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Notebook: Taumua out for revenge against Hawaii

Junior defensive end hopes to secure bragging rights for his next trip home

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Justin M. Bowen

Malo Taumua of UNLV looks at the scoreboard as the Rebels take on the Beavers of Oregon State Saturday night at Sam Boyd Stadium. Oregon State won the game 23-21.

Wednesday, Sept. 16, 2009 | 2:30 a.m.

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Next game

  • Opponent: Hawaii
  • Date: Sept. 19, 8 p.m.
  • Where: Sam Boyd Stadium
  • TV: The Mtn., Cox ch. 334
  • Radio: ESPN Radio 1100 AM
  • The Line: UNLV by 7

More than anything, UNLV junior defensive end Malo Taumua would just like a more pleasant trip home on his next voyage to the Hawaiian islands.

"It's for bragging rights," he said of the Rebels upcoming showdown with 2-0 Hawaii at 8 p.m. Saturday night at Sam Boyd Stadium. "The last two times we lost to them, I went back home, I got nothing but trash talk."

Taumua's heard it from Hawaii senior linebacker R.J. Kiesel-Kauhane and senior defensive lineman Rocky Svaiigaea, both of whom he went to school with at Aiea High in O'ahu. The Rebels were thumped by the Warriors during each of Taumua's first two seasons on campus, losing 42-13 on the road in 2006, then 49-14 in Vegas a year later.

Now, as a junior, he feels he'll have more to do with the Rebels fate, rather than watching from the side.

"When we played them my freshman year, I was getting picked on a lot because I was a freshman," he said. "Now I'm a junior. I'm aware of more things, I'm focused."

The 6-foot-2, 270-pound Taumua has also transformed himself into the heart and soul of an improving UNLV defense.

Through two games, the vocal and animated Taumua has four tackles, a sack and an interception.

A year ago, he had a fall camp which gave every indication that he'd have a monster sophomore season. Overmatched at times and swallowed up by double teams on the interior line, he's already on pace to smash his numbers from 2008 at his new defensive end post.

Though Taumua isn't the only Rebel who sees the showdown with 8 p.m. as a game that carries added meaning. On top of the other four players who consider the Hawaiian islands home — defensive tackle Ramsey Feagai, long snapper Kamu Kapanui, guard Sean Tesoro and offensive lineman Daniel Kaanana — the Polynesian influence on the UNLV roster is extensive.

"You try not to put extra added incentive to it and keep it in perspective and keep it just a game," said UNLV offensive line coach Keith Uperesa, who recruits Hawaii for the Rebels. "The more you add to it, the more pressure you put on people. I like for the kids to just relax and play ball."

Clayton most likely a go

It's well known that if junior quarterback Omar Clayton is healthy enough to go, he gets the starting nod for the Rebels.

It appears as thought that will be the case on Saturday night.

A precautionary MRI on his right knee revealed no major damage, and showed that Clayton suffered just a sprained PCL during Saturday's 23-21 loss to Oregon State.

He was relieved by sophomore Mike Clausen, who went 6-for-9 and threw two touchdown passes during UNLV's second half comeback.

"He practiced today, but we're still not gonna make a decision until the week goes on as to how we're gonna do the quarterback thing," UNLV coach Mike Sanford said following Tuesday's practice. "It just depends on how he does this week or whether it swells up. But he practiced today and practiced well."

Sanford said a final decision won't be made before at least Thursday.

As for senior defensive end/linebacker Jason Beuchamp, he was back to practicing on his sprained right ankle on Tuesday, but wore a yellow vest over his uniform to avoid heavy contact.

He played roughly half of the snaps against Oregon State, and should be ready to go on Saturday.

Discussion: 2 comments so far…

Comments are moderated by Las Vegas Sun editors. Our goal is not to limit the discussion, but rather to elevate it. Comments should be relevant and contain no abusive language. Comments that are off-topic, vulgar, profane or include personal attacks will be removed. Full comments policy.

  1. Hawaii will give Rebels a really tough game and will have a great number of fans at the game

  2. Wow...guys stop using Taumua for quotes....seems like for two weeks running, he's giving the other team locker room material

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