In 2020, Joe Salaveโ€™a was the third highest-paid defensive line coach in college football, earning $685,000 as an Oregon Duck, a 45-year-old rising star in the prime of his career. He was a feared recruiting opponent, perhaps the top recruiter in the Pac-12.

Salaveโ€™a knows what it is to win a Rose Bowl before 90,000 fans, contend for a national championship and have Nike icon Phil Knight put his arm around his shoulders and thank him for keeping the Ducks high and mighty.

Salaveโ€™a also knows what it is to prove someone wrong. In 2012, new Arizona coach Rich Rodriguez told Salaveโ€™a he would not be retaining him on RichRodโ€™s first UA staff; instead, RichRod hired old West Virginia crony Bill Kirelawich, then 62, to coach the UAโ€™s defensive line. Howโ€™d that work out?

Four years later, Kirelawich was fired after Salaveโ€™aโ€™s new team, Washington State, beat Arizona 69-7, the most lopsided loss of RichRodโ€™s long career.

It was almost unfathomable to think that Arizona could reconnect with Salaveโ€™a after his star rose so rapidly, first under WSUโ€™s Mike Leach, then under Oregonโ€™s Mario Cristobal. When Cristobal left Oregon to be the head coach at Miami three years ago, he paid Salaveโ€™a a reported $850,000 a year to be his assistant head coach and defensive line coach.

This year, the Hurricanes opened 9-0, climbed to No. 4 in the AP poll, and Salaveโ€™aโ€™s value climbed even higher, if possible.

When Arizona coach Brent Brennan recently made contact with Salaveโ€™a, he knew he couldnโ€™t turn Salaveaโ€™s head with money. Brennan offered $750,000 a year. Salaveโ€™a accepted, even though itโ€™s a pay cut. Brennan offered exactly the same title that Salaveโ€™a had at Miami: assistant head coach and defensive line coach.

Joe Salaveโ€™a got choked up when recalling the moment he was about land in Tucson to help coach the program that recruited and shaped him.

Why would Salaveโ€™a leave a rising national power to return to Arizona, a place at which all 36 employees in the football department have reason to be worried about job security?

It is probably as simple as loyalty, Wildcat blood that has flowed through Salaveโ€™aโ€™s veins since the winter day in 1993 he agreed to play for Dick Tomeyโ€™s Wildcats.

Tomey took a chance on Salaveโ€™a, who was not academically eligible for the 1993 season. It was then called โ€œProposition 48,โ€ which meant Salaveโ€™a would have to pay his own way to Arizona while getting academically eligible.

Tomey and assistant coaches Duane Akina and Larry Mac Duff treated Salaveโ€™a like family, a son. Salaveโ€™a made it work two ways: the 18-year-old who grew up in American Samoa vowed to earn his degree.

For the next three years, Salaveโ€™a became a star defensive lineman.

He recovered a fumble and returned it for a touchdown to beat ASU in the final 90 seconds of an unforgettable 1995 game in Tempe. He twice became an All-Pac-10 lineman.

After the โ€™96 season, eligible for the NFL Draft, four years removed from Oceanside High School, Salaveโ€™a did something almost unheard of in college athletics the last 30 years: After playing in the Hula Bowl All-Star game, he returned to Tucson and told Tomey that he was withdrawing from the draft.

He was determined to earn his degree, which he had not only promised to Tomey, but to his family in California. Salaveaโ€™a made good on his word. He graduated from the UA in four years after entering school as a Prop. 48 student.

Now heโ€™s back at Arizona Stadium for Round 3, this time committed to helping save his alma materโ€™s cratering football program that desperately needs his help.

Salaveโ€™a knows what heโ€™s getting into. Heโ€™s seen it all. In his eight-year NFL career, he played for the Tennessee Titans 1999 Super Bowl team, and he was an assistant coach on Tomeyโ€™s 2-10 San Jose State team of 2009, after which Tomey retired and Salaveโ€™a was left without a job in football.

He moved to Las Vegas for a year and pondered his future. Little did Salaveโ€™a know his best was yet to come: he has earned more than $7 million and established a reputation as one of college footballโ€™s most capable assistant coaches.

Now heโ€™s clearly betting โ€” some would say against the odds โ€” that he can turn his alma materโ€™s football program into a winner again.


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Contact sports columnist Greg Hansen at GHansenAZStar@gmail.com. On X(Twitter): @ghansen711