/ decreases). Allergy (nonspecific allergic reactions, hives, allergic rhinitis, facial swelling and sensitivity), Special Senses (conjunctivitis, ear infections, vertigo, visual disturbances, including decreased visual acuity), Metabolic-Nutritional (edema, weight gain), Urinary Tract (urinary tract infections, renal calculi, urethritis), Genital Tract (prostatitis, epididymitis, sexual dysfunction), Psychiatric (anxiety, depression, fatigue), Hematology (lymphadenopathy, thrombocytopenia), Endocrine.

Individuals who are hypersensitive to minoxidil, propylene glycol, or ethanol must not use ROGAINE. ROGAINE Topical Solution contains alcohol, which could cause burning or irritation of the eyes, mucous membranes, or

sensitive skin areas If ROGAINE accidentally gets into these areas, bathe the area with large amounts of cool tap water Contact your doctor if irritation persists.

What ara tha possible slda affacts that caald affact tha haart aad circulation arhaa aalai ROGAINE? Although serious side effects have not been attributed to ROGAINE in clinical studies, there is a possibility that they could

occur because the active ingredient in ROGAINE Topical Solution is the same as in minoxidil tablets Minoxidil tablets ate used to treat high blood pressure Minoxidil tablets lower blood pressure by relaxing the arteries, an

effect called vasodilation. Vasodilation leads to retention of fluid and increased heart rate The following effects have occurred in some patients taking minoxidil tablets for high blood pressure.

Increased heart rate—some patients have reported that their resting heart rate increased by more than 20 beats per minute; Rapid weight gain of more than 5 pounds or swelling (edema) ot the face, hands, ankles, or stomach area, Difficulty in breathing, especially when lying down, a result of an increase in body fluids or fluid around the heart, Worsening ot, or new onset ol, angina pectoris

When ROGAINE Topical Solution is used on normal skin, very little minoxidil is absorbed and the possible effects attributed to minoxidil tablets are not expected with the use of ROGAINE. If, however, you experience any of the possible side effects listed, discontinue use ol ROGAINE and consult your doctor Presumably, such effects would be most likely if greater absorption occurred, e g because ROGAINE was used on damaged or inflamed skin or In greater than recommended amounts.

In animal studies, minoxidil, in doses higher than would be obtained from topical use in people, has caused Important heart structure damage. This kind of damage has not been seen in humans given minoxidil tablets lor high blood pressure at etfective doses

What factors nay lacraasa tha rlsh at sarlaas slda affacts arlth ROMINE 7 Individuals with known or suspected underlying coronary artery disease or the presence of or predisposition to heart failure

would be at parlicular risk if systemic effects (that is, increased heart rate or fluid retention) ot minoxidil were to occur Physicians, and patients with these kinds ot underlying diseases, should be conscious ot the potential risk ot treatment if they choose to use ROGAINE.

ROGAINE should be applied only to the scalp and should not be used on other parts of the body, because absorption ot minoxidil may be increased and the risk of side effects may become greater. You should not use ROGAINE if your scalp becomes irritated or is sunburned, and you should not use It along with other topical treatment medication on your scalp. Can man arlth high blood pratturo uta R06AINE7

Individuals with hypertension, including those under treatment with antihypertensive agents, can use ROGAINE but should be monitored closely by their doctor. Patients taking guanethidine for high blood pressure should not use ROGAINE. Should any precaution* ho followed?

Individuals using ROGAINE should be monitored by their physician one month after starting ROGAINE and at least every six months afterward Discontinue ROGAINE if systemic effects occur.

Do not use it in conjunction with other topical agents such as corticosteroids, retinoids and petrolatum or agents that enhance percutaneous absorption. ROGAINE is for topical use only. Each mL contains 20 mg minoxidil and accidental ingestion could cause adverse systemic effects

No carcinogenicity was found with topical application. ROGAINE should not be used by pregnant women or by nursing mothers The effects on labor and delivery are not known. Pediatric use: Satety and effectiveness has not been established under age 18.

Caution: Federal law prohibits dispensing without a prescription. You must see a doctor to receive a prescription.

Upjohn ) 1991 The Upjohn Company

The Upjohn Company

THE BAY JWR-EA ness the explosion at Miami, Texas and Houston—but there was a time not too long ago when many of the nation's finest passers claimed a Bay Area background.

Coaches schooled in this tradition soon began spreading the wealth. Mike White went to Illinois, where he was to influence quarterbacks Dave Wilson, Tony Eason, Jack Trudeau and Jeff George. Darryl Rogers shifted from the West Coast to Michigan State. Dennis Green brought the passing game to Northwestern.

The Bay Area had its heyday during the aerial explosion of the '70s. John Ralston, who attended Cal, coached Stanford to back-to-back Rose Bowl triumphs with quarterbacks Jim Plunkett and Don Bunce and White as his top offensive assistant.

Of the nine NCAA passing champions from 1973 through 1981, eight had Northern California roots, from Jesse Freitas of San Diego State to Jim McMahon of Brigham Young. During that same era, White developed Steve Bartkowski, Joe Roth and Rich Campbell at the University of California, while Bill Walsh was doing likewise with Guy Benjamin, Steve Dils and Turk Schonert at Stanford.

If you're still not convinced, consider these facts: • Stanford produced six NCAA passing champions, from Bobby

Garrett in 1953 to Schonert in 1979. Seven different Cardinal quar­terbacks have attained All-American distinction from Frankie Albert in 1940 to John El way in 1982.

• Cal is the only college in the nation to produce three Super Bowl quarterbacks: Joe Kapp (Vikings), Craig Morton (Cowboys and Broncos) and Vince Ferragamo (Rams). Marv Levy, who recruited Morton as the Golden Bears' coach in 1961 and had Walsh and White as assistants, made it as coach of the Bills this year.

• Walsh, who reached the pinnacle of coaching success with three Super Bowl victories, attended San Jose State; worked with Morton as a Cal assistant; developed Ken Anderson and Dan Fouts as an NFL aide; coached Benjamin and Dils to back-to-back passing titles at Stanford; turned Steve DeBerg into the NFL's most prolific passer with the 49ers in 1979; and guided Montana to fame and fortune in the '80s.

• White, now a Raiders' coach, attended the same high school (Acalanes of Lafayette) that spawned Norm Van Brocklin; played with Kapp at Cal; worked with Morton and Plunkett as an assistant; and continued grooming outstanding quarterback talent as the head coach at Cal and Illinois.

• The fertile Santa Clara Valley produces blue-chip quarterbacks along with computer chips. It is the home of San Jose State, which turned Walsh and Dick Vermeil into master coaches. Dan Pastorini, Bob Berry. Morton, Bartkowski, Plunkett, McMahon and Campbell are among quarterbacks reared in the area.

• The Sacramento-Stockton area also has produced its share of top-notch quarterbacks, beginning with Pacific's Eddie LeBaron down to UOP's Troy Kopp, who averaged 364 yards of total offense as a sophomore in 1990 with coach Walt Harris' run and shoot.

The Northern California passing tradition began more than 50 years ago when Clark Shaughnessy revived a Stanford squad that had gone 1-7-1 in 1939. He converted Albert from a single-wing tailback to a T-quarterback, and the rest, as they say, is history.

Albert used the new offense to guide Stanford to a 10-0 record in 1940, including a Rose Bowl victory over Nebraska.

The other diminutive quarterbacks continued the Bay Area trend in the mid-'40s. In 1946, the 16-year-old LeBaron became the youngest college gridder in the nation for Pacific in nearby Stockton. LeBaron, a three-time Little All-American, quarter-backed the 1950 College All-Stars to a 17-7 upset of the Philadelphia Eagles.

"The pros weren't that much of an influence in those days," explained former USC coach John Robinson, who grew up with boyhood chum John Madden in Daly City, just south of San Francisco. "I really think it was the other way around, because the 49ers didn't start until 1946.

The first great pro-style passer from the Bay Area was Van Brocklin. The Dutch-man was a fourth-string tailback at Oregon

USJ-4536.00 February 1991

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THE BAY Afft-EA until coach Jimmy Aiken adopted the T. The Ducks went 9-1 in 1948, and Van Brocklin went on to a great pro career. Chuck Taylor continued Stanford's passing excellence when he

became head coach in 1951. Taylor, a former All-American line­man under Shaughnessy, directed Stanford to the Rose Bowl his rookie year behind quarterback Gary Kerkorian.

His successor was Bobby Garrett, the NCAA passing champion and an All-American in 1953, a season in which he set a confer­ence record with 17 TD passes and threw for 324 yards against mighty USC. Then came Brodie, an Oaklander who was the NCAA's No. 1 passer as an All-American in 1956, completing a conference-record 139 passes that season.

"I credit Stanford's image of the '50s for all the great quarterbacks from Northern California," Robinson said.

"The whole area has a tradition of putting the ball in the air," observed Paul Wiggin, an All-American lineman at Stanford in the '50s and later the coach of his alma mater. The Bay Area's prolific passing continued in the '60s. Morton

and Berry, both prep stars in the Santa Clara Valley, shared All-American honors as college seniors in 1964, the latter at Oregon.

John Ralston, a Cal grad, became Stanford's coach and intended to run the ball to success, as he did at Utah State. Plunkett con­vinced him otherwise, launching a three-year career which resulted in 52 touchdowns, 7,809 yards and a senior year crowned with a Heisman Trophy and a Rose Bowl upset of Ohio State.

"I believed we could win by running off tackle when I got to Stanford," Ralston conceded. "But I was bumping my head against the wall. Players at USC and other schools were physically superior, so we had to do something else. Plunkett was a pure pass­er, and we took off with him."

Ralston had competent help in making the transition to the passing game. When assistants White and Roger Theder departed Stanford and switched to Cal in 1972, the Golden Bears immediately gained passing prominence with the likes of Bartkowski, Ferragamo, Roth and Campbell. Bartkowski was the NCAA passing champion and an All-American in 1974.

The legacy was enhanced at Stanford when Walsh began his head coaching career in 1977 and developed Benjamin into the NCAA passing champion. He proved it was no fluke when Dils earned similar honors in 1978. When Walsh moved to the 49ers in 1979, Rod Dowhower replaced him at Stanford and Schonert made it three national passing titles in a row.

Elway assumed the quarterback duties in 1980, never winning a passing crown while generally being acknowledged as the greatest quarterback in Stanford history.

Campbell got into the act by setting NCAA records with 21 con­secutive completions, a .707 season percentage and a .644 career percentage for Cal.

By 1982, MSU's Rogers and Illinois' White already had chal­lenged the old order of the Big 10, which no longer was a run-ori­ented conference. White used his Northern California roots to attract Eason from Walnut Grove, near Sacramento, and Trudeau from Livermore. "The Big 10 started to change its thinking and became more com­

petitive about that time," White said. "The rest of us may not have been on a par with Michigan and Ohio State, but we could give them a game."

Four Northern Californians were especially proficient passing the ball during the mid-'80s: Robbie Bosco of Roseville, near Sacramento, who took over for McMahon at BYU; Santos, for the valley town of Selma, who thrived under Scovil at San Diego State; Mike Perez of San Jose State; and Kevin Sweeney, who played for Ws father, Jim, at Fresno State. The most recent rage is UOP's Kopp, who burst upon the national

scene last fall with outrageous performances in three consecutive October games for Harris' run and shoot.

With Kopp back this season, Northern California's passing tradi­tion remains alive and well. •••

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Page 39: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

DEPLACER-VOUS JERRY LEWIS!

(MOVE OVER, JERRY LEWIS!)

American football has become France's newest nutty import.

sSS*..

Tom Kellev (left) and Jered Wagner, both recent graduates of Santa Clara University, are the toasts of Paris as player-coaches of the Paris Rangers.

Photos by Gary Matoso

BY GARY MATOSO

Until recently, if you happened to be in Paris, strolling down the Champs Elysees and you overheard two Frenchmen having a heated discussion about yesterday's foot­ball match, you could be certain they were talking about a game where a bunch of guys in shorts run up and down a field, kicking a little black and white ball around. Then, a man named Laurent Plegelatte came along and changed the course of French football history.

In 1980, Plegelatte, a high school gym teacher in Paris, was vacationing in Canada when he was introduced to a new sport, "American style" football. He liked the game so much that he brought 24 sets of helmets and pads back with him to France.

By 1982, Plegelatte had organized a six team league and the Federation Francais de

Parisian students, lawyers, stockbrokers and even art gallery owners were lining up to put on the pads and start banging heads together on weekends... Football Americain (FFFA) was born. Today there are more than 60 teams with three different levels of competition. In addition, there is a new 18-and-under junior league, a French national team, and flag-football is being introduced into many high school sports programs.

"Back in '82, the league was much differ­ent than today," recalled Didier Zouari, the captain of a team from Paris, Les Rangers, and one of the early French players to step on a gridiron. "Guys were playing in homemade equipment and getting a field properly marked with yard lines was next to impossible."

At that time there weren't man) Americans playing, just a handful of U.S. Marines who happened to be stationed in Paris. The popularity of the league contin-

Gary Matoso is an American photogra­pher in Paris.

TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED

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FRENCH FOOTBALL

ued to grow and along with it, so did the level of competition. Teams began actively recruiting Americans and Canadians living in France. With more foreign players join­ing the league, new rules were quickly instated limiting teams to no more than a combination of two players from either the United States, Canada, Mexico or Japan. (Mexico or Japan?) The only other major rule is that a player from one of these four countries cannot play at quarterback.

Parisian students, lawyers, stockbrokers and even art gallery owners were lining up to put on the pads and start banging their heads together on weekends, a pretty amazing trend in a country where a bicycle race is the sporting event of the year.

Teams started attracting local sponsor­ship, usually receiving around $3,000, which they used to cover expenses like new uniforms or for renting a bus for road games. Some teams raised as much as $10,000 and could afford to hire a coach or a foreign player for their eight-game sea­son, but nothing compared to the deal put

Wagner tries to regroup his team at halftime

After the eight-hour ride, the Rangers run through

plays in a restaurant parking lot.

TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATE'

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FRENCH FOOTBALL

Many of the French teams have cheerleaders, usually the girlfriends of players.

together by a team from southern France last year, Les Argonautes. They amassed over $200,000 in sponsorship by going after large corporations, such as the French airline UTA. With the money, they hired three Canadian coaches, bought heavy workout equipment like blocking sleds and had enough left over to get an ex-pro Canadian to play for them.

The Argonautes rolled over opponents on their way to an undefeated season and brought home the coveted Casque D'Or (The Golden Helmet Award) which is kind of like the French version of the Vince Lombardi trophy. The Argonautes success story makes it evident that French football is once again entering a new stage, as fan interest grows and more money becomes available, it seems likely that there will be some sort of semi-pro offshoot of the FFFA in the near future.

For the majority of teams though, they're just a bunch of weekend warriors having fun. For some Americans, the league has given them a great opportunity to really experience a foreign country. Tom Kelley and Jered Wagner, both recent graduates of Santa Clara University, learned about the FFFA through a teammate who had played in France the previous season. He also said he could probably get them invited to play if they were interested.

Both Kelley and Wagner, who had already been planning a European adventure before going to work in "the real world," were up

"...how do you teach violence? Some of the French players get it and some don't."

—Jered Wagner

for the idea. One week later, they were con­tacted by the captain of the Paris Rangers and stockbroker, Didier Zouari, and a seri­ous contract was negotiated. For their part, the two Americans would both play for and coach the Rangers for one season. In return, they would receive: round-trip plane fare, room and board with a French player's fam­ily, a monthly Metro (subway) pass and $100 a week in "beer money."

"It was an offer we couldn't refuse," said Kelley.

Kelley and Wagner showed up to their first practice not knowing exactly what to expect. They had some ideas about offen­sive and defensive formations they wanted to teach the team. They quickly realized that they were getting a little ahead of themselves. "We would try and run a sim­ple running play and it wouldn't work because our linemen didn't know the prop­er blocking techniques or footwork,"

remembers Wagner. "You have to keep reminding yourself that these guys didn't grow up playing this game."

Another challenge has been with teach­ing the contact part of the game. "A lot of these guys aren't used to really hitting," explained Wagner. "Football is a violent game, how do you teach violence? Some of the French players get it and some don't." So, going back to the fundamentals, Kelley and Wagner are trying to make con­tenders out of the Rangers.

The level of contact may be much less than what they are used to but the two Americans are paying their dues. They each play both ways. Kelley, 22, who played fullback at Santa Clara, has played guard, tackle, tight end, fullback, lineback­er, defensive end and noseguard since arriving in France. Wagner, 23, a strong safety at S.C., who has a similar list of accreditations to his name, lost count after making 27 tackles in a recent game.

The coaching part of the job doesn't get much easier. "Trying to coach and play at the same time is not the optimum situa­tion," said Wagner. Kelley, whose French abruptly ends at "bonjour," calls the play in the huddle in English, then one of the play­ers translates it into French.

It's easy to smile at the thought of the French playing football. Images of players in berets and shoulder pads, drinking wine and eating Camembert at halftime, may come to mind. But these guys deserve credit, it's not easy being a football player in France.

First of all, it's expensive. In addition to team and league fees, each player must fur­nish his own equipment, which can run upwards of $700. The playing conditions are less than perfect. Grass is a luxury, they usually play on converted dirt rugby fields, and the road trips can be brutal. For a recent game in Grenoble, in southern France, the Rangers met at midnight on a Saturday, took an eight-and-a-half-hour bus ride to Grenoble, ate breakfast, played a game at 1 p.m. Sunday, lost, showered, ate dinner and by 6 p.m. they were back on the bus that would arrive at 2 a.m. in Paris, most trying to forget that they had to go to work in just a few hours.

American football in France has come a long way since the days when Laurent Plegelatte's Spartacus were a team in search of an opponent. With the beginning of youth leagues, high school programs and the success of teams like the Argonautes, the future of American foot­ball in France looks pretty healthy. Who knows? Maybe one day the NFL will have a team with a starting quarterback whose name is Pierre or Jean Claude but, until then, as Monsieur Plegelatte would proba­bly say, "vive le football Americain!" *

TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATE

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1 9 9 1 AT&T LONG DISTANCE

AWARD AT&T brings you another great long distance connection.

Webster doesn't have enough adjec­tives to appropriately describe Doug Flutie's long distance connection with Gerard Phelan on Nov. 24,1984.

To those rooting for Boston College that day, the improbable final play fell into the "last-gasp", "Hail Mary", "desper­ation-heave" category.

Fans of victim Miami, though, might have described the ending as "heart­breaking", "gut-wrenching", or "lucky".

The record books forever will show the score, Boston College 47, Miami 45, and list a lot of impressive offensive stats. It will be left to videotape, though, to cap­ture the fantastic finish.

The high-scoring affair appeared to have been decided when Hurricane run­ning back Melvin Bratton scored his fourth touchdown, a 1-yard plunge, to give 12th-ranked Miami a 45-41 advan­tage with 28 seconds remaining.

Greg Cox kicked off into the end zone, forcing the lOth-rated Eagles and their magical Flutie to start from their own 20.

"We've got at least four plays," Flutie told his troops. "Let's get the ball out near midfield and put one up in the end zone."

Flutie, destined to win the '84 Heisman Trophy, began the drive with a 19-yard completion to Troy Stradford. Then hit Scott Gieselman with a 13-yard pass, putting the Eagles on Miami's 48.

Although obviously nervous, the Hurricane fans who filled the Orange Bowl relaxed a bit knowing that a field goal would do no good. The Eagles needed a TD, and likely two comple­tions to get one.

Flutie's incompletion with six seconds left seemed to seal a Miami victory.

With the game's outcome on his shoulders, the 5-9 Flutie then produced his most memorable moment. He took the snap, drifted back between his own 35- and 40-yard lines, and unleashed a bomb toward the end zone.

"The play was called a flood tip," then Boston College coach Jack Bicknell said.

"It's designed to come down to Phelan, who tips the ball to someone else. But if it hits you in the chest, you catch it."

That 's exactly what happened, as Phelan, Flutie's best friend and room­mate, corralled the ball despite being surrounded by six defenders.

"Doug threw a rocket," Phelan said. "I just held that thing against my shoulder pad like it was my first-born."

Flutie (34-of-46, 472 yards , three TDs) and Miami counterpart Bernie Kosar (25-of-38, 447 yards, two TDs) shattered the NCAA record for two players each passing for 250 yards or more in the same game.

The game will be remembered, how­ever, for one long play.

"Somebody was definitely listening to us," Bicknell said, "because we needed that one."

AT&T honors Division I-A players in six Long Distance football categories, by contributing to their respective school's General Scholarship Fund. At die conclusion of the season, AT&T will present Long Distance Awards and scholarship donations based on sea­son-long statistics.

At AT&T, we honor players who've reached their goals on the field and we help others reach their goals off the field. Look for announcements in your local paper each week to see if your favorite players win the AT&T Long Distance Awards.

A hero many times in his college career, Doug Flutie reached new heights against Miami in 1984.

1990 LONG DISTANCE LEADERS' PASSING YARDS PER GAME

David Klingler, Houston 467.27 Ty Detmer, Brigham Young 432.33 Troy Kopp, Pacific 367.88 Dan McGwire, San Diego State 348.45 Craig Erickson, Miami 305.73

RECEIVING YARDS PER GAME

Patrick Rowe, San Diego State 126,55 Aaron Turner, Pacific 114-91 Herman Moore, Virginia 108.18 Andy Boyce, Brigham Young 103.42 Dennis Arey, San Diego State 10164

All you need to reach out. AT&T

Page 43: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

Bucknell's Brad Myers fights for yardage during the Bison's 21-20 victory over Colgate.

BY JOHN BARTIMOLE

At a time when it was rare to have one runner gain 1,000 yards in a nine-game season, this team had two.

In the days when it was unusual to use the pass as anything but a last-gasp tool, this team threw for 1,261 meaningful yards en route to a perfect 9-0 season.

When it was difficult to run up huge scores because of the emphasis on the ground game, this team managed to outscore its rivals, 339-126.

This team is still the one they talk about at Bucknell University—this great 1951 team that went 9-0, graduated many play­ers onto stellar professional and athletic careers, and placed 10 of its members in the university's Athletic Hall of Fame.

"When Bucknell football fans talk about great teams, this '51 team is at the top of their list," Brad Tufts, associate athletic director at Bucknell, said. "Even though

The 1951 Bucknell Bisons thundered to a record-setting perfect season. £

A SELDOM

we've had teams win the Lambert Cup (1960 and 1964), that '51 team is the mea­suring stick for all the others. It was an exceptional team that really clicked."

The '51 Bison didn't win the Lambert Trophy—symbolic of supremacy in eastern football—simply because the award hadn't yet been initiated. Still, the team holds the distinction of being Bucknell's last unde­feated football squad, and the team to record the most victories in a single season.

Even more impressive, in addition to the nine games Bucknell won in '51, the team had won its last four (after a rough 2-3 start) in 1950, and followed the '51 session by winning its first four, stringing together a 17-game undefeated streak.

"This was in the days of two-platoon football," Tufts said. "It was also in the days when teams ran the ball almost exclu­sively. Yet, the '51 team threw the ball well when it had to."

The '51 Bison averaged a phenomenal 463.3 yards per game—almost all on the ground—smashing the eastern record for yardage previously held by the great '45 Blanchard-Davis team at Army.

Because of the ferociousness of the ground attack, which gained an average of 323.2 yards per game, the Bison, coached by Henry Lawrence, were able to pass the ball with extreme effectiveness when nec­essary. In fact, the team averaged more than 26 yards per completion, a statistic that would make any of today's super­charged offenses ecstatic.

An interesting note about the Herd's passing game was its diversity: quarter­back Tommy Dean did most of the throw­ing, completing 28 of 66 passes for four TDs and 549 yards. But a trio of running backs—Glenn Aspinwall, Bob Albert and Brad Myers—also threw the ball, picking up almost 700 aerial yards between them.

The '51 squad remains special to Bucknell fans and to eastern football, rep­resenting the heart of that 17-game win­ning streak and boasting some of the most well-known of Bucknell's players. For example, the starting defensive tackle on that memorable team was George Young, a first team Little All-America selection who signed with the Dallas Texans of the AFL, but who is best known for being the gener-

A freelance writer living in Olean. N.Y., John Bartimole writes for the Big East Conference, the NCAA and numerous sports publications.

DISCOURAGED HERD

TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED

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THE HERD al manager—and the guiding light—of the world champion New York Giants. Young, who also made several major All-East teams that year, including the Associated Press squad, was the Giants' GM for their first Super Bowl victory, and also is con­sidered one of the masterminds of the earli­er Miami Dolphins' championship teams.

Young, however, wasn't the only noted performer on the '51 squad. The two 1,000-yard rushers, Myers and Burt Talmage, were also well-known and well-recognized for their accomplishments that season. Myers, who ran for 1,069 yards, gained AP All-East second team honors, was named to United Press International's first-team All-East, and earned honorable mention on Colliers magazine's All-East squad. Myers went on to play for the Los Angeles Rams and the Philadelphia Eagles. Talmage gained first-team AP All-East

accolades, based on the strength of his 1,025-yard rushing season. Both he and Myers scored 14 touchdowns each. Though Bucknell was classified as a "lit­

tle" college, the team did post victories over some well-known football schools during that storied year. There were the usual routs against lesser football powers (62-32 vs. Buffalo, 41-7 vs. Gettysburg, 54-10 vs. Muhlenberg), but the team also scored impressive wins over Temple, Colgate, Kent State, Lafayette and Lehigh. Against Lafayette, in fact, the Herd rum­

bled for a total of 562 yards en route to a 40-21 victory at the Leopards' home field. Myers gained 133 yards and Talmage 123 as the Bison scored three quick TDs to set the stage for the romp. The Bison defense was typically lost in

the wake of the team's offensive prowess, but it shined against Temple, when it limited the Owls to just 34 yards on the ground, 104 in the air, and allowed Temple to cross the midfield stripe only twice in the 28-7 win.

In the game against Lehigh, Bucknell carried only a 14-7 lead into the third quar­ter, but again, the defense came through, this time with two quick interceptions, which set up two quick scores and pushed the Herd out to a 28-7 lead entering the fourth quarter. The defense's proudest moment, howev­

er, came during the team's Oct. 13 show­down with unbeaten Kent State in Ohio. With Bucknell holding a.slim 13-7 lead, Kent State penetrated to the Herd's 14-yard line in the game's waning moments. But the defense, led by Young, repulsed the Kent State attack to preserve the victory. The game also showcased the effectiveness of Bucknell's passing attack: quarterback Dean hit his favorite target, end Joe Gallagher, five times, including a 16-yard scoring toss in the third period that proved to be the winning margin.

The only other tight game the Herd

Coach Henry Lawrence (center) had good reason to smile in '56 with stars Brad Myers (left) and Burt Talmage.

played during '51 was against Colgate, at Hamilton, N.Y. This time, it was Bucknell's passing attack and special teams that paced the 21-20 victory over the Red Raiders. Colgate actually outgained Bucknell, 386-361, but was unable to ever wrest the lead during the game. Dean com­pleted 12 of 16 passes for 211 yards, snuck for one score and threw to fullback Albert for another. Also instrumental in the win was Joe Mason, who kicked three extra points, and Myers, who scored the game-winning touchdown on a 58-yard run in the fourth quarter.

The Herd closed out its perfect season with a 33-6 win over Delaware at home. Bucknell gained 401 yards against the Blue Hens, and had a 27-0 lead going into the

fourth quarter. Talmage scored twice in the opening quarter to put the game out of reach, as the Bisons inked the last chapter in their storybook 9-0 season—the team's first undefeated season since 1918, and its last since then.

The season wasn't over for Albert and Young, however. Both seniors played in the annual Blue-Gray game in Birmingham, Ala., to close out their college careers.

Forty years after that team etched the most remarkable season in Bucknell's foot­ball history, it still holds a number of marks that may never be broken.

Among them: most points in a season (339); most touchdowns in a season (50); and most yards in a game (698 vs. Buffalo). Myers still ranks as Bucknell's all-time leading rusher, with 2,622 yards, and his 'Touchdown Twin,' Talmage, is fifth with 1,878 yards.

The '51 Herd team had 38 players on its squad; eight players, including Young, Myers and Talmage, are enshrined in the Bucknell Athletic Hall of Fame, along with Lawrence, the team's head coach, and the team trainer.

This year, the surviving members of the '51 squad will gather at Bucknell to remi­nisce on the occasion of the 40th anniver­sary of their remarkable season.

And for however brief a moment, that mighty Herd squad will rumble, again. <••

No matter what your favorite sport is, BUSHNELL® makes the binocular that will let you get the maximum enjoyment from watching it. Each one is a fine, reliable, optical instrument manufactured to Bushnell's exacting standards

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• n i i r u n n u i k i II I IJSTRATED

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JOE KAPP n the gridiron and the hardwood,Cal's

Kapp was one tough Golden Bear.

BY NICK PETERS

Warren Moon is still trying, but Joe Kapp holds the distinction of being the only quar­terback in history to lead teams to the Rose Bowl, the Grey Cup and the Super Bowl.

That's regarded as somewhat of a quirk because Kapp doesn't rate among the greatest quarterbacks of all time. Instead, he's revered as a colorful and controversial leader of men who frequently performed the unexpected.

How else can you explain the fiercely determined Kapp being branded as a winner at the University of California despite an 11-20 three-year record and the dubious dis-

Nick Peters covers baseball and college sports for the Sacramento Bee after spe­cializing on Cal football and basketball during his days as sports editor of the defunct Berkeley Daily Gazette and later with the Oakland Tribune. He has authored "100 years of Cal Football" and "Giants Almanac. "

"Nearly all the other • k schools had more

talent, but they VJI didn't have Joe."

—Jack Hart

tinction of throwing 29 interceptions com­pared to merely eight touchdown passes?

How else could Kapp, as a senior in 1958, overcome an 0-2 start to lead the Golden Bears to the Pacific Coast Conference Championship and a Rose Bowl berth? That was 33 years ago, and Cal still hasn't been back to Pasadena on New Year's Day.

How else could he possibly defeat the champion Green Bay Packers twice as a Minnesota Vikings rookie in 1967? Or, how could Kapp, a man known for throw­ing wobbly passes, fire a record-tying seven TD passes against the Baltimore Colts in 1969, the season in which he remarkably became the MVP of the NFL?

Joe Kapp was unique. He was an athlete of substance more than style, leaving an indelible imprint on teammates and oppo­nents. He even managed to leave his mark on a short-lived coaching career, being on the sidelines as a rookie in 1982 when his Golden Bears etched themselves into col­lege football lore with The Play, a multi-lat­eral phenomenon that stunned Stanford and its marching band in a bizarre Big Game.

Those who know Joe Kapp couldn't have been surprised. Because he was the ulti­mate underdog as an athlete, his legendary career was brimming with upsets. That trend started not long after he was recruited out of Hart High in Southern California on a basketball scholarship by Hall of Fame coach Pete Newell.

"There were no football scholarships available," Newell recalled. "I wanted him because he was a skilled basketball player. Red Sanders wanted him for the UCLA football team, but told Joe he couldn't play basketball. He came to Cal because he was told he could play both sports."

Jack Hart, now a Bay Area advertising executive following a coaching career that included stops at Cal and Illinois, enrolled at Berkeley the same time as Kapp. They

soon became fast friends because they had similar personalities and a tremendous desire to succeed.

"With Joe, it was every day, every way," Hart said. "In all the years I've been in ath­letics as a player, coach and fan, the two greatest competitors I've been around are Joe Kapp and Dick Butkus. Joe didn't know what fear was. He's one of the most compet­itive and driven people I've ever seen.

"He wasn't a highly-regarded high school quarterback, but he was determined to suc­ceed. He didn't throw picture passes, but he did what had to be done to win. We were co-captains of the freshman team (1955), fourth-string at the start of our sophomore year, starters by the fourth game and co-captains again as seniors on the Rose Bowl team."

Kapp's penchant for rising to the occa­sion was evident from those humble begin­nings. After beating out three quarterbacks as a sophomore, Kapp climaxed the season with an emotional performance in the Big Game against Stanford. It was Pappy Waldorf's final game as Cal's coach, and Kapp did his best to send him out a winner.

Stanford was a heavy favorite behind All-American senior quarterback John Brodie. But Kapp rushed for 106 yards and the Bears posted a 20-18 upset. Pete Elliot took over as coach in 1957, and Cal's only victory was a 12-0 drubbing of Southern Cal, the school's first victory over the Trojans in seven years.

Coming off a 1-9 season, the Bears weren't expected to be contenders in 1958. In fact, they were picked near the bottom of the PCC, and it seemed an accurate evaluation when College of the Pacific jolted Cal in the season opener, 24-20. Kapp scored a pair of touchdowns, includ­ing a 50-yard run, and had a great day, but was overshadowed by COP standout Dick Bass, who rushed for 215 yards.

The Bears were crushed 32-12 at Michigan State the next week, so Hart and Kapp huddled on the plane ride home and decided it was time for Cal to stop being a loser. The team rallied for seven victories in eight games and went to the Rose Bowl.

Kapp's interception of a conversion pass prevented a tie and saved a 14-12 victory over USC, the last time the Bears would defeat the Trojans until 1970. The team improved to 4-2 with a 23-6 rout of Oregon, in which Kapp broke the game

TniirwnoiAiw •• • n c T o « T c n

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open with a 92-yard touchdown run, third longest in Cal history. At the time, it was thought to be a broken play.

"Pete Elliot's philosophy was to never fumble when you had a lead," Hart recalled. "We were on our eight yard line and the play was supposed to be a dive handoff to me. That's what everyone expected, but Pete told Joe not to let any­one else know he was to keep the ball. That was part of the deception.

"I just plowed into the line, expecting to have the ball. About nine guys jumped on me. By the time I got up, Joe was at the 50. He broke a couple of tackles at the line, but then he was wide open. He probably was the slowest back on the team, but that's the way Joe was — always coming up with the big play.

"The magic of Joe was his running the Split-T Belly option to perfection," Hart said. "He did it as well as anyone, ever. He was utilized more as a single-wing tailback than as a quarterback. He could do every­thing. Nearly all the other schools had more talent, but they didn't have Joe. He'd snarl at defensive players and dare them to stop our option play."

Kapp fired a TD pass in a 20-17 victory over UCLA, scored the winning touch­down to edge Washington 12-7 and clinched the PCC title with a two-point conversion pass to Wayne Crow in a 16-15 squeaker over Stanford. Kapp finished his senior year with 56 completions in 97 attempts (57.7 percent) for 649 yards and was the rushing leader with 582 yards.

Cal was crushed 38-12 by Iowa in the Rose Bowl, capping a 7-4 season. The big­ger and swifter Hawkeyes set records with 516 yards of total offense behind Bob Jeter and Willie Fleming, but the win-starved Bears' fans didn't mind. They finally had a winner again, and the man most responsi­ble was Kapp, whose competitiveness at Pasadena was not ignored.

"Joe was crazy," recalled Fleming, who became Kapp's teammate with the British Columbia Lions. "1 ran 77 yards for a TD in that Rose Bowl and placed us ahead something like 32-0. All of a sudden, I see this Cal guy running into the end zone, shak­ing his fist at me and hollering, 'We've got you guys right where we want you—we're going to kick your butt.' It was Joe."

Whereas Kapp was ultra-intense as a football player, he was a serious student of football who wasn't especially known as a hell-raiser. On the other hand, stories abound regarding Kapp's involvement with Newell's championship basketball team, on which he served as a sixth man and enforcer.

"Elliot was pretty straight-laced, and he kept a tight rein on the football players," Hart pointed out. "I don't recall any wild

As Cal's head football coach from 1982-86, Kapp instilled his fiery, never-say-die attitude in his teams.

incidents with those football teams. His hell-raising days followed in Canada, and he got quite a reputation when a teammate cut him with a broken bottle, and again when he fought linebacker Lonnie Warwick in a Vikings' practice.

Two altercations, in particular, reveal how seriously Kapp took his role with the Cal basketball team as Newell was build­ing a powerhouse culminating with the NCAA championship team of 1959. Kapp was concentrating on football by rJien, but he served on the 1957 and 1958 squads.

"I've never coached a bench player who was any better in terms of inciting his team­mates to get into the game," Newell said. "Nobody was better at letting the guys know what was going on. If you were sit­ting next to him on the bench and not say­ing anything, he'd let you know about it."

Kapp's willingness to communicate wasn't restricted to his teammates. During the 1957 season, one of Cal's star players was Earl Robinson, who later was to play major league baseball. Robinson, now an instructor at Oakland's Laney College, is black. One of Cal's opponents in 1957 had no blacks, and Robinson was a target of their verbal and physical abuse on the Bears' court.

"It was a very tough and physical USC team," Robinson recalled. "They tried to outmuscle everybody, and we muscled them back. I was having a good game, and they were making derogatory remarks, try­ing to throw me off my game. There weren't any tacit racial overtones, but some people interpreted it that way.

"Joe was watching from the bench when

"I've never coached a bench player who was any better in terms of inciting his teammates to get into the game."

—Pete Newell

this 6-10 guy flagrantly elbowed me in the back as I was walking to the free throw line. I reacted by jawing with the guy, and I remember hearing Florence Newell (Pete's wife) yelling from the stands: 'Hit him, Earl! Hit him!' When the first half ended, Joe followed the USC players into their dressing room and chewed them out."

That was a relatively tame incident, how­ever, compared to what transpired when Cal was visiting New York City for the annual Holiday Festival. It was Christmas Eve and the Bears were practicing at the 27th Armory on Lexington Ave., the play­ers were weary following a long cross­country flight, and it was pouring rain.

"After practice, I told the guys I'd go out­side and hail some cabs," Newell recalled. "I yelled for this taxi, and it stops about 300 feet away. I told the players not to run because it was slippery. Well, these two drunks waddled out of a bar and saw the cab's doors wide open, so they climbed in one side while one of our players enters the other side.

"Joe sees this and becomes incensed. He's yelling, 'It's our cab!' and the drunks don't budge, so he pulls them out of the cab. I remember telling him to go easy. As it turns out, the rest of the guys celebrating in the bar realize what's going on, so they pour out to help their buddies. The bar empties, and the next thing you know we're in a full-scale street fight.

"We finally got a couple of skirmishes settled," Newell added, "and I look toward the intersection and see Joe and two or three guys from the bar illuminated by the streetlamp. It was like a scene from a James Cagney movie. Joe kept dodging and faking, and they didn't come within five feet of him."

Kapp was no slouch once he got into games, either. Newell remembers him beating Stanford with a last-second shot. Kapp was no longer was with the Bears when they became NCAA champs, but Newell didn't forget. When the champions were honored at a campus rally, the coach introduced him as a member of the team.

Joe Kapp indeed was special. •••

TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED

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ATHLETIC ADMINISTRATION ASSOCIATE ATHLETICS DIRECTOR Hugh Yoshida

Hugh Yoshida, former executive secretary of the Oahu Interscholastic Association, took over the duties of associate athletics director at the beginning of the year, filling the vacancy created when Rockne Freitas was appointed Vice President for University Re­lations.

Yoshida will handle the day-to-day management of the Athletic Department, including administrative, facilities and student services functions. He will assist the athletics di­rector in rigorous fund-raising and lobbying activities as well as public relations work in speaking to numerous groups and organizations.

Yoshida, a graduate of Iolani School, received his bachelor's and master's degrees from Linfield College in McMinville, Ore., where he won NAIA All-America honors as a linebacker in 1961. He won all-conference honors in 1960 and 1961 and was named the team's Most Inspirational Player those years.

He returned to the Islands in 1967 as a teacher and football and track coach at Wa-ialua High School. In 1970, he moved to Leilehua High School, where he served as ath­letic director, head football coach and track coach until 1987, when he moved to the OIA.

ASSISTANT ATHLETICS DIRECTOR SENIOR WOMEN'S ADMINISTRATOR Marilyn Moniz-Kohoohanohano

Marilyn Moniz-Kahoohanohano, be­ginning her third year at the helm of the

Wahine athletic program, brings a unique per­spective to her job both as an athlete and an adminis­trator.

She played in­tercollegiate vol­leyball for the Wahines from 1972-76, coached

by Dave Shoji part of that time. In 1986, she was awarded the department's presti­gious Jack Bonham Award, presented an­nually to the university's outstanding scholar/athlete.

Moniz-Kahoohanohano received her Bachelor of Arts degree in American Stud­ies from the university in 1976 and earned her Juris Doctor Degree from the Univer­sity of Hawaii School of Law in 1979. She served as Director of Parks and Recreation for the County of Maui before accepting the top women's post in the Athletic De­partment at Hawaii. She also served as Maui's Deputy Director of Parks and

Recreation and Deputy Prosecuting At­torney for the County of Maui.

The Kaimuki High School graduate is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Kap­pa Phi and is active in the Hawaiian Ca­noe Club, Portuguese Chamber of Com­merce, Maui County Bar Association and the Maui County Council of Boy Scouts.

ASSISTANT ATHLETICS DIRECTOR FOR STDDENT SERVICES Kaia Hedlund

Kcria Hedlund is in her second year as Assistant Athletic Director for Student Ser­vices. She is responsible for the depart­ment's academic affairs, eligibility and compliance. Before coming to Hawaii in 1990, she was Associate Athletic Direc­tor/Student Affairs as the University of Cal­

ifornia at Irvine for six years. Prior to that, she was the women's swim­ming coach for four years.

She received her bachelor's de­gree from the Uni­versity of Southern California, where she won four let-

ters in swimming, serving as captain her final two seasons. She earned her mas­ter's in PE/Sports Management from Cal State University at Fullerton.

ASSISTANT ATHLETICS DIRECTOR FOR FACILITIES Doug Rattley

Doug Rattley begins his second year as Assistant Athletics Director for Facili­ties and Game Management. A native of Bridgeport, Conn., he received his bach­elor's degree in human develop­ment from UH-Manoa in 1975 and his master's in education from Pepperdine in 1979.

Prior to join­ing the Univer­sity, he worked for eight years V - ^ i * ^ for the Department of Education and DKT Consultants for a year. He joined the UH in 1985 as Makai campus coordi­nator.

He and his wife, Mahie, have two sons, David a n d Dominic, a n d twin daughters, Michelle and Mahie.

S 3

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ATHLETIC STAFF

, " 5 ^ . Charles Kale Ane II

Strength Coordinator

Paula Asato

Personnel Assistant

Arthur Buto Computer Specialist

lames Donovan ID

Sports Marketing Director

Ken Fujimura

Equipment Manager

Russell Gima Women's Equipment

Manager

Jayson Goo

Assistant Men's Trainer

Carol Gouveia

Executive Director, Koa Anuenue

Norma Higuchi

Baseball Secretary

Marge Honda

Marketing Secretary

Ed Inouye

Sports Information Director

3S Bruce Kennard

Aquatics Complex Coordinator

Sandra Kim

Academics Secretary

Dawn Kurihara

Lssistant Women's Trainer

Julie Lauofo

Men's Basketball Secretary

loan Anne Lee

Women's Athletic Secretary

Gordon Mark

Academic Advisor

Dr. Stephen Martin

Faculty Representative

Donna Lee Murayama Michael Nagafuchi Nancy Nahas

Assistant Business Manager Publications Ticket Manager Specialist

Glenn Nakaya

Assistant Strength Coordinator

Eric Okasaki

Men's Trainer

Marge Olrimoto

A.D. Secretary

8 4

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ATHLETIC S W F

Dr. Tim Olderr Adam Primas Leon Schumaker

Team Physician Assistant to the A.D. Academic Advisor

Jill Shigano Administrative

Assistant/Business

Jon Taketa

Assistant Equipment Manager

Kyle Tengan

Rainbow Stadium Manager

Melody Toth

Women's Trainer

TeriWilhelm

Administrative Assistant/Facilities

Thomas Yoshida

Assistant Sports Information Director

Edith Tanida

Ticket Manager

FOOTBALL STAFF

Jim Rodden

Voiunteer Coach

Carol Pangan Ben Yee Ken Niumatalolo

Secretary Administrative Assistant Administrative Assistant

Todd Murgatroyd

Graduate Assistant

Tim Lino

Graduate Assistant

left Mullen

Graduate Assistant

Dan Newbrough

Graduate Assistant

Eric Price

Graduate Assistant

se

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1 J M I • 3 I *

IJIMSITY OF HAWAII

I he University of Hawaii, a multi-campus system of post-secondary educa­

tional institutions, is in its 85th year of ex­istence.

Founded in 1907 as a land-grant col­lege of agriculture and mechanic arts called the College of Hawaii, it grew from a student body of five regular students and a faculty of 12, to a statewide system of three four-year institutions and several community colleges.

In 1912 the school moved from its tem­porary site in downtown Honolulu to its permanent location on some 300 acres of land in Manoa Valley. With the addition of a College of Arts and Sciences in 1920, it became the University of Hawaii.

The main campus, better known as UH-Manoa, is the major comprehensive research campus, with more than 18,000 students. The University of Hawaii-Hilo (UHH) is located on the island of Hawaii and enrolls some 3,750 students in two four-year colleges. West Oahu College of­fers an upper division program on the western side of Oahu. Six community col­leges are organized as a sub-unit with four campuses on Oahu and one each on Maui and Kauai.

Today, UHM is a multidimensional uni­versity operation conducting education, research and public service programs for the state, nation and world community.

Geographical location generates in­

terest in oceanography, marine sciences and interdisciplinary studies of tropical environments, problems and resources. The physical characteristics of Hawaii fo­cus academic attention in such areas as tsunami research, volcanology, astrono­my and astrophysics. The state's multira­cial culture and close ties to Asia create a favorable environment for the study of various aspects of diverse cultural sys­tems, including such subjects as linguis­tics, genetics, philosophy and interracial relations.

In all, the University offers course work

leading to bachelor's degrees in 89 fields of study, master's degrees in 62, doctorates in 35, first professional degrees in law and medicine and a number of certificates.

The university is governed by a board of regents appointed by the governor of Hawaii. They in turn appoint a president of the University, who acts as executive of­ficer of the board and is responsible for educational leadership in the University system. Chief administrative officers for the various campuses are either chan­cellors or provosts. The president of the University heads Manoa campus. «*»

« * • • « • « . V A. C T

LOCATION: On a 300-acre site in Manoa Valley, four miles east of downtown Honolulu and two miles north of world famous Waikiki.

PRESIDENT: Dr. Albert J. Simone

FOUNDED: 1907

ENROLLMENT: 18,847

ACCREDITATION: Western Association of Schools and Colleges

UNDERGRADUATE COLLEGES AT MANOA: Arts and Sciences, Business Administra­tion, Continuing Education and Commu­nity Service, Education, Engineering,

Health Sciences and Social Welfare, Trop­ical Agriculture and Human Resources.

PROFESSIONAL SCHOOLS: Architecture, Health Science and Social Welfare, Library Studies, Medicine and Law.

ATHLETIC DEPT. MAILING ADDRESS: University of Hawaii Athletic Dept., 1337 Lower Campus Road, Honolulu, HI 96822

ATHLETIC DIRECTOR: Stan Sheriff

NICKNAME: Rainbows

COLORS: Green and White

POPULATION OF STATE: 1,108,229

POPULATION OF HONOLULU: 836,231

mm

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ALOHA S T A D I l l INFORMATION

SERVICES FIRST AID/SECURITY—Trained med­

ical personnel and facilities are available at Aloha Stadium. First aid stations are located on the north side of the stadium behind section UU and at the south end of the building across from the elevator on the main concourse. The stadium security office is adjacent to the main box office.

LOST AND FOUND—If you lose an article at Aloha Stadium, contact the sta­dium's Events Office. If you find an article, please turn it in to any usher or to securi­ty personnel. Remember to note the name of the person who accepted the article.

REGULATIONS FOOD/ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES—

Rules and regulations prohibit cans, bottles, food, drinks, alcoholic bever­ages and coolers from being brought into the stadium.

NOISEMAKERS/LARGE OBJECTS— Horns and other noisemakers are pro­hibited from being brought into the sta­dium. Transistor radios are allowed, but must be kept at low volume so as not to bother those sitting near you. We suggest that earphones be used. Umbrel­las, banners or large objects that might

interfere with the viewing, comfort and safety of others are not allowed.

ANIMALS/BICYCLES—No animals, skateboards, bicycles or motor scoot­ers are permitted in the stadium.

CAMERAS—Video c a m e r a s a n d tripods are not allowed in the stadium. Hand-held "still picture" cameras are permitted.

ENTRY—Entry into the s tad ium requires an admission ticket for the event being held.

COOPERATION—We ask that smok­ing be kept to a minimum out of con­sideration and courtesy to those sitting around you. We also ask for your coop­eration in depositing all rubbish in near­by trash containers.

FACILITIES REST ROOMS—There are a total of

36 rest rooms in the stadium, 16 for men and 20 for women. They are located on both the upper and lower concourses.

PUBLIC TELEPHONES—Public tele­phones are located throughout the sta­dium on both upper and lower con­courses.

BOX OFFICE—Regular Box Office hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday to Sat­urday. Closed Sundays and Holidays.

Opening and closing times may vary according to the event. Mastercard and Visa credit cards are accepted for over-the-counter ticket sales during regular box office hours only. Checks are not accepted.

EMERGENCIES—If an emergency arises, please contact any usher or secu­rity officer.

NOTES AIEA BRIDGE—The pedestrian bridge

from Aiea into the stadium parking lot substantially increases available park­ing and convenience for those who do not mind the short walk. Those walking to Aiea following the games are encour­aged to use the bridge for their own safety.

YOUR KOKUA PLEASE—We ask that you not go on to the playing field or in any way interfere with the game. We also request that both children and parents refrain from running in and around the stands for your safety and for the safety of those around you.

The m a n a g e m e n t a lso reminds you that the throwing of objects onto the field or in the stands is strictly pro­hibited. Have a nice day and enjoy the game. •••

» ©

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AHAHUIKOA AMIEME ince 1967, A h a h u i Koa

| Anuenue, the official fund-raising organization of the

University of Hawaii Athletic Department, has contributed more than $4 million to the UH athletic program.

Ahahui Koa A n u e n u e , w h i c h translates to "The Society of the Rain­bow Warrior," was founded in 1967 under the leadership of the late Gov. John A. Burns to provide financial aid in the form of athletic scholarships to worthy members of the University of Hawaii men's and women ' s varsity intercollegiate teams. A group known as "the team behind the UH teams," is a non-profit organization made up of friends of the University of Hawai i who believe a strong intercollegiate athletic program goes hand-in-hand with building the best academic insti­tution in the Pacific basin.

These funds a r e a d m i n i s t e r e d under the rules of the UH, the National Collegiate Athlet ic Assoc i a t ion

(NCAA), the Western Athletic Confer­ence (WAC) and the Big West Confer­ence. By becoming a part of this fund-r a i s i ng o r g a n i z a t i o n , o n e ob ta in s s p e c i a l benef i t s a n d p r iv i l eges , including:

—Preferred sea t ing for football, men's basketball and baseball

—Parking privileges at Aloha Sta­dium during the football season

—Parking a rea for UH men's bas­ketball games

—Football pregame reception —Footbal l p r e s e a s o n C o a c h e s '

Huddle —Major sports media guides —Wall plaque, membership card,

and decal. Benefits may vary, depending on

the size of the donat ion . All major donors (those who contribute $400 or more annua l ly ) e a r n the option to pu rchase two season tickets to foot­ball, men's basketball and baseball.

In addition, they are also eligible to

purchase parking privileges. The Board of Directors of Ahahui

Koa is headed by the Honorable James S. Bums, president; Harold Kometani, vice president; Donald Horio, secretary, and Lionel Tokioka, treasurer.

Other m e m b e r s of the Board of Directors include:

Gilman Budar, Don Carroll, Albert Chong, Alfred Costa, Walter Dods Jr., Frank Hata, James Markey, Keith Oda, Bill Prideaux, Mike Sen, Clarence Tarn, Alec Waterhouse and Art Woolaway.

Last year nearly a thousand members of Ahahui Koa Anuenue contributed more than $500,000 to the UH Athletic Pro­gram. This year, the goal is to reach more than a thousand members and to collect more than $600,000.

Caro l G o u v e i a , the execu t ive director, serves in a fulltime capacity. Her office is in the HPER/Athletic Complex. For more information on joining the "team behind the teams," call 956-6500. •••

M KOA FOOTBALL CLUB The Na Koa Football Club is an organization

formed to enable the Rainbow Warriors to accomplish numerous projects in the upgrad­

ing of the football operations. The group is administered through the Athletic Department in line with NCAA guidelines.

Established four years ago, Na Koa has already played a big part in purchasing new equipment, acquiring com­puter software to aid in recruiting a n d g a m e analysis , establishing a Rainbow All-WAC picture gallery, assisting with the financing of the team trip to an outer island for a scrimmage during spring practice a n d numerous other items related to the football program.

Fans have an opportunity to join Na Koa at four differ­ent levels: Team ($30-99), Capta in ($100-249), Coaches ($250-499) and Rainbow Warrior ($500 or higher).

Members at the Team level receive a Na Koa polo shirt, a decal and membership card and can attend the weekly luncheons. Captain status also includes a complimentary Football Media Guide a n d a n invitation to the Spring Huddle. With a Coaches membership, fans also get a spe­cial cap and sideline privileges for the Spring Game. As Rainbow Warriors, members also get sideline privileges for one regular season game.

For more information, contact Ben Yee at (808) 956-4513. •••

0 1

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12 • « *•* O JF

1991 RAINBOWS

Bryan Addison Los Angeles, CA

»#•

Peter Albinio Waimanalo, Oahu

Lene Amosa Ewa Beach, Oahu

Carlos Anderson Wahiawa, Oahu

V / i Tasi Autele

Boise, ID

Greg Banks Honolulu

•*ir

ii k Glenn Carson

Oakville, Ontario Canada

Dan Duncan Springfield, OH

Martin Bento Hilo, HI

it/ i Michael Carter Long Beach, CA

Jason FJam Snellville, GA

Johann Bouit Pearl City, Oahu

Darrick Branch Dallas, TX

Gemini Burke Fayerteviife, NC

Shawn Ching Honolulu

Nalei Cox kaneohe, Oahu

Joe Davis DeSoto, TX

* « » ^

Junior Faavae Oceanside, CA

Jamal Farmer LaJce View Terrace, CA

Taase Faumui Honolulu

Charles Freitas Honolulu

Akili Calhoun Los Angeles, CA

ft it A

Jude Dreisbach Palm Springs, CA

Travis Fonseca San Jose, CA

Kendall Goo Kapaa, Kauai

Brian Gordon Columbus. OH

» »

Warren Grant Montreal, Quebec

Canada

Daryl Green West Covina, CA

Page 54: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

Ivin Jasper Los Angeles, CA

Alika Jay Aiea, Oahu

Delmar Johnson San Francisco, CA

Shavondi Johnson Long Beach, CA

Deacon Hanson Kekaha, Kauai

Kenny Harper Compton, CA

Jack Harrington Oceanside, CA

Winston Haynes West Vancouver British Columbia

Tom Heffernan Hauula, Oahu

Cy Hirota Waipahu, Oahu

Mitchell Kaaialii Las Vegas, NV

Haku Kahoano Honolulu

Reynolds Kama Mililani, Oahu

Sean Kamai Kailua, Oahu

Nuuanu Kaulia Waianae, Oahu

Eddie Kealoha Honolulu

Amos Keawekane IVailulcu, Maui

Keoni Kilbey Kaneohe, Oahu

S»l

ii/i Wi Danney Lewis Marlowe Lewis Inglewood, CA North Hollywood, CA

Kelly McGill San Jose, CA

Ollie Myrick Sarasota, FL

Jeff Liilii Kaneohe, Oahu

Dean Nakagawa Waipahu, Oahu

Mika Liilii Kaneohe, Oahu

Jeff Newman Pacoima, CA

Harry Lyons Ewa Beach, Oahu

1 f Datsun Nihipali

Hauula, Oahu

Paul Manera Sydney, Australia

w it A Zac Odom

Hawthorne, CA

9 9

Page 55: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

1 9 9 1 R A I N B O W S

Peter Pale Hiram Palimoo Kaunakakai, Molokai Honolulu

Tony Pang-Kee Omar Perez-Sandoval Kaneohe, Oahu Honolulu

Tom Pimentel Honolulu

Grant Pittman Los Angeles, CA

Benjamin Prohm Kailua, Oahu

Louis Randall Los Angeles, CA

Ed Ripley Honolulu

Keahi Salvador Honolulu

Lyno Samana Kailua, Oahu

Walter Santiago Hauula, Oahu

Coby Stewart Denver, CO

Jeff Sydner Columbus, OH

Herman Talley Philadelphia, MS

Ilk

& Maa Tanuvasa Wahiawa, Oahu

Joe Sardo Hamilton, Ontario

Canada

Jason Satumio Hilo, HI

Erik Senter Honolulu

Joe Shaw Seattle, WA

Travis Sims Federal Way, WA

Rich Stevenson Laie, Oahu

Doug Vaioleti Kahulru, Oahu

John Veneri Honolulu

Kimo von Oelhoff en Kaunakakai, Molokai

Terry Whitaker Tacoma, WA

Ghana Williams Laiewood, CA

Manly Williams Honolulu

Stewart Williams Honolulu

»••

Page 56: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

I v E K H A W

RAINBOW PROFILE L O I S M A N N

by Dara Young

Wi hile many 23-year olds spend their days pursuing their college degrees or job hunting, Lois Manin's day is spent informing the public of Wahine athletics. This past August Manin was named the new Women's Sports Information Director at the university. At 23, she is the youngest full-time staff member in the Athletic Depart­ment.

Her predecessor, Julie Bennett, is currently employed part-time at Central Missouri State University. When Bennett an­nounced she was leaving the islands, Manin seemed to be the right person at the right time for the job. After graduating with a bachelor's degree in technical journalism from Colorado State in December 1990, she was employed at Wesport Sporting Goods until she applied for her current position. Her only experience in the area was her internship at Colorado State's Media Relations Office. Because of her limited experience, Manin didn't think her chances were very good.

"I thought my chances were next to none," she said.

But she decided to give it a shot anyhow. Going into her interview, she knew she was among the top candidates for the position, so she knew that the interview would be important in improving her chances. Apparently, Manin did many things right during the interview.

"When I first found out about getting the job, I was happy because it was my first job," she said. "A lot of people get turned down when they apply for their first job."

Manin, an all-around athlete herself, graduated in 1986 from Kaiser High. She earned letters in track, soft tennis, basket­ball and softball at Kaiser. But it was softball that Manin starred in for the Rams. She played center field for three years and was named to the first team all-Region in 1989. Last year, she was a High Country Athletic Conference Honorable Mention selection and was given the team's 1990 Golden Glove Award.

Her duties began at the start of the Wahine volleyball season, which is one of the busiest times of the year because the Wahines' schedule runs concurrent to the football season. Manin admits that in the beginning, she

H - 1 7 -

felt that she was being thrown into doing a lot, especially since her only previous experience in the area was her internship. But slowly, and with the help of the other staff members in the Sports Information Department, Manin is getting used to the business of her job.

Aside from adjusting to the heavy workload, Manin's one goal she would like to try to accomplish is to bring women's athletics to the same level as the men.

"My goal is to work with Marilyn (Moniz-Kahoohanohano, Assistant Athletic Director/Senior Women's Administrator) for exposure for the women's pro­gram," she said. 'They're not quite where they should be and I would like to get women's sports to be revenue-generating."

Manin doesn't find much free time, especially during the volleyball season. But when she does, her free time is spent watch­ing "a lot of sports" on television and going to the beach. She also keeps active by participating in various basketball and softball community leagues.

Although part of her job requires her to keep the public and the media up to date on the Wahine teams, the public doesn't get to see much of her. She enjoys working behind the scenes and says that the best thing about her job is meeting new people and being in an athletic atmosphere.

Manin lives in Hawaii Kai with her mother, Julie, and sister, Alison Price, a senior at Kaiser High School. They also live with their 8-month-old golden retriever, Duke.

Page 57: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

(Continued from page H-l 6)

"Holmes is 205 right now and we'd like for him to be around 230," Wallace said. "We're hoping he can olidify the middle position for us. It'll depend on how quick he learns and how his strength and weight comes around."

Marty Winter, who appeared in 12 games last season, will also battle for a starting role.

SCHEDULE

"I think its a fair schedule to prepare us for the WAC," Wallace notes of the 1991-92 campaign.

"We open with a tournament with Arizona who is a power. We then go to Illinois where it's never easy to win there."

In all, the Rainbows will play in five preseason tournaments, including the prestigious Rainbow Classic in December. The teams in the Classic include Washington

State, Wisconsin, Navy, Alabama, Bradley, Fresno State and Villanova.

In terms of the WAC schedule, Wallace chooses the defending conference champion, Utah, to win the title.

There is always a team on the move and Wallace notes that San Diego State might be that team this year.

"I think San Diego State's on the move and New Mexico will be a question without Luc Longley, although they've got a 6-11 kid who redshirted. UTEP has got their front line back so they'll be tough."

As for Wallace's prediction on the Rainbows? He predicts an improvement over last year's fifth place finish.

"I think with four starters back and a fifth place finish last year, we've got to move up a notch or two. We should be in the number two, three or four spot. Look out for Utah. I picked them preseason top 10."

1992 REVISED FOOTBALL SCHEDULE

The 1992 football schedule listed on page 10 of this program, has again been updated. The new schedule follows.

Sept. 12

Sept. 26

Oct. 3

Oct. 10

Oct. 17

Oct 24

Oct. 31

Nov. 7

Nov. 14

Nov. 21

Nov. 28

Dec. 5

* at Air Force

* BRIGHAM YOUNG

LONG BEACH STATE

* at Utah

* FRESNO STATE

NEVADA-LAS VEGAS

*at Texas-El Paso

* COLORADO STATE

* at San Diego State

* WYOMING

TULSA

PITTSBURGH

* denotes WAC game

*Dine in Style Restaurant Olomana Featuring: Breakfast Lunch Fine Dining Banquet Facilities Catering Karaoke Parties

One of Hawaii's Finest

18 hole golf course

Pro Shop - Driving Range

6:30 am - 10:00 pm

Ph. #259-7926 (Starter)

Conveniently located - Open to the Publi 1C

H-18

Page 58: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

A T H L

CoSIDA/GTE Academic All-America Team University Division

The 1991 CoSIDA/GTE Academic All-America Football Team, selected

by members of the College Sports Infor­mation Directors of America, honors the nation's best student-athletes.

Just as the balancing of football and academics is difficult, the standards for nomination and selection to the team are rigorous. To be nominated, a varsity starter or key reserve player must have a mini­mum 3.200 cumulative grade-point aver­age (on a 4.000 scale).

The program began in the 1950s with honorees in football; later, basketball and baseball all-academic teams were added. Academic and athletic biographical data of nominees are prepared in ballot form and mailed to the CoSIDA membership, who vote in each of eight districts. From the eight district teams comes a national ballot, distributed to the 1,400 members for the final all-academic team.

One player from the university division also was honored as GTE academic all-America of the year. The honor, which goes to the athlete who "best represents the qualities of an academic all-America," was presented to quarterback Bill Mus-grave of Oregon. Musgrave posted a 3.460 grade-point average in finance.

Other selections include Don Davey, a defensive lineman from Wisconsin who was the first four-time selection in the University Division, and wide receiver Andy Boyce of Brigham Young and pun­ter/place kicker Jason Hanson of Wash­ington State—both among the nation's leaders in individual statistics. Nebraska had three selections on the first team.

"The achievements of these young men should truly be commended," said NBC sportscaster Dick Enberg, spokesman for the GTE academic all-America team. "I often wonder where college students find the time and energy to play a demanding sport like football, excel ia the classroom and be active on campus and in their communities. To me, these are the true all-Americas."

First-Team Offense Quarterback Bill Musgrave, Oregon, 3.460 GPA, Finance Running Back Chris Howard, Air Force, 3.700 GPA, Political Science

Running Back Stefen Scotton, Georgia Tech, 3.500 GPA, Electrical Engineering Wide Receiver Andy Boyce, Brigham Young, 3.450 GPA, Advertising/Market­ing

Wide Receiver Ed McCaffrey, Stanford, 3.400 GPA, Economics/Sociology Tight End Patrick John Jackson, Bowling Green, 3.960 GPA, Business Offensive Lineman James Appel, More-head State, 4.000 GPA, Math/Computer Science Offensive Lineman David Edeal, Ne­braska, 3.910 GPA, Mechanical Engi­neering Offensive Lineman Jim Hansen, Colo­rado, 3.960 GPA, Aerospace Engineering Offensive Lineman Eric Schweiker, Ford-ham, 3.960 GPA, Political Science Offensive Lineman Jim Wanek, Ne­braska, 3.590 GPA, Speech Communica­tions Place Kicker Ira Adler, Northwestern, 3.440 GPA, Premedicine

First-Team Defense Defensive Lineman Irvin Clark, Florida A&M, 3.410 GPA, Political Science Defensive Lineman Don Davey, Wis­consin, 3.580 GPA, Mechanical Engineer­ing Defensive Lineman Lee Tilleman, Wash­ington State, 3.550 GPA, Business Ad­ministration Defensive Lineman Kyle Stroh, Cincin­nati, 3.400 GPA, Finance/ Marketing Linebacker Mike McGowan, Montana, 3.970 GPA, History Linebacker Jeff Nielsen, William and Mary, 3.710 GPA, Business Linebacker Pat Tyrance, Nebraska, 3.450 GPA, Premedicine Defensive Back David Easterling, McNeese State, 3.870 GPA, Premedicine Defensive Back Shon Harker, Lehigh, 3.860 GPA, Mechanical Engineering Defensive Back Brad Preble, Dartmouth, 3.710 GPA, Government Defensive Back Mike Welch, Baylor, 3.730 GPA, Computer Science

Punter Jason Hanson, Washington State, 3.680 GPA, Premedicine

Second-Team Offense Quarterback Kent Kiefer, Missouri, 3.620 GPA, Business Administration Running Back Kevin Callahan, Yale, 3.240 GPA, History Running Back John Volpe, Stanford, 3.600 GPA, Industrial Engineering Wide Receiver Nick Cullen, Virginia Tech, 3.270 GPA, Finance Wide Receiver Jack Lavalette, Holy Cross, 3.550 GPA, Math/Premedicine Tight End Jeremy Garvey, Colgate, 3.540 GPA, Political Science Offensive Lineman Ed Cunningham, Washington, 3.440 GPA, Business Ad­ministration Offensive Lineman Kevin Donnalley, North Carolina, 3.360 GPA, Economics Offensive Lineman Greg Kalinyak, Wil­liam and Mary, 3.410 GPA, Accounting Offensive Lineman Curtis Lovelace, Illi­nois, 3.480 GPA, Business Administration Offensive Lineman Eric Walker, Furman, 3.570 GPA, Business Administration Place Kicker Kevin McKelvie, Nevada-Reno, 3.530 GPA, Logistics Management

Second-Team Defense Defensive Lineman Pat Engelbert, Ne­braska, 3.480 GPA, Civil Engineering Defensive Lineman Bryan Faulkner, Mid­dle Tennessee State, 3.500 GPA, Aerospace Engineering Defensive Lineman Kevin Martchek, Villanova, 3.280 GPA, Business Adminis­tration Defensive Lineman Gregory Smith, Ohio State, 3.410 GPA, Premedicine Linebacker Shawn Cobb, Mississippi, 3.340 GPA, Business Administration Linebacker Anthony Noto, Army, 3.640 GPA, Mechanical Engineering Linebacker J. T. Tokish, Air Force, 3.490 GPA, Biochemistry Defensive Back Michael McElrath, Army, 3.560 GPA, Mechanical Engineer­ing Defensive Back Louis Riddick, Pitts­burgh, 3.250 GPA, Economics Defensive Back Todd Sandroni, Missis­sippi, 3.560 GPA, Pharmacy Defensive Back Scott Wagner, Yale, 3.890 GPA, Economics Punter Colin Godfrey, Tennessee State, 3.560 GPA, Computer Science •

H-19

Page 59: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

FOOTBALL SCHEDULE Aug. 31

Sept. 7

Sept. 14

Sept. 21

Sept 28

Oct. 5

Oct. 19

Nov. 2

Nov. 9

Nov. 16

Nov. 23

Nov. 30

*at Wyoming

At Iowa

•NEW MEXICO

PACIFIC

at Colorado State

SAN DIEGO STATE

*at Brigham Young

•UTAH

"TEXAS-EL PASO

at San Jose State

*AIR FORCE

NOTRE DAME

* WAC Games # ESPN Telecast

12noonMDT

11:30 a.m.CDT#

7:05 p.m.

7:05 p.m.

12:05 p.m.MDT

7:05 p.m.

12noonMDT

7:05 p.m.

7:05 p.m.

l:30p.m.PST

7:05 p.m.

6:05 p.m. #

Nov. 7

Nov. 8

Nov. 9

Nov. 15

Nov. 16

SPORTS CALENDAR !

Women's Volleyball vs. Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo 7 p.m., Klum Gym

Women's Volleyball vs. Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo 7 p.m., Klum Gyn

Football vs. Texas-El Paso 7:05 p.m., Aloha Stadium

Women's Volleyball vs. Pacific 7 p.m., Klum Gym

Football at San Diego State 1:30 p.m. PST (11:30 a.m. HST) San Jose, CA

Women's Volleyball vs. Pacific 7 p.m., Klum Gym

MAHAL0 The University of Hawaii Athletic Department wishes to express its deep appre­ciation to the following automobile dealers for making automobiles available

for use by members of the athletic staff:

NISSAN MOTOR CORP. IN HAWAII LTD.

HONDA WINDWARD PACIFIC OLDSMIBILE-GMC INC.

PFLUEGER HONDA CUTTER FORD

SHELLY MAZDA

WINDWARD NISSAN

WINDWARD DODGE

HONOLULU FORD

NISSAN OF WAIPAHU SCHUMAN CARRIAGE CO., LTD. ALAMO RENT-A-CAR

SUBARU ALTAKAHATA BUDGET RENT-A-CAR

TROPICAL RENT-A-CAR SYSTEMS INC. DOLLAR RENT-A-CAR

H-20

Page 60: NOVEMBER 2,1991/$2 · 2011. 6. 30. · Magazine A joint publication of the University of Hawaii and Professional Sports Publications. November 2, 1991 Hawaii vs. Utah -HAWAII-

I l l

Customer Satisfact

TOYOTA PICKUP Best

Compact Pickup*

TOYOTA 4RUNNER Best

Compact Sport Utility*

TOYOTA LAND CRUISE Best

Full-Size Sport Utility*

•J.D. Power and Associate* 1991 Light Duty Truck Customer Satisfaction with Product Quality and Dealer Service.™ Based on 10,458 consumer respons

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Ph. 622-4195

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Ph. 735-1737

WINDWARD TOYOTA 45-655 Kam Hwy., Kaneohe

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MOTOR IMPORTS 650 Kapiolani Blvd., Honolulu

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