FLORHAM PARK, N.J. โ Helva Matungulu took a wrong turn on campus one day as a freshman and walked into a new world. It was a life-altering case of lost-and-found.
In 2011, he left his home in Nairobi, Kenya, to study molecular biology at Western Carolina University, a few hours from an aunt in Raleigh, North Carolina. He played some sports in his native land, mainly rugby, but his decision to matriculate in the United States was based purely on academics.
That changed when he was on his way to class and somehow wound up at the football field. Matungulu sat in the bleachers and watched the players run sprints. Not surprisingly, he caught the attention of the coaches because, letโs face it, you donโt come across too many 6-foot-5, 245-pound spectators with college eligibility.
โThe coach came up to me and invited me to join the team,โ Matungulu said after a recent New York Jets practice. โI never played football.โ
His response?
โSure, why not?โ
What began as sheer โhappenstance,โ according to Matungulu, has turned into a potential career. He blossomed into a 298-pound defensive lineman, demonstrating the kind of natural power and athleticism NFL teams covet.
After three seasons and 31 career games at Western Carolina, Matungulu signed with the Jets as an undrafted free agent, receiving a modest $3,000 signing bonus. Heโs a project because of his inexperience, but itโs worth a shot because of his potential. Bill Parcells had a name for this sort of thing. He called it โThe Planet Theory,โ his way of pointing out that there arenโt many 300-pound men walking the planet who possess the skills to play in the NFL. If you see one, sign him.
โHe has huge, huge upside,โ Western Carolina coach Mark Speir said in a phone interview.
Speir was hired in 2012, the year after Matungulu was discovered in the bleachers, but he, too, was intrigued by his size, growth potential and athletic traits. They just had to, well, teach him how to play football. Matungulu sat out the 2011 and 2012 seasons, learning the game on the practice field. Weโre talking Football 101: How to put on equipment, how to line up in a stance, etc.
โIt was square one as far as the rules,โ Speir said.
There was a period of trial and error. Matungulu started out as an offensive lineman. That didnโt last long. He was moved to tight end. That didnโt work. He was switched to defensive end. The Western Carolina staff didnโt think he had enough fluidity to play on the edge. So they slid him inside, making him a tackle in their four-man front.
In 2015, Matungulu played most of the defensive snaps for the Catamounts, recording 23 tackles, 1.5 sacks and a forced fumble. His most productive game came against Texas A&M, a five-tackle day that became his signature game.
When a raw talent from an FCS school holds his own against SEC competition, people notice โ some people, anyway. He wasnโt invited to the scouting combine and had no private workouts before the draft. His only exposure to scouts came at the NFLPA Collegiate Bowl, an all-star game in California, and the Appalachian State pro day. Western Carolina didnโt have its own pro day, so Matungulu made the 140-mile drive up Interstate 40.
John Scott Jr., the Jetsโ assistant defensive line coach, knew about Matungulu because Scott played and coached at Western Carolina. On the final day of the draft, he happened to be watching the tape of the Texas A&M game. He was impressed and called Speir.
โHe was like, โMan, I canโt believe how heโs pushing around these SEC guys, just walking โem backward,’โ said Speir, recalling his conversation with Scott.
Matungulu will be hard-pressed to crack the Jetsโ talented defensive line, but he has practice-squad potential. Heโs known as a hard worker, and in a weird way, his lack of experience could be a blessing because heโs not stuck in his ways. Heโs receptive to coaching.
โItโs going to take time,โ the 24-year-old said. โI learn every day.โ
Thereโs no doubting his intelligence. Matungulu graduated with a degree in molecular biology (2.7 GPA) and speaks three languages โ English, French and Swahili. Someday, he wants to get a job that will allow him to focus on genetics and stem-cell research. Asked to explain his passion, he said, โJust a cell and how it works, how something so small could affect the whole organism.โ
Absorbing the Jetsโ playbook probably wonโt be a problem.
Matungulu wouldnโt be the first Kenyan to play in the NFL. That distinction belongs to former rugby star Daniel Adongo, according to KenyaMOJA.com. In 2013, he signed with the Indianapolis Colts as a linebacker and played in five games before being released last season. One difference, though: Adongo had no previous football experience; Matungulu has a three-year edge.
โHe developed himself from nothing into [a prospect] in a short amount of time, and I guess that intrigued the Jets,โ Speir said. โHeโs not going to come in there entitled. Heโs going to do what he did at Western. Heโs going to battle his butt off and prove the naysayers wrong. Thatโs what heโs going to try to do, anyway.โ
Source -sportscenter.com
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