Archive for July 3rd, 2009

Chad Lopati will attend Arizona Western JC

July 3, 2009

HA Note: “Kapolei head coach Darren Hernandez said Chad Lopati, who signed with UH in February, will attend Arizona Western Junior College this year. Lopati did not meet the requirements to attend UH this year.”

About why Chad chose to go to Arizona Western rather than sit out a year while trying to earn a qualifying SAT score or go to a 4-year college that does not have a football team, Hernandez said:
“He wanted to play football (this year). It won’t be easy. Going the JC route is a risky route. You have to perform academcially in a short amount of time.” (HA)

HA Note: “As a non-qualifier, Lopati would need to earn an associate degree and accumulate at least 48 transferrable credits to be eligible to play at a Division I school. Because scholarship offers come with expiration dates, by enrolling at a JC, Lopati essentially becomes a free agent.”

Hernandez said that if Lopati plays well, as expected:
“there will be a whole lot of schools coming after him (in two years).” (HA)

About how the 6′2″, 248-pound Lopati is listed as a MLB, Hernandez said:
“The coach called me. (Lopati) is penciled in as the starter.” (HA)

http://warriorbeat.honadvblogs.com/2009/07/03/couple-of-minutes-with-colt-brennan

Ryan Grice-Mullen’s head coach expects him to have a big season

July 3, 2009

VS = Vancouver Sun

VS Note: “In particular, he predicts a breakthrough season for a player who spent most of June standing around or riding an exercise bike — wide receiver Ryan Grice-Mullen. The Dreadhead is over his hamstring injury and is ready to ramble after failing to dress for any of last month’s rehearsals.”

Expecting RGM to have a big season, BC Lions head coach wally Buono said:
“The guy, I believe, who’s going to have a big year for us is Grice-Mullen. I haven’t even talked about him. Grice-Mullen can be as explosive a player as there is in this league. You saw that last year in the few games he played. So when you look at a lot of things we’re trying to do — and taking the pressure off Geroy [Simon] is one of them — I do believe we have athletes around him today that can more than do that.” (VS)

VS Note: “Grice-Mullen has only three career and two playoff games under his belt and he doesn’t turn 23 until Sept. 12.”

http://www.vancouversun.com/sports/Lions+GameDay+Team+coming+together+Buono/1757019/story.html

Feature on Rich Miano, Centurians #28

July 3, 2009

HSB Note: “There is a play Hawaii defensive backs coach Rich Miano shows his players. It looks like something from a video game. Dick Tomey, with 50 years in the coaching business, says it’s the second greatest he’s seen, right after Jim McMahon’s impromptu left-footed punt. A screen of three blockers is aligned between a safety and a ballcarrier.”

About facing the three blockers, then-UH DB (now UH DB coach) Rich Miano said:
“I had three choices. Under them, through them or over them.” (HSB)

HSB Note: “Cue that weird “Six Million Dollar Man” noise. The defender — who happens to be Rich Miano — hurdles the blockers, lands on the guy with the ball, taking him down.

About motivating his players with his story, Miano said:
“They see me. They think, ‘If that guy can make the NFL, I can.’” (HSB)

HSB Note: “”YOU’RE GONNA WALK on and you’re gonna get carried off,” said a high school teammate 30 years ago, when told of Miano’s plans to play at the University of Hawaii. Well, at least it was better than his first day of practice at Kaiser, when another braddah greeted him with, “Eh, haole, move your pads before I blast you!” Yet another veteran Cougar, Bryan Almadova, was already benching 225 pounds 10 times. It was a locker room full of studs and Miano wondered if he’d made a big mistake.”

About seeing his teammates at Kaiser, Miano said:
“These were the guys I was going to play with, in my one year of high school football?” (HSB)

HSB Note: “He stuck with it and even gained some cred as the 1979 season went along. Miano intercepted two passes to help the Cougars upset Kamehameha in the Prep Bowl. Ron and Cal Lee had been right. Ron knew an athlete when he saw one, even on a diving board. Cal knew he belonged on defense.”

About how he had planned to go to a small college on the mainland to continue to learn about football, but decided to go to UH after his brother Robert died in an accident, Miano said:
“There was no way I was going to leave my family. My family was devastated. I attribute my success to him.” (HSB)

About how he never thought he’d adjust quickly to Hawaii after moving to Hawaii as a 15-year-old from Brockton, Mass, Miano said:
“I’d never lived anywhere else. I had my first girlfriend. When my dad said we were moving to Hawaii, it was a shock and a disappointment. I cried every day. When we got here, it was culture shock. I hated it.” (HSB)

About how he finally stopped moping after the move, Miano said:
“Then I realized my whole protest wasn’t going to work, we weren’t going back to Brockton. I joined diving.” (HSB)

About how Ron Lee (Kaiser’s head coach) found Miano when he was on the diving team, Cal Lee (the defensive coordinator) said:
“He was raw, like a raw fish, and to his credit he worked hard. I’m not saying he came on and was tearing up the league. Leroy Lutu made him look like a child two or three times. But that was in September. It’s not how you start, it’s how you end.” (HSB)

About how he struggled when he auditioned for UH’s defensive coordinator Bob Wagner, Miano said:
“(Wagner) wanted so much to laugh, he had to turn around. “(HSB)

HSB Note: “To top it off, he wasn’t even academically qualified.”

HSB Note: “He made grades in the summer and, despite the bad workout, Miano somehow got on the fall camp roster — or so he thought.”

About how he thought he was on the fall camp roster but didn’t see his name listed anywhere, Miano said:
“My name’s not on the dinner list, my name’s not on the dorm list, my name’s not on the equipment list.” (HSB)

About how he worked extremely hard to improve, Miano said:
“Nobody ever outworked me, I was obsessed. I wanted acceptance in Hawaii. I wanted to be good so people would like me.” (HSB)

About how Miano wanted to learn, star CB Dana McLemore said:
“He wanted to learn everything, a sponge. He was big, strong, fast and smart. He was just young and hadn’t played at that level.” (HSB)

HSB Note: “He got his first real playing time as a sophomore in 1982, in at safety for injured Louis Santiago against BYU. Miano picked off a Steve Young pass.”

About how he kept his spot once he got a chance to play, Miano said:
“After that I never missed a down.” (HSB)

HSB Note: “He kept improving, and became a fan favorite because of how hard he hit. And there was his name — some people thought it was Japanese; the outsider was mistaken for a local, until he took his helmet off.”

About how people thought he was local, Miano said:
“I would tell people, ‘Yeah, I’m hapa, I just pull to the haole side.’” (HSB)

About how the odds to make the NFL were against him because the USFL had just folded and there were so much competition to make the roster, Miano said:
“There were 20 different kinds of yogurt in the cafeteria at training camp. I made it my goal to be there long enough to taste them all.” (HSB)

HSB Note: “Now he’s married to a local girl, Lori, mother of his children, Kupa’a and Siena. He works at a job he loves, trying to show others how to do what he did.”

About his story, Miano said:
“This is not Disney. I’m not Vince from ‘Invincible,’ I’m not Rudy.” (HSB)

HSB Note: “Actually he’s got Rudy beat — by college stardom and 11 years in the NFL.”

http://www.starbulletin.com/sports/20090703_further_review.html

Aloha Stadium may replace its FieldTurf surface as early as next year

July 3, 2009

HSB Note: “Aloha Stadium manager Scott Chan said the goal would be to have a new field in place in time for the 2010 football season. The HTA is also looking to bring the Pan-Pacific Championship, an international soccer tournament, back to Honolulu, and a new playing field could be one of the conditions in securing the deal. Chan said the window to have a new field installed would be February to August 2010. If the process can’t be completed in that span, the replacement would likely happen prior to the 2011 football season.”

Trying to get the new turf in 2011, Aloha Stadium manager Scott Chan said:
“We may have to wait until 2011, but I’m trying my hardest to see if we can do it before that.” (HSB)

HSB Note: “Aloha Stadium hosted the Pan-Pacific Championship in February 2008, with the Houston Dynamo and L.A. Galaxy of Major League Soccer playing in the event along with teams from Japan and Australia. The tournament featured the return of Kamehameha graduate Brian Ching as well as L.A.’s David Beckham and Landon Donovan. The U.S., Japan, Korea and China were represented in this year’s four-team tournament in Carson, Calif.”

About the Pac-Pacific Championship, HTA chairman Mike McCartney said:
“I think it’ll bring in people from both east and west and coverage in major markets where we want to develop more tourism and in established markets, like Japan. And there’s a great following for soccer around the world. What’s good is the stadium authority and the tourism authority are working together already to make sure we can help each other and get the best possible outcome.” (HSB)

HSB Note: “Aloha Stadium replaced its AstroTurf surface with FieldTurf in 2003 at a cost of $1.3 million. The state paid $800,000, with the NFL chipping in $500,000.”

http://www.starbulletin.com/sports/sportsnews/20090703_Stadium_eyes_FieldTurf_replacement.html

Warrior Beat Q&A with Colt Brennan

July 3, 2009

Asked who was the best UH football player, Colt chose Jesse Sapolu:
“That’s a good question. I would think it was the guy who played for San Francisco and won all of those Super Bowls — Jesse. He’s the most notable, to me.” (HA)

Asked who was the best player he played with at UH, Colt said:
“It’s kind of biased when you ask who’s the best ever. You can measure it it on a scale of what a player did statistically and career-wise. I never felt more comfortable on a football field in my life than when Nate Ilaoa was standing right next to me. There’s something about Nasti. When he was on the field next to me, I never felt more comfortable or more confident.” (HA)

Asked which was his favorite UH team, Colt said:
“We got so much love for our last year (in 2007) because we went 12-0. But my junior year, that was the best football team I’ve ever been on in my life. Hands down. We sent like six or seven guys to the league on defense. We never realized my junior year how good we were really were. The following year, we realized we were a good football team. Not as good as we were the year before, but we could beat the teams we were playing. That’s how we won the close games.” (HA)

When told that Alabama vacated its victory over UH in 2006, so the Warriors technically went 12-2 and 12-1 in his final two seasons at UH, Colt said:
“Put that in the paper. I like that. I want to frame that.” (HA)

About finding a bargain for his new rental place, Colt said:
“I moved into a place that’s a lot bigger but for a lot less price. I went from an apartment to a townhome. This place is, like, $300 less in rent.” (HA)

Asked why he needed to find a cheap rental place, Colt said:
“I think people get confused. Football is not like basketball or baseball. There’s not a lot of guaranteed money. As far as the minimum (salary) goes, we make a lot less than basketball and baseball players. Everyone thinks you’re making a lot of money, living the big life. But, really, right now, you don’t know when your next paycheck is coming when you’re a guy like me. It’s not a lot compared to a lot of the guys who are in the locker room with you. Basically, they say to treat your first contract like your last contract. You save it and save it. Hopefully, you get to a second contract. If you get a second contract, it’s usually means you’re getting paid.” (HA)

http://warriorbeat.honadvblogs.com/2009/07/03/couple-of-minutes-with-colt-brennan/