In Quick Pitch, Navy Promotes Assistant
Niumatalolo Takes Reins of Football Team
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Sunday, December 9, 2007
Navy wasted no time filling the vacancy created by Friday's departure of football coach Paul Johnson for Georgia Tech. Yesterday, the academy announced the promotion of Ken Niumatalolo, Johnson's longtime assistant.
Niumatalolo and Athletic Director Chet Gladchuk met for five hours Friday night, and Gladchuk said the quick decision came in part to assuage uncertainty from Navy's assistant coaches, players, fans, recruits and those at the Naval Academy Prep School.
Gladchuk also said "a majority" of the current assistant coaches will stay; the staff is expected to be completed in the next few days.
"Every year we were going through the 'Is Paul staying?' [questions], and obviously as an athletic director, it's incumbent on me to stay ahead of the curve," Gladchuk said. "There's never been any doubt in my mind in the last couple years that if the opportunity presented itself, I knew what I wanted to do."
Niumatalolo, 42, spent the past six seasons as assistant head coach and offensive line coach at Navy; in all, he has spent 10 years as an assistant at the academy and either worked with or played for Johnson for 17 seasons.
Niumatalolo's first stint at Navy was from 1995 to '98. He replaced Johnson as offensive coordinator after Johnson left following the 1996 season to become the head coach at division I-AA Georgia Southern. Niumatalolo played college football at Hawaii and began his coaching career there while Johnson served as the Warriors' offensive coordinator.
Niumatalolo is believed to be the first Polynesian head coach in NCAA division I-A history. His first game as a head coach will be when the Midshipmen (8-4) face Utah (8-4) in the Poinsettia Bowl on Dec. 20 in San Diego.
"I believe in what this place is about," Niumatalolo said. "I believe in the patriotism of the country. I know this place is about leadership, I understand that and embrace it. . . . We want to continue to dominate the other academies, and I look forward to keeping the machine going."
Niumatalolo said he plans on continuing to run the option-based offense that Johnson used to great effect, though he will not call the plays. (Johnson had been the team's offensive coordinator.) Niumatalolo's stint as offensive coordinator in 1997 and '98 included a 39-7 victory over Army in 1997 and a 32-31, comeback victory over Boston College in 1998. Navy was third in the nation in rushing in 1997 and fourth in '98.
"It's fundamental to me that we've won with the triple option, we've lost with the triple option, but at Navy it's going to be the triple option and that's all there is to it," Gladchuk said. "It's something I feel strongly about."
Players said Niumatalolo is reserved, though he has no problem getting his point across.
"When he starts to get excited his voice starts really low but then it gets higher and higher," junior fullback Eric Kettani said. "By the time he's done, he's pretty much in your face. That's only happened to me once, thank goodness."


