Irelevant Week: It starts tonight
Barry Faulkner
Tevita Ofahengaue was predictably excited about being the final
pick in the 2001 NFL Draft Sunday, chosen 246th by the Arizona Cardinals
to become Mr. Irrelevant XXVI.
But, perhaps equally excited in his Provo, Utah household were his
four kids, who will be accompanying the 6-foot-2, 254-pound tight end to
Newport Beach for the annual Irrelevant Week festivities that include a
trip to newly opened Disney’s California Adventure.
“A free vacation, plus my kids get to go see Mickey (Mouse),” said
Ofahengaue, known to his former Brigham Young University teammates as
T-bone. “I’m excited.”
Ofahengaue was less than thrilled as the seventh and final round of
the draft wound down, especially after Jacksonville, which had shown the
most pre-draft interest, concluded its selections without tabbing the
26-year-old native of Tonga, who grew up in Hawaii.
“My wife (Carey) and I had our own little war room and we were
following along watching the draft on TV,” Ofahengaue said. “I had some
friends over, because I was expecting to be drafted. But, with two picks
left, I turned the TV off. Then, I saw the Arizona Cardinals on my
(telephone) caller ID and it was their coaches telling me they had
drafted me.
“The tight ends coach (Pete Hoener) sounded excited and I was really
excited,” Ofahengaue said. “I told him he had his starting tight end for
next season. Then, as soon as I got off the phone, my wife and I started
looking into who they had at tight end.
“Just remember,” Ofahengaue said, paraphrasing a biblical reference to
describe his plans to crack the Cardinals’ depth chart. “The first is
last and the last is first.”
The Cardinals, 3-13 a year ago, tying Cleveland for the second worst
record in the NFL (behind San Diego’s 1-15 mark), currently have three
tight ends on the roster, including incumbent starter Terry Hardy, a
four-year veteran out of Southern Mississippi who caught 17 passes for
160 yards and one touchdown last season.
Tywan Mitchell, a rookie last season out of Mankato State in
Minnesota, caught five passes for 80 yards, while Jay Tant, a rookie out
of Northwestern, caught one pass for 4 yards, before sustaining a
season-ending knee injury in the ninth game.
Ofahengaue, a three-year starter for the Cougars, had at least one
reception in all 12 games last season. His 22 catches for 305 yards was
good enough to earn him second-team All-Mountain West Conference laurels.
That Ofahengaue is even in a position to land an NFL job reveals that
the former walk-on followed the “my advice to youngsters” he provided in
one BYU media publication: Nothing is impossible.
“I got married my junior year in high school (at Kahuku High in Oahu,
which has won nine state football titles), so, after I graduated in 1992,
I had no plans to even go to college,” Ofahengaue said. “I worked quite a
few jobs, then I moved our family to Dallas to take a (baggage handler)
job for American Airlines.
But, my brother, Kelepi (then a BYU linebacker) and (then-BYU tight
end) Itula Mili (now a member of the Seattle Seahawks) talked me into
coming out for the team. I walked on that year (1997), earned a
scholarship, then started the next three years.”
Ofahengaue, who earned his degree in social work, with a minor in
coaching, is currently working on a masters in special education. He has
plans to work with troubled youth and is currently organizing his own
youth foundation. But, he’ll put that on hold to try to contribute to the
Cardinals.
Ofahengaue first learned about the Mr. Irrelevant title when it went
to Cam Quayle, out of Ogden-based Weber State, in 1998.
“The Irrelevant (organizers) must love Utah,” Ofahengaue said with a
laugh. “Even playing college football was something I didn’t plan on.
Now, to be Mr. Irrelevant ... If I was writing a book, my book would be
closed.”
The Irrelevant Week folks, headed by event founder Paul Salata, who
announced the pick at Madison Square Garden, have most assuredly come to
love Ofahengaue’s effusive personality.
Ofahengaue, along with his wife and sons Tre (age 9) and Moana (7), as
well as daughters Teilissa (3) and Teisa (1), will be the featured guests
for the weeklong celebration of the underdog. Began by Salata to “do
something nice for someone for no reason,” the event includes the Arrival
Party tonight, the All-Star Sports Gala and Banquet, where he will be
presented the Loswman Trophy Tuesday evening, a Survivor Challenge, the
traditional Beercan Regatta, as well as the aforementioned trip to the
newest Disney theme park.
Ofahengaue will attempt to become the ninth Mr. Irrelevant to play in
the NFL, the fifth since 1993, when the draft was shortened to seven
rounds.
Mr. Irrelevant XXV, Mike Green, played in seven games as a defensive
back for the Chicago Bears last season, while Mr. Irrelevant XXIV, Jim
Finn, started four games last season at fullback for the Indianapolis
Colts.
Marty Moore, chosen last by the Patriots in 1994, has enjoyed the most
extensive professional career of any Mr. Irrelevant (though Bill Kenney,
who came to Newport Beach in place of the 1978 final pick, Lee Washburn,
made the Pro Bowl as a quarterback for the Kansas City Chiefs). Moore has
played seven seasons at linebacker for the Patriots and Browns. He
started nine games for Cleveland last season.
Ronnie McAda, a quarterback out of Army chosen last by the Packers in
1997, has yet to play an NFL game. But he was signed as a free agent in
the offseason by the Denver Broncos.
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