BYU's Eathyn Manumaleuna (55), Brian Logan (7) and coach Shawn Nau celebrate.
Jeffrey D. Allred, Deseret News
PROVO — So timing really is everything. Just ask anyone who doesn't have it. They can never get it right. They bring flowers the night they get dumped. They laugh before the joke is finished, or don't laugh when it is. They overcook their steaks and undercook their oatmeal. They leave the theater during the credits and find out later there were some great outtakes at the end.
And then there's Eathyn Manumaleuna, who has the timing of a late-night talk show host.
He hits it every time.
With the Washington Huskies in a fourth-and-7 situation at the BYU 27 and 1:55 remaining, Manumaleuna rose up to block Jake Locker's pass, to preserve a 23-17 Cougar win, Saturday at LaVell Edwards Stadium. That not only made him a hero of the game, but a hero of two games.
In his last two college outings — 2 1/2 years apart — he's secured wins by blocking the football in the closing seconds.
You want timing?
This man has it in bushels.
"I didn't want to rush too much, because I knew Locker is a great runner, and so I just engaged a little bit and moved a little in his direction, and right when he released it, I just jumped, and it didn't hit my hands, it hit my helmet. So it was a good thing," he said.
Sometimes getting smacked in the head is a wonderful thing.
If the name Manumaleuna sounds vaguely familiar, it's because 32 months ago he was on the defensive line for the Cougars in their Las Vegas Bowl game against UCLA. With three seconds left, he blocked a 28-yard Bruin field goal to preserve a 17-16 victory.
But that was it for his victory tour. Two years on an LDS mission took him out of the loop. He returned for this season, having earned his old spot back, and was putting together a fair-to-middling day with two assisted tackles against Washington. Soon, though, the Huskies started their march that could have won the game. Six minutes to go, they got the ball. Four minutes later they were knocking at the door.
Locker dropped back and released it into Manumaleuna's noggin.
"His hands should be up on a three-step delivery, and they were," said BYU coach Bronco Mendenhall.
So was his head.
If you ask Manumaleuna, the fact he played big in his last two games was fairly inexplicable.
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