Top

Army Navy Game

December 10, 2011 by · Comments Off on Army Navy Game 

Army Navy Game, Every year, something miraculous happens in December in America — the Army-Navy football game. It is one of the most fabled and long-standing rivalries in American athletics.

Navy Midshipmen and Army Cadets spend their entire four years of college saying, “Beat Army” or “Beat Navy” dozens of times a day.

In the weeks leading up to the contest both Academies wage mock war against each other – with pranks, commando raids and high jinx. On game day the Armed Forces network broadcasts it around the world. Soldiers will listen in from their posts in the war zones. Sailors will tune in from the high seas.

Not only is the Army-Navy game one of the oldest college football competitions in the nation, in many ways it is one of the best.

It’s not that the football is great, because it’s usually not. The young men who play for Army or Navy weren’t recruited by the top university teams – they’re too small, or too light. They aren’t semi-professional football stars, living, eating and studying apart from their college classmates.

The men who play at West Point or Annapolis major in physics or electrical engineering and spend more time doing homework and marching in drills than at football practice. When they graduate they won’t be drafted by the NFL.

It is the last organized football game most of them will ever play. In a few months time, they will be ensigns standing watch on ships in the Pacific, marine lieutenants flying helicopter reconnaissance missions, and army lieutenants in remote, forward operating bases in Afghanistan.

Army Navy Game 2010

December 4, 2010 by · Comments Off on Army Navy Game 2010 

Army Navy Game 2010, Army-Navy game in 2010 often leads championship Saturday. Instead, the game Army-Navy 2010 is another week, while Oregon, Auburn and other BCS contenders are in action today. Although this is the conference championship Saturday, it is not the last day of the pre-season bowl. That will come next Saturday, when the academy finally faces off again in Philadelphia. As such, it constitutes another example of how the game Army-Navy is different from the rest.

Normally, this rivalry is taken on the first week of December, or last week of November in years past. However, the battle has now been reduced to an undercard before the conference championship confrontations later in the day.

In this case, the game Army-Navy 2010 was pushed back a week, while Oregon, Auburn, and teams from the ACC, Big 12 and Big East battle for BCS berths. On December 11, the Black Knights and Midshipmen will be autonomous in the last game before the bowl season.

This slice became historical by other means, as both programs are eligible to bowl the first time in 15 years. Aspiring to enter 8-3, and were blocked in the Poinsettia Bowl on Dec. 23. As for the Black Knights, they are 6-5, and are appropriately directed to the Armed Forces Bowl Dec. 30.

When the game Army-Navy 2010, the two teams must know who their opponents bowl. Yet they seem like small compared matchups, according to the history and pageantry of this rivalry is renewed.

Of course, this rivalry has been a lot worse in one season of college football in recent decades. Now that both academies are not of national power more, the tradition is its main drawing point now. In fact, it is such a historic showdown, after playing second fiddle to the conference championship is unacceptable, at least this year.

No matter when it is required, however, the game of the Army-Navy 2010 offers a great opportunity for the Black Knights. Since this year has been their most successful in a long time, they have hopes to top it off by beating the Midshipmen for the first time since 2001. Yet they did not even score a touchdown against the Midshipmen since 2006.

Army Navy Game 2009

December 5, 2009 by · Comments Off on Army Navy Game 2009 

Army Navy Game 2009:WEST POINT — For the U.S. Military Academy’s football team, next week is the most important of the year.

On Dec. 12, it faces Navy for the 110th time on the gridiron.

Leading up to that game the whole corps of cadets will participate in Spirit Week, which begins Monday and lasts until Thursday.

It includes flag football games and bonfires, boat burnings and speeches.

“This year is the year we are going to make history,” said cadet Maci Farley, a senior and the school’s spirit captain. “You can feel it amongst the corps. Every one is feeling it, everyone is excited.”

The Black Knights have won five games, which means if they beat Navy, they will be eligible to play in a bowl game.

In addition to the planned spirit activities , this year coach Rich Ellerson is also resurrecting an old tradition.

In honor of the fallen soldiers, Ellerson will walk the players to Trophy Point for a moment of silence before they board the bus.

“We expect it to be fiercely contested,” Ellerson said of the Army-Navy game in a press release on Thursday.

“We expect to win. We know it’s going to be hard. We know it’s going to be an uphill fight. No disrespect to Navy and what they’ve accomplished, obviously they are the more accomplished football team, but we’re gaining on them,” Ellerson said. “We’re anxious to share this venue. We’re anxious to measure ourselves against the service academy that right now is dominant.”

Counting down until the game, which will be played at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia, Farley is channeling the corps’ emotions into even more events to make sure the school remains excited all week long.

As spirit captain, Farley has a staff of nine people who help her organize Spirit Week events.

She also is responsible for the coordination of the band, the cannon crew and the radio station personnel. Farley also plays a role in the spirit dinners, weekly Thursday night corps dinners.

“It never goes away,” Farley said of her job, “but I love to get people excited and it’s the funnest job in the corps.”

Bottom