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Warriors roll past Spartans

Stephen Tsai
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TONY AVELAR / SPECIAL TO THE STAR-ADVERTISER

UH defensive back Jalen Rogers celebrated with teammates after making an interception against San Jose State during the first half on Saturday.

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TONY AVELAR / SPECIAL TO THE STAR-ADVERTISER

Hawaii Warriors quarterback Dru Brown (19) runs for a touchdown against the San Jose State during the first half of a NCAA football game on Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016, in San Jose, Calif. ()

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UH quarterback Dru Brown, above, scored a touchdown on a 62-yard run against the Spartans in the second quarter. Top, Warriors running back Steven Lakalaka dove into the end zone past San Jose State safety Trevon Bierria for a touchdown in the fourth quarter.

SAN JOSE, Calif. >> As the University of Hawaii football team prepared to depart for Saturday’s game against San Jose State at CEFCU Stadium, head coach Nick Rolovich handed each player a container of Capri Sun juice drink.

The message was inspirational and metaphorical: bring the juice to the Mountain West Conference game.

“It was a way to pump us up,” said defensive tackle Kory Rasmussen, whose Rainbow Warriors defeated the Spartans 34-17 for their first road victory since 2014. The Warriors are 2-0 in the Mountain West for the first time in their five-year membership.

“That was Coach Rolo doing his thing,” defensive end Makani Kema-Kaleiwahea said. “He has his ways, his mysterious ways of pumping us up. I thought that was awesome. Before the game, everyone was drinking it. We definitely had the juice.”

Quarterback Dru Brown, making his second NCAA start and playing 12 miles from his family home in Los Gatos, was 24-for-33 for 287 yards and two touchdowns. He also turned a now-you-see-it, now-you-don’t fake into a bootleg that went 62 yards for a touchdown.

“It was a ‘Sunshine’ day,” said slotback Dylan Collie, who caught a 24-yard scoring pass from the quarterback known as “Sunshine.”

Collie said Brown, who has not been intercepted in his two starts, is “a great football player, an all-around leader and, more importantly, he has a lot of confidence. He’s a confident kid, and it brings out the best in us.”

The Warriors also received a boost from a defense that stood up after being bullied by the Spartans’ power running game the first two series. The Spartans averaged 12.8 yards on their first seven carries before being stopped on third-and-1 and settling for Bryce Crawford’s 20-yard field goal.

The Spartans then went 85 yards in 12 plays to take a 10-7 lead early in the second quarter.

“I had to hold on to my ass,” UH defensive coordinator Kevin Lempa said. “I thought, ‘Damn, they’re fast.’ The first two drives, they went up and down the field like we were Swiss cheese.”

And then the Warriors had enough. The front seven clogged the running lanes and then chased quarterback Kenny Potter, who was playing on a sore knee and ankle. Potter was harassed into three interceptions — one each by safety Trayvon Henderson and cornerbacks Jalen Rogers and Jamal Mayo.

“This week, we did a lot of high-point drills,” Rogers said of jumping for high passes, “and I guess it paid off.”

The Warriors sacked Potter six times, and produced 11 minus-yardage plays.

“Our guys settled down,” Lempa said. “They understood what they were supposed to do and they did it. They played well. They played aggressively.”

The Warriors also had to make an offensive adjustment. They had planned a sequel to the previous week’s 344 rushing yards. But offensive coordinator Brian Smith did the math: There were more defenders than blockers in the tackle box, and the Spartans were in man-to-man pass coverages. With the Spartans keying on running back Diocemy Saint Juste, who averaged 1.0 yard per rush in the first half, Smith called for more passing.

Collie was wide open on a delayed corner route that he and Brown synchronized after practices last week. “As soon as I saw the coverage and I saw Dru bail (out of the pocket), I knew I had to keep my head down, and he was going to let (the pass) go, and that’s exactly what he did,” Collie said. “It worked out.”

Brown said: “It was a good scheme. I made my read, I made my throw, and Dylan did the rest.”

Later, the Warriors faced a fourth-and-1 situation on their 38. Running back Steven Lakalaka, the short-yardage specialist, was summoned. Rolovich gave approval to Brown to give the ball to Lakalaka, as the Spartans expected, or to fake the handoff and run the other direction on a bootleg.

“You’ve got to trust your players,” Rolovich said.

Brown pulled back the football from Lakalaka, who was running to his left, and then sprinted on a keeper around the right side and into open space.

“I definitely got tired at the end,” said Brown, whose 62-yard touchdown broke a 10-all tie with 8:20 left in the second quarter. “I definitely felt them reel me in. It was a long run. I’m happy I made it into the end zone.”

But the enthusiasm was tempered when Brown was penalized for excessive celebration when he high-fived a Pop Warner player in the end zone.

“I didn’t even know that was a rule,” Brown said. “It’s definitely something I’ll try not to do anymore.”

The Warriors were assessed a 15-yard penalty, and the tee was placed on the 20 for the ensuing penalty.

On UH’s final play of the first half, wideout Ammon Barker was similarly penalized after his 39-yard catch for the first touchdown of his UH career.

“We don’t need these stupid penalties,” Rolovich said. “We’ve got to start acting like we’ve been here before and know how to win.”

While satisfied with Brown’s overall play, Rolovich still expressed disappointment in yet another lost fumble by the sophomore quarterback, this one parlayed into 19-yard return for a touchdown to close the Spartans within 24-17 in the third quarter. Brown lost a fumble the previous week.

“We’ve been telling him about that stupid fumble,” Rolovich said. “I told him it was coming, and it came. … Maybe this will be a lesson he gets. If he wants to keep doing it, we’ll make another change.”

Brown said not securing the football tightly is “a habit I have to break. There’s no excuse. It’s something I’ve been able to get away with my whole life. Guys are a lot faster, a lot bigger (in Division I than in junior college or high school). … If I just have it tucked, I won’t fumble, and I’ll take a sack, and that’s not a house call, that’s not a touchdown in their favor. I don’t think it’s me trying to do too much. It’s the way I hold the ball. I can’t be doing that anymore.”

But the defense did not allow another point the rest of the way. Lakalaka’s 30-yard touchdown run and Rigo Sanchez’s 35-yard field goal ended the suspense.

“It was a little bit of a gut check in the second half,” Rolovich said, “and that was good for this team. That’s good growth for this team.”

FIRST QUARTER

SAN JOSE STATE

>> Bryce Crawford 20 field goal.

>> Drive: 9 plays, 86 yards, 5:01 elapsed time. Time: 9:59. Score: San Jose State 3, Hawaii 0

HAWAII

>> Rigo Sanchez 24 field goal.

>> Drive: 13 plays, 69 yards, 4:52 elapsed time. Time: 5:07. Score: San Jose State 3, Hawaii 3

SECOND QUARTER

SAN JOSE STATE

>> Justin Holmes 8 pass from Kenny Potter. Crawford kick.

>> Drive: 12 plays, 85 yards, 5:06 elapsed time. Time: 14:57. Score: San Jose State 10, Hawaii 3

HAWAII

>> Dylan Collie 24 pass from Dru Brown. Sanchez kick.

>> Drive: 5 plays, 75 yards, 2:11 elapsed time. Time: 12:46. Score: San Jose State 10, Hawaii 10

HAWAII

>> Brown 62 run. Sanchez kick.

>> Drive: 4 plays, 71 yards, 1:45 elapsed time. Time: 8:20. Score: Hawaii 17, San Jose State 10

HAWAII

>> Ammon Barker 39 pass from Brown. Sanchez kick.

>> Drive: 5 plays, 77 yards, 0:51 elapsed time. Time: 0:26. Score: Hawaii 24, San Jose State 10

THIRD QUARTER

SAN JOSE STATE

>> Frank Ginda 19 fumble return. Crawford kick.

>> Time: 4:16. Score: Hawaii 24, San Jose State 17

FOURTH QUARTER

HAWAII

>> Steven Lakalaka 30 run. Sanchez kick.

>> Drive: 4 plays, 44 yards, 2:00 elapsed time. Time: 12:53. Score: Hawaii 31, San Jose State 17

HAWAII

>> Sanchez 35 field goal.

>> Drive: 57 plays, 42 yards, 3:18 elapsed time. Time: 07:04. Score: Hawaii 34, San Jose State 17

TEAM STATISTICS

HAW SJS
First downs 20 16
Rushes-yards 31-144 40-164
Passing 287 175
Comp-Att-Int 24-33-0 18-33-3
Return Yards 0 123
Punts-Avg. 6-44.5 3-46.0
Fumbles-Lost 2-2 0-0
Penalties-Yards 9-85 4-25
Time of Possession 29:44 30:16

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS

RUSHING–Hawaii, D.Brown 6-54, Saint Juste 16-38, Lakalaka 4-36, Harris 3-29, Ursua 1-4, (Team) 1-(minus 17). San Jose St., Roberson 19-91, Crawley 3-39, Cooper 7-30, Hartley 1-18, (Team) 1-(minus 1), Love 1-(minus 4), Potter 8-(minus 9).

PASSING–Hawaii, D.Brown 24-33-0-287. San Jose St., Potter 16-30-3-160, Love 2-3-0-15.

RECEIVING–Hawaii, Kemp 6-69, Ursua 5-52, Collie 4-54, Timoteo 3-28, ‘Unga 2-41, Barker 2-38, Camanse-Stevens 1-6, Saint Juste 1-(minus 1). San Jose St., Hartley 4-41, Crawley 4-38, Holmes 4-37, Freeman 3-51, Roberson 3-8.

MISSED FIELD GOALS–San Jose St., Crawford 50.

13 responses to “Warriors roll past Spartans”

  1. zhiro says:

    UH ranks no. 64 (120) nationally in total offense and no. 115 (104) in total defense. Rigo Sanchez ranks no. 14 in punting, Marcus Kemp is no. 23 in receiving yards and Diocemy Saint Juste in no. 39 in rushing. (Last year’s final rankings in parentheses).

    • Crackers says:

      UH ranks 45th nationally in total offense and #122 in total defense. 101st in scoring offense and #114 in scoring defense. This is through 6 games and includes the blowout losses. I like the trendline over the past two games. Teams need to learn how to win at their own level before they can elevate.

      The message is clear that Hawaii was never born into privilege, a Power five conference, access to huge booster money and a large talent pool of top players.

      We initially got JJ at a bargain and he wanted to come here and stay for a while. We chased him away. Mac actually did good afterward (1 WAC title, T-2nd in 4 years) and continued the legacy here and Hawaii liked the aggressive defense and the high flying run and shoot offense. The A.D. at the time squandered all that momentum away, chased away what is now a top DC in the country. It took a change of A.D. and fortunately we got back the former O.C. with more experience and is now the head coach in Rolo.

      • zhiro says:

        NCAA ranks total offense by yards-per-game. Georgia Southern is no. 45 with 439.4 yards per game after 5 games. UH is no. 64 with 419.7 yards per game after 6 games.

      • nippy68 says:

        No disrespect to jj but he left to go to smu for the money.

        • ehowzit says:

          HE NEVER LEFT BCOZ OF MONEY; OTHERWISE HE COULD HAVE STAYED AT SAN DIEGO CHARGERS FOR 3 MILLION BUCKS. ALSO, HE WOULD HAVE NOT OFFERED TO TAKE THE U.H. HC JOB LAST YEAR FOR FREE.

  2. Bdpapa says:

    I thought that was a pretty solid performance. Not a great start but they came back strong!

  3. Crackers says:

    We are seeing a nice trend being established and a team starting to believe in itself. Not bad after 6 games consider it is a brand new offense, new playbook, new calls, new coaches and a couple dozen new players between recruits and walk-ons. How can you judge down on a team whose reality is being a team in a mid-major conference.

    Context: ESPN college football conference rankings. MWC is 7th of 10. Top 6 are SEC, Big 10, Big 12, ACC, Pac-12 as the power-5 conferences, then the AAC as #6.

    ,p> We played a top 30 in Cal in Australia, then a week later #5 ranked Michigan on the road, then a Pac-12 team in AZ also on the road. Sitting at 3-3 after playing 4 of the first 6 games on the road, traveling 4x as much (25,000+ miles flown) as any other major college football team, we aren’t in a bad spot. We are already 2-0 in conference, first time since before Chow. Won a road game for the first time since 2014, and only the 2nd road win since 2011. All steps are positive.

    Defense is starting to click. Offense is moving the ball with consistency. We still have 7 more games to go. #35 Air Force, #36 SDSU on the road. Then #19 Boise State at home. We have more to cheer for now than in the previous 4 years.

    Only the ignorant fans blowing hot air would say in impatience they they aren’t beating top 10 teams immediately at the talent level we have. They don’t know football, how long it takes to build a talent core, establish entire team players within a system, and executing it. Go Rainbow Warriors!

    • ehowzit says:

      ALL DISRESPECT TO THOSE POWER-5 AND TOP TEN-RANKED NCAA TEAMS, BUT THEY WOULD NEVER TRY U.H.’S TRAVEL SCHEDULE FOR ANY YEAR. THEY NEED TO BE SPOON-FED THEIR TEAM PRE-SEASON NAMBY-PAMBY SCHEDULES EVERY YEAR. THEY ARE WOOSIES, A COMBO OF WOOSES AND SISSIES. IN A COUPLE OF YEARS, THEY WILL FIND ALL KINDS OF REASONS NOT TO PLAY HAWAII NO MATTER HOW MUCH WILL BE WILLING TO PAY THEM; INDIVIUAL TEAMS HAVE DONE IT IN THE PAST.

  4. Pacificsports says:

    No respect from the MWC, here’s all they had to say about the game, “Hawaii topped San Jose State in a game that allegedly took place.” http://www.mwcconnection.com/videos/2016/10/9/13212996/week-6-mountain-west-football-highlights

  5. jankenpo says:

    I totally agree with Coach Rolovich. “We’ve got to start acting like we’ve been here before and know how to win.” Sooner or later, these celebration penalties will, not may, cost the team the game.

  6. ehowzit says:

    WHOSE FEELINGS AM I HURTING>? YOU MAY eMAIL ME DIRECTLY.
    DENGZEH.

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