Lax Advances

It was little more than a week ago that the Navy lacrosse team appeared to be on the outside looking into the NCAA lacrosse tournament. Now the Mids are about to host a quarterfinal game, earning a rematch with Johns Hopkins after beating North Carolina, 8-7. It was a great win for a team that wasn’t even supposed to be there.

The Bad: During the pregame show on WNAV, Pete Medhurst mentioned that Coach Meade felt that his team needed to win at least 50% of the faceoffs in order to have a shot at winning. They didn’t even come close, only pulling out 6 of 19. Combined with UNC clipping Navy in ground balls (41-39), you’d think that it spelled bad news for the Mids. But that’s before you factor in…

The Good: …North Carolina’s atrocious 14-26 on clears. What used to be Navy’s biggest problem became their best friend on Saturday night, as the Tar Heels couldn’t solve Navy’s ride. Not only did UNC’s clearing problem lead directly to two Navy goals, but it also negated the posession advantage that usually comes from dominating faceoffs.

The Really, Really Good: Tommy Phelan was on fire with 12 saves, including several of the highlight-reel variety. Richie Meade felt that Phelan was the hot hand going into the game after this week’s practice, and his decision paid off.

The Better Than It Has Been Lately: For three quarters, Navy’s offense looked about as good schematically as it had all year. UNC’s defense was pushing out to challenge the Mids on the perimeter, which is the M.O. of a lot of teams the Mids have played lately. It led to some lousy passing and catching, but Navy also took advantage with much better shot opportunities than we’ve seen in the last several weeks. Tim Paul was the primary beneficiary with 4 goals, but the Mids generated a few shots from near point-blank range– something you’d expect to open up with a stretched-out defense. Unfortunately, Paul’s 4 goals were all that Navy’s set offense could generate.

The Ugly: That’s because Navy is probably the worst shooting team of any that is regularly in the top 10-15. Grant Zimmerman did make some nice saves, no doubt. But he didn’t always have to. Doesn’t it seem a little unusual that opposing goalies always seem to have career days against Navy? Think back to Bucknell, the second half of Maryland, Army, Hopkins, or even as far back as VMI and Mount St. Mary’s. Some good goalies, to be sure. But when great goalie play seems to be the norm, you start to wonder… Maybe it’s us. I’m not sure how to fix the problem, but it sure doesn’t seem like the Navy offense makes goalies work too hard. Johns Hopkins is good enough offensively that Navy will need to capitalize on those point-blank opportunities in order to keep up.

The incredibly frustrating: Navy went up 7-4 after 3 quarters, thanks to Paul’s 4 goals, a goal in transition by longpole Zack Schroeder, and a couple of gifts courtesy of Grant Zimmerman. Predictably, Navy put the brakes on the offense and stopped looking for shots.

SHOTS BY PERIOD       1  2  3  4  Tot
————————————-
Navy……………………. 11 12 15  3 – 41
North Carolina………..  4 13  4 12 – 33

That includes 0 shots taken on a :30 EMO with about 10 minutes left in the quarter. And just as predictably, UNC fought their way back into the game, scoring three goals in the 4th. Fortunately for Navy, Nick Mirabito capitalized on an incredible gaffe in the UNC clearing game that left him with an empty net to shoot on. Otherwise, I might be writing a different story right now.

Let’s break this down a little bit. Navy had leads going into the 4th quarter against 5 teams that made the NCAA tournament field– Ohio State, Cornell, Colgate, Maryland, and UNC. In the 4th quarter of those games, Navy was outscored 13-4. The Colgate game was pretty much already out of reach. Against Ohio State and Cornell, Navy lost the lead. Against Maryland and UNC, both teams drew within a goal and had posession with a chance to score at the end of the game before making mistakes that ran the clock out. Navy lost a 6-2 lead against Ohio State, a 7-4 lead against Cornell, and put Maryland and UNC in position to tie the game after having 2nd half leads of 5-0 and 7-4, respectively. Whatever happened to putting an opponent away? The counter argument is that at that point, it’s more important to posess the ball than it is to shoot. But the two aren’t mutually exclusive. Turnover stats weren’t kept in the Ohio State game for some reason, but in the other 4 games, Navy averaged 3.83 turnovers per quarter through the first 3 quarters. In the 4th quarters of those games, Navy averaged 7 turnovers. Navy does a better job of maintaining posession when they’re actually trying to score. The same was true on Saturday, as long Navy posessions set the tone for the game in the first half. Defenses take more chances trying to get the ball back when they’re behind late in games, so it makes sense that they’d force more turnovers in the 4th quarter. But the flip side of taking chances is supposed to be that the opposing offense will make you pay, since playing too aggressively will create holes in the defense. After scoring only 4 4th-quarter goals in those 5 games, Navy doesn’t do that. They allow the defense to dictate instead of pressuring them right back. Consequently, no lead is seemingly ever safe against a team that’s any good.

Of course, I pray that Navy is in position to blow a lead against Johns Hopkins this weekend, since that would be a huge improvement over the Mids’ last performance against the Jays. When you think about it, things are shaping up about as well as Navy fans could have hoped for. We had a first-round game against a UNC team that Navy had historically played well against, had a hit-or-miss offense, and was badly overseeded at #4. And now we have another crack at Johns Hopkins, which is always a welcome opportunity. The seniors have an opportunity to wash the bad taste of the last Hopkins game out of their mouths, having been given a second chance that you just know they’re fired up about. And they get it at home in front of what will probably be a crowd of 20,000+. After the miserable way the regular season ended, could things have worked out any better? I don’t think so.

Bill Wagner is kind of a big deal.

People know him. He’s very important. He has many leather-bound books, and his apartment smells of rich mahogany.

http://www.hometownannapolis.com/cgi-bin/read/2008/05_07-13/NAS

Taxpayers foot the bill to educate students at Air Force, Army and Navy under the belief the graduates of those institutions will one day protect the rights and freedoms of United States citizens by serving in the armed forces. I would imagine the majority of taxpayers would agree that playing pro football full-time while recruiting part-time does not constitute legitimate military service.

Which begs the question: How effective of an Army recruiter can Caleb Campbell be considering he’s effectively avoiding his five-year commitment? It would seem difficult for Campbell to talk about the realities of military service when he has not fully tasted that life.

Wags smacked this one to smithereens. It’s the most comprehensive breakdown of the situation that we’ve seen in the media. If you were worried about what you were going to tell your senator, don’t be; Wags did the heavy lifting for you. Because that’s what he does. Well, in between rescuing cats from tall trees, delivering babies at Anne Arundel Medical Center, bringing rain to the desert, and getting great gas mileage.

You Just Aren’t Smart Enough

After Adam Ballard commented on the importance of making good on one’s commitments, Army punter Owen Tolson made the mistake of offering a feeble response to the noble oratory of America’s Alpha Male:

“Adam is a great player and he had a great career,” said Tolson, who will report to mini-camp with the Giants next week. “I’ll give him that. But I think what a lot of people who comment don’t realize is that this (alternative service) policy will give all the academies good exposure.”

Tolson could of easily lashed out at Ballard. He didn’t. However, Tolson did manage to get another point across.

“My father (Tommy) is a commander in the Navy and he thinks it’s a good idea and so does a lot of the people he works with. “Adam is a great athlete, but I think he needs to get some more information so he better understands the policy.”

I must be the dumbest and/or laziest person on the internet. The Army’s response to every single challenge of this policy (whether through the players or through some spokesmouth) is that if you don’t like the policy, you just don’t understand. You might even be a “fool.” You just need to get more information. Unfortunately, they don’t seem to be providing any of it.

How arrogant can they be?

FEAR THE GOAT

Columns about Big East expansion are no rarity. Almost as common are mentions of Navy within those columns as a candidate. But saying that Navy is too good for the Big East?

The Navy possibility has always been intriguing. Annapolis, Md.? Sure. The football is pretty good. There is also the nationwide draw of the Army-Navy game, though its contract with CBS would be an issue.

But the biggest problem with Navy is that it might be a little too good. The Midshipmen, who averaged eight wins a year the past five seasons under former coach Paul Johnson (now at Georgia Tech), could easily hang in the Big East and be in the mix for one of the conference’s seven bowl bids.

Adding another team to a conference sounds good until it affects you directly. And Navy coming in would affect middle-of-the-pack teams even with the conference aligning itself with the new St. Petersburg Bowl pitting Big East and C-USA schools. With similar records, Navy could be more attractive than other Big East teams to bowl committees.

Now I’ve seen everything.

Taking the Pulse

The Caleb Campbell story has been cooking in the media Crock Pot for more than a week now, and initial reactions are coming in. In my scan of the web, it seems that the people writing about this can be split into two groups: sports writers/columnists, and everyone else. Among those whose primary focus is sports, the reaction has been mostly positive, with a couple of exceptions. That shouldn’t be a surprise; it’s expected that the natural inclination of those who cover sports for a living would be for a kid to be allowed to play sports. That’s fine, I guess. But I have a problem with a lot of the arguments and misconceptions that are being presented in some of these pieces. I’ll get to that in a minute. Among those whose primary function is not to cover sports, the reaction is much more mixed.

We’ll start with the admittedly unscientific USA Today poll, which at the moment sits at 53%-47% against Campbell going straight to the NFL. Again, it’s unscientific, but I think it demonstrates something important. The “USA! USA!” chants coming from the drunk Jets fans in the balcony at Radio City Music Hall at the tail end of the draft made for a nice scene, but it isn’t indicative of the general public. This poll might not be, either… but it at least demonstrates that once you get away from sports fans, people have questions about the merits of the Army policy. Campbell’s story isn’t necessarily the feel-good tale that ESPN is selling.

That brings me to the first thing that’s wrong with a lot of the stories & columns that support Campbell. Almost all of them call this a “feel-good story.” How, exactly, is that the case? What is there to feel good about? So he went to West Point. Who cares? Going to West Point is supposed to be the means to an end, not an end unto itself. Campbell’s ends do not match those that we associate with West Point graduates. His are no different than those of any other player in the draft. So he’ll wear a uniform and talk to high school kids aboutt he Army. Big deal. Scores of NFL players do community outreach. Hell, I was at the March of Dimes walk last week with Terry Cousin. Is his a “feel-good story?” And yes, Campbell will (supposedly) head back to the regular Army if he can’t catch on to an NFL team. Is that the “feel-good” part of all of this? To root for Campbell so he doesn’t have to do normal service? Actually, that probably is the appeal for some people. I don’t think that’s the message the Army wants to send, though.

It’s service that makes service* academies and the people who attend them special. Without that, they’re just regular colleges with uniforms and a lot of rules. And if he makes an NFL roster, that’s all it will have been for Caleb Campbell. He is no different than any other NFL hopeful. Other than the fact that the Army is making concessions on the terms of his active duty obligation, there is nothing special about this story. It’s “Guy Turns Down Other Jobs For Shot At NFL Glory And Money.” That’s the same story of everyone else in the draft. This isn’t a “feel-good” story. At best, it’s a “feels like everyone else” story.

Annoying misconception number two is the idea that Campbell will actually be a recruiter. I’m not talking about whether or not his “service” as a poster boy will drive people to enlist; we’ve already talked about that fallacy extensively. No, right now I’m talking about the actual work that Campbell will be doing for the Army– his “service.” One of the common themes you read is, to paraphrase: “Campbell will be a recruiter– and recruiting is service too!” I have serious doubts that the people who say this have any idea what real recruiting duty actually entails. Recruiting is difficult and time-consuming work. It can’t be accomplished working one day a week. Recruiting duty isn’t about shaking hands at events here & there, or maybe talking to kids at a high school or two. Recruiters have long hours, have quotas to meet, are constantly on the road in their assigned areas, and frequently work weekends. Campbell isn’t going to be doing any of this. Well, he’ll be working weekends, but it won’t be for the Army. So for all the people talking about how Campbell is still going to be serving, please stop. Campbell may be assigned to a recruiting command for administrative purposes, but he is most certainly not going to be a real recruiter. Real recruiters work more than one day a week. Saying this is “service” is nothing but spin.

Which brings me to annoying misconception number three, as illustrated in this piece in the Las Vegas Review-Journal. “Service,” according to this author and others, can only be defined by those who have served:

Do you know the people who seem to have the biggest problem with this? Those who never served a day.

No, no, no, no. You do not need a connection to the military to have an opinion on this issue. You only need to be a taxpayer. The Army, like any other government agency, is supposed to answer to the people– not the other way around. If taxpayers don’t think they’re getting the return they would expect from their West Point investment, they have every right to voice their opinions about it. If this columnist (who presumably never served himself) is allowed to speak out in favor of the policy, then it’s just as appropriate for people who disagree with him to do the same.

Another flawed argument that you see in defense of the Army’s policy is that it will only affect one or two cadets per year. As Jim Litke wrote for the AP:

No matter how Campbell or Viti’s NFL stints go, there is no chance a parade of topflight prep athletes will enroll in the service academies seeking a path to pro sports. The odds are too long, too many other schools already offer a more established and much more comfortable route and that’s before you factor in the risk.

It’s true that few service* academy players get looks from the NFL; that’s why some people say it won’t affect more than a player or two each year. But that’s all based on the assumption that nothing will change under the new policy. Isn’t the whole point of all this to be able to attract better players? Of course it is:

It’s no coincidence that when Army’s plan was introduced in 2005, then coach Bobby Ross drafted a memo to NFL player personnel directors, informing them of the new policy. It was time to get the word out.

To the NFL, to potential recruits.

Because back then, and now, it was all about recruiting.

Recruiting football players.

And now that Army has what appears could be, at least, a slight edge in recruiting over its service academy rivals, they better start closing the gap on them.

After all, that’s why the policy was instituted in the first place.

How can anyone assume that the number of players that’ll have a shot at the NFL will remain the same under the new policy as it was under the old? People like Litke and others make the argument that West Point still isn’t the easiest path to the NFL, and recruits won’t be turning down Michigan and Texas to go there. True, but that misses the point. Army doesn’t have to out-recruit BCS schools. They only have to out-recruit Navy and Air Force. If each service* academy produces 2 players a year that might be capable of playing in the NFL, the Army wants to get all six of them going to West Point. You can’t assume that only a player or two per year will be affected by this based on past performance.

Colonel Bryan Hilferty, speaking on behalf of West Point, sought to clear up some misconceptions about the policy for the Detroit News. He pretty much does the opposite.

Hilferty cleared up some misconceptions about the program:

• It is a Dept. of Defense program and does not apply only to West Point. (The Naval and Air Force academies have not implemented it.)

• The perception other cadets will head to Iraq immediately after graduation is wrong. They face another year of training.

• Campbell is not giving up his military obligation. He owes the army eight years of service. After two years with a pro sports team, he can buy out the next three years of active service for about $120,000 — the cost of three years of his education.

• Campbell would then have a six-year obligation of active reserve duty.

On the first point, I am going to assume that whoever wrote this is just making a mistake and that the Colonel isn’t telling a blatant lie. The “Alternative Service Option” is very much the Army’s alone. It is not a Department of Defense program, as you already know since I posted a link to the DOD policy. (In case you haven’t seen it, you can read it here.) As for the other points, it doesn’t matter what kind of an obligation Campbell has if he makes the team, because he won’t be qualified to do anything. West Point seems desperate to portray all this as business as usual, but it really isn’t.

You can tell by the way that they are using talking points and questionable arguments in defense of the policy. Mike Viti, who is getting a lookfrom the Buffalo Bills, is quoted in that Litke column:

“I think a lot of people have the misconception that if you’re not getting bullets slung by your head, that you’re not serving your nation in a time of war,” Viti said.

“There are service support branches in the Army for a reason. Combat arms is what I decided to do, but that doesn’t mean my service is going to be any less,” he added, “because when you start to split hairs on it, you start to demean some of the other branches of the U.S. Army.”

This is almost embarrassing; I very seriously doubt that Viti came up with this clack himself (Caleb Campbell said almost the exact same thing word-for-word here, which tells me that they’ve been told exactly what to say). Hiding behind other branches of the Army in order to defend this policy? Making people feel guilty for thinking that this policy is wrong?  It’s the Animal House logic:

The issue here is not whether we broke a few rules, or took a few liberties with our female party guests – we did. But you can’t hold a whole fraternity responsible for the behavior of a few, sick twisted individuals. For if you do, then shouldn’t we blame the whole fraternity system? And if the whole fraternity system is guilty, then isn’t this an indictment of our educational institutions in general? I put it to you, Greg – isn’t this an indictment of our entire American society? Well, you can do whatever you want to us, but we’re not going to sit here and listen to you badmouth the United States of America! Gentlemen!

Special advisor to the West Point Public Affairs Office.

What a horrible, cowardly argument to make. Nobody– nobody— has claimed that you aren’t serving if you aren’t being shot at. Saying that a one-day-a-week faux “recruiter” isn’t truly serving doesn’t demean the service of non-combat branches of the Army in the least. Quite the opposite… What’s demeaning is saying that Viti’s part-time boondoggle is no different than the vital work that Quartermasters, AGs, or doctors– or even real recruiters– do. That’s the whole point of the argument. This isn’t an indictment of non-combat branches of the Army. Not even close. The whole point of the argument is that playing in the NFL and spending one day a week shaking hands doesn’t measure up to the work that those branches do. This is spin of the worst kind.

Viti isn’t the only player to have made dumb remarks. Caleb Campbell is quoted in the New York Times:

“I’ve heard stories about what’s gone on in Iraq and Afghanistan,” Campbell said. “In another sense, the N.F.L. is just as much pressure. You’re out there to take somebody’s job. In terms of coaches can’t cut me? We’re talking about the N.F.L. here. This is a cutthroat business.”

In the NFL, “cutthroat” is a metaphor. In Iraq, “cutthroat” is literal. If you fail in the NFL, you’re released and pursue a more conventional career like everyone else in America. If you fail in Iraq or Afghanistan, you die. The pressure isn’t even close to the same. If anyone other than Caleb Campbell said this, half of the Army fans supporting this policy would be up in arms about how much of an insult it was, and how out of touch the person who said it must be. This is “good PR?” Hardly. Maybe these are young guys, and putting them in front of a microphone enough times will eventually yield dumb comments like Campbell’s and Viti’s. Maybe… but does it matter? This is all about PR, right? Maybe it isn’t the best idea to trot out Mike Viti to tell everyone that they’re “fools” if they disagree with him.

(By the way… Criticizing the policy is not the same as attacking the players personally. That’s another strawman that some policy supporters like to whip out. And once these players open their mouths, their words should come under the same scrutiny as anyone else’s. Just making a pre-emptive strike here for the inevitable comments about how I’m being mean to the players.)

Dave Ausiello, writing for GoMids.com, got Army coach Stan Brock’s take on the policy.

Specifically, when asked if he felt the policy, from the recruiting aspect makes the playing field uneven amongst the three academies, Brock responded:

I guess it would be.  I don’t think about it that much, but it sounds like it would be.”

Either Stan Brock is the stupidest man in football, or he is lying through his teeth. There is no way that you can spend so much time recruiting players and not understand what kind of a recruiting advantage this policy gives you. Especially since later in the interview, he seems to know all about the kind of benefits the policy is supposed to bring:

We understand at West Point that west of the Mississippi…we are challenged a little bit in getting information out about [the academy] and all that it stands for.  And so to have the national exposure like we had in the last 24 hours with Caleb Campbell – a seventh round draft choice…is very, very positive for a lot of reasons,” said Stan Brock.

A lot of reasons, but he just doesn’t think much about the reasons that help him do his job? Riiiight. Brock said something else in that interview that I found disturbing:

“We’re recruiting for West Point.  You have to be a special kid – you have to have something special about you to come to West Point.  It does not change our recruiting whatsoever.  We still have the academic and physical standards.  This will always be West Point.”

As if it’s academic and physical standards, not providing the core of the nation’s career Army officers, that makes West Point what it is.

 

Perhaps the most perplexing comment of all came from the Department of Defense, who, when questioned by Bill Wagner about Army’s policy, delivered this shipment of wisdom:

Eileen M. Lainez, spokesperson for the Department of Defense, issued a statement that read: an applicant for early release to pursue professional sports must meet certain requirements to include serving a minimum of 24 months of the original active duty service obligation in addition to any further requirements as determined by the appropriate secretary of the military department concerned.

“It is up to the military departments to interpret and apply that policy. Therefore, you must ask Army about its interpretation and application (or why it may differ from other services),” Lainez wrote in an e-mail.

It’s up to the Army to interpret DoD orders? Is that how it works? That’s the most stupid, spineless thing I’ve ever heard. It’s basically the OSD’s way of saying, “we don’t want to go through the trouble of telling the Army it’s wrong.” What kind of nonsense is it to say that the Army gets to interpret DoD rules as they see fit? Imagine if everything worked that way. I would get to interpret this:

to mean this:

Because clearly, the first sign says I can’t go any less than 55. And who’s to say otherwise? It’s up to me to interpret it! Way to step up to the plate, OSD.

It doesn’t take long to find commentary against the policy, too. One college paper took a stab at it:

Whether or not they intended to do so, the army’s actions have made military service something to be avoided and even abandoned. The army can’t be taking cadets such as Campbell away from his military duty in hopes that he’ll attract some kids that, in regards to joining, were on the fence. Because if kids do end up looking up to him, they might be jumping right back over it.

Some think of the Army as “selling out,” and today’s editorial in the Examiner agrees: 

This has nothing to do with anything so shallow as West Point’s newfound recruiting advantage over the Naval and Air Force academies.

What it has to do with is Army leadership seeming to go soft and weak in their institutional leadership, losing their core values and will.

That says more in two sentences than I’ve said in all of my voluminous ranting on the subject, which is probably why writers at the Examiner get paid while I deposit my scribblings on the electronic equivalent of a bar napkin.

But the best comment so far probably comes from Adam Ballard, which is no surprise:

“I don’t know if I would be able to look myself in the mirror everyday, making six digits [in salary] and playing football for a living while [my classmates] are defending our country. It’s a lot of guys’ dreams to go play in the NFL, but once you come here and sign your papers, you are getting a free education. As a man, you hold up your end of the bargain.”

And that includes the Army holding up its end of its bargain to taxpayers, too. West Point is there for a reason. That reason has nothing to do with the NFL.

Oops…

It appears I jumped the gun. Navy is in the NCAA lacrosse tournament, and headed to UNC on Saturday to once again face the Tarheels in the opening round. Somehow Navy got the nod over Georgetown and Army, who suffered some fairly incredible meltdowns against suspect competition over the last few weeks. Then again, so did Navy, although Colgate went on to make the tournament as the Patriot League’s AQ. Still, I imagine the Mids’ selection has raised some eyebrows.

North Carolina’s offense hasn’t been overwhelming this year, so perhaps this is a good matchup for the Mids. The Heels did beat Johns Hopkins at the end of March, but two weeks later lost to an Ohio State team that Navy beat at the beginning of the season. It’s about as good a draw as we could have hoped for, and a win would likely mean a rematch with Johns Hopkins in Annapolis.

We were lucky just to get in. Here’s hoping we make the most of it.

Loose Change, 5/1/08

We have a women’s basketball coach! Navy has hired Bowdoin head coach Stefanie Pemper to take charge of its struggling women’s basketball program. I’m not going to pretend to know a thing about Division III women’s basketball, but this:

Bowdoin has become the most consistent Division III power in the nation under Pemper’s direction, leading the program to six-consecutive NCAA Elite 8 appearances (2002-07) and seven-straight trips to the Sweet 16 (2001-07). In 2004, Pemper’s squad compiled a 30-1 mark and became the first team in any sport in school history to play for a National Championship. Pemper was honored after the 2004 season as the WBCA Division III National Coach of the Year.

Pemper’s clubs dominated the New England Small College Athletic Conference (NESCAC), winning seven-consecutive league titles from 2001-07 and Bowdoin rarely, if ever, lost at home winning 76-consecutive games from 2001-07, the fourth-longest streak in Division III basketball history.

seems pretty impressive. That success came at a school that is very demanding academically, which I’m sure played a part in Pemper’s hiring. I look forward to seeing how she chooses to unleash the  fury of Cassie Consedine upon the rest of the Patriot League.

The Congressional Bowl is a go. Almost exactly a year after we first heard about the possibility, Christian Swezey has the details about the new bowl game for Washington DC. The Congressional Bowl will be played December 20th between a bowl-eligible Navy team and ACC #9… meaning that it’ll probably be a bowl-eligible Navy team and someone outside the ACC. The MAC was the rumored backup candidate should the ACC not have 9 eligible teams, which it probably won’t. Still left to be decided is whether the game will be played at the new Nationals Park or at trusty ol’ RFK. The Nats’ new home is certainly the shinier and more glamorous of the two, but with most Navy fans probably driving to the game, everyone’s going to end up parking at RFK anyway. Might as well play the game there. (Disclaimer: Football games at RFK are some of my most treasured childhood memories, and I am extremely biased. )

Bad news for Greg Sudderth. Bill Wagner is reporting that wide receiver Greg Sudderth’s request for a fifth year of eligibility has been denied by the NCAA.

“I’m very disappointed for Greg. I felt he deserved another season,” Niumatalolo said.

“Sometimes, things are too black-and-white with the NCAA. We were hoping they would look at the totality of the situation and the fact this kid has never been able to play a full season.”

Sudderth switched to wide receiver last year after playing most of his career as a defensive back. He appeared to be adjusting well to his new position, blocking aggressively and catching 6 passes over the first half of the season (including impressive grabs against Duke and Delaware) before an ankle injury ended his season. That might not sound like much, but when you consider our leading receiver only had 13 catches all year, it was a significant contribution to the offense. Sudderth was expected to start this year.

 

Why Two Years?

Perhaps the most disturbing part of the whole “Alternative Service Option” debacle is the Army’s blatant disregard for the Department of Defense policy that defines the terms for service* academy graduates to pursue opportunities in professional sports. The DoD policy requires graduates to spend at least two years on active duty before even being allowed to ask permission to play professionally. The Army has circumvented this by redefining “active duty” to include pretty much anything. If you believe the spokes-colonel that West Point trotted out to recite the talking points for the E:60 piece on the subject, that could mean playing in the NFL, playing minor league baseball, or singing on American Idol. The Army has exploited a loophole. This great American institution that has valued honor above all else throughout its history has chosen to ignore the spirit of a DoD order by utilizing a technicality. It’s shameful.

But doesn’t the DoD policy itself say that putting players in the NFL is good for PR and recruiting? That’s how people who defend the Army policy would read it, but that’s not what it actually says:

Exceptional personnel with unique talents and abilities may be released from active duty when there is a strong expectation they will provide the Department with significant favorable media exposure likely to enhance national recruiting or public affairs efforts.

May be released from active duty, and only when there is a strong expectation of enhancing recruiting and public affairs efforts… Not because it will enhance recruiting and public affairs efforts. In other words, putting officers into the NFL isn’t inherently good for PR, and the decision to do so should be handled on a case-by-case basis. Army’s “Alternative Service (lol) Option” operates on a different assumption.

So when, then, does the DoD think there is a recruiting or PR benefit? Good question, and it brings us to why there is a two year active duty requirement. Supporters of Army’s policy like to point to Chad Hennings, David Robinson, and Roger Staubach as examples of the great PR that pro sports can bring to the Armed Forces. But those three players actually served– and by serve, I mean in a capacity other than as a recruiter on offseason Tuesdays. Hennings spent four years as a pilot and flew missions in Iraq. Robinson spent two years in the Navy’s Civil Engineering Corps. Staubach served for four years, including a tour in Vietnam, before he played a single down for the Cowboys. That’s why they were good publicity. By actually showing that even the pampered and glorious life of a professional athlete was worth putting on hold for the sake of the same jobs that rank & file servicemen perform, they raised the profile of the those rank & file jobs in the eyes of the American public. By allowing Campbell to eschew those jobs in favor of the NFL, the Army does the opposite. They become no different than any other job that someone would give up in order to play in the NFL.

The only marketing benefit that the Army receives from putting Campbell into the NFL is an increased awareness that the Army exists, as if there’s anyone who doesn’t already know that. That doesn’t do the Army any good. What the American people aren’t aware of, and what the Army would really benefit from if they were, is the actual nature of service– what life is like, the wide variety of careers available, etc. The most credible people to tell this story are the people who have done it. Hell, the Army already knows this. Just go to their own official recruiting site. The first thing you see is a video described thusly:

Explore over 150 different careers you can train for and find out from real Soldiers what it’s like to be a Soldier in the U.S. Army.

Clearly, the argument that Campbell would be good for recruiting contradicts the Army’s own methods, since no part-time Tuesday recruiter and football player can tell anyone “what it’s like to be a Soldier in the U.S. Army.” There is only one group that could potentially see recruiting benefits from Campbell being in the NFL: the West Point football team. That’s the Army’s true motive behind their policy. If the Army football team was going 9-3 instead of 3-9 every year, I doubt we’d hear about how much we need this “good PR.” Ask yourself this: what is the most likely place that this “Alternative Service Option” idea was hatched? At the Army’s recruiting command? Or in one of the “expert” panels that West Point put together to improve the football program? Deep down, I think we all know the answer.

Besides, what exactly is the benefit behind this “good PR?” There’s no doubt that Campbell carried himself well at the draft, and seeing him get applauded certainly gave everyone a warm and fuzzy feeling. But doesn’t that applause demonstrate how highly the American public already thinks of its servicemembers? We have holidays to honor them, people put bumper stickers on their cars about supporting them, and spontaneous applause for uniformed personnel is by no means rare when they’re seen walking through an airport. Serving in the Army is already considered honorable and held in high esteem by the mainstream. The Army doesn’t need good PR about the idea of service. They already have that. What they need is good PR about the actual work that its members perform; to break the various misconceptions that people have about what they’d be in store for if they signed up. The Air Force got that kind of PR when broadcasters talked about how cool it was that Chad Hennings flew A-10s in combat. The Army gets nothing of the sort from Campbell, nor from those who will follow in his footsteps.

There is another reason that the DoD policy requires two years of active duty service. One of the conditions for a selected player’s reserve service is that he will:

4. Be assigned to a Selected Reserve unit and meet normal retention requirements based on minimum participation standards per Title 10, United States Code, Section 10147, and be subject to immediate, involuntary recall for any reason to complete the period of active duty from which early release was granted.

If someone is being recalled, there’s a good chance that he’s needed as part of an armed conflict. That’s the difference between recruiting and other non-combat roles. Things like medical and supply directly support the front lines. Recruiters do not. In requiring applicants to have at least two years of active duty service, the DoD ensures that they are trained in something that can support those engaged in the conflict. By spending two years of “active duty” as a recruiter without having any other training or experience, officers that are part of the Army’s policy are basically useless in the event of a recall.

By the way, here’s the referenced section of the U.S. Code:

Except as specifically provided in regulations to be
prescribed by the Secretary of Defense, or by the Secretary of
Homeland Security with respect to the Coast Guard when it is not
operating as a service in the Navy, each person who is enlisted,
nducted, or appointed in an armed force, and who becomes a member
of the Ready Reserve under any provision of law except section 513
or 10145(b) of this title, shall be required, while in the Ready
Reserve, to –
        (1) participate in at least 48 scheduled drills or training
      periods during each year and serve on active duty for training of
      not less than 14 days (exclusive of traveltime) during each year;
      or
        (2) serve on active duty for training not more than 30 days
      during each year.

If the story in USA Today is correct– that “he’ll serve as a recruiter, spending his Tuesday off days from the Lions visiting high schools and working”– then what the Army is calling Campbell’s active duty doesn’t even meet the U.S. Code’s requirement for the reserves.

The two year requirement for active duty– real active duty– is there for a reason. The Army’s redefining of active duty to include professional sports, when the Department of Defense clearly distinguishes the two, is deplorable. For the Army to claim that it’s being done for its own good is disingenuous at best, dishonorable at worst.

Daily Chuckle

The Air Force put out a press release praising the USAFA football team for their academic prowess, which you can read here. One part made me laugh a little:

Air Force continues to be one of the leaders in academic excellence among the Mountain West Conference. The football team’s score of 975 ranked highest among the nine-team MWC. Air Force is one of only five football playing Division I institutions to post a four-year APR in the top 10 percent nationally while playing in a major conference with the football bowl subdivision. Duke, Rice, Rutgers and Stanford are the other four.

OK, two things. One, if the Mountain West (and Conference USA, based on the inclusion of Rice on the list) is considered a “major conference with the football bowl subdivision,” then what do they consider a minor conference with the FBS? Two, why do you suppose the press release only compared Air Force to other schools in conferences as opposed to everyone, including independents? No reason, I’m sure.

Roffles.

Common Sense Prevailing?

My hope that the Ohio State game would be offset with an adjustment in the rest of the 2009 schedule might be on its way to being fulfilled. According to Bill Wagner’s blog:

Meanwhile, Gladchuk said Navy has moved its 2009 game with Hawaii from Sept. 5 to Nov. 21. Navy was forced to switch the date of that contest in order to play Ohio State in the 2009 season opener.
Gladchuk said Navy will release its complete 2009 schedule in early May. It will not resemble the previously published slate for that season.
“There are about half a dozen changes in terms of opponents and dates,” he said. “We are still fine-tuning some things, but should have it nailed down in a week or so.”

So stand by. It appears that sanity may be on the march.