Big Blue went with the big blast, right up the gut.
The game plan worked to near-perfection, and Moanalua is now in the quarterfinals of the OIA Red playoffs. Richard Parham and Kaleo Yanai combined for 140 yards as Moanalua rallied past Waipahu 31-20 on Friday night.
Moanalua took the lead for good, 17-14, early in the third quarter on Micah Kaneshiro’s 5-yard slant pass to Jon-Michael Sharsh. With defensive tackle Scott Pagano wreaking havoc in Waipahu’s backfield, the visitors struggled to move the ball in the third quarter.
With 6:33 to play, Kaneshiro found Chad Aragon for a 21-yard TD pass in the corner of the end zone, and Na Menehune led 24-14.
A fumble recovery led to a 7-yard touchdown pass from Kai Mercado-Aiona to Isaiah Alama with 1:45 left, bringing the Marauders within 24-20. But Pagano blocked the PAT kick and Tahi Caldwell emerged with the football after a pileup on the ensuing onside kick.
Wide receiver Donald Lambert then lined up as a wildcat quarterback and scored on a 53-yard run to put away the game with 1:25 remaining.
A crowd of about 1,500 watched at Moanalua’s field as the home team overcame 182 yards in penalties. Pagano had four of his team’s five sacks to keep Waipahu quarterbacks Kaimi Paredes and Solomon Matautia under control much of the night.
"We played our normal defense, but you have to stop Paredes," Moanalua coach Arnold Martinez said.
Kaneshiro spent most of the night handing the ball to Parham and Yanai, who were north-south runners on nearly every play. Na Menehune rushed for 209 yards on 36 attempts. Kaneshiro still passed for 149 yards and two touchdowns. He was picked off twice by Waipahu safety Solomon Matautia.
"We love our kids and we’re proud of them. They had to deal with a tough, physical team," Martinez said. "They’ve got beastly players. Thick, aggressive."
Waipahu missed the play of two starting offensive linemen, Jedidiah Mageo and Numa Viliamu, due to injury, but the visitors still rushed for 143 yards on 36 carries.
"We ran the ball pretty good, but defensively, their offensive line sealed people off with their blocks. That surprised us," Waipahu coach Eric Keola said.
Parham, who scored on a 20-yard touchdown early, wasn’t surprised by the workload. Moanalua game-planned up the gut, away from Waipahu’s stout outside linebacker, Wesley Nagaseu.
"From watching film, we knew the middle would be open a lot. Our O-line’s play wasn’t a surprise to us. We had miscues in the Kahuku game, but they cleaned it up," he said.
Waipahu finished the year 2-7, with four losses of five points or less. The Marauders played for the Division II state title last year, losing to ‘Iolani.
At Moanalua
Waipahu (2-7) |
6 |
8 |
0 |
6 |
— |
20 |
Moanalua (5-4) |
7 |
3 |
7 |
14 |
— |
31 |
Moan–Richard Parham 20 run (Landon Ogawa kick)
Waip–Kaimi Paredes 1 run (kick blocked)
Moan–FG Ogawa 26
Waip–Isaiah Alama 9 run (Paredes run)
Moan–Jon-Michael Sharsh 5 pass from Micah Kaneshiro (Ogawa kick)
Moan–Chad Aragon 21 pass from Kaneshiro (Ogawa kick)
Waip–Alama 7 pass from Kai Mercado-Aiona (kick blocked)
Moan–Donald Lambert 53 run (Ogawa kick)
RUSHING–Waipahu: Paredes 8-62, Alama 10-53, Matapua Tulafale 7-18, Mercado-Aiona 9-13, James Nunuha 1-0, Solomon Matautia 1-(-3). Moanalua: Yanai 14-74, Parham 14-66, Lambert 1-53, Sheldon Pagba 3-14, Ishmil Scott 3-4, Kaneshiro 1-(-2).
PASSING–Waipahu: Paredes 8-18-2-124, Mercado-Aiona 2-5-1-9. Moanalua: Kaneshiro 13-19-2-149.
RECEIVING–Waipahu: Tulafale 5-57, Nunuha 2-53, Jordan Mendiola 1-14, Alama 1-7, Mataio Fualema 1-2. Moanalua: Sharsh 5-27, Pagba 4-74, Aragon 3-21, Lambert 1-27.
Junior varsity–Moanalua 13, Aiea 12.