Alan Akana, Millennium Hall of Fame
- Share via
Richard Dunn
Once the lead blocker in Estancia High’s famous power sweep and an
offensive guard at Michigan State who opened holes for All-American
tailback Lorenzo White in 1985, Alan Akana these days has a perch high
atop a tropical paradise.
As a lifeguard at Honolua Bay in West Maui, Hawaii, which is home to
some of the world’s best waves, Akana can determine his form of activity
for that day.
“I surf all the time ... as much as I can,” said Akana, who also
bodysurfs and rides a Boogie board, and, if the waves aren’t so good,
goes motorcycle riding through stunning Hawaiian terrain.
Referred to as “Big Al” by some of his former Estancia football
teammates, Akana was 6-foot-2, 260 pounds at Michigan State, where he
started his senior year under Coach George Perles.
“That was the ultimate high,” Akana said of his two-year experience
with the Spartans, which included a 19-7 upset victory over rival
Michigan in 1984, in front of more than 100,000 fans at Ann Arbor.
“It was awesome. We played in some great stadiums.”
Akana said Spartan players were “treated like kings” during the
season, “especially when you were starting.” But Akana needed special
training before reaching the Big 10 Conference.
Following an excellent career at Estancia (Class of ‘80), Akana played
one year at Golden West College, then joined the U.S. Army. He spent one
full year in the army, then six years in the U.S. Army Reserves.
“It made me grow up a lot, it really did,” said Akana, who missed the
1981 and ’82 football seasons, then returned to Golden West for the ’83
campaign, after being urged by the late Dennis Dixon.
Akana was an offensive tackle and noseguard in high school who weighed
240 pounds for Coach Ed Blanton’s Sea View League championship squad in
1979, earning first-team all-league and third-team All-Orange Coast area
by the Daily Pilot as a defensive player his senior year.
Akana, 20 pounds more than Estancia’s next heaviest player, led the
Eagles’ strong-side sweep on offense with guard Jeff Tracy and tight end
Tony Camp, helping junior running back Robert Urmson rush for over 1,000
yards as the Eagles (9-3) captured their first outright league title.
One of Akana’s favorite highlights was defeating Miraleste, 13-0, in
the first round of the ’79 CIF Southern Section Central Conference
playoffs, while handling first-team All-CIF Division III center Mark Gray
(USC). “We blew him away,” Akana said.
“In high school, there’s so much more camaraderie,” said Akana, a
second-team all-league selection as a junior in ‘78, when the Eagles
struggled (2-7).
Akana also pointed to the El Toro game his senior year as a highlight,
a 22-15 Estancia victory that secured the Sea View League championship.
But, after the 1980 season at Golden West, Akana felt he needed more
discipline in his life and signed up the U.S. Army Reserves. He returned
to GWC a new man.
“That’s when I realized what I wanted to do, and I got my head
together and started studying in school,” he said. “I got lazy in high
school ... a lot of things happened.”
Akana, whose family is from Hawaii, is the youngest of seven children.
All but two of the children (Alan and his sister) were born in Hawaii.
After a two-season hiatus and playing at GWC in the fall of ‘83, Akana
was hoping to play football at the University of Hawaii. But the offer
wasn’t there and he settled on Michigan State, where he met his wife,
Debra.
Akana played on special teams as a junior at Michigan State in ‘84,
when the Spartans finished 6-6. One of the season’s lowlights included a
24-20 loss to Notre Dame in Week 2, after the Spartans had a 20-3 lead
with seven minutes left. “(Heisman Trophy winner) Tim Brown returned a
couple of punts for touchdowns,” Akana said.
Akana, the power in the trenches on Estancia’s first team to win a
league championship outright, is a member of the Daily Pilot Sports Hall
of Fame, celebrating the millennium.
Akana lives in Maui (near Kapalua Golf Club) with his wife and two
boys, Major, 8, and Marshall, 7. “They both surf,” he said.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.