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Couch Commentary: Army/Navy Preview, Part Two by Ryan Thies | General | 12.10.09 | | Text Size: +
“Three days until we beat Army, SIR!” Navy expects to beat Army. It’s not just Go Navy, Beat Army. Instead Annapolis cadets count down the
days towards the Army game. Not
because it’s a goal, but because it’s expected. It’s the logical conclusion to the football season. The
all-time Army/Navy series record is a remarkably close 53-49-7. Like a pendulum swinging
back-and-forth, each Academy has had their time to shine. These last ten-plus years have
undoubtedly been Annapolis’ time.
They have won 10 of the last 12, but anyone that knows the full history
of the series knows that eventually the pendulum will swing back in West Point’s
favor. Which means an Army win this
weekend be the beginning of their return, or it could be just a blip on the
radar. But Navy cadets know what
to do to blips on a radar. They
know to be ever vigilant, and they know they are going to win. Forbes
declared the Naval Academy at Annapolis the 30th best school in the
country, which is pretty impressive when you see Notre Dame (50th),
Brown (72nd), Berkeley (73rd), UCLA (78th) and
Penn (83rd). But this
is a Military Academy we’re talking about so the standards are a little different,
and considering that West Point (1st) and Air Force (7th)
were both higher, Annapolis has some catching up to do. But then again, ask either of the other
academies if they would trade places in the rankings if they could beat Navy in
football and they’d think long and hard about it. It’s not
just an abstract ‘pride’ but an actual trophy that those other Academies are
missing out on. The
Commander-in-Chief’s trophy goes to the Military Academy that beats the other
two. It’s obviously a big deal to
every cadet in each of the schools, but recently one Academy has stood
head-and-shoulders above the rest.
A Navy cadet will bring up their streak of C-I-C trophies faster than
they can do a pull-up, which is probably faster than you or I could even say
the words “pull-up.” It’s
seven-straight over Army, and thanks to a win earlier this year it’s also seven-years
over Air Force, which means they’ve had the Commander-in-Chief’s trophy longer
than we’ve been in Iraq, which might have been a better explanation for John
Mccain’s (Navy class of ‘58) line about staying in Iraq for 100 years. The caveat--the
Iraq retort--would
be dismissed as idiocy in any other rivalry, like blaming a losing streak on
daylight savings time, but clearly this rivalry is different. Iraq and Afghanistan matter more to
these two schools than any others in the country. Army says (and the data backs them up) that they have borne
far more of the brunt of the Middle East than Navy has, and as a result it is
harder for them to recruit football players. The five-year post-graduation military-commitment pretty
much rules out any football player which the slimmest hope of making it to the
NFL--as Lt Caleb Campbell proved, even being drafted by the NFL can’t change
that commitment to the government.
While Army
and Navy won’t admit that they lost those athletes long ago, I think we all
realize that if Roger Staubach were a high schooler today there’s no way he
chooses Annapolis. But even among
the remaining athletes, Army’s military commitment is much tougher to overcome
than Navy’s…or so West Point claims.
In fact in the game a few years ago, Army’s football team came out
wearing fatigue-uniforms, a not so subtle statement that they were the one true
military academy, implying that Navy is just a bunch of dudes going on a
cruise. It’s a nice story,
certainly a nice excuse for a long losing streak, but it doesn’t quite hold up
to scrutiny. Because contrary to
popular belief, some Marines do go to school--and that school is
Annapolis. In fact Navy cadets
stretch from control and precision (a nuclear-sub) to raw aggressiveness (the
Marines) and across that entire spectrum is a danger that is indicative of true
active duty. Yet, while
they work under the same constraints that the other Academies deal with, Navy
still puts out a good team every year.
This year’s might be better than most. But what’s remarkable is not just the success despite the hurdles;
it’s the timelessness of the success.
I don’t mean they’re successful every year- anyone that watched them
play from 1983 to 2002 can attest to that. That 20 year stretch saw them win a combined 68 games and go
to just one bowl. But the last 6
years have not only seen six-straight bowl games but also a record of 51-26. And all of those wins came from a
simple, old-school, offense: the triple-option. While the “Wildcat” in the NFL is similar, Navy’s “Wishbone”
isn’t some gimmick, it isn’t a trick-play, and it isn’t a fad. College football actually sees a ton of
variations of this offense even on tremendously successful teams (Urban Meyer
and Florida seem to do okay with it), but all of those programs consider it as
a good formation to pass out of.
Navy (along with Air Force) instead believes in the run-first,
run-second, run-third plan of attack.
In fact only twice this year has Navy even attempted 10 passes in a
game, and in a win over Wake Forrest they didn’t attempt a single pass. Houston’s Case Keenum had more
completions in one game (against UTEP) than Navy has had all season. Navy is running a century-old offense
and still succeeding. They’ve
beaten Notre Dame two out of the last three and earlier this year they gave
BCS-bound Ohio State a run for their money, so you know they are for real, but all
those wins don’t hide the fact that they play a one-game season. Ask any cadet which game is the most
important and the answer won’t surprise you but the depth of sincerity may: “It’s
not the most
important game, it’s the only important game.” All the other stuff riding on the game (Army going for win
#6 and bowl eligibility, Navy going for win #9 and true national
respectability) matters little compared to the game itself. And there
is a lot of that other stuff that goes into this game. Presumably there are quite a few bets
at the Pentagon during this time each year but beyond that each cadet
represents the millions of soldiers- 99.9% of whom never went to these
academies, but all of whom cheer for their branch. In fact both Army and Navy intentionally schedule games in
parts of the country where their enlisted men and women areL Army annually
schedules games in Texas while Navy this year played in Hawaii and consistently
takes a bowl game in San Diego.
They are scholars, warriors, and ambassadors, and every one of those
titles requires a different skill set but a singular focus. A focus so
concentrated that despite all the distractions, despite all the pressures,
despite whatever happens in Saturday’s game, ask a Navy cadet this Sunday about
next year’s game and you’re going to get only one answer: “Three-hundred and sixty-five days until we beat Army, SIR!” Written by Ryan ThiesRyan "Leaky Pipes" Thies got his nickname when he missed a guest spot on SportsNight due to a plumbing problem at his house (there really isn't anything more to the nickname, sorry to disappoint you.) For the record, if Ryan were to introduce himself on MNF, he would be torn between introducing himself as from St John Bosco (an Honorary LB school), LBCC, or CSULB. Read More Articles by Ryan Thies... Comments
Click Here to Leave a Comment
jon The US Naval Academy has midshipmen, not cadets. JR Salazar It's quite a shame that the Falcons could not muster a victory over the Middies in OT. I think they will get pounded by Houston in the Armed Forces Bowl. bill b Well put Ryan, but we wouldn't expect less from a Bosco Alum. In sports, especially football we talk about the athletes being warriors and going to battle along many other adjectives and descriptions. But many of these young men actually will be in harms way defending our ability to watch football freely on saturdays and sundays. And if you take into consideration as Lt. Campbell position, he would be in the NFL, except for his obligation to our country. And yet they knowingly still accept the commitment. Hats of to the true warriors of the sportimg wprld.
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