Hand gesture that started in Gainesville taken the wrong way by opposing fans
POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Oct 03, 2008
"It's about my honor and our school's honor," Kenton said.
Kenton and his team were criticized for supposedly making a lewd hand gesture toward the crowd at War Memorial Stadium during the closing moments of his team's 25-22 loss. He also drew fire for not shaking hands with Baldwin coach A.J. Roloos after the game.
The roots of the King Kekaulike "salute" began early in the season when the team went to Florida for a nonconference contest. While the team attended the Florida-Hawaii game, players were inspired by Florida fans - and their Gator chomp ritual - to come up with a symbolic 'H' sign of their own to salute UH.
The hand gesture caught on with other teammates, so much so, that they used it all the time - even while riding a roller coaster at Disney World. By the time Na Alii returned to the islands, the gesture was modified to something similar to a mountain peak since the school is located on the slopes of Haleakala.
"It just became more of a rallying thing, saluting each other," said Kenton, who led the program to a Division II state title two years ago.
Fast forward to the Baldwin game. When King Kekaulike rallied to tie it at 22 late in the game, Na Alii fans were jubilant.
"It was more intense than the Iolani game. Our coaches saluted our fans," he said of the gesture. The misunderstanding by fans outside of King Kekaulike, Kenton says, probably started then.
"We would never do something that was offensive, especially to women," Kenton said, adding that principals at both King Kekaulike and Baldwin are women, and that his JV team has a female player.
Kenton said his response to officiating cost the team a possible win. With an injury to one of his linemen on an illegal chop block, Kenton says he lost his cool, which led to an unsportsmanlike conduct call. That led to a game-winning 39-yard field goal by Ceejay Santos.
At game's end, he had several senior leaders to console.
"I'm trying to calm my team down. A lot of the kids were crying," Kenton said. "It was an incredible game, but I lost the game. Instead of a 55-yard field goal, it ends up being 39 or 40 yards.
"My first fault was getting mad at the officials. If I'm cursing at him, I wasn't going to get anything. We teach self-control, and that was a perfect example of not having it," he said. "Then I was still sour after the game. I was so mad at the officials."
Though he normally doesn't shake hands with players, he did so with Baldwin. The problem was, he missed three Baldwin coaches, including Roloos.
In the meantime, King Kekaulike (2-2, 1-1) has eschewed the hand gesture that was born in Gainesville.
On the Big Island, Keaau canceled last week's game with Hawaii Prep. The game between Division I Keaau and D-II HPA was an exhibition - divisional crossover games do not count in the BIIF standings. Keaau canceled to focus on this week's key matchup with defending D-I league champ Kealakehe. A key reason for the cancelation was timing.
"I talked to (Keaau) before the season even started and our athletic director had already set up the game. Their coach (Leo Aberilla) wanted to play the latter part of the season and I wanted to play the beginning part of the season," Hawaii Prep coach Geoy Purdy said.
"I like playing the Division I teams because it'll tell me where we stand. If you're going to set up something, it has to be two-sided," Purdy said.
Here's a look at tomorrow's matchups:
Saint Louis (4-0, 2-0) is well-rested after last week's bye. Any additional time off helps running back Austin Wakinekona, who had a season-high 99 rushing yards in the win over Kamehameha two weeks ago despite a nagging injury.
Moanalua has stayed in contention despite myriad injuries. "We've got five starters out and we're down to our third-string quarterback," coach Arnold Martinez said. "In 17 years, I've never had anything like this happen. It's almost driving me crazy."
The Cougars (2-3, 2-1) canceled last week's exhibition with HPA to focus on the Waveriders. Kealakehe (4-2, 3-0) is a different team now with explosive Jordan Ursua at quarterback.
King Kekaulike coach J.W. Kenton came close to resigning on Wednesday because of public criticism about his team, stemming for a game with Baldwin two weeks ago.
"It's about my honor and our school's honor," Kenton said.
Kenton and his team were criticized for supposedly making a lewd hand gesture toward the crowd at War Memorial Stadium during the closing moments of his team's 25-22 loss. He also drew fire for not shaking hands with Baldwin coach A.J. Roloos after the game.
The roots of the King Kekaulike "salute" began early in the season when the team went to Florida for a nonconference contest. While the team attended the Florida-Hawaii game, players were inspired by Florida fans - and their Gator chomp ritual - to come up with a symbolic 'H' sign of their own to salute UH.
The hand gesture caught on with other teammates, so much so, that they used it all the time - even while riding a roller coaster at Disney World. By the time Na Alii returned to the islands, the gesture was modified to something similar to a mountain peak since the school is located on the slopes of Haleakala.
"It just became more of a rallying thing, saluting each other," said Kenton, who led the program to a Division II state title two years ago.
Fast forward to the Baldwin game. When King Kekaulike rallied to tie it at 22 late in the game, Na Alii fans were jubilant.
"It was more intense than the Iolani game. Our coaches saluted our fans," he said of the gesture. The misunderstanding by fans outside of King Kekaulike, Kenton says, probably started then.
"We would never do something that was offensive, especially to women," Kenton said, adding that principals at both King Kekaulike and Baldwin are women, and that his JV team has a female player.
Kenton said his response to officiating cost the team a possible win. With an injury to one of his linemen on an illegal chop block, Kenton says he lost his cool, which led to an unsportsmanlike conduct call. That led to a game-winning 39-yard field goal by Ceejay Santos.
At game's end, he had several senior leaders to console.
"I'm trying to calm my team down. A lot of the kids were crying," Kenton said. "It was an incredible game, but I lost the game. Instead of a 55-yard field goal, it ends up being 39 or 40 yards.
"My first fault was getting mad at the officials. If I'm cursing at him, I wasn't going to get anything. We teach self-control, and that was a perfect example of not having it," he said. "Then I was still sour after the game. I was so mad at the officials."
Though he normally doesn't shake hands with players, he did so with Baldwin. The problem was, he missed three Baldwin coaches, including Roloos.
In the meantime, King Kekaulike (2-2, 1-1) has eschewed the hand gesture that was born in Gainesville.