BYU football: Russell Tialavea returns for senior season after unexpected mission service
BYU's Russell Tialavea, center, has returned from his mission to Santiago, Chile.
Jason Olson, Deseret News
PROVO — BYU will be receiving the services of defensive lineman Russell Tialavea this season following his two-year LDS mission to Santiago, Chile. The fact that he left for a mission in the first place is truly remarkable for several reasons.
There are generally three types of players with regards to handling media interviews. There are players who love to give quotes, speak for the team and even search out the media. There are those that work with the media — giving perfunctory answers when asked, but not a whole lot more. And then there are those like Tialavea.
Tialavea would go to great lengths to avoid interviews with reporters during his three years starting at nose tackle before his LDS mission. When you were able to catch him he’d do his best to serve up the shortest answers possible — preferring to spend the least amount of time with reporters as possible.
That’s OK — it’s who he is. Not all players are talkers and it’s not a requirement to anxiously engage the media with insightful quotes as often as possible.
As a missionary, however, it is a requirement. In fact, it’s pretty much all you’re doing for 12 hours a day, every day of the week for two years.
With all that in mind, it was nothing short of a shock when Tialavea accepted a call to serve a mission to Santiago, Chile almost three years ago.
“Russell came into BYU — I can’t say with no intention of serving a mission, but probably with little intention of serving a mission,” said BYU football coach Bronco Mendenhall. “He really struggled in really growing, maturing and finding himself, but he did in making progress each and every year.”
In each of his three years playing for BYU Tialavea started and was set to start for 2010 before making a likely bid to play in the NFL. While most coaches would be pretty put out to lose a three-year starter for the coming season, Mendenhall isn’t that type of coach.
“One of the highlights of my coaching career at BYU is when (Tialavea) came into my office and told me that he’s going to serve a mission,” said Mendenhall. “Here’s a three-year starting lineman going into his senior year saying that he’s not going to be there. That would usually send some panic, yet there wasn’t a single coach — the hugs were probably the deepest and the embraces probably for Russell, up and down the hallway and the conversation between his parents on the phone — not only when he went, but when he came back. It’s truly been a remarkable experience.”
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