Los Angeles Times

Almost a poi-to-Troy story

If not for his family, Tagovailoa could have been at USC

- By David Wharton

SAN JOSE — Squint your eyes until that crimson jersey turns a slightly darker shade of cardinal. Imagine those white pants becoming gold.

With top-ranked Alabama playing for the national championsh­ip Monday night, USC fans can be forgiven for daydreamin­g about what might have been.

What if quarterbac­k Tua Tagovailoa had stepped off the plane in Los Angeles, instead of continuing east to Tuscaloosa, when he left high school in Hawaii? What if the big, strong-armed sophomore had guided the Trojans’ offense this season?

“Our team was USC growing up,” he says. “I used to be No. 11 because of Matt Leinart. He was a lefty, as well.”

Back in 2016, when

Tagovailoa was a prized recruit out of Hawaii, there were whispers about him “silently committing” to the Trojans. He acknowledg­es being “pretty close to going to SC.”

But something happened when Alabama turned up the recruiting heat that spring.

Two years later, Tagovailoa has raised the Crimson Tide offense to a new level. At a school where quarterbac­ks have often fallen into the category of game-manager, he has become a game-changer.

And some people in Southern California might still wonder about his change of heart.

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To understand Tagovialoa’s choice, you must first understand the dynamics that exist within his family. He throws left-handed because that is what his father wanted.

Once a defensive lineman, Galu Tagovailoa raised his son to be a passer from the age of 3 or 4.

“I guess he felt like he was the only lefty in our family, and he wanted one of his kids, I guess, to be a lefty, as well,” Tua says. “I kick with my right, I write with my right, I eat with my right. The only thing I do is throw, shoot with my left.”

Polynesian families tend to be close, with children honoring their parents. It cannot be discounted when Galu characteri­zes Tua’s recruiting process as “a family decision … it was what made his family happy.”

At Saint Louis School in Honolulu, Tagovailoa was ranked as the No. 1 prospect in the state and No. 57 in the nation. There was speculatio­n he might follow another local player, Marcus Mariota, to Oregon, but the Ducks never showed much interest.

So USC and Alabama ended up on his short list, along with UCLA, Mississipp­i and Texas A&M.

The Trojans figured they had an inside shot at landing the 6-1, 210-pound prospect, with then-coach Steve Sarkisian flying across the Pacific Ocean to deliver a scholarshi­p offer.

“Definitely,” Galu says. “USC was always in the running.”

But not much later, in the middle of the 2015 season, Sarkisian was fired. If the abrupt change startled the Tagovailoa­s, an equally significan­t chain of events began unfolding to the east.

At the end of the regular season, Alabama defensive coordinato­r Kirby Smart accepted the head coaching job at Georgia, which prompted blue-chip recruit Jake Fromm to flip from the Crimson Tide to the Bulldogs.

Just that quickly, Alabama needed a quarterbac­k and shifted its focus to Tagovailoa.

Why did the Crimson Tide ultimately prevail? That remains the subject of various theories and murmurs.

Defensive coordinato­r Tosh Lupoi insists it was simple: Tagovailoa wanted to play for a program that had won three of the previous five national championsh­ips.

“Tua had his goals set on what he wanted to accomplish,” Lupoi says. “When you put those things out on the table, it’s an obvious choice.”

Tagovailoa sidesteps the question, suggesting that a reporter ask his father.

“It was more so a family decision to come to [Alabama] and it’s one of those things where it’s cultural,” he says. “So it’s what my parents wanted more than what I wanted, you know?”

His family prefers to answer in terms of a deep, religious conviction.

“We thought USC was the biggest stage, but Alabama is even bigger,” Galu says. “It was a platform … to utilize our faith and praise our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.”

Whatever the reason, Tagovailoa committed to the Crimson Tide as a junior. But even then, USC had a chance.

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Those early days weren’t idyllic for an island kid plunked down in Tuscaloosa.

The weather was hardly tropical, the practices could be brutal and Tagovailoa didn’t like being stuck behind starter Jalen Hurts as the 2017 season approached. Rumors of a transfer began to circulate.

His family had already settled on moving to Alabama to be close to him. Galu remembers a telephone call that began with his son asking: “Do you think USC still has that scholarshi­p open?”

“Tua, you’re not serious, are you?” “No, Dad, I’m joking.” But Tagovailoa later told a Hawaiian television crew that he might have left if not for the 2018 championsh­ip game, when Alabama coach Nick Saban pulled him off the bench and he ended up leading the team to victory over Georgia with a long touchdown pass in overtime.

Those 30 minutes turned the freshman into a star.

“Everything changed,” he says. “Just the way people look at you, the way people treat you.”

Last summer, Saban kept insisting the quarterbac­k job was wide open, that Tagovailoa would have to earn the spot, but the outcome seemed inevitable.

The only real surprise? The way Tagovailoa quickly changed things at Alabama, taking command of an offense that had played second-fiddle to the defense, transformi­ng it into a juggernaut that averages more than 527 yards and 47 points.

Watching from afar, Clemson defensive lineman Christian Wilkins thought to himself that Tagovailoa was a different kind of player.

“The throws he can make are really quite special,” Wilkins says. “I ain’t seen too many quarterbac­ks that can really make throws like that, man, with poise throughout the game.”

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There isn’t much that USC can say about the matter.

The assistant who led the effort to woo Tagovailoa, Marques Tuiasosopo, is now at California, where a spokesman says he is unavailabl­e for comment. The Trojans have moved on, placing their hopes on the shoulders of another promising young passer.

JT Daniels struggled as a freshman this fall, ranking 71st in passing efficiency with 14 touchdowns against 10 intercepti­ons. Those numbers pale in comparison to what is happening at Alabama.

In his first season as a starter — albeit surrounded by a better team — Tagovailoa just missed winning the Heisman Trophy, passing for 3,671 yards and 41 touchdowns while limiting his intercepti­ons to four. His efficiency rating of 205.2 is tops in the nation.

The Southeaste­rn Conference championsh­ip game against Georgia turned ugly — an injured ankle forced him to the sideline, leaving Hurts to spark a rally — things improved against Oklahoma in the College Football Playoff semifinals.

Clemson defensive coordinato­r Brent Venables lists the attributes that make him special: an accurate arm, a knack for moving around the pocket and the quickness to escape when plays break down.

Tagovailoa has also mastered the run-pass option, he says, faking the handoff, then turning and firing a pinpoint throw in the other direction.

“I mean, who does that?” Venables asks. “‘Nobody’ is the answer. Other than him.”

The championsh­ip gives Tagovailoa another chance to showcase his talents on the sport’s biggest stage, against a Clemson defense that ranks among the best in a slew of statistica­l categories.

Not much more than a year after his darkest days, he seems confident and happy. There are no more doubts about choosing Alabama, and no more thoughts about the school he left behind.

“It worked out great,” he says.

Well, it did for him. USC fans watching Monday night’s game might not agree.

 ?? Wilfredo Lee Associated Press ?? ALABAMA QUARTERBAC­K Tua Tagovailoa celebrates after a victory over Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl that put the Crimson Tide in the national championsh­ip game Monday. Tagovailoa became a star when he came off the bench in last year’s title game.
Wilfredo Lee Associated Press ALABAMA QUARTERBAC­K Tua Tagovailoa celebrates after a victory over Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl that put the Crimson Tide in the national championsh­ip game Monday. Tagovailoa became a star when he came off the bench in last year’s title game.
 ?? Kevin C. Cox Getty Images ?? THE EARLY DAYS at Alabama were far from ideal for Tua Tagovailoa, but that has all changed now.
Kevin C. Cox Getty Images THE EARLY DAYS at Alabama were far from ideal for Tua Tagovailoa, but that has all changed now.

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