San Diego Union-Tribune

Niumatalol­o deserves credit, won’t take it

- Feinstein is a freelancer who wrote this for The Washington Post.

As Ken Niumatalol­o explained it Monday, he and his wife, Barbara, always had a routine after Navy home games.

They would drive to the Annapolis Safeway and Barbara would go inside to choose something for dinner while Ken sat in the car and began looking at video clips from that day’s game. The pandemic has changed that, though, because now the Niumatalol­os — like so many people — have groceries delivered to their house.

And so, last Saturday evening, after Navy had hung on to beat Temple, 31-29, for the 100th victory of Niumatalol­o’s Naval Academy career, they decided they had to find a different way to celebrate.

“Chick-fil-A,” Niumatalol­o said.

There was one problem: Chick-fil-A had already closed.

“So, we went to McDonald’s,” Niumatalol­o said during a Zoom call. “I hadn’t been for years. But it was nice to have a Double Quarter Pounder with Cheese.”

Perhaps nothing sums up Niumatalol­o better than his confession that he celebrated win No. 100 with, as he called it, “bad food.”

That may be the extent of Niumatalol­o’s vices: occasional­ly eating food he knows isn’t healthy

No one wins 100 games in 12-plus years as a Football Bowl Subdivisio­n coach without bringing an unabated intensity to the job, and what people miss about Niumatalol­o is how searingly competitiv­e he is. Most of the time, Niumatalol­o is as softspoken as they come. He’s a terrible TV interview because his answers are always the same. When the Midshipmen are playing well, it’s because the players have done a great job. When they aren’t playing well, it’s because he’s being out-coached and the other team’s players are doing a great job.

But when there aren’t TV cameras around, Niumatalol­o will never fail to get after his players and he will often do so loudly.

“I know I say some crazy things to you guys on the practice field,” he told his players a year ago after a dramatic win over Air Force. “But I do it for moments like this.”

Of course, Niumatalol­o cried early and often that day after the Mids scored in the final seconds to win. He is a self-described “big crybaby,” and he knew the Air Force victory was the first real signal that the difficult moves he had made during the previous offseason, in the wake of a 3-10 disaster in 2018, were paying off. He had fired assistant coaches who had been good friends, he had demanded that the athletic department show more support for the football team and he had implored his players to not make excuses for losses but to find ways to make certain they didn’t happen again.

The changes sure seem to have paid off. The Mids used that Air Force win as a springboar­d to an 11-2 season that was highlighte­d by a 31-7 win over Army — ending a three-game losing streak to their archrivals.

I have been fortunate enough to know Niumatalol­o since he first arrived at Navy in 1995 as an assistant coach on Charlie Weatherbie’s staff. I remember the first time I really noticed him on the practice field. I was half paying attention when I heard screaming coming from the middle of the field. It was Niumatalol­o, letting the offensive line know he was not at all happy with what he was seeing.

Niumatalol­o became the offensive coordinato­r after Paul Johnson left to become the head coach at Georgia Southern. But when things began to slip for Weatherbie, Niumatalol­o became one of the scapegoats. Weatherbie decided to abandon Johnson’s option offense and bring in a new offensive staff. In Weatherbie’s last season in Annapolis, the Midshipmen were 0-10; saved from 0-11 only by the cancellati­on of a game at Northweste­rn.

When Johnson was hired to replace Weatherbie, his first move was to bring Niumatalol­o back. Six seasons later, Johnson had become an icon at the academy. He took the Mids to five straight bowl games, went 6-0 against Army and — perhaps most important — ended Navy’s 43-game losing streak to Notre Dame.

Six days after Navy trounced Army to end that 2007 season, Johnson took the Georgia Tech job. Athletic Director Chet Gladchuk immediatel­y named Niumatalol­o as his successor. The program was certainly on solid ground. Even after losing that season’s Poinsettia Bowl to Utah, the Mids finished 8-5. That was the good news. The bad news was that following Johnson at Navy was a little bit like following Elvis

in concert.

Except that Niumatalol­o has himself become an icon, although in a much quieter way than Johnson, his former boss and mentor.

Niumatalol­o has had plenty of chances to leave for a civilian school, to go to a job where recruits don’t run from the room at the mention of the five-year service obligation upon graduation. The closest he came to leaving was in 2015, when he was pursued by Brigham Young.

It seemed inevitable that Niumatalol­o would leave. He is a devout Mormon and BYU is a Mormon school. Plus, his son Va’a was playing there. He had already done just about everything there was to do at Navy: He was 8-0 against Army; had won the Commander-in-Chief ’s Trophy five times and had become Navy’s all-time winningest coach.

Tearfully (of course), Niumatalol­o more or less said farewell to his players after their win over Army.

“I really did think I was going to take the job when I went out there,” he said later. “Part of it was feeling an obligation to my church.”

But the BYU search committee blew it. Instead of convincing Niumatalol­o that he needed to take the job, they kept asking him

why they should offer him the job. Niumatalol­o’s ego isn’t anywhere close to Johnson’s, but the (non) pitch bothered him. He had gone to BYU to be sold on why he should leave a job he loved..Instead, he was asked to sell himself.

No thanks. He turned the job down.

It now seems likely that Niumatalol­o will coach at Navy until he retires. He’s only 55, and one would think before he quits, the field at Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium will bear his name. The field is currently named for Navy graduate Jack Stephens, a past chairman of Augusta National Golf Club, because of a huge donation Stephens made to the academy.

Niumatalol­o’s name should be added. His contributi­ons to Navy go way beyond money.

But don’t tell him that. It’s all about the players and his coaches and everyone he works with.

“I’m just a fat guy who stands in the middle of the field,” he said once.

Well, he might eat a Double Quarter Pounder with Cheese every once in a while, but let’s be honest: He’s earned it.

 ?? GAIL BURTON AP ?? Ken Niumatalol­o won his 100th game as Navy coach last week and celebrated with a Double Quarter Pounder with Cheese.
GAIL BURTON AP Ken Niumatalol­o won his 100th game as Navy coach last week and celebrated with a Double Quarter Pounder with Cheese.

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