LARAMIE — As the temperature dips Saturday night and Wyoming and Hawaii prepare to kick off, Tim Kamana expects to see a few shivers among fans wearing green.
"I mean, people go running for their coats when it’s 60," the Honolulu native said of his home state. "It’s completely different. Sixty out here, man, I don’t even want to wear a shirt or anything. It’s too hot. And then during the wintertime, it gets up to 40 and you’re like, ‘T-shirt and shorts time.’"
Hot weather is just one of many characteristics of Hawaiian football culture that differs from most other states.