State rugby: Hilo Reign lose steam against Kahuku

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HILO — Two distinct factors stood out about the Hilo Reign on Saturday at Malama Park that separated the Under 19 rugby team from its competitors.

HILO — Two distinct factors stood out about the Hilo Reign on Saturday at Malama Park that separated the Under 19 rugby team from its competitors.

For one thing, Hilo’s passing can overcome any physical disadvantage, even against an opponent slightly bigger, like Westside, a combination of the Waimea Boars and Pacific Rim, from Kailua-Kona.

But what’s also obvious is that the Reign aren’t immune to exhaustion, and that came into play, as well as limited depth, against the Kahuku Red Raiders in the state championship, which looked like a physical game of hot potato.

The Red Raiders, with a roster full of the school’s physically imposing football players, defeated defending champion Hilo 14-0, showing that vital gridiron skills such as tackling and power running can compensate for inexperience.

Earlier in the day, Alexander Tacuban scored a try, for five points, to get the momentum going, and Hilo passed the ball around better and pushed aside Westside 26-0. Then there was about 20 minutes of rest before the championship.

The sun was no less forgiving throughout the 1 hour and 20 minutes of game time, and Kahuku had the benefit of relaxing after posting a 2-0 record Friday. The Red Raiders beat Hilo 24-19 and Westside 21-7; Hilo blanked Westside 27-0.

“I thought our boys did good. We stood up against Kahuku,” Hilo coach Lawrence Fong said. “We were able to bang heads with them, but silly mistakes cost us. It was draining playing two games, and endurance hurt us.”

Hilo had a roster of 18, with several younger players called up. Kahuku had a roster of 23, all from the football team. From one Red Raider to the next, there wasn’t much drop-off in size, speed and strength — nice building blocks for a greenhorn squad, which loudly chanted the school’s haka.

“It was a hard game to the end, playing against a very experienced team,” Kahuku coach Nusi Tukuafu said. “They’re all football players learning the sport. I think we’ll be a lot better next year. Emotion played a big part.”

The state championship is 15 players a side, and it’s much easier to bottle up one star player by covering every gap, and putting a few defenders in the back for reinforcements.

The Aloha World championship 7s will be held this week on Oahu, where Hilo, Waimea, Pacific Rim and Kahuku will enter seven-a-side teams. With fewer players on the field, speed and sure-handed tackling are premium assets.

In the 15-player field, the better rugby teams pick up a few valuable traits from both soccer and football. Much like soccer, the team that passes with precision controls ball possession and creates more scoring opportunities, a reason Hilo sent Westside home early.

If there’s one thing the Kahuku Red Raiders are known for across the state in football, it’s being able to tackle. Whenever someone in a yellow Hilo Reign jersey shot through a gap, a Red Raider and a few of his friends were waiting.

Kahuku’s football team might not have the most imaginative offensive playbook, but that power-running style works just fine in rugby, where forward passes aren’t allowed, but bull-dozing over defenders is welcomed with open arms.

In the first half, the Red Raiders worked the ball down the right sideline with a few juke moves, before reversing field and handing off to Polikapo Liua, who’s 5 feet, 9 inches and 219 pounds, and punched in for a try. No surprise, on the football team he played fullback.

The second half was a battle of field position and a defensive stalemate until the Reign had a late costly turnover. Celcius Tara Whiti took the gift, scored five points, and after the two-point conversion kick it was 14-0, punting Hilo’s comeback hopes out of Malama Park.

The Reign couldn’t manage any formidable attacks, and the clock slowly ticked down under a punishing sun that had the 30 players looking for water as soon as the final horn sounded.