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Taitusi Lutui, the other Tongan in the Super Bowl [1]

Tampa, Florida,USA

Saturday, January 31, 2009 - 19:15.  Updated on Thursday, July 30, 2015 - 15:05.

Taitusi Lutui (25), guard for the Arizona Cardinals.

From Tonga to Tampa with stops in Arizona and California - Taitusi Lutui grew into a guard with massive girth and a matching sense of humor who plays a decidedly Tongan brand of football for the Arizona Cardinals, US sports writers are saying on the eve of this year's Super Bowl, noting that in Tonga they watch the Super Bowl on Monday instead of Sunday.

Greg Bishop in the New York Times reports today that under Russ Grimm, the Cardinals' offensive line coach, Lutui helped turn one of the worst offensive lines in football into a more consistent unit. And now, a Tonga native turned Cardinals fan, he finds himself in the biggest game of all playing for the team he rooted for.

"Super Bowl and Arizona Cardinals are in the same sentence," said Lutui whose Cardinals teammates call him "Deuce".

"I will say this about Polynesian kids in general: They love football," said Pat Ruel, Lutui's position coach at Southern California. "Because back in their culture, there has always been this warrior mentality. Not so much that intensity about it. But almost a playful warrior mentality."

Lutui was born on May 5, 1983 in Ha'apai, Tonga, and his family emigrated from Tonga to Mesa, Arizona, when he was months old. They joined the local Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Mesa, where his parents will go Sunday to pray for their "little big boy," Lutui said.

Because of their religious obligations, the family could not travel to Tampa for the Super Bowl. But that has not stopped Lutui from sharing Tonga stories with reporters and his teammates.

"Deuce is proud of his roots, and there's no secret about that," his teammate Reggie Wells said.

Downsizing

Perhaps Lutui would not be here, either, had Ruel not gone to U.S.C. from the Giants, noticed that Lutui weighed more than 385 pounds and talked the coaching staff out of benching him. Instead, Ruel told Lutui he needed to lose at least 40 pounds and then moved him from tackle to guard.

Lutui met with a nutritionist and spent extra time in the weight room, and sure enough the weight melted away. By the middle of his senior season, Lutui was projected as a fourth- or fifth-round draft pick. By the end, scouts projected that he would be taken in the first two rounds.

"It was almost like he was released," Ruel said. "Those 40 pounds made him a new man. Turns out he could run like a deer. I've never seen a big man move like that."

Three seasons

The Cardinals selected him in the second round in 2006, and it is Lutui, not his more celebrated U.S.C. teammate, quarterback Matt Leinart, who will start for the Cardinals in the Super Bowl.

This did not surprise Ruel. He viewed Lutui as a first-round talent, a player, he said, with a "special makeup," the kind of guy who chuckled when telling an Oregon defensive tackle he would make him his "Samoan slave."

The kind of guard who laughed when defenders took swings at him, who sang the fight song after practice, who never showed a trace of anger. For months after the Cardinals drafted him, Lutui called Ruel once a week to thank him.

"I missed the guy when he left, and I never really stopped missing him," Ruel said. "I've never been around a guy who enjoys football as much as he does.".

Arizona Cardinals [2]
Taitusi Lutui [3]
People [4]

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Source URL:https://matangitonga.to/2009/01/31/taitusi-lutui-other-tongan-super-bowl

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[1] https://matangitonga.to/2009/01/31/taitusi-lutui-other-tongan-super-bowl [2] https://matangitonga.to/tag/arizona-cardinals?page=1 [3] https://matangitonga.to/tag/taitusi-lutui?page=1 [4] https://matangitonga.to/topic/people?page=1