Ken Niumatalolo didn’t get on the field much at Hawaii — he completed just 20 passes in three seasons as a backup quarterback, none for a score — but when he did it was memorable.
In September 1989, Niumatalolo replaced injured Garrett Gabriel in the fourth quarter as the No. 23 Rainbow Warriors rallied to beat San Diego State 31-24.
Niumatalolo scrambled for 17 yards and completed a pass for 26 yards during the winning drive in the final 2:23 . He didn’t have much time to celebrate. Two days later, his wife, Barbara, delivered their first child, Alexcia.
He joked that he didn’t have a name picked out for a daughter; he planned to name a son Magic, after his sports hero, Magic Johnson.
After that, Niumatalolo’s career had a bit of magic to it.
What he’s already done at Navy, winning 64 percent of his games in 10 years, might get him into the College Football Hall of Fame someday.
The question now is whether he’ll attempt to win at a higher level, at Arizona. Everybody’s waiting for an answer.
Niumatalolo was one of Honolulu’s top athletes as a Radford High School senior in 1982-83, a standout basketball player and one of the top quarterbacks in Honolulu history.
He served as the student-council vice president at Radford, and then signed to play football for Dick Tomey at Hawaii. After Niumatalolo’s freshman season in ’83, he left to serve an LDS mission in Ventura, California.
The son of a career Coast Guard officer, Niumatalolo learned to speak Spanish during a two-month mission preparatory camp at BYU. He returned to Hawaii just as Tomey left to become Arizona’s head coach.
So Niumatalolo played three seasons under Bob Wagner, who later became one of Tomey’s assistants at Arizona. Among Niumatalolo’s teammates at Hawaii was Dino Babers, now the head coach at Syracuse and Arizona’s offensive coordinator during its famed 12-1 season in 1998.
He hoped to become a sports broadcaster, but in an exit meeting with Wagner in 1989, was offered a chance to be a graduate assistant coach for the Rainbow Warriors.
Now, almost 30 years later, Niumatalolo could be the next from the Rainbow Warrior family to attempt some football magic in Tucson.

