Junior Tagaloa
Bryce Alderton
Junior Tagaloa has high expectations for his receivers.
The former Orange Coast College standout wide receiver in 1986-87,
who broke several school receiving records, heads into his third
season as receivers coach at OCC with the goal of seeing every one of
his receivers someday play on Sundays in the National Football
League.
“Just playing football is not what this is about,” said Tagaloa,
the 35-year-old Costa Mesa resident who has a wife, Wendy, and a
6-year-old daughter, Kailualani. “I’m teaching them how to play
someday in the NFL, to push my guys to live up to that level.”
Beginning the third week in December players start working out and
get only two weeks off before the next season starts in Tagaloa’s
regimen.
He coached OCC’s tight ends in 1990 and said he employs the same
drills then as he does now.
“I teach my receivers footwork, handwork and catching the ball
because if you can’t get to the ball you can’t catch the ball,”
Tagaloa said.
And catching the ball was something Tagaloa did a lot of during
his two-year OCC career in 1986-87. He holds two-year records in
receptions (119), touchdowns (22) and receiving yards (2,132) and
holds single-season records for receiving yards (1,190) and
touchdowns (17), both in 1987 when the Pirates went 8-2, 7-2 in the
Mission Conference, good for second place.
He attributed his play to his then-girlfriend and now wife Wendy,
who opened up a certain record book.
“(Wendy) took out the OCC record book and highlighted all the
records I had to beat,” Tagaloa said. “I tell my receivers day-in and
day-out that if you want a full-ride (scholarship) this is what you
do.”
But Tagaloa remains modest about his records and would like to see
them broken.
“As long as a record stands, players don’t go where they need to
go,” Tagaloa said. “I tell these receivers to break my records and
that what they do on the field is expected of them and if the
accolades come with that, fine.”
He is dedicated to football seven days a week. With practices now
beginning at 7 or 8 a.m. each morning, he has each player strap a
tire to themselves using a harness and drag it across the field.
Even Tagaloa’s daughter gets in on the tire-dragging, lugging the
rubber item to get herself ready for the upcoming soccer season.
He then leaves for his job as an account executive at Bertolini,
Inc., a furniture manufacturer.
“My wife says I’m sick but Kailualani would rather come to
football practice and when Wendy comes with her friends to pick her
up she doesn’t want to leave,” Tagaloa said chuckling. “When
‘Remember the Titans’ came out people began calling her ‘Little
Coach.’”
Coaching OCC’s receivers has been Tagaloa’s first coaching job and
he does it out of love.
“I’m giving back to the kids and giving back to the school that
allowed me to do what needed to be done,” he said.
After graduating from OCC in 1987, Tagaloa played at UC Berkeley
and signed with the Rams before a kidney injury sidelined him and he
went back to Cal to get his degree and then play for four years in
the Arena Football League-2.
Before Tagaloa and his family moved to Costa Mesa in 2000, they
lived in Utah where Tagaloa spent time playing for the AFL-2 team
based there. He also played for the Albany Conquest of the AFL-2.
OCC’s quarterbacks coach Phil Cooper asked Tagaloa if he would
like to coach the receivers when the Tagaloas were living in Utah.
Tagaloa accepted with open arms.
“To come back and coach was icing on the cake, it was good to come
back to California,” Tagaloa said.
“My wife always said if I wasn’t coaching then she wouldn’t live
with me anymore.”
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