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thedrifter
12-02-05, 02:04 PM
Posted on Fri, Dec. 02, 2005
Navy gets ready for game in shadow of war
By Steve Goldstein
INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

ANNAPOLIS, Md. - Rhythmic footfalls echoed off the stone walls of Bancroft Hall yesterday as the midshipmen of the Naval Academy assembled for noon formation in Tecumseh Court - and suddenly found themselves bombarded by water balloons.

The suspected snipers were from West Point, of course, cadets on campus as part of the semester exchange between the two academies - and all part of the high jinks leading to tomorrow's 106th renewal of the Army-Navy game at Lincoln Financial Field.

But much more than a rivalry, this is also a special relationship "that transcends football," senior Midshipman Paul Angelo said. In a short time many will be brothers-in-arms, the water balloons replaced by more deadly weaponry.

So amid yesterday's revelry, there was earnest reflection. In recent days, middies first class - the seniors - have received their duty assignments.

"Now, it's become a reality," said Midshipman Jacquelyn Hanna of Lisbon, N.D. Her class, the first to enter after the Sept. 11 attacks, has "always been very aware that's what we're going to be doing very shortly," she said.

Receiving her assignment to surface warfare - after she completes two years' study at Oxford University as a Rhodes scholar - made it suddenly very imminent. Some of her friends will be Marines on the ground next year.

"We know we won't be so lucky that everyone comes home," Hanna said, "and it's a sobering fact."

Another pointed reminder came Wednesday in the person of President Bush, who told the assembled 4,300 middies at Alumni Hall that "some of your former classmates" are training with Navy SEAL teams to storm terrorist safe houses or "preparing to lead Marine rifle platoons that will hunt the enemy in the mountains of Afghanistan and the streets of Iraqi cities."

Angelo, a senior from Columbia Station, Ohio, said his destiny was impressed upon him when he first walked into the Yard four years ago.

"When we arrived as plebes," he said, "I remember someone saying we're the first class to enter the Naval Academy during a time of war since Vietnam. We all came here knowing what to expect.

"Everyone is really gung ho to implement and put into practice what we've been training for the past 3 1/2 years," said Angelo, also a Rhodes scholar assigned to surface warfare.

There is a running commentary among his classmates as to how many times a certain commandant will remind them that "we're a nation at war." The point has been driven home repeatedly.

In their classrooms, they debate tactics with combat veterans, as well as the utility of war and even whether the United States should be fighting in the gulf.

Sam Fromville of Fallston, Md., who is headed for submarine training in Charleston, S.C., when he graduates in the spring, said instructors ask them what they think about Iraq, whether the focus should be on winning the fight on the ground or winning the support of the Iraqi people.

"Is it a hearts-and-minds mission or a kill-the-insurgents mission?" Fromville said. "This is a discussion we have in class just like Congress has in Washington. These are valuable discussions."

"Most of us appreciate the debate in Washington and realize that's an important part of what makes our country safe and what makes our country good," said Midshipman Christine Higgins of Salisbury, Md., who will be a surface-warfare officer.

Hanna, though, said most of her classmates no longer debated the issue: "I think most of us have put aside whether we should be there as a question, because the reality is we are there, and for better or worse it's a situation we have to face and we have to find a way to properly handle the war."

When the middies walk through Bancroft Hall, they can see enshrined on the walls the names of their predecessors who have fallen in the line of duty. More significant in their young lives are the high school classmates who enlisted right out of school, who have already seen combat in Afghanistan and Iraq, who in some cases have not returned.

"When you hear about someone else being killed, it makes you appreciate the burden that everyone is carrying here," Higgins said. "They are not just going out to make money when they graduate or to pursue civilian careers, but to perform a service."

And so yesterday, there was time to look forward to the big game, and to the chance that Navy will win four in a row and break a bizarre deadlock that stands at 49 wins apiece and seven ties.

There was time to enjoy the return of the Commander-in-Chief's Trophy that had been kidnapped by persons (read: cadets) unknown.

There was time to think of other things.

"I definitely heard anecdotes that there was a very different feel to the academy before we entered an armed conflict," Hanna said. "People's view of the military and its job was different - because we were a peacetime force.

"Things changed in ways we really can't understand," she said.

Contact reporter Steve Goldstein
at 202-383-6048 or slgoldstein@krwashington.

Ellie

thedrifter
12-02-05, 02:41 PM
Go Navy!!

thedrifter
12-02-05, 03:07 PM
December 02, 2005
Commander-In-Chief’s Trophy found

The Naval Academy may have taken the Commander-In-Chief’s Trophy from Air Force in 2003, but those Mids seem to have a problem keeping track of it.

Annapolis recovered the service academies’ cherished award Nov. 30, about 48 hours after it was believed to have been stolen.

The trophy disappeared from the football team’s locker room in Ricketts Hall, where it was moved Nov. 28 to motivate the team for its game against Army on Dec. 3 in Philadelphia. That night, Navy athletic officials discovered the theft, along with a note that read: “Before we win the football game on Saturday, we thought we would take the trophy. By the time you read this, it will be halfway to West Point.”

It was found two days later — not anywhere near West Point — but in a storage room inside the Naval Academy’s Bancroft Hall, Chet Gladchuk, Navy’s athletic director, told The Washington Post.

The prize, 2½ feet high and weighing 170 pounds, goes to the winner of the head-to-head football competition among Air Force, Army and Navy. While Annapolis and West Point are vying for this year’s honor, Air Force leads the competition, having won it 16 times in its history, compared to seven for Navy and six for Army; the competition has ended in a tie four times.

Ellie

thedrifter
12-03-05, 09:00 AM
Posted on Sat, Dec. 03, 2005
Army's Holleder delivered where he was needed
He led on the ball field and the battlefield.
By Frank Fitzpatrick
Inquirer Staff Writer

In 1955, he had been the improbable quarterback in Army's improbable upset of Navy. Twelve years later, heading into a Vietnamese jungle, into the smoky heart of a battle he did not have to join, Maj. Donald W. Holleder was running again.

"I couldn't keep up with him," recalled Tom "Doc" Hinger, an Army medic during that bloody October 1967 clash with North Vietnamese regulars in Ong Thanh. "His legs were churning. He just looked back and yelled, 'C'mon, Doc, there's wounded in there. Let's go get them.' "

Hinger, who had retrieved several injured colleagues already, got close enough to the powerfully built officer to see a sniper's bullet fell him. The medic lifted Holleder's head into his arms and watched the big man die. The father of four young daughters was 33.

This afternoon's Army-Navy game at Lincoln Financial Field will mark the 50th anniversary of that 14-6 Cadets victory that Holleder led and inspired. That game and his heroic death have combined to make Holleder, little known beyond West Point, an Army legend.

His name, which can be found on an Arlington National Cemetery gravestone and on Panel 28, Row 25, of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, lives on elsewhere, too. The military academy's athletic center bears his name. So does a plaque in the National Football Foundation's Hall of Fame. And the Army football team's Black Lion Award, presented earlier this week to backup tailback Scott Wesley, honors Holleder and the Black Lions of the Second Battalion who died along with him that distant day.

There is resonance in his story because his final moments - ordering his helicopter pilot to land, jumping from the craft and sprinting toward his wounded colleagues - so closely mirrored the attributes he displayed on the football field that season a half-century ago.

"People just expected Don Holleder to excel," said Jim Shelton, a retired Army major who served with him in Vietnam and scrimmaged against him at West Point as a Delaware linebacker. "And he expected the same thing of himself."

Tall, handsome, a three-sport star at Aquinas Institute in Rochester, N.Y., crew-cut Don Holleder was an all-American boy and an all-American end for a 7-2 Army team that had the nation's leading offense in 1954. But quarterback Pete Vann was gone in 1955 and coach Earl "Red" Blaik needed a replacement. He turned, almost inexplicably, to Holleder.

The 6-foot-2 200-pounder had never played in the backfield. He understood that the switch would cost him his all-American status and expose him and his coach to criticism. But, after sleeping on Blaik's unusual proposal, Holleder agreed.

"He understood self-sacrifice," said Hugh Wyatt, a high school football coach in Camas, Wash., who once was the personnel director for the World Football League's Philadelphia Bell and who conceived the idea for the Black Lion Award. "In Vietnam and on the field he was willing to do whatever was best for his team."

The criticism came. Heading into the season-ending Nov. 26 game with Navy, Army was a disappointing 5-3. Blaik was ridiculed for the peculiar move and Holleder, who threw just 63 passes the entire season, completing only 22, was labeled one-dimensional.

Holleder himself heard fellow Cadets criticizing his play and even Lt. Gen. Blackshear Bryan, the academy superintendent, made it a point to tell Blaik how much heat he was getting over the quarterback.

"He couldn't throw," Shelton recalled. "He would just roll left or roll right and run it himself. But he was a load to bring down. Tackling him was like trying to tackle a horse. And after you did, he got up kicking and swinging."

He was someone, as author David Maraniss noted in his book, They Marched Into Sunlight, which focuses on that 1967 Vietnam battle, "people either loved or hated."

But Blaik demanded and prized toughness above all else. He stuck with his tough QB.

"Holleder was a natural athlete, big, strong, quick, smart, aggressive, a competitor," Blaik wrote in his 1960 autobiography. "I knew he could learn to handle the ball well and to call the plays properly. Most important, I knew he would provide... leadership."

Navy, with a 6-1-1 record and the nation's top passer, future Midshipmen coach George Welsh, was a clear favorite when they arrived in Philadelphia.

The night before the game, Blaik gathered his team at the Bellevue-Stratford Hotel and told them he was wearying of those long postgame walks to shake hands with winning coaches.

"That walk tomorrow, before 100,000 people, to congratulate [Navy coach] Eddie Erdelatz would be the longest walk I've ever taken in my coaching life," he said.

There was silence in the room. Then Holleder spoke. "Colonel," he said, "you're not going to have to make that walk."

No one in a sun-splashed Municipal Stadium crowd of 102,000 - President Eisenhower didn't come, but Supreme Court Chief Justice Earl Warren was among the 37 trainloads of spectators who arrived in Philadelphia for the game - was surprised when the Midshipmen took the opening kickoff and drove 76 yards for a touchdown and a 6-0 lead.

Holleder and Army couldn't do anything offensively and Navy looked to add to its advantage. But it was Holleder - in those days of no-platoon football, the offense played defense, too - who kept them from doing so.

He knocked down a fourth-down pass to end one Navy drive and forced a fumble at Army's 13 to stop another.

In the second half, with Holleder now running the ball and confidently directing the offense, Army scored twice to take a 14-6 lead that held up.

Afterward, Gen. Douglas MacArthur was so ecstatic that he sent a gushing telegram to Blaik.

"No victory the Army has won in its long years of fierce football struggles has ever reflected a greater spirit of raw courage, of invincible determination, of masterful strategic planning and resolute practical execution."

A week later Holleder became the only quarterback to appear on Sports Illustrated's cover following a game in which he failed to throw a single completion. One of his two passes was intercepted and the other should have been.

After graduating in a 1956 academy class that included Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf, Holleder went on to an outstanding career as an infantry officer and even served for three years as an assistant football coach at West Point.

On Oct. 17, 1967, as he sat in a helicopter helplessly observing the closing stages of a North Vietnamese ambush that would kill 58 Americans, Holleder was, in Maraniss' words, "an untamed mustang."

He badgered his commanding officer until Holleder finally got permission to land. The major leapt from the chopper, grabbed a .45 pistol and some nearby soldiers, including Hinger, and made for the bloody jungle.

"He was running hell-bent when automatic-weapons fire got him," said Hinger, who like Shelton is retired and living near Sarasota, Fla. "Then, a moment or so later, he died in my arms. It's funny, I only knew Don Holleder for about two minutes. But that was long enough to know what kind of man he was."

Army-Navy Rivalry: Over the Years

Here is a look at the football rivalry between Army and Navy:

Today's game: Lincoln Financial Field, 2:30 p.m.

TV/Radio: Channel 3; WDAS-AM (1480).

Series record: 49-49-7.

Last year's game: Navy 42, Army 13.

Series records in Philadelphia: Army leads, 38-36-4; at Municipal/JFK Stadium, Navy won, 22-16-3; at Franklin Field, Army won, 11-7; at Veterans Stadium, Army won, 11-5-1; at Lincoln Financial Field, Navy leads, 2-0.

Other venues: Games have also been played in West Point, N.Y.; Annapolis, Md.; Princeton; New York; Baltimore; Chicago; and East Rutherford, N.J.

Score of first meeting: Navy 24, Army 0, at West Point, N.Y., Nov. 29, 1890.

Score of first game in Philadelphia: Army 17, Navy 5, Dec. 2, 1899.

2005 records: Army, 4-6; Navy, 6-4.

Web sites: Navy, www.navysports.com; Army, www.goarmysports.com.

Game highlights

Dec. 1, 1945 - World War II ended a few weeks before the season started, and the unbeaten teams played for the national championship. Army won, 32-13, as Felix "Doc" Blanchard scored three touchdowns, and Glenn Davis added two.

Nov. 29, 1958 - Army won, 22-6, as head coach Earl "Red" Blaik ended his career with an 8-0-1 record, Army's last unbeaten team. Blaik created the "lonely end offense," with receiver Bill Carpenter never returning to the huddle, standing 15 yards away and receiving plays from quarterback Joe Caldwell through hand signals. All-American running back Pete Dawkins went on to win the Heisman Trophy.

Dec. 1, 1962 - Navy defeated Army, 34-14, as Navy's Roger Staubach set an Army-Navy game record by completing 11 of 13 pass attempts.

Nov. 28, 1970 - Mark Schickner intercepted a record-setting four passes, the last a game-saver in the final minute, leading Navy to a stunning 11-7 upset.

Nov. 27, 1971 - In one of the most exciting Army-Navy finishes, Army escaped with a 24-23 victory when Navy's last-minute fourth-down 7-yard pass from Fred Stuvek to Andy Pease trickled off the receiver's fingertips at the goal line.

Nov. 29, 1980 - At Veterans Stadium, Navy took its first series lead since 1921 with a 33-6 rout. It was the first time in 35 years that the game was played at a site other than JFK Stadium.

Dec. 9, 1989 - Frank Schenk drilled a 32-yard field goal with 11 seconds remaining to lift Navy to a 19-17 win at Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J.

Dec. 7, 1996 - Defensive back Garland Gay's interception at the goal line with 10 seconds remaining sealed Army's come-from-behind 28-24 victory.

Dec. 1, 2001 - Before a sellout crowd that included President Bush, Army won, 26-17, in the game's last appearance at Veterans Stadium.

Source: www.goarmy.com

Contact staff writer Frank Fitzpatrick at 215-854-5068 or ffitzpatrick@phillynews.com.

Ellie
GO NAVY!

thedrifter
12-03-05, 03:11 PM
Halftime

Navy-21

Army-10

GO NAVY!;)

Wyoming
12-03-05, 07:07 PM
Final - 42-13 - Navy

Great game!!

yellowwing
12-03-05, 08:00 PM
In this photograph released by the US Navy, Navy players hold up the Commander-in-Chief Trophy following their 42-23 victory over Army Saturday, Dec. 3, 2005 in Philadelphia.
(AP Photo/ Journalist 1st Class James G. Pinsky, US Navy)
GO NAVY!

BOOGIEMAN44
12-03-05, 11:30 PM
great Game... Go Navy