All NFL Flag Registrations Due December 27th

December 12th, 2009

Aloha NFL Parents,

We have been told that the NFL will no longer be working with the same vendor who does the registrations for NFL Flag this coming January 1st, 2010. They will be contracting a new company and so we are pushing for registration to be completed by December 27th.  We need to order all new jerseys by December 28th with the existing vendor. It normally takes 2-3 weeks to receive our jerseys, footballs, and flags.

We need to order everything on December 28th due to any unforeseen turn around problems that will likely arise while working with a new vendor.  We appreciate everyone’s cooperation. Please send your payment by December 27th for us to order the equipment by December 28th.

Please click on the registration button at www.808football.com ASAP to register and send your checks to the below address. For those who want the discount send your check for $115 if you sign up by December 20th. If you sign up between  December 21st and 27th then it will be $125.  If you are keeping your same jersy and flags it will only cost you $105.

Please make your checks out to “HFS” or “Hawaii Football School”.

The address is:

Attention: NFL Flag
2504 Aeo Place
Pearl City HI 96782

Please note we have made a change to our NFL Flag Football League divisions:

Menehune: 5-6 year olds
Na Koa: 7-8 year olds
Imua: 9-11 year olds
Ali’i: 12-14 year old

The district and game locations are as follows:
Central District – Manana Community Park in Pearl City
South District – The Boys & Girls Club at Washington Intermediate School
West District – NFL Youth Education Town at Nanaikapono Elementary School
East District – TBA

Don’t forget to let your friends and family know about our program.  If you have any questions or comments, please let us know.  We wish everyone love and Aloha during this Holiday Season.

Aloha,

Coach Chris

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New Discounted Fee for Former NFL Flag Participants

December 12th, 2009

December 3, 2009

NFL Flag- Very Important/ Must Read-New Fee for former NFL Flag Participants

Aloha NFL Parents,

For all previous NFL Flag Football teams that participated in the fall, we are providing you an option to keep the jerseys and flags that you used last season because many of you have perfectly usable uniforms.  We understand that it is the holidays and want to make things as affordable as possible. If you decide to keep your jerseys & flags, your fee will only be $105 if registered and paid by December 27th.   Please note that the $10.00 discount only applies to NEW registrations.  Want to be on the same team?  Get in touch with your coaches and let them know.   Please don’t let it slip by and register early! Please mail in your registration and fee to the below address:

Mail to:

Attention: NFL Flag Football
2504 Aeo Place
Pearl City, HI  96782

Make Checks Payable to “Hawaii Football School” or “HFS”

Important Dates To Remember:

December 20, 2009
Last day for new players  to register or past season players that do not want to keep their previous jerseys and flags to register for the $10.00 discount.  Early registration cost: $115.00.  Mail must be postmarked by December 20, 2009 to receive the discount.

December 27 – VERY IMPORTANT!

Last day of early registration for past season players wanting to remain on the same team and reuse their jerseys and flags.  Early registration for past season players cost: $105.00.  Mail must be postmarked by December 27, 2009 to receive the discount.

In order for us to purchase and receive the equipment on a timely matter, we must receive all registrations and payment by December 27th.  Late registration will be the full price of $125.00.

January 7-9
Parent/Coach Orientation Meeting – location & time TBA
Late registrations – fees will be $125 for everyone who pays after December 27th.(extra fees to expedite shipping of equipment, and organizing the league)

Ages: 5-14/Coed Boys and Girls
Divisions: Menehune (5-6yr olds), Na Koa (7-8yr olds), Imua (10-12yr olds), Alii (13-14)
Areas: Honolulu, Pearl City, Kapolei, Mililani, Kaneohe, Kailua

*Please call to inquire about coaching!!!

Happy Holidays!

coachchris News

Hawaii Football School Classes start November 7th

October 29th, 2009

Aloha HFS Parents,

I am excited to announce that we will be starting our second year for Hawaii Football School on November 7th. Initially we will start with one location on Saturdays at the Boys and Girls Club on Honolulu by Washington Intermediate from 9-11 am in November and Coach Chris will run this site.

When Coach Chad Owens gets back in December we will have our second location at Booth Park on Sunday Afternoons that he will run.

The cost will be our annual registration fee of $25 and $10 a class for each time you participate.

Anyway, we look forward to seeing you all this year and to hear all the ways in which you have grown.

Mahalo,
Chris Teves
Hawaii Football School &
NFL Flag Football
808-330-5537
cnteves@gmail.com

coachchris News

HFS to start in December

September 30th, 2009

Aloha HFS Parents,

I just talked to Chad Owens yesterday and he is going great up in Canada. After some discussion we are tentatively going to be starting the program again in December. We will start our second year by having an HFS potluck to celebrate our first birthday as a school.  Anyway, look for our email in November and can’t wait to see you again. I hope you keiki are having much success this football season.

 

Aloha,

Coach Chris

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Mahalo for Giving Back to Booth Park and Pauoa Elementary School

September 30th, 2009

Aloha HFS Parents,

I just wanted to say thank you for giving back to Booth Park and Pauoa Elementary School. It was great seeing  your kieki working with you shoveling dirt, carrying buckets, pulling weeds, carrying wheelbarrows, and of course sweating. Our keiki will always remember times like this and will have the heart to give back when they become adults.  Anyway, I know that the community appreciated  this and I look forward to doing this through out the coming years.

 

Aloha,

Coach Chris

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REMINDER: NFL Flag Football Meeting, this Sunday September 6

September 1st, 2009

Hello everyone,

Just a quick reminder, Sunday September 6 is NFL Flag Football orientation day. Please make sure to come early if you have not paid for your fees. You may call me for any concerns or questions.

Meeting location: Pauoa Elementary School cafeteria (across from Booth Park)

Parking in Pauoa Elementary School

1 pm to 2 pm Walk-in registrations & final payment due (enclose in an envelope with your child(s) name, check/cash & amount)

2 pm to 3 pm Introduction & Meeting

3 pm to 4 pm Break-out into teams

4 pm to 5 pm Questions

We are still accepting players. Please let your family/friends & children’s friends know about this program. They may be able to register online by Saturday or register on Sunday during our walk-in registration.

coachchris News

A Great First Year for HFS

August 26th, 2009

I just wanted to thank all the parents and all kids for your support for Hawaii Football School in our first year. We are coming up to our last class of the year this coming Sunday afternoon before we take a two and a half  month break. I also want to thank all the coaches for too for their sacrifice during the year.

It has been great reading the paper and seeing a lot of our kids excelling in their football play. For example, it was great seeing Tyler Kila of Roosevelt get the MVP award last week on OC16 for his great performance last Friday night. Anyway, we look forward to seeing your hard work rewarded and we are very proud of all of you. Much Love!

 

Aloha,

Coach Chris

coachchris News

Coach Chad Recognized As The #9 Best UH Football Player

August 26th, 2009

Many happy returns

When it came to being an all-purpose player, no one did it better at UH than Owens

By Billy Hull

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Jul 22, 2009

 

Billy Hull is a Star-Bulletin sportswriter. Tomorrow we unveil No. 8. See starbulletin.com for more on “The Centurions.”

 

The average hang time on a college football punt is roughly 5 seconds.

STAR-BULLETIN / 2004

Chad Owens was a major key to reversing Hawaii’s fortunes in 2004 with four wins to end the season. Here he celebrates after one of his five touchdowns against Northwestern. That season, he was first-team All-WAC as a receiver and second team as a return specialist.

Enough time for Joey Chestnut to chow down a hot dog on the Fourth of July at Coney Island, or to kiss your spouse good-bye on the way to work in the morning.

But for fans of the 2004 Hawaii football team, those 5 seconds were a time to ponder the future.

Because every time the opposing team lined up to punt that season, Warrior fans across the state were asking themselves one simple question.

What was Chad going to do?

THE ORIGINS of Chad Owens’ eventual success go way back to the ninth grade at Roosevelt High School.

As a member of the JV team, Owens couldn’t wait to don the Red and Gold for the first time in front of friends and family at Roosevelt Stadium.

Game day arrived and Owens was ready to give everyone the first glimpse of an amazing career to come. Then he was hit with two of the scariest words in high school.

Progress report.

“I was getting an ‘F’ in history class and I couldn’t play,” Owens said. “At first, I was upset with my history teacher, but after we lost that game and I thought about it, I had nobody to blame but myself.

“I went back and apologized to my teacher and from then on, I said grades would never make me miss another football game again.”

They never did.

OWENS WAS getting looks from small colleges his senior year, but nothing at the Division I level. At 5-foot-7, he didn’t have the prototypical size major college coaches look for at wide receiver.

But his high school coach, Lester Parilla, knew better.

“You could tell with the way he moved and the way he ran and the work ethic he had he was something special,” Parilla said. “It was a diamond in the rough thing. He was just lacking the size.”

Owens had his mind set on playing at Linfield (Ore.) College when his good buddy, Chad Kapanui, got a chance to work out for Hawaii coaches June Jones and Ron Lee.

Kapanui needed someone to throw to and Owens happily obliged. With the head coach of the hometown school looking on, Owens knew this was his only chance.

“I was out there trying to put on a show, because this was my shot,” Owens said. “We were back there behind the scoreboard (of Roosevelt Stadium) where there’s not much grass, mostly dirt, and I was diving on the ground trying to catch everything.

“I don’t think I dropped a pass.”

Owens was one of the last people added to the summer roster as a walk-on. But as he practiced with guys like Ashley Lelie, Craig Stutzmann and Nate Jackson, he quickly realized the future in front of him.

“I was rolling with all these big names and I was able to make plays,” Owens said. “Immediately, I had the confidence.”

BY THE TIME a Brigham Young player hit him, Owens was already in the end zone. His 100-yard kickoff return helped the Warriors to a 72-45 rout of the Cougars to end the 2001 season.

A redshirt freshman, Owens saw sporadic time at the end of games as a slotback. Where he was given the opportunity to shine was as a returner, and nobody did it better.

He added a 76-yard punt return for a score against the Cougars, and by the time Hawaii was done rolling up the most points BYU has allowed in a game, Owens had set an NCAA record with 342 return yards.

“You can’t say enough about that game,” Owens said. “We dominated everywhere and for me to do that against an undefeated BYU team, it was amazing.”

And it was only the beginning.

Before he even stepped foot on a field for his senior season, Owens already had put together a stellar college career. Most slotbacks are either strong or quick; Owens was both and he quickly became NCAA career passing leader Timmy Chang’s go-to receiver. The criticism he faced coming out of high school was laughable. Too small? Yeah, right.

But that’s the fuel that drives Owens to succeed. There’s no bigger motivation than people saying you can’t do something. So now that “Mighty Mouse,” as he was nicknamed, had already shunned the notion he wasn’t big enough, he needed something else.

“I’ll be honest, as a college football player, your goal is to win a conference title and then after that, it’s to go to the next level and play in the NFL,” Owens said. “I established myself as a player at the University of Hawaii, and now it was time to prove it at the next level.

“That was the new question I faced every day, so I did everything I could to be the best every single day.”

DOING IT ALL

Chad Owens has three of UH’s top seven single-game performances in all-purpose yardage: 

 

Yards Player Opponent
342 Chad Owens vs. BYU, 2001
308 Jason Rivers vs. Arizona State, 2006
301 Chad Owens vs. Michigan State, 2004
299 Jeff Sydner vs. San Diego State, 1990
285 Ashley Lelie vs. Air Force, 2001
283 Jeff Sydner vs. BYU, 1990
276 Chad Owens vs. Northwestern, 2004
272 Jeff Sydner vs. Maine, 1990
270 Rusty Holt vs. Occidental , 1927
270 Pete Wilson vs. BYU, 1950

OW-ENS! OW-ENS! OW-ENS!

It started with a 66-yard punt return for a touchdown against Tulsa. A week later, he did it again, taking a punt 75 yards for a score against Nevada.

Both were home games and, with every Saturday, the chants became louder.

He made it three games in a row at Aloha Stadium with a punt return TD, going 71 yards against San Jose State.

But the streak was snapped against Idaho, and Hawaii was 5-5 needing wins against Big Ten teams Northwestern and Michigan State to clinch a spot in a bowl game. That’s when the unbelievable happened.

“I just remember the crowd’s energy,” Owens said. “I could feel it, they could feel it, I felt like I was going to score every time.”

He caught the punt cleanly and headed up the middle untouched. All that was left in his way was Northwestern punter Brian Huffman.

A punter? Tackling Chad Owens? No way.

“I tripped and I was like, ‘Oh no, I can’t get tackled by a punter,’” Owens said. “I just kept pumping my feet and my teammates came and hit him and I broke the tackle and was off.”

Off to the record books, that is — again.

He made it into the end zone for one of his five touchdowns in the game, tying a UH record. He added four more receiving TDs a week later in a win over the Spartans, helping the Warriors clinch a Hawaii Bowl berth against UAB.

He returned a fifth punt for a score against the Blazers, setting an NCAA record for one season and helping the Warriors win their second straight Hawaii Bowl.

His 22 touchdowns as a senior? Second in the nation to Memphis running back DeAngelo Williams.

My, what an ending it was.

HE WAS DRAFTED in the sixth round by the Jacksonville Jaguars and sparkled in camp. But problems holding onto the ball on punt returns cost him his spot in the NFL. Owens then played for the Colorado Crush in the Arena Football League before suffering a serious knee injury.

Back home on the mend, he helped head the Hawaii Football School, a weekly class to help youth both in on-the-field performance and areas away from the game, like academics.

Working with kids in sports is the life Owens hopes to one day lead on a permanent basis, but not quite yet.

Now that he’s close to 100 percent physically, playing football is back on his mind. He is in Canada on the practice squad of the Montreal Alouettes of the Canadian Football League, and hopes it’s only a matter of time before he’s back on the field.

“It’s the biggest obstacle I’ve ever had to overcome,” Owens said of his knee injury. “But like my career, I have to overcome things …

“The greatness of a man should not be determined by his success in life, but by what he is able to overcome.”

Which is why, whatever CFL team he catches on with, you can bet its fans will get those same 5 seconds every home game to ponder one simple question.

What is Chad going to do?

 

 


coachchris News

Kalai’i Kalei Recognized At Oregon Camp

August 26th, 2009
Receives Defensive Back Award at the University of Oregon Football Camp

Receives Defensive Back Award at the University of Oregon Football Camp

It was great to have Kalai’i Kalei recognized for all of his hard work at the University of Oregon football camp. Kalai’i was one of the first  two students who started the Alii class on November 2nd, 2008. He has worked incredibly hard and we are very proud of him here at HFS.  I know Kalai’i will have an incredible season for Roosevelt High School.

Aloha,
Coach Chris

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No Class this Sunday!

August 14th, 2009

Just a reminder, there will be no class this coming Sunday, August 16, 2009. Class will resume on Sunday, August 23. 2009 from 2 pm to 3 pm. Please let me know if you have any questions.

coachchris News