UH adjusting to tough times

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McMackin says past 8 days have been 'tough,' with changes coming




The past eight days have been difficult for the Hawai'i football team.


During the span, they lost a game (27-7 to Boise State) and their best offensive player (Kealoha Pilares, sprained foot).

Special teams coordinator Ikaika Malloe underwent an emergency appendectomy. Freshman offensive lineman Tuiatua Tuiasosopo underwent surgery after suffering side effects from an infection. Wideout Jovonte Taylor withdrew from school after losing more than 20 pounds from a viral infection.

"It's been tough," head coach Greg McMackin said. But those incidents are part of life, McMackin acknowledged.

Self-created mistakes on the field, McMackin said, "are not acceptable."

And that is why McMackin has authorized modifications to the offense, return teams and depth chart.

The changes were made in relative secrecy. McMackin allowed media members to attend closed-to-the-public practices this past week on the condition that they do not report nor show several key changes in personnel and strategy.

But McMackin confirmed that a lack of productivity in post-catch running prompted some of the changes. Against Boise State, the Warriors' yard-after-catch (YAC) average was 3.94 yards. The starting receivers dropped five passes.

"There are always going to be mistakes," McMackin said. "But we can't have big mistakes."

McMackin, who already made alterations to fit quarterback Inoke Funaki's running skills, will further expand the offensive menu. Some modifications were derived from hours of studying videos of UH practices and Nevada's games. Others were kept in storage, culled from different programs at all levels of college football.

"We've worked very hard this week, and the fans will see that," McMackin said.

McMackin also commissioned changes to help improve the Warriors' field position. He had been disappointed in the punt returns; the Warriors are dead last nationally, averaging minus-0.33 yards per return.

Aaron Bain has been promoted to No. 1 punt returner. Nate Nasca and Daniel Lofton also have been trained for duty.

Malcolm Lane, who was 10th nationally in kickoff returns last season, will be the primary kick returner. The Warriors also conducted an audition for the wedge-setter, a position vacated when Victor Clore suffered a knee injury. The wedge is a series of partial blocks that create a lane for the kickoff returner.

Malloe said Antwan "Tua" Mahaley will be the wedge-setter, a position aligned on the right hash, at about the 25. Mahaley actually earned the job because of his work as a wedge-buster. Mahaley had volunteered to play on the scout kickoff team. On a kickoff, he raced downfield and floored a wedge-setter.

"He wasn't intimidated," Malloe said, noting that was when it was apparent Mahaley also would be suitable to set the wedge.

Malloe said C.J. Allen-Jones, who plays on the front line of the kickoff-return unit, and Cameron Allen-Jones will be available to play wedge-setter.

The Warriors are entering the final stretch of the regular season. At 3-4 overall, they need to win four of their final six games to ensure a winning regular season and claim the accompanying berth in the Sheraton Hawai'i Bowl.

"This is a very important and very crucial game for us," McMackin said. "We're at home. We're playing a good football team. And we need to win at home."

McMackin said the team is in a "position where we have to win out. It's important for us to get better every game and go to a bowl game. This (game) is in our way. This team is coming over to keep us from our goal."

The Warriors begin a two-game road trip next week. They play at Utah State Nov. 1 and New Mexico State Nov. 8. They will stay in El Paso between those games.
 

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Warriors will have their hands full on defense

Hawaii is not used to losing at home, but oddsmakers say it could happen


Here are two words that haven't been associated with Hawaii football in a while:

Home underdog.

According to those who set the odds each college football weekend, Nevada enters Aloha Stadium for tonight's Western Athletic Conference game against the Warriors as a 3 1/2 -point favorite.

If the Wolf Pack (4-3, 2-1 WAC) -- hailing from the state most connected with such figures -- prove the prognosticators correct, it'll be the first time they leave Honolulu with a win over UH since 1948.

Hawaii (3-4, 2-2), meanwhile, has lost multiple home games in a season just once since 2002, going undefeated in Halawa a year ago. The Warriors already let one slip away this season against San Jose State, and are looking to rebound from a loss at Boise State last week in pursuit of a third straight bowl berth.

"Games at home are must wins," UH linebacker Adam Leonard said. "You've got to protect your house."

The Warriors will try to defend their home field against Nevada's pistol offense, which hasn't lacked for firepower this season. Nevada scores just under 39 points per game and ranks sixth nationally in total offense behind quarterback Colin Kaepernick and running back Vai Taua.

Hawaii coach Greg McMackin closed practices to the public this week while the staff tinkered with personnel and schemes in an effort to ignite a Warriors offense coming off a five-turnover outing in last week's 27-7 loss at Boise State.

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This one shapes up as a test of strengths.

As expected, a veteran Hawaii defense has anchored the Warriors this season, sparking wins with turnovers and keeping them competitive in other games while a rebuilding offense searches for its identity.

Opposite the Warriors tonight will be a Nevada attack that's scored at least 44 points in each of the last four games and "could be one of the best offenses we've played," Hawaii coach Greg McMackin said.

The duel between the teams' featured units highlights a pivotal Western Athletic Conference game in both teams' pursuits of postseason berths.

At 3-4 overall and 2-2 in WAC play following last week's loss at Boise State, Hawaii's margin for error in its run at a third straight bowl appearance is shrinking fast. Nevada (4-3, 2-1) is 0-4 at Aloha Stadium in WAC play and needs a win to stay within sight of the conference leaders with a run against the front-runners coming up.

Following is a look at the matchup as Hawaii enters its lone home game in a five-week stretch:




When Hawaii has the ball: McMackin said the Warriors will open things up this week as the offense tries to keep pace with the WAC's highest-scoring offense.


Executing that philosophy will depend heavily on the play of the Hawaii offensive line.

The Warriors gave up seven sacks against Boise State and rank next to last in the nation in sacks allowed at 3.71 per game. The line will have to hold up against a Wolf Pack front that has 20 sacks this season, led by defensive end Dontay Moch's 5 1/2 .

Hawaii sputtered last week once running back/slotback Kealoha Pilares, the Warriors' most effective weapon of late, went out with a sprained foot. In his absence, the backfield duties will be shared by a trio of backs, and David Farmer's blocking ability could make him a key part of the protection scheme.

Inoke Funaki remains UH's starting quarterback, looking to rebound from a five-interception performance, though McMackin indicated that more than one QB could see action tonight.

Greg Salas has emerged as the top playmaker among the Warriors receivers and will operate against a Wolf Pack defense that ranks fifth nationally against the run but is 119th in pass defense.

But facing three of the country's top eight air attacks -- Texas Tech, Missouri and New Mexico State -- does tend to slant the numbers.






When Nevada has the ball: The Wolf Pack running game is second in the country, aided in part by Colin Kaepernick's improvement as a passer.

"To have a quarterback develop in the passing game and be an awesome runner gives them a different aspect," UH linebacker Adam Leonard said.

Nevada has added an option element to the pistol offense and Kaepernick has run for 11 touchdowns, while running back Vai Taua, who's averaging 105.1 yards per game in place of injured Luke Lippincott, has nine scores.

Devote too much attention to the run, though, and a receiver corps led by Marko Mitchell (85.6 ypg, four TDs) can get loose in the secondary for Kaepernick, who is completing 62.5 percent of his throws.

The numbers Kaepernick and Taua have racked up can also be credited to the work of a hefty offensive line.

"(The pistol) gives the offensive line opportunities to move the line of scrimmage and the running back a chance to read the gaps as the holes develop," Leonard said.

Closing those gaps will fall on a Hawaii front seven preparing for a physical battle at the line of scrimmage. The Warriors defense kept Hawaii in contention against Boise State last week until a hail of second-half turnovers contributed to 17 second-half points.






Special teams: With the Hawaii return units skimming the bottom of the national rankings, the Warriors have made some changes in that phase of the kicking game.

Warrior special teams coach Ikaika Malloe implemented some of the adjustments to the units prior to having an emergency appendectomy on Wednesday. Aaron Bain is now slated to return punts and Malcolm Lane will return kickoffs.

Dan Kelly's field goal with 11 seconds left decided last year's meeting in Reno and he's made five of his last six kicks. Nevada's Brett Jaekle is 7-for-9 this season, but the Wolf Pack don't settle for field goals much, as he's attempted just three in the last five games.



KEY MATCHUP

Nevada QB Colin Kaepernick vs. UH LB Solomon Elimimian
Containing Kaepernick was a central theme for the Warriors defense last year, when it held the freshman to 23 yards rushing and 134 passing in a 28-26 win.

Elimimian played a big part in that scheme and will be in the middle of the action again tonight.

"As a middle linebacker you're pretty keyed into the quarterback," UH coach Greg McMackin said. "He's pretty important in controlling any running game."

The Warriors have faced multi-talented quarterbacks before in Washington's Jake Locker and Florida's Tim Tebow, and "(Kaepernick's) definitely similar," Elimimian said. "He's a dual-threat quarterback and he has a great football mind. He's right up there with them."

Kaepernick averages 87 rushing yards per game, and keeping the 6-foot-6 sophomore from turning the corner on the option will be among the tasks facing the Warrior defense.

As Elimimian chases Kaepernick, he'll also be running down the school's career tackles record. He's three shy of the mark of 366 set by Levi Stanley in the early 1970s.
 
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